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Malpractice Liability
Do You Have a Dormat Malpractice Liability?
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Do You Have a Dormant Malpractice Liability?

You surely must hate even to think about a legal malpractice claim waiting to be filed against you for something that happened years ago. But, the case of Lyons v. Medical Malpractice Insurance Association, 730 N.Y.S.2d 345 (2001), illustrates that trial lawyers who thought they had represented their clients well in obtaining large settlements from both the hospital and the attending physician in a professional negligence action can be surprised to find out the clients later found out differently.

Alexander Lyons was unfortunate to develop bacterial meningitis at age 3 that would cause him profound mental retardation, autism and spastic diplegia cerebral palsy. He will never be capable of independent living. Alexander's father, David Lyons, brought suit against both the hospital where this occurred and the physician who delivered the child, claiming that the duty of care was breached during delivery. A jury agreed and awarded Alexander and David $7,065,000 from the hospital. In lieu of a certain lengthy appeal, the father settled with the hospital for about $2,400,000 in cash.

Do Not Rely on Adversary's Offer

Their lawyers, skilled in this type of case, also negotiated a settlement with the doctor, who had a $1 million insurance policy with Medical Malpractice Insurance Association (MMIA). On behalf of its insured physician, MMIA's claim adjuster handling the case offered a combination of up front cash plus future lifetime payments for Alexander's benefit, payable for the rest of his life, with a minimum guarantee of 20 years. The insurer represented to the lawyers that the "present day value" of this package was $940,180. This was a good offer, the lawyers convinced their client David, because it approached the doctor's policy limit.

The claim adjuster had told David through his attorneys that the "yield to normal life expectancy" from the settlement would amount to $2,540,300, and that also appealed to the boy's father. Of course, that figure was based on this 11-year-old boy living another 69 years until age 80. Realistically, a person with these permanent injuries has a life expectancy much shorter than that of a normal person. Several life insurance company underwriters had already predicted an abbreviated lifespan for Alexander, including American International Life Assurance Company of New York's assignment of a "rated age" of 54. It offered lifetime monthly benefits for Alexander's benefit, knowing that it likely would be paying them for not much longer, if al all, then the 20-year guarantee period.

The physician's insurer knew the cost of an annuity from this life insurance company to provide these future benefits was only about $410,000. But, because the insurer did not intend to divulge the true cost to the claimants or their attorneys, it had its structured settlement broker calculate a fictitious "present day value" that would be about $265,000 higher than it would actually pay. This evidently was the way they operated regularly. In previous quotes for this case, the broker even offered to the claim adjuster to make the fictitious value higher by using a different assumed interest rate. Notice that the claim adjuster never used the word "cost." Instead, it was called "present day value."

Fee Overcharge was Negligence

David settled, assuming that his attorneys had pushed the insurer to pay out nearly all that the doctor had in coverage, not realizing that the offer was about $265,000 shy of what the claim adjuster had said it was worth — roughly the same amount of the cash component of the offer. He then paid his attorneys based on an agreement that the lawyers would get a fee equal to one-third of the total amount recovered. There is a suggestion in the record that the attorneys actually took less than one-third of what they thought had been recovered in damages, but it is clear that they took too much based on the actual recovery.

Alexander Lyons, who had been cheated at age 3 out of a normal life, had now been defrauded, his father alleges, by the insurer for the physician and unwittingly overcharged by his own attorneys who did not know the settlement was worth a whole lot less than the claim adjuster had said. Later, when his father found out that the settlement may not have been worth what they had been told, he sued everyone who had been involved in that settlement. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the medical malpractice insurer; to the broker who furnished the illustrations and their fictional values; and to the annuity issuer and its affiliated property and casualty company that took the qualified assignment, both aware that the claimants had been told the value of the settlement was much higher than the amount they were being paid for the annuity plus what the claimant was being paid in cash. Only the lawyers representing Alexander and his father remained as defendants, as far as the trial court was concerned. This gave the claimants the necessary leverage to settle with their own lawyers.

The trial court ruled, as a matter of law, that there existed no privity between the claimants and the insurer. Therefore, even though the insurer did not deny making false representations to the claimants, the trial court accepted the defendants' argument that the claimants should not have relied on these representations. Fortunately for Alexander, the appellate court reversed the trial court and the matter will now be decided on the facts—whether there was fraud or intentional misrepresentation by the insurer to induce the claimants to give up their property right of the tort claim against the physician. But, the attorneys who thought they had done a great job representing their clients in settling with the hospital and the physician learned the hard way that they should not have trusted their adversaries to tell the truth.

This article was written by Richard B. Risk, JD
 
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