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Kenney v. Liston

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.
Jul 18, 2014
233 W. Va. 620 (W. Va. 2014)

Summary

holding that “the law establishes a legal duty for a tortfeasor to repair any damage or losses carelessly inflicted upon a victim”

Summary of this case from American Towers LLC v. BPI, Inc.

Opinion

No. 13–0427.

2014-07-18

John N. KENNEY, Defendant Below, Petitioner v. Samuel C. LISTON, Plaintiff Below, Respondent.

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Monongalia County, The Honorable Susan B. Tucker, Judge, Civil Action No. 11–C–102. AFFIRMED. Tiffany R. Durst, Esq., Nathaniel D. Griffith, Esq., Pullin, Fowler, Flanagan, Brown & Poe, PLLC, Morgantown, WV, for Petitioner. J. Bryan Edwards, Esq., Paul R. Cranston, Esq., Cranston & Edwards, PLLC, Morgantown, WV, for Respondent.






Syllabus by the Court


1. “The collateral source rule excludes payments from other sources to plaintiffs from being used to reduce damage awards imposed upon culpable defendants.” Syllabus Point 11, Ilosky v. Michelin Tire Corp., 172 W.Va. 435, 307 S.E.2d 603 (1983).

2. The collateral source rule protects payments made to or benefits conferred upon an injured party from sources other than the tortfeasor by denying the tortfeasor any corresponding offset or credit against the injured party's damages. Even though these collateral sources mitigate the injured party's loss, they do not reduce the tortfeasor's liability.

3. “The collateral source rule normally operates to preclude the offsetting of payments made by health and accident insurance companies or other collateral sources as against the damages claimed by the injured party.” Syllabus Point 7, Ratlief v. Yokum, 167 W.Va. 779, 280 S.E.2d 584 (1981).

4. The rule that collateral source benefits are not subtracted from a plaintiff's recovery applies to proceeds or benefits from sources such as insurance policies, whether maintained by the plaintiff or a third party; employment benefits; services or benefits rendered gratuitously (whether free, discounted, or later written off); and social legislation benefits. The law does not differentiate between the nature of these collateral source benefits, so long as they did not come from the defendant or a person acting for the defendant.

5. “An injured person is entitled to recover damages for reasonable and necessary nursing services rendered to him, whether such services are rendered gratuitously or paid for by another.” Syllabus Point 5, Kretzer v. Moses Pontiac Sales, Inc., 157 W.Va. 600, 201 S.E.2d 275 (1973).

6. A person who has been injured by the tortious conduct of a culpable tortfeasor is entitled to recover from the tortfeasor the reasonable value of medical and nursing services necessarily required by the injury. This recovery is for the reasonable value of the services and not for the expenditures actually made or obligations incurred.

7. Where an injured person's health care provider agrees to reduce, discount or write off a portion of the person's medical bill, the collateral source rule permits the person to recover the entire reasonable value of the medical services necessarily required by the injury. The tortfeasor is not entitled to receive the benefit of the reduced, discounted or written-off amount.

8. “The formulation of jury instructions is within the broad discretion of a circuit court, and a circuit court's giving of an instruction is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard. A verdict should not be disturbed based on the formulation of the language of the jury instructions so long as the instructions given as a whole are accurate and fair to both parties.” Syllabus Point 6, Tennant v. Marion Health Care Foundation, Inc., 194 W.Va. 97, 459 S.E.2d 374 (1995)
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Monongalia County, The Honorable Susan B. Tucker, Judge, Civil Action No. 11–C–102. AFFIRMED.
Tiffany R. Durst, Esq., Nathaniel D. Griffith, Esq., Pullin, Fowler, Flanagan, Brown & Poe, PLLC, Morgantown, WV, for Petitioner. J. Bryan Edwards, Esq., Paul R. Cranston, Esq., Cranston & Edwards, PLLC, Morgantown, WV, for Respondent.
James G. Bordas, Esq., Scott S. Blass, Esq., Bordas & Bordas, PLLC, Wheeling, WV, Chad S. Lovejoy, Esq., Duffield, Lovejoy, Stemple & Boggs, PLLC, Huntington, WV, for Amicus Curiae West Virginia Association for Justice.

Justice KETCHUM:

In this appeal from the Circuit Court of Monongalia County, we are asked to examine a jury's award of compensatory and punitive damages in a car wreck caused by a drunk driver. The driver—the defendant—caused serious injuries to the plaintiff.

The defendant's appeal challenges the collateral source rule. The defendant's appeal also asserts that the circuit court erred in allowing certain evidence at trial and in giving a limiting instruction pertaining to the defendant's assets in the punitive damage phase of the trial.

After careful consideration of the record, oral argument, and the briefs of the parties and amicus curiae, we affirm the jury's award of compensatory and punitive damages.

The Court acknowledges and wishes to express appreciation for the excellent amicus curiae brief submitted by the West Virginia Association for Justice.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On April 6, 2010, plaintiff Samuel C. Liston was a passenger in a vehicle sitting at a stoplight. Defendant John N. Kenney slammed his car into the rear end of the plaintiff's vehicle. The defendant did not brake before the collision, and the force of the impact broke the seat in which the plaintiff was sitting. The defendant had previously consumed a number of alcoholic beverages, and an hour after the collision his blood alcohol was measured at .328, over four times the legal limit. He later pleaded no contest to first-offense driving under the influence.

The plaintiff suffered serious, permanent, painful injuries to his spine in the collision, and brought suit against the defendant for his injuries. The defendant admitted that he was solely liable for the collision, and the case was bifurcated into a two-phase damages trial. The first phase was to determine the amount of the plaintiff's compensatory damages; the second phase was to determine whether and to what extent the defendant should pay punitive damages.

As a result of the collision, the plaintiff incurred medical bills in excess of $70,000.00. West Virginia law permits a plaintiff to recover the necessary and reasonable medical expenses for an injury from a tortfeasor. Proof that a medical bill was incurred is prima facie evidence the expense was necessary and reasonable. The plaintiff therefore sought to recover the entire billed amount as his necessary and reasonable medical expenses.

See W.Va.Code § 57–5–4j [1981] (“Proof that medical, hospital and doctor bills were paid or incurred because of any illness, disease, or injury shall be prima facie evidence that such bills so paid or incurred were necessary and reasonable.”).

Prior to trial, the defendant filed a motion in limine and asserted that only a portion of each medical bill had been paid, either by the plaintiff (as co-pays or deductibles) or by the plaintiff's health insurance carrier (Blue Cross/Blue Shield). By an agreement between the plaintiff's medical providers and his health insurance carrier, the medical bills were discounted, reduced, or adjusted downward. Because of the agreement with the health insurance carrier, the remaining, unpaid portions of the medical bills were “written off” by the plaintiff's medical providers.

The defendant asserted that the plaintiff's damages “should be limited to the amounts actually paid by Plaintiff ... and amounts paid on Plaintiff's behalf by any collateral source,” such as the plaintiff's health insurance carrier. The defendant argued to the circuit court that the value of the medical bills before reduction was not paid by either the plaintiff or his health insurance carrier. Further, because of health insurance, the value of the medical bills was not an obligation that the plaintiff was expected to pay. The defendant contends that since the full bills were neither paid nor actually incurred by the plaintiff or the plaintiff's health insurance carrier, the plaintiff should not be allowed to introduce evidence of those written-off amounts at trial.

The circuit court denied the defendant's motion in limine because the discounts or write-offs were a collateral source to the plaintiff. The circuit court reasoned that under the collateral source rule, the plaintiff was entitled to recover damages for the value of any reasonable and necessary medical services he received, “whether such services are rendered gratuitously or paid for by another.” Further, the circuit court noted that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the value of medical services rendered to the plaintiff irrespective of “the expenditures actually made or obligations incurred.” Because of the collateral source rule, and because the evidence would tend to be misleading and prejudicial, the circuit court prevented the defendant from offering any evidence that the bills for the plaintiff's medical services were either reduced by the provider or paid by the health insurer at a discounted rate.

Syllabus Point 5, Kretzer v. Moses Pontiac Sales, Inc., 157 W.Va. 600, 201 S.E.2d 275 (1973).

On September 21, 2012, the jury returned a verdict in the first phase of the bifurcated trial. The jury awarded the plaintiff compensatory damages totaling $325,272.92. The verdict included $74,061.00 for the plaintiff's past medical expenses, an amount almost equal to the total amount of the plaintiff's medical bills.

At trial, the plaintiff introduced medical bills totaling $76,313.49, but it appears that the jury declined to award the plaintiff compensation for $2,252.00 in bills from a chiropractor.

After receiving the jury's compensatory damage verdict, the circuit court held a punitive damage trial. Counsel for the defense told the jury in opening statement that the defendant was impoverished and unable to pay any punitive damage verdict. During plaintiff's direct examination of the defendant, plaintiff's counsel properly countered the defense's opening remarks by eliciting testimony from the defendant that he had liability insurance. On cross examination, defense counsel prompted the defendant to testify that he only had $100,000.00 in liability insurance. In response, and over an objection by defense counsel, plaintiff's counsel extracted a statement from the defendant that he knew his liability insurer might be required to pay the jury's entire verdict, even if it exceeded the defendant's $100,000.00 liability limits. The circuit court thereafter instructed the jury that additional liability insurance “may or may not” be available to pay the verdict. The jury returned a punitive damage verdict against the defendant for $300,000.00.

The circuit court entered a judgment order on the jury's verdict on October 9, 2012. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial. The circuit court denied that motion on February 26, 2013.

The defendant now appeals and asks that we vacate the circuit court's judgment order in its entirety and grant the parties a new trial. In the alternative, the defendant requests that we grant the parties a new trial solely on the issue of punitive damages.

II.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

The defendant appeals the circuit court's ruling denying his motion for a new trial. “As a general proposition, we review a circuit court's rulings on a motion for a new trial under an abuse of discretion standard.”

Tennant v. Marion Health Care Found., Inc., 194 W.Va. 97, 104, 459 S.E.2d 374, 381 (1995).

Although the ruling of a trial court in granting or denying a motion for a new trial is entitled to great respect and weight, the trial court's ruling will be reversed on appeal [only] when it is clear that the trial court has acted under some misapprehension of the law or the evidence.

Syllabus Point 4, Sanders v. Georgia–Pacific Corp., 159 W.Va. 621, 225 S.E.2d 218 (1976). See also, In re State Pub. Bldg. Asbestos Litig., 193 W.Va. 119, 124, 454 S.E.2d 413, 418 (1994) (quoting 11 Charles Alan Wright and Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2818 at 118 (1973) (“There are few subjects in the entire field of procedure that have been subject to so much change and controversy in recent years as the proper scope of review of an order granting or denying a motion for a new trial. The trial court has very broad discretion and the appellate courts will defer a great deal to his exercise of this discretion. This much is settled.”)).

III.

ANALYSIS

The defendant raises two issues of consequence.

First, the defendant argues the trial court erred in applying the collateral source rule to exclude evidence, testimony and argument relating to medical expenses that were discounted or written off by the plaintiff's medical providers. The defendant asserts he is not challenging the collateral source rule; he says he merely seeks to introduce evidence of what the plaintiff's insurer actually paid the providers as evidence of the reasonable value of the medical services.

Second, the defendant argues that the trial court erred in the punitive damage phase by allowing the jury to hear plaintiff's counsel's questions suggesting that additional coverage may be available to the defendant to pay the jury's excess verdict. Further, the defendant contends it was error for the trial court to instruct the jury that excess liability insurance coverage might be available.

A. Collateral Source Rule

We begin with the question of whether those portions of the plaintiff's medical bills that were discounted or written off can be submitted to the jury. The defendant does not dispute that the collateral source rule protects the portions of the plaintiff's medical bills that his health insurer actually paid and that the plaintiff's health-care providers accepted as payment in full. Further, the defendant concedes that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the reasonable value of the medical services that were necessary and caused by the defendant's misconduct.

The question presented concerns how to calculate the “reasonable value” of the plaintiff's medical services in light of the collateral source rule. The defendant argues that the collateral source rule does not apply to the difference in value between the amount billed and the amount paid. The plaintiff responds that the collateral source rule protects the entire amount initially billed, so long as it was necessary and reasonable, because any discounts or written-off amounts were as a result of a collateral source: the plaintiff's health insurance. In addition, the plaintiff argues that W.Va.Code § 57–5–4j provides that the medical bills that he incurred are prima facie evidence that the amounts billed were necessary and reasonable.

See supra, footnote 2.

The collateral source rule is a long-standing principle in West Virginia law and has been “a staple of American tort law since before the Civil War.” “The collateral source rule excludes payments from other sources to plaintiffs from being used to reduce damage awards imposed upon culpable defendants.” The collateral source rule protects payments made to or benefits conferred upon an injured party from sources other than the tortfeasor by denying the tortfeasor any corresponding offset or credit against the injured party's damages. Even though these collateral sources mitigate the injured party's loss, they do not reduce the tortfeasor's liability. The collateral source rule “operates to preclude the offsetting of payments made by health and accident insurance companies or other collateral sources as against the damages claimed by the injured party.”

Michael I. Krauss & Jeremy Kidd, Collateral Source and Tort's Soul, 48 U. Louisville L.Rev. 1, 4 (2009). The collateral source rule first appeared in America in The Propeller Monticello v. Mollison, 58 U.S. 152, 17 How. 152, 15 L.Ed. 68 (1854). The term “collateral source” derives from language used in 1870, in Harding v. Town of Townshend, 43 Vt. 536, 538 (1870) (“The policy of insurance is collateral to the remedy against the defendant, and was procured solely by the plaintiff and at his expense, and to the procurement of which the defendant was in no way contributory.”).

Syllabus Point 11, Ilosky v. Michelin Tire Corp., 172 W.Va. 435, 307 S.E.2d 603 (1983).

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920A (1979) gives the following effect to payments made to an injured party:
(1) A payment made by a tortfeasor or by a person acting for him to a person whom he has injured is credited against his tort liability, as are payments made by another who is, or believes he is, subject to the same tort liability.
(2) Payments made to or benefits conferred on the injured party from other sources are not credited against the tortfeasor's liability, although they cover all or a part of the harm for which the tortfeasor is liable.

Syllabus Point 7, Ratlief v. Yokum, 167 W.Va. 779, 280 S.E.2d 584 (1981).

The law is clear that, “A tort victim who has incurred medical expenses, suffered lost wages, or experienced other compensable loss, may sue the tortfeasor for the entire amount of the victim's injuries even if those losses have been neutralized by first-party insurance, by the victim's relatives, by the victim's employer, or through the kindness of strangers.” A tortfeasor cannot take advantage of a contract or relationship “between an injured party and a third person, no matter whether the source of the funds received is an insurance company, an employer, a family member, or other source.” As the Restatement (Second) of Torts notes,

Krauss & Kidd, 48 U. Louisville L.Rev. at 11.See also, Pack v. Van Meter, 177 W.Va. 485, 488, 354 S.E.2d 581, 584 (1986) (“Our law is quite clear that the amount of money that an injured plaintiff receives from a collateral source is not admissible.”).

Covington v. George, 359 S.C. 100, 103–04, 597 S.E.2d 142, 144 (2004) (citation omitted).

[Benefits from collateral sources] do not have the effect of reducing the recovery against the defendant. The injured party's net loss may have been reduced correspondingly, and to the extent that the defendant is required to pay the total amount there may be a double compensation for a part of the plaintiff's injury. But it is the position of the law that a benefit that is directed to the injured party should not be shifted so as to become a windfall for the tortfeasor.
Stated succinctly, a person who is negligent and injures another “owes to the latter full compensation for the injury inflicted[,] ... and payment for such injury from a collateral source in no way relieves the wrongdoer of [the] obligation.”

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920A, cmt. b (emphasis added).

Walthew v. Davis, Adm'r, 201 Va. 557, 563, 111 S.E.2d 784, 788 (1960).

The collateral source rule is both a rule of evidence and a rule of damages.

“As a rule of evidence, [the collateral source rule] precludes the defendant in a personal injury or wrongful death case from introducing evidence that some of the plaintiff's damages have been paid by a collateral source.” Because the likelihood of misuse by the jury clearly outweighs the probative value of evidence of collateral benefits, the “induction of collateral sources into the jury's consciousness for whatever purpose is to be avoided.” The theory is “that the jury may well reduce the damages based on the amounts that the plaintiff has been shown to have received from collateral sources.” For example, “[c]alling attention to the fact that a plaintiff had [hospitalization or medical] insurance can be prejudicial error because the jury may conclude that plaintiff sustained no damages for which he was entitled to recover if his medical bills were paid by insurance.”

James L. Branton, The Collateral Source Rule, 18 St. Mary's L.J. 883 (1987). See also, Michael Flynn, Private Medical Insurance and The Collateral Source Rule: A Good Bet?, 22 Toledo L.Rev. 39, 42 (1990) (“As to evidence, it bars the submission of evidence that the injured plaintiff received payment for any part of his damages, including medical expenses, from other sources.”)

Eichel v. New York Cent. R. Co., 375 U.S. 253, 255, 84 S.Ct. 316, 11 L.Ed.2d 307 (1963) (“In our view the likelihood of misuse by the jury clearly outweighs the value of this evidence. Insofar as the evidence bears on the issue of malingering, there will generally be other evidence having more probative value and involving less likelihood of prejudice than the receipt of a disability pension.”); Hrnjak v. Graymar, Inc., 4 Cal.3d 725, 732, 94 Cal.Rptr. 623, 484 P.2d 599, 604 (1971) (“The potentially prejudicial impact of evidence that a personal injury plaintiff received collateral insurance payments varies little from case to case.”).

Ilosky v. Michelin Tire Corp., 172 W.Va. at 447, 307 S.E.2d at 615.

Ratlief v. Yokum, 167 W.Va. at 787, 280 S.E.2d at 590.See also James M. Fischer, Understanding Remedies § 12(a), at 77 (1999) (“The evidentiary component bars admission of evidence of the existence of the collateral source or the receipt of benefits. The concern here is that the trier of fact may use that evidence improperly to deny the plaintiff the full recovery to which he is entitled.”); Proctor v. Castelletti, 112 Nev. 88, 90, 911 P.2d 853, 854 (1996) (adopting a per se rule barring admission of collateral source payments into evidence for any purpose; “Collateral source evidence inevitably prejudices the jury because it greatly increases the likelihood that a jury will reduce a plaintiff's award of damages because it knows the plaintiff is already receiving compensation.”).

Biehler v. White Metal Rolling & Stamping Corp., 30 Ill.App.3d 435, 444, 333 N.E.2d 716, 723 (1975).

As a rule of damages, the collateral source rule “precludes the defendant from offsetting the judgment against any receipt of collateral sources by the plaintiff.” The “rationale for this rule is that the party at fault should not be able to minimize his damages by offsetting payments received by the injured party through his own independent arrangements” “[T]he wrongdoer should not benefit from the expenditures made by the injured party or take advantage of contracts or other relations that may exist between the injured party and third persons.”

Branton, 18 St. Mary's L.J. at 883.See also, Ilosky v. Michelin Tire Corp., 172 W.Va. at 446, 307 S.E.2d at 615 (“the collateral source rule excludes payments from other sources to plaintiffs from being used to reduce damage awards imposed upon culpable defendants.”); Flynn, 22 Toledo L.Rev. at 42 (“As to damage calculations, the Rule prohibits the tortfeasor from reducing payment of a tort judgment by the amount of money received by an injured party from other sources.”).

Ratlief v. Yokum, 167 W.Va. at 787, 280 S.E.2d at 590.

Wilson v. Hoffman Grp., Inc., 131 Ill.2d 308, 320, 137 Ill.Dec. 579, 546 N.E.2d 524, 530 (1989).

The drafters of the Restatement (Second) of Torts recognized that there are four general categories of collateral benefits that should never be subtracted from the plaintiff's recovery. Those four categories are:

This list is not absolute. The drafters also said about collateral sources, “The law does not differentiate between the nature of the benefits, so long as they did not come from the defendant or a person acting for him.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920A, cmt. b.

(1) Insurance policies, whether maintained by the plaintiff or a third party. Sometimes, as in fire insurance or collision automobile insurance, the insurance company is subrogated to the rights of the third party. This additional reason for keeping the tortfeasor's liability alive is not necessary, however, as the rule applies to insurance not involving subrogation, such as life or health policies.

See also, Richard C. Maxwell, The Collateral Source Rule in the American Law of Damages, 46 Minn. L.Rev. 669, 672 (1962) (“Typically, the insurance cases make no distinction in relation to the type of insurance involved nor do they usually rest upon a stated conclusion that double recovery is avoided because the insurer is subrogated to the rights of the insured.”).

(2) Employment benefits. These may be gratuitous, as in the case in which the employer, although not legally required to do so, continues to pay the employee's wages during his incapacity. They may also be benefits arising out of the employment contract or a union contract. They may be benefits arising by statute, as in worker's compensation acts or the Federal Employers' Liability Act. Statutes may subrogate the employer to the right of the employee, or create a cause of action other than by subrogation.

(3) Gratuities. This applies to cash gratuities and to the rendering of services. Thus the fact that the doctor did not charge for his services or the plaintiff was treated in a veterans hospital does not prevent his recovery for the reasonable value of the services.

(4) Social legislation benefits. Social security benefits, welfare payments, pensions under special retirement acts, all are subject to the collateral-source rule.

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920A, cmt. c (footnotes added).

Examples of collateral sources that are inadmissible to reduce a defendant's liability, in both our jurisprudence and that of other states, are legion. Benefits to a plaintiff protected by the collateral source rule come from sources as diverse as life insurance, health insurance, accident insurance, workers' compensation, sick pay, vacation pay, gratuitous nursing care by a relative, charity, remarriage, disability insurance, veteran's and military hospitals, tax savings, private or government pension programs such as Social Security, or other government programs like Medicare and Medicaid. The cases from this jurisdiction and others are clear: “Only benefits received from the original tortfeasor, the tortfeasor's agent, or a joint tortfeasor reduce a tort defendant's liability.”

Brabham v. Baltimore & O.R. Co., 220 F. 35, 37–38 (4th Cir.1914) (“When an action is brought against a wrongdoer, he is not entitled to have the damages consequent upon the commission of his wrongful act reduced by proving that the plaintiff has received compensation for the loss from a collateral source wholly independent of himself.... [T]he court below erred in permitting the defendant to prove that the mother of the decedent received the sum of $2,500 [life] insurance on account of the death of her son.”).

Syllabus Point 7, Ratlief v. Yokum, 167 W.Va. 779, 280 S.E.2d 584 (1981) (“The collateral source rule normally operates to preclude the offsetting of payments made by health and accident insurance companies or other collateral sources as against the damages claimed by the injured party.”).

Id. See also, Syllabus Point 4, Johnson by Johnson v. General Motors Corp., 190 W.Va. 236, 438 S.E.2d 28 (1993) (“The collateral source rule operates to preclude the offsetting of uninsured or underinsured benefits since the benefits are the result of a contractual arrangement which is independent of the tortfeasor[.]”).

Syllabus Point 3, Mercer v. Ott, 78 W.Va. 629, 89 S.E. 952 (1916) (“Where a workman is killed by an accident arising in the course of and resulting from his employment, and a tort-feasor other than his employer is responsible therefor, the right to compensation from the workmen's compensation fund by a dependent of the deceased is not lost by a recovery of damages against the tort-feasor, by the personal representative of the deceased.”); Syllabus Point 6, Merrill v. Marietta Torpedo Co., 79 W.Va. 669, 92 S.E. 112 (1917) (“An employé who receives compensation for an injury from the workmen's compensation fund is not thereby estopped to sue a third person, not his employer, whose negligence caused his injury.”); Syllabus Point 3, Jones v. Appalachian Elec. Power Co., 145 W.Va. 478, 115 S.E.2d 129 (1960) (“The amount of compensation received for injury or death from the Workmen's Compensation Fund is not a proper subject for a remittitur in an action by the injured person, or the administrator of his estate in case of death, against a third party responsible for his injury or death.”); Syllabus Point 3, Jones v. Laird Found., Inc., 156 W.Va. 479, 195 S.E.2d 821 (1973) (“Workmen's Compensation benefits for an original work related injury and for aggravation of an original injury, or for a care in selecting a physician and treatment administered for a work related injury, are within the ‘Collateral Source Rule’ in the same way as accident insurance, health insurance and life insurance, and, therefore, benefits from Workmen's Compensation cannot be applied to reduce damages in an action against a successive tort-feasor such as a physician or hospital for injury caused by negligent or unskillful treatment of a compensable injury.”).

Syllabus Point 4, Ellard v. Harvey, 159 W.Va. 871, 231 S.E.2d 339 (1976) (“One claiming damages for loss of wages is not barred from recovering on the claim merely because he was paid in accordance with a sick leave policy or similar plan while away from work.”); Syllabus Point 3, King v. Bittinger, 160 W.Va. 129, 231 S.E.2d 239 (1976) (same).

Ellard v. Harvey, 159 W.Va. at 879, 231 S.E.2d at 344 (“[A]n injured party may recover damages for lost leave, whether accumulated sick time or vacation time, for which he is paid by the employer[.]”).

Syllabus Point 5, Kretzer v. Moses Pontiac Sales, Inc., 157 W.Va. 600, 201 S.E.2d 275 (1973) (plaintiff's unmarried daughter, who had always lived with the plaintiff, quit her job after the accident in order to care for her injured mother; “An injured person is entitled to recover damages for reasonable and necessary nursing services rendered to him, whether such services are rendered gratuitously or paid for by another.”).

See, e.g., Big Bird Tree Servs. v. Gallegos, 365 S.W.3d 173 (Tex.App.2012) (although indigent plaintiff qualified for healthcare charity program and received medical services free of charge, reasonable medical expense was “incurred” and could be recovered from defendant under collateral source rule).

Syllabus Point 6, Dimmey v. Wheeling & E.G. Railroad Co., 27 W.Va. 32 (1885) (“Where the husband as administrator of his deceased wife brought an action to recover damages of a street railroad company for causing her death, and he was on trial examined as a witness on his own behalf, it was improper on cross examination to ask him: ‘Are you not engaged to be married again.’ ”); Syllabus Point 4, Addair v. Bryant, 168 W.Va. 306, 284 S.E.2d 374 (1981) (“Evidence of the remarriage of a surviving spouse, or the possibility of such remarriage, ordinarily is not admissible to mitigate damages in a wrongful death action.”); Syllabus Point 9, Keesee v. General Refuse Service, Inc., 216 W.Va. 199, 604 S.E.2d 449 (2004) (same). But see William C. Harvin, The Collateral Source Rule—Abandonment or Modification, 10 Judges J. 28, 29 (April 1971) (advocating allowing evidence of remarriage because “the jury in appraising the loss does not know that there is a new spouse whose earnings will supplant those which have been lost. A jury should not be misled into believing that the ‘light of her life’ has gone out and will remain forever extinguished, when in fact she has already struck another match.”).

Hrnjak v. Graymar, Inc., 4 Cal.3d at 733, 94 Cal.Rptr. 623, 484 P.2d at 604–05 (evidence a plaintiff “demonstrated the prudence to purchase disability insurance coverage” inadmissible to show plaintiff is a malingerer).

Sainsbury v. Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines, 183 F.2d 548, 550 (4th Cir.1950) (plaintiff received free care at the Marine and Naval Hospital; “It is generally well settled that the fact that the plaintiff may receive compensation from a collateral source (or free medical care) is no defense to an action for damages against the person causing the injury.”); Plank v. Summers, 203 Md. 552, 562, 102 A.2d 262, 267 (1954) (the value of medical and hospital services furnished gratuitously by a naval hospital to plaintiffs as members of the United States Navy were proper items for the jury's consideration in determining the amount of damages to be paid by defendants); Hudson v. Lazarus, 217 F.2d 344, 347 (D.C.Cir.1954) (“We see no reason to distinguish services rendered by a naval hospital to the veteran Hudson from services rendered by a naval hospital to a man still in the Navy.”); Banks v. Crowner, 694 P.2d 101, 105 (Wyo.1985) (“hospital bills from the Veteran's Administration (V.A.) were properly submitted to the jury for consideration”).

See Michael I. Krauss & Robert A. Levy, Calculating Tort Damages for Lost Future Earnings: The Puzzles of Tax, Inflation and Risk, 31 Gonz. L.Rev. 325, 335 (1996) (stating that personal injury elements of tort awards are nontaxable).

Moyer v. Merrick, 155 Colo. 73, 80, 392 P.2d 653, 657 (1964) (“courts have almost uniformly held that evidence of receipt by plaintiff of a public or private pension cannot be admitted into evidence. It is not in mitigation of damage so has no place in the trial of a case.”); Nigra v. Walsh, 797 A.2d 353, 355 (Pa.Super.Ct.2002) (trial court erred and violated collateral source rule in permitting defendant to present evidence plaintiff was receiving social security disability benefits). See generally, H.G. Hirschberg, Collateral Source Rule: Receipt of Public or Private Pension as Affecting Recovery Against a Tortfeasor, 75 A.L.R.2d 885 (1961).

Baptist Healthcare Sys., Inc. v. Miller, 177 S.W.3d 676, 682–83 (Ky.2005) (“It is improper to reduce a plaintiff's damages by payments for medical treatment under a health insurance policy if the premiums were paid by the plaintiff or a third party other than the tortfeasor.... Medicare benefits are governed by the collateral source rule and are treated the same as other types of medical insurance.”); Brown v. Van Noy, 879 S.W.2d 667, 676 (Mo.Ct.App.1994) (plaintiff permitted to admit evidence of medical expense paid or “written off” as part of Medicare coverage because it “is not materially different than expenses paid by insurance or paid in part by insurance with part ‘written off’ pursuant to a contract or agreement between the medical provider and the insurance company”). See also, William C. Harvin, The Collateral Source Rule—Abandonment or Modification, 10 Judges J. 28 (April 1971) (“With the rise of the welfare state, the plaintiff has a veritable arsenal of governmentally supported programs to assure minimum standards of care and comfort—the Veterans Administration, Medicare, social security, state unemployment and disability plans, and various other statutory benefits. Virtually all of these payments and services are inadmissible for mitigation purposes.”).

Loncar v. Gray, 28 P.3d 928, 933 (Alaska 2001) (“The collateral source rule ‘exclud[es] evidence of other compensation on the theory that such evidence would affect the jury's judgment unfavorably to the plaintiff on the issues of liability and damages.’ Under this rule, the superior court appropriately excluded Medicaid evidence at the beginning of the trial.”); Wills v. Foster, 229 Ill.2d 393, 418–19, 323 Ill.Dec. 26, 892 N.E.2d 1018, 1033 (2008) (Where plaintiff was a recipient of Medicaid and Medicare, “the fact that the collateral source was the government instead of a private insurance company is a distinction without a difference. All plaintiffs are entitled to seek to recover the full reasonable value of their medical expenses.”); Bynum v. Magno, 106 Hawai‘i 81, 89, 101 P.3d 1149, 1157 (2004) (“Inasmuch as Medicare/Medicaid are social legislation programs, we conclude that the collateral source rule applies to prevent the reduction of a plaintiff's award of damages to the discounted amount paid by Medicare/Medicaid.”).

Krauss & Kidd, 48 U. Louisville L.Rev. at 11.

We turn now to the specific question at hand: does the collateral source rule protect the amounts discounted from the plaintiff's medical bill or written off by the medical provider? We hold that it does, because the amount of the medical expense that was discounted or written off can be considered both a benefit of the plaintiff's bargain with his health insurance carrier, and a gratuitous benefit arising from the plaintiff's bargain with the medical provider. “A creditor's forgiveness of debt—that is what a write-down in the present context amounts to—is often considered equivalent to payment in other contexts, e.g., income tax, credit bids at foreclosure, etc. In other words, a creditor's partial forgiveness of a tort victim's medical bills via a write-down is properly considered a third-party ‘payment,’ evidence of which is barred by the collateral source rule.” It has been said,

McConnell v. Wal–Mart Stores, Inc., –––F.Supp.2d ––––, ––––, 2014 WL 464799, *4 (D.Nev. Feb.5, 2014).

The general rule is that a plaintiff who has been injured by the tortious conduct of the defendant is entitled to recover the reasonable value of medical and nursing services reasonably required by the injury. This is a recovery for their value and not the expenditures actually made or obligations incurred.

A majority of jurisdictions that have considered this question hold that a plaintiff can present to the jury the amount that a health care provider initially billed for the services necessarily rendered, and not merely amounts that were later paid. The tortfeasorcannot offer evidence that part of the bill was discounted or written off. Further, the plaintiff is not limited to recovering only expenditures made or obligations actually incurred. The plaintiff may recover the full amount of his or her reasonable and necessary medical expenses, even if those expenses were later discounted and a portion written off by the health care provider. Regardless of how, or even whether, the plaintiff's obligation to the medical provider was later discharged, the plaintiff became liable for the bills when the services were received; the plaintiff is therefore entitled to recover the value of the services. “The damage is sustained when the plaintiff incurs the liability, and the method by which that liability is later discharged has no effect on the measure of damages.”

See Swanson v. Brewster, 784 N.W.2d 264, 277 (Minn.2010); Aumand v. Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, 611 F.Supp.2d 78, 91–92 (D.N.H.2009); White v. Jubitz Corp., 347 Or. 212, 219 P.3d 566, 583 (2009); Tucker v. Volunteers of America Colo. Branch, 211 P.3d 708, 712–13 (Colo.App.2008); Wills v. Foster, 229 Ill.2d 393, 415–418, 323 Ill.Dec. 26, 892 N.E.2d 1018, 1032–33 (2008); Papke v. Harbert, 738 N.W.2d 510, 535–36 (S.D.2007); Leitinger v. DBart, Inc., 302 Wis.2d 110, 136, 736 N.W.2d 1, 14 (2007); Pipkins v. TA Operating Corp., 466 F.Supp.2d 1255, 1261–62 (D.N.M.2006); Arthur v. Catour, 216 Ill.2d 72, 83, 295 Ill.Dec. 641, 833 N.E.2d 847, 854 (2005); Lopez v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 212 Ariz. 198, 129 P.3d 487, 496 (Ariz.Ct.App.2006); Baptist Healthcare Systems, Inc. v. Miller, 177 S.W.3d 676, 683–84 (Ky.2005); Mitchell v. Haldar, 883 A.2d 32, 40 (Del.2005); Bynum v. Magno, 101 P.3d at 1157;Covington v. George, 359 S.C. at 103–05, 597 S.E.2d at 144–45;Calva–Cerqueira v. United States, 281 F.Supp.2d 279, 295–96 (D.D.C.2003); Brandon HMA, Inc. v. Bradshaw, 809 So.2d 611, 618 (Miss.2001) (and Wal–Mart Stores, Inc. v. Frierson, 818 So.2d 1135, 1140 (Miss.2002)); Koffman v. Leichtfuss, 246 Wis.2d 31, 48–49, 630 N.W.2d 201, 210 (2001); Olariu v. Marrero, 248 Ga.App. 824, 825, 549 S.E.2d 121, 123 (2001); Acuar v. Letourneau, 260 Va. 180, 192, 531 S.E.2d 316, 322 (Va.2000); Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc. v. Anderson, 334 Ark. 561, 567–68, 976 S.W.2d 382, 385 (1998); Texarkana Memorial Hosp., Inc. v. Murdock, 903 S.W.2d 868, 874 (Tex.App.1995), rev'd on other grounds946 S.W.2d 836 (Tex.1997); Brown v. Van Noy, 879 S.W.2d 667, 676 (Mo.Ct.App.1994).

Lewis R. Mills, Note: The Collateral Source Doctrine in Missouri, 1953 Wash.U.L.Q. 453, 461 (1953).

The defendant argues that the collateral source rule operates solely to protect “payments.” He argues that a discount, reduction or write-off of a bill by a creditor is not a payment, and is therefore not encompassed by the collateral source rule. We reject this tenuous distinction, because the law is clear that the collateral source rule applies to any benefit received by a plaintiff from any source in line with the plaintiff's interests.

The public policies behind the collateral source rule are wide ranging. For one, “it is better for injured plaintiffs to receive the benefit of collateral sources in addition to actual damages than for defendants to be able to limit their liability for damages merely by the fortuitous presence of these sources.” The Supreme Court of Virginia has said:

Ilosky v. Michelin Tire Corp., 172 W.Va. at 446, 307 S.E.2d at 615.

The collateral source rule is designed to strike a balance between two competing principles of tort law: (1) a plaintiff is entitled to compensation sufficient to make him whole, but no more; and (2) a defendant is liable for all damages that proximately result from his wrong. A plaintiff who receives a double recovery for a single tort enjoys a windfall; a defendant who escapes, in whole or in part, liability for his wrong enjoys a windfall. Because the law must sanction one windfall and deny the other, it favors the victim of the wrong rather than the wrongdoer.

Schickling v. Aspinall, 235 Va. 472, 474–75, 369 S.E.2d 172, 174 (1988) (emphasis added).

The collateral source rule is a central part of the tort system's goal of “requiring tortfeasors to make right their wrongful acts.” The primary unifying principle of tort law is one of corrective justice, that is, the law establishes a legal duty for a tortfeasor to repair any damage or losses carelessly inflicted upon a victim. As the drafters of the Restatement (Second) of Torts recognized, “it is the tortfeasor's responsibility to compensate for all harm that he causes,” not merely the net loss to the injured party.

Krauss & Kidd, 48 U. Louisville L.Rev. at 52 (2009).

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920A, cmt. b (emphasis added).

We are persuaded that a defendant owes to an injured plaintiff a duty to make right for his or her wrongful acts, and so must pay the plaintiff compensation for all losses proximately caused by any negligence or wrongdoing. It is the defendant's responsibility to repair the damage he or she has done to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff's receipt of benefits from collateral sources, whether from affection, philanthropy, contract, social services, or others cannot relieve the defendant of this obligation. “The collateral source rule requires the injured party to be made whole exclusively by the tortfeasor and not by a combination of compensation from the tortfeasor and collateral sources.”

Mitchell v. Haldar, 883 A.2d at 38.

In light of the above, we hold that the rule that collateral source benefits are not subtracted from a plaintiff's recovery applies to proceeds or benefits from sources such as insurance policies, whether maintained by the plaintiff or a third party; employment benefits; services or benefits rendered gratuitously (whether free, discounted, or later written off); and social legislation benefits. The law does not differentiate between the nature of these collateral source benefits, so long as they did not come from the defendant or a person acting for the defendant.

In summary, we stand by the principle that an “injured person is entitled to recover damages for reasonable and necessary nursing services rendered to him, whether such services are rendered gratuitously or paid for by another.” A person who has been injured by the tortious conduct of a culpable tortfeasor is entitled to recover from the tortfeasor the reasonable value of medical and nursing services necessarily required by the injury. This recovery is for the reasonable value of the services and not for the expenditures actually made or obligations incurred.

Syllabus Point 5, Kretzer v. Moses Pontiac Sales, Inc., 157 W.Va. 600, 201 S.E.2d 275 (1973).

Stated another way, the collateral source rule permits an injured person to recover all of his or her reasonable medical costs that were necessarily required by the injury. Where a person's health care provider agrees to reduce, discount or write off a portion of the person's medical bill, the collateral source rule permits the person to recover the entire reasonable value of the medical services necessarily required by the injury. The tortfeasor is not entitled to receive the benefit of the reduced, discounted or written-off amount.

In this case, the defendant does not deny that the plaintiff would have been liable for the total amount billed by his medical providers absent his health insurance coverage. Whether the plaintiff took benefits from his health insurer in the form of medical expense payments or in the form of discounts and write-offs because of agreements between his health insurer and his health care providers is irrelevant. Those amounts written off are as much of a benefit for which the plaintiff paid consideration as are the actual cash payments made by his health insurer to the health care providers. This is the very purpose of the collateral source rule: to prevent a defendant from reaping the benefits of a plaintiff's preparation and protection.

We note that, in the limited context of medical negligence actions, the Legislature has chosen to alter this balance and to permit a careless defendant to benefit from “evidence of payments the plaintiff has received for the same injury from collateral sources.” W.Va.Code § 55–7B–9a [2003]. But see State ex rel. Ohio Acad. of Trial Lawyers v. Sheward, 86 Ohio St.3d 451, 715 N.E.2d 1062 (1999); O'Bryan v. Hedgespeth, 892 S.W.2d 571 (Ky.1995); Wentling v. Med. Anesthesia Servs., P.A., 237 Kan. 503, 701 P.2d 939 (1985); Carson v. Maurer, 120 N.H. 925, 424 A.2d 825 (N.H.1980).

Accordingly, we find no error in the circuit court's decision to apply the collateral source rule and prohibit the defendant from introducing evidence of the plaintiff's discounted medical bills.

B. Punitive Damage Verdict

The defendant's second argument concerns the punitive damage verdict. Specifically, the defendant asserts that the circuit court erred in allowing one question to be asked about the availability of liability insurance in excess of policy limits, and erred in instructing the jury that insurance coverage for an excess verdict “may or may not” be available.

The lawyers for both parties were permitted to give opening statements in the punitive damages phase of the trial. The lawyer for the defendant informed the jury that the defendant would testify that he did not have the resources to pay punitive damages, stating:

He will also tell you that he has no financial means at this point to pay a punitive damage verdict. He was working at the time of this accident, but he'll tell you [he] since has been laid off. He was working for a company that sold equipment to mines and has been laid off since May and is currently receiving unemployment benefits in the amount of 800–and–some dollars a week. At the time that he was working, he made 30–some thousand dollars [a] year. He has—as a part of his unemployment, has an obligation to apply for jobs. He has no job prospects at this point.

He's 35 years old. Living with his parents. Doesn't own any property. He owns a car, which I believe is a 2002 car that is paid off. He has nothing else of financial value to pay [a punitive damage verdict].

This Court has said that if a defendant “offers evidence of his financial status to influence the jury on punitive damages, then the plaintiff may rebut such evidence by introducing proof of the defendant's liability insurance.” Following the opening statements about the defendant's financial inability to pay punitive damages, the lawyer for the plaintiff called the defendant as an adverse witness and asked the following two questions about the existence of liability insurance:

Syllabus Point 4, in part, Wheeler v. Murphy, 192 W.Va. 325, 452 S.E.2d 416 (1994).

Plaintiff's Counsel: You also, in fact, have insurance, don't you?

Defendant: I do.

Plaintiff's Counsel: So you are not a man without assets; isn't that correct?

Defendant: I—I would not say that that would—I mean, I don't have a lot of assets ...
Defense counsel responded by asking the defendant on cross-examination about the amount of liability insurance he had:

Defense Counsel: [Plaintiff's counsel] also asked you about insurance. And you did have insurance at the time of the accident, correct?

Defendant: I did.

Defense Counsel: What—do you know what your policy limits are?

Defendant: I believe they were $100,000 at the time, yes.

On appeal, counsel for the defendant challenges one question that was asked on re-direct examination of the defendant. Because counsel for the defendant left the jury with the impression that there was only $100,000.00 in coverage available to the defendant, counsel for the plaintiff asked:

Plaintiff's Counsel: With regards to your insurance coverage, there was, in fact, a question about actually how much coverage you have; isn't there?

This question pertains to the amount of insurance coverage actually available to the defendant in excess of policy limits under Shamblin v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company. In Shamblin, this Court ruled that if an insurance company fails to settle a liability action within policy limits where there was an opportunity to settle, and thereby fails to protect a defendant from personal liability, then the insurance company has prima facie acted in bad faith and may be required to pay any judgment against the defendant in excess of the policy limits. The plaintiff contends that he offered to settle his claims against the defendant within policy limits. Because the defendant's liability insurer declined to settle, and because the jury returned a compensatory damage verdict in excess of the policy limits, the plaintiff asserts that the defendant's insurer should be required to pay the entire verdict without regard to policy limits.

Syllabus Point 2 of Shamblin v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 183 W.Va. 585, 396 S.E.2d 766 (1990), states:
Wherever there is a failure on the part of an insurer to settle within policy limits where there exists the opportunity to settle and where such settlement within policy limits would release the insured from any and all personal liability, the insurer has prima facie failed to act in its insured's best interest and such failure to so settle prima facie constitutes bad faith toward its insured.

Defense counsel objected to plaintiff's counsel's question, and the trial court had an extensive discussion with the lawyers (outside of the jury's presence) to discuss whether the defendant's insurer had been “Shamblin-ized.” Defense counsel conceded that the defendant hired an independent lawyer (not paid by the insurance carrier) to protect him from any Shamblin-type excess verdict. Further, it was the defendant's personal position that the liability insurer “is going to be responsible for the entire verdict, regardless of what it is.” The trial court determined that defense counsel had opened the door to the amount of available insurance coverage, and said “it is simply not fair to let the jury believe that those are the only assets available.” Accordingly, the trial court ruled it was proper to ask the defendant about the possibility of additional coverage for an excess verdict, but limited plaintiff's counsel to one question and ordered counsel not to “belabor it.”

When the jury returned, plaintiff's counsel asked the defendant the following:

Plaintiff's Counsel: Mr. Kenney, before we broke we were discussing the issue regarding your amount of insurance coverage. You understand that; is that correct?

Defendant: I do.

Plaintiff's Counsel: Okay. You understand that because of some actions that have been taken in ... the course of this case, that you may have additional coverage to cover whatever the verdict may be; isn't that correct?

Defendant: That is correct.

At the conclusion of evidence in the punitive damage phase of the trial, the trial court proposed giving the following limiting instruction to the jury:

The Court instructs you that because of certain legal actions that have been taken in this case that there may or may not be additional coverage to pay whatever your verdict may be.
Defense counsel objected to this instruction that there “may or may not be additional coverage” under Shamblin on the ground that “under Rule 51 [of the Rules of Civil Procedure ] that that's commenting upon the evidence.” The trial court rejected this objection and read the instruction to the jury.

After deliberations, the jury returned a verdict finding that the defendant “engaged in grossly negligent or reckless conduct which caused the motor vehicle accident” with the plaintiff. The jury returned a $300,000.00 punitive damage award against the defendant.

The defendant argues that the questions and instructions allowed by the circuit court crossed the line from the existence and policy limits of defendant's liability insurance, and allowed the jury to wander in areas of pure speculation about whether there “may be” unlimited insurance coverage available to the defendant. The defendant argues that the circuit court permitted the jury to speculate about the potential post-judgment effect of their punitive damage award. This is because at the time of trial (and, in fact, up to the time of oral argument before this Court) there had been no determination by the circuit court that the defendant's insurance carrier would be obligated under Shamblin to indemnify the defendant for any liability in excess of policy limits.

The defendant's argument is patterned after Lacy v. CSX Transp. Inc., 205 W.Va. 630, 520 S.E.2d 418 (1999), where we disapproved a circuit court's actions allowing a jury to speculate on the effects of joint and several liability. We said, in Syllabus Point 4 of Lacy, that:
In a civil trial it is generally an abuse of discretion for the trial court to instruct the jury or permit argument by counsel regarding the operation of the doctrine of joint and several liability, where the purpose thereof is to communicate to the jury the potential post-judgment effect of their assignment of fault.

The defendant also argues that the circuit court's instruction to the jury was in error, because it was an improper comment upon the evidence. Rule 51 of the Rules of Civil Procedure [1998] says that, “the instructions given by the court ... shall not comment upon the evidence[.]” The defendant contends that by instructing the jury that “there may or may not be additional coverage to pay whatever your verdict may be,” the circuit court had given undue influence to one piece of the defendant's financial condition.

After carefully reviewing the appendix record, we find that the circuit court did not err. Counsel for the defendant “opened-the-door” to the issue of liability coverage when she asserted in opening argument that the defendant was financially unable to pay any punitive damage verdict when, in fact, he had liability insurance. Further, when counsel for the defendant asked questions leaving the jury with the impression that only $100,000.00 in coverage was available, she “opened-the-door” to the availability of coverage for an excess verdict. At the time of the punitive phase of the trial, both the plaintiff and defendant were aware that the liability insurer could be faced with paying an excess verdict pursuant to Shamblin. The plaintiff had sought to settle the case within the $100,000.00 policy limits. Taken together, even without a judicial ruling, these facts established that the liability insurer had “prima facie failed to act in its insured's best interest” and could be liable for an excess verdict. The circuit court correctly discerned that it would have been misleading to leave the jury thinking that only $100,000.00 in coverage was available.

Furthermore, the formulation of jury instructions is a matter within the discretion of the trial court:

The formulation of jury instructions is within the broad discretion of a circuit court, and a circuit court's giving of an instruction is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard. A verdict should not be disturbed based on the formulation of the language of the jury instructions so long as the instructions given as a whole are accurate and fair to both parties.
The appendix record establishes that the circuit court's instruction was accurate and based directly on the testimony of the defendant. Further, the instruction was fair to both parties.

Syllabus Point 6, Tennant v. Marion Health Care Foundation, Inc., 194 W.Va. 97, 459 S.E.2d 374 (1995).

We therefore find no error underlying the jury's punitive damage verdict.

IV.

CONCLUSION

We find no error in the circuit court's judgment order dated October 9, 2012, or in the circuit court's decision denying the defendant a new trial dated February 26, 2013.

The defendant makes two additional arguments that the circuit court erred by including lines for certain damages on the jury's verdict form. However, the defendant never raised any objection about these damages on the verdict form to the circuit court. “Where objections were not shown to have been made in the trial court, and the matters concerned were not jurisdictional in character, such objections will not be considered on appeal.” Syllabus Point 1, State Road Comm'n v. Ferguson, 148 W.Va. 742, 137 S.E.2d 206 (1964). Accordingly, we decline to consider these two assertions by the defendant.

Affirmed. Justice BENJAMIN concurs and reserves the right to file a separate opinion.
Justice LOUGHRY dissents and reserves the right to file a separate opinion.

LOUGHRY, Justice, dissenting:

“The object of tort law is to provide reasonable compensation for losses [.]” Roberts v. Stevens Clinic Hosp., Inc., 176 W.Va. 492, 504, 345 S.E.2d 791, 803 (1986). To that end, “ ‘[t]he general rule in awarding damages is to give compensation for pecuniary loss; that is, to put the plaintiff in the same position, so far as money can do it, as he would have been [in] if ... the tort [had] not [been] committed.’ ” Kessel v. Leavitt, 204 W.Va. 95, 187, 511 S.E.2d 720, 812 (1998) (quoting 5C Michie's Jur. Damages § 18, at 63 (footnote omitted)). In this case, the majority has turned this fundamental rule on its head by allowing a jury to award compensable damages based on fictitious evidence that bears no relationship to the plaintiff's actual losses. In such regard, the majority has determined when a tortiously injured person receives medical care for his or her injuries, that individual's recovery for the medical expenses incurred will be based upon an artificially inflated number that exists only in the medical provider's billing system rather than the actual amount the medical provider willingly accepts as full payment for the services rendered. The majority's conclusion that medical bills that include a “write-off” or discount—an amount no one pays—constitutes the “reasonable value” of the medical services rendered defies both logic and common sense. Therefore, I dissent.

Long ago, this Court recognized that “the very term ‘compensatory damages' implies that there must be actual loss before compensation can be given [.]” Douglass v. Railroad Co., 51 W.Va. 523, 533, 41 S.E. 911, 916 (1902). Yet, the majority's decision today allows a plaintiff's damages to be based on the amount a medical provider wishes it could charge for a particular service, not the amount necessary to put the plaintiff in the same financial position he or she was in before the tort occurred. The “write-offs” or discounts at issue here are not sums for which the plaintiff has incurred any liability because these are amounts which the medical provider never actually expects to be paid and never will be paid. Because neither the plaintiff, nor anyone on the plaintiff's' behalf, pays the “write-offs” or discounts, no loss occurs. Therefore, these amounts should not be recoverable.

Precluding recovery for the “write-offs” or discounts does not contravene the collateral source rule. The purpose of the collateral source rule is to prevent the jury from discounting a plaintiff's damages based on the fact that the plaintiff's bills have already been paid by someone else. As this Court has observed, “[t]he collateral source rule normally operates to preclude the offsetting of payments made by health and accident insurance companies or other collateral sources against the damages claimed by the injured party.” Syl. Pt. 7, Ratlief v. Yokum, 167 W.Va. 779, 280 S.E.2d 584 (1981) (emphasis added). “Because no one pays the write-off, it cannot possibly constitute payment of any benefit from a collateral source.” Robinson v. Bates, 112 Ohio St.3d 17, 857 N.E.2d 1195, 1200 (2006); see also Kastick v. U–Haul Co., 292 A.D.2d 797, 740 N.Y.S.2d 167, 169 (N.Y.App.Div.2002) (stating that “ ‘write-off’... is not an item of damages for which plaintiff may recover because plaintiff has incurred no liability therefor”); Moorhead v. Crozer Chester Med. Ctr., 564 Pa. 156, 765 A.2d 786 (2001) (finding collateral source rule does not apply to amounts written off by insurer since those amounts are never paid by collateral source), abrogated on other grounds by Northbrook Life Ins. Co. v. Commonwealth, 597 Pa. 18, 949 A.2d 333 (2008).

The majority reasons that these “write-offs” or discounts are protected by the collateral source rule because the plaintiff received the benefit of her bargain with the insurance carrier as well as a gratuitous benefit arising from the bargain with the medical provider. The fallacy of this reasoning is easily demonstrated.

The majority concludes that the “write-off” or discount is a benefit the plaintiff received from her insurer because she paid the premium and her insurer extinguished her liability for the full price of her medical care through a combination of cash payments and the negotiated “write off” or discount. However, the majority ignores the fact that the plaintiff was never liable for the inflated bill because at the time the charges were incurred, the medical provider and the insurer had already agreed on a different price for the services rendered. Furthermore, the “write off” or discount does not primarily benefit the plaintiff and to the extent that it does, it was not intended as compensation for the plaintiff's injuries. Rejecting the same reasoning employed by the majority in this case, the Supreme Court of California explained that

Insurers and medical providers negotiate rates in pursuit of their own business interests, and the benefits of the bargains made accrue directly to the negotiating parties. The primary benefit of discounted rates for medical care goes to the payer of those rates—that is, in largest part, to the insurer.

Nor does the insurer negotiate or the medical provider grant a discounted payment rate as compensation for the plaintiff's injuries .... [S]ellers in almost any industry may, for a variety of reasons, discount their prices for particular buyers, but a discounted price is not a payment.... Nor has the value of damages the plaintiff avoided ever been the measure of tort recovery. And even when the overall savings a health insurance organization negotiates for itself can be said to benefit an insured indirectly—through lower premiums or copayments, for example—it would be rare that these indirect benefits would coincidentally equal the negotiated rate differential for the medical services rendered the plaintiff.
Howell v. Hamilton Meats & Provisions, Inc., 52 Cal.4th 541, 129 Cal.Rptr.3d 325, 257 P.3d 1130, 1144 (2011) (internal quotations omitted).

Likewise, the “write-off” or discount is not a gratuitous provision of medical services because the medical provider agreed before treating the plaintiff to accept a certain amount in exchange for its services. The amount constitutes the medical provider's price that the plaintiff and her health insurer were obligated to pay. In Howell, the Court found that the gratuitous services exception to the rule limiting recovery to a plaintiff's economic loss “has no application to commercially-negotiated priced agreements like those between medical providers and health insurers,” observing that

[m]edical providers that agree to accept discounted payments by managed care organizations or other health insurers as full payment for a patient's care do so not a gift to the patient or insurer, but for commercial reasons and as a result of negotiations.... [H]ospitals and medical groups obtain commercial benefits from their agreements with health insurance organizations; the agreements guarantee the providers prompt payment of the agreed rates and often have financial incentives for plan members to choose the providers' services.... That plaintiffs are not permitted to recover undiscounted amounts from those who have injured them creates no danger these negotiations and agreements will disappear; the medical provider has no financial reason to care whether the tortfeasor is charged with or the plaintiff recovers the negotiated rate differential. Having agreed to accept the negotiated amount as full payment, a provider may not recover any difference between that and the billed amount through a lien on the tort recovery.
Howell, 257 P.3d at 1139–40 (citations omitted). Thus, the “write-off” or discount is not a collateral payment or benefit that is subject to the collateral source rule.

Given the current complexities of health care pricing structures, it is simply absurd to conclude that the amount billed for a certain procedure reflects the “reasonable value” of that medical service. Like retailers who raise the price of their goods by twenty-five percent before having a ten percent off sale, medical providers utilize the same sort of tactic to ensure a profit. In fact, “[b]ecause so many patients, insured, uninsured, and recipients under government health care programs, pay discounted rates, hospital bills have been called ‘insincere,’ in the sense that they would yield truly enormous profits if those prices were actually paid.” Howell, 257 P.3d at 1142 (citation omitted).

One authority reports that hospitals historically billed insured and uninsured patients similarly. Mark A. Hall & Carl E. Schneider, Patients As Consumers: Courts, Contracts, and the New Medical Marketplace, 106 Mich. L.Rev. 643, 663 (2008). With the advent of managed care, some insurers began demanding deep discounts, and hospitals shifted costs to less influential patients. Id. This authority reports that insurers generally pay about forty cents per dollar of billed charges and that hospitals accept such amounts in full satisfaction of the billed charges. Id.

As more medical providers are paid under fixed payment arrangements, another authority reports, hospital charge structures have become less correlated to hospital operations and actual payments. The Lewin Group, A Study of Hospital Charge Setting Practices i (2005). Currently, the relationship between charges and costs is “tenuous at best.” Id. at 7. In fact, hospital executives reportedly admit that most charges have “no relation to anything, and certainly not to cost.” Hall, Patients As Consumers at 665.
Stanley v. Walker, 906 N.E.2d 852, 857 (Ind.2009). Thus, to conclude that a medical bill that does not reflect the “write-off” or discount that will ultimately be given to the payer constitutes the reasonable value of the medical service rendered ignores the reality of modern medicine economics.

It is difficult to conceive how allowing the plaintiff to present to the jury fictitious evidence of amounts paid for medical services, while preventing the tortfeasor from challenging that evidence, serves the interests of justice. The petitioner in the instant case sought to introduce the amounts actually paid for the medical services not in an effort to establish a per se limit on the respondent's medical damages, but rather as evidence of precisely what the majority's new syllabus point prescribes—the reasonable value of those services. What more probative evidence of the reasonable value of the services could there be than the negotiated and paid rate for the services? What more could a defendant offer to rebut the prima facie presumption established in West Virginia Code § 57–5–4j? Are we to blindly accept the fiction that hospitals and other medical providers routinely and as a matter of freely-negotiated contracts accept less than the reasonable value of their services?

The collateral source rule should not be extended to permit plaintiffs to receive compensation for medical expenses that were never paid by anyone. The rule was intended to prevent tortfeasors from unfairly receiving a discount on the damages they are required to pay merely because a plaintiff was wise or fortunate enough to have procured insurance coverage. Limiting the amounts which can be recovered as damages for medical expenses to those amounts actually paid, as opposed to fictitious amounts generated by medical providers to ensure they can still make a profit after giving a substantial discount, does not thwart the rationale behind the collateral source rule. If tortfeasors are automatically required to compensate plaintiffs for their medical expenses at the highest possible price, regardless of the actual amounts paid, those costs will inevitably be passed on to the public through higher insurance premiums. “Tort law ... is not designed to be a Las Vegas game of chance; it serves no useful purpose to turn the tort system into a lottery where everyone pays high insurance premiums so that enormous windfalls can be allocated randomly.” Roberts, 176 W.Va. at 504, 345 S.E.2d at 803–04. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from the majority's decision in this case. BENJAMIN, Justice, concurring:

While I do not disagree with the majority's decision with regard to the other assignments of error, I would have found it unnecessary to address those issues and ordered a new trial based on the faulty compensable damages award.

(Filed July 18, 2014)

I wholeheartedly concur with the majority opinion's decision in this case. I write separately to express my belief that the majority opinion's new syllabus points are unnecessary because, in my opinion, the issue of the application of the collateral source rule to medical expense write-offs was long ago settled by this Court and is well-established law in West Virginia.

Almost forty years ago, in syllabus point 14 of Long v. City of Weirton, 158 W.Va. 741, 214 S.E.2d 832 (1975), superseded by statute on other grounds as stated in Pritchard v. Arvon, 186 W.Va. 445, 413 S.E.2d 100 (1991), Justice Charles Haden, for this Court, wrote that “[t]he award of special medical expenses in a personal injury case is predicated on proof of the reasonable value of such expenses necessarily incurred by reason of the defendant's negligence, and not upon the actual expenses paid. [Emphasis added.] Again writing for this Court, Justice Haden applied this same principle to determination of future medical expenses in syllabus point 15 of Jordan v. Bero, 158 W.Va. 28, 210 S.E.2d 618 (1974), which holds:

Justice Haden later became Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia.

To warrant a recovery for future medical expenses, the proper measure of damages is not simply the expenses or liability which shall or may be incurred in the future but it is, rather, the reasonable value of medical services as will probably be necessarily incurred by reason of the permanent effects of a party's injuries.
[Emphasis added.] This syllabus point from Jordan v. Bero was relied on more than twenty years later by Justice Franklin Cleckley in authoring this Court's opinion in Reed v. Wimmer, 195 W.Va. 199, 465 S.E.2d 199 (1995). These cases clearly establish that the measure of damages in a given case is the reasonable value of such damages; therefore, evidence of any amounts actually paid or payable are not admissible.

I believe that in the instant case, several if not all of the new syllabus points simply are not needed. This Court already has a long jurisprudence which establishes that the tortfeasor is responsible for the reasonable value of the damages, not the amount actually charged or paid. Thus, the majority opinion is not groundbreaking and it is in no way a departure from this Court's prior caselaw. Therefore, because the majority opinion is consistent with the well-settled precedent of this Court, I concur.


Summaries of

Kenney v. Liston

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.
Jul 18, 2014
233 W. Va. 620 (W. Va. 2014)

holding that “the law establishes a legal duty for a tortfeasor to repair any damage or losses carelessly inflicted upon a victim”

Summary of this case from American Towers LLC v. BPI, Inc.

In Kenney, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals addressed the application of the collateral source rule in situations in which a healthcare provider discounts or writes off a portion of a medical bill pursuant to an agreement with a plaintiff's health insurer.

Summary of this case from Simms ex rel. C.J. v. United States

identifying as collateral sources “veteran's and military hospitals,” “government pension programs such as Social Security,” “other government programs like Medicare and Medicaid,” and “social services,” among others

Summary of this case from Simms ex rel. C.J. v. United States

referring to the difference as "discounts or write-offs"

Summary of this case from Dedmon v. Steelman

discussing examples, which "are legion," of collateral sources inadmissible to reduce a defendant's liability and collecting cases

Summary of this case from Pressey v. Children's Hosp. Colo.
Case details for

Kenney v. Liston

Case Details

Full title:John N. KENNEY, Defendant Below, Petitioner v. Samuel C. LISTON, Plaintiff…

Court:Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.

Date published: Jul 18, 2014

Citations

233 W. Va. 620 (W. Va. 2014)
233 W. Va. 620

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