March 2nd, 2008

New York’s No-Fault Law Problem With "Serious Injuries"

New York has a No Fault law that applies to injuries from car accidents that limits the rights of people to bring suit unless they have a “serious injury.” And my upstate colleague Jim Reed at ZiffLaw described a fundamental problem with that law, via an email exchange with a prospective client: If you are lazy and “milk” the injury, you qualify to bring suit under New York’s statute, but if you struggle back to work, and work despite the pain and limitations you might have, you don’t qualify. The “serious injury” law, in other words, works as an incentive for people to be lazy and complain instead of being as productive as they can.

This problem arises because, under New York’s No-Fault Law, one can only bring a suit after an auto accident if the “serious injury” fits one of these definitions:

  1. A personal injury that results in death;
  2. Dismemberment;
  3. A significant disfigurement;
  4. A fracture;
  5. The loss of a fetus;
  6. Permanent loss of use of a body organ, member, function or system;
  7. Permanent consequential limitation of use of a body organ or member;
  8. Significant limitation of use of a body function or system; or
  9. A medically determined injury or impairment of a non- permanent nature which prevents the injured person from performing substantially all of the material acts which constitute such person’s usual and customary daily activities for not less than ninety days during the one hundred eighty days immediately following the occurrence of the injury or impairment” (See, for example, Oberly v. Bangs Ambulance; Insurance Law § 5102 [d]).

This significant restriction on bringing suit was a trade-off for the guaranteed health benefits of the No-Fault Law that started in 1973 and was amended in 1977 to the present formulation. But it also works in the counter-productive manner of encouraging people to stay home and not work. And that makes for bad public policy.

It also means that a fractured pinky that heals in a few weeks would qualify as “serious” under the law, but soft tissue back pain that lasts for years might not, especially if objective results don’t turn up on radiological studies or the physician does a poor job documenting the injury and the specifics of the limitations.

It is this conundrum that brings up the problem with “medical mills” that some folks complain about. In order to document the injury properly, one needs physicians who are familiar with the legal requirements of satisfying a statute that includes a “significant limitation of use of a body function or system.” That may not be the type of language that doctors learn in medical school or the way they were taught to make their medical records, creating a problem and cottage industry of those doctors who will document the way the legislature wants, and who will also find the time to testify in court.

And it brings yet another problem: Treating doctors may need to exaggerate certain claims of the patient to fit into legislatively defined categories in order to keep the tap open from the insurance company that is paying the bills, because the real injuries may not qualify. And the insurance company, by contrast, as an incentive to hire “independent” doctors to check the patient and rig the exams to show no injuries to close down the tap, even if the injuries are real. In fact, this is the subject of two lawsuits that have been brought in New York, that are discussed here:

Now some of these problems will exist anyway, even without the statutory framework. But it seems to me that the statute has exaggerated the problem, and it may be time for New York to revisit the subject to clean things up.

 

March 2nd, 2008

Avvo Rating System: Thanks, But I’ll Pass


The Avvo web site for rating lawyers came on line last year to the sound of widespread derision. I won’t re-invent the wheel, just point you to Scott Greenfield’s most recent post on the subject at Simple Justice, where he goes through some of his past criticisms, which Avvo has been working on from the beginning. The last time I checked it out, they wanted my credit card number just to write a review of another lawyer. Thanks, I thought, but I’ll pass.

Since Greenfield said today that many improvements had been made, I went back for a visit. After all, the days of lawyers or clients finding appropriate counsel from books is rapidly going the way of the dinosaur, and potential clients may find such websites that will replace Martindale-Hubbell. So this is the nightmare I found when I tried to create an account to update the profile they created for me:

A “terms of use” document that I started to read, before I realized it didn’t have an end. Or at least it didn’t have an end any rationale human being would ever see. After reading the part about giving them the right to change the terms at any time without my agreement, and this could be to take my first born for all I know, I knew it was unlikely I would agree to their terms of use.

It then went on to assert that they had the right to send me as many junk emails as they want from whoever they sell their lists to. You can’t opt out. I mean, really, are you guys kidding with this crap? [Edit: Apparently you can opt out of commercial emails, but not “service or account-related emails.” See the comments.]

Quickly disgusted, I copied and pasted the terms of use into a Word document, ran the word count, and found their 15-page magnum opus to be 4,983 words long. And some of it, for reasons known best to people who apparently don’t deal with actual humans, is IS WRITTEN IN ALL CAPS IN BLOCKY PARAGRAPHS FILLED WITH WRETCHED LEGALISTIC MUMBO JUMBO making it almost impossible to read. Is this where you put stuff when you really don’t want folks to read it?

I quickly left the site. Thanks, Avvo, I’ll pass again.

Addendum 3/27/08: More on lousy legal drafting using all caps at The Legal Satyricon, wth many links: Seven sixteenths of one inch… Maddox meets contract drafting

 

February 29th, 2008

AMA Analysis: Screwing Injured People Means Lower Malpractice Rates

OK, maybe this American Medical Association article didn’t have quite the same headline I used. But according to them, tort “reform” in the form of capped damages means there will be lower insurance rates.

In other words, if the burden of a terrible loss is heaped upon the victim and not the tortfeasor, then the person that caused the injury will be better off.

So why have a cap? I bet if we lowered the cap to zero, that premiums will go down even further. Really great, huh? Especially if you are the insurance company or the person that caused the injury.

Of course, there are also other ways to bring down premiums. Like getting rid of bad doctors and not engaging in a white coat of silence. In New York, 7% of doctors are responsible for 68% of the malpractice payouts.

Does this mean there should be no damage caps at all? Of course not. New York doesn’t have a one-size-fits-all cap on damages, and we do just fine (see How New York Caps Personal Injury Damages). The question of artificial damage caps really boils down to this: Who should bear the burden of a loss, the one that caused it or the one that suffered it?

(hat tip to Kevin M.D. for the link, though I’m guessing he has a slightly different view)

 

February 29th, 2008

Patients Billed for Medical Errors

Talk about chutzpah. First the doctor operated on the wrong side before correcting himself and operating on the right side. Then the patient was billed for both surgeries.

While 10 states will no longer allow billing for “never events” such as wrong site surgeries, 40 states still allow it.

But still, even if the state allows it, what goes through the mind of the person submitting that bill? Operate on the wrong side and then bill for it? Good grief. MSNBC has the story.

 

February 29th, 2008

Random Notes

Personal Injury Law Round-Up #51 is up at Perlmutter & Scheulke, which means next week is its first blawgiversary. This week it takes on more Riegel, punitive damages and lawyers gone wild;

Andrew Bluestone reports on testimony regarding a “two week brain fart;”

A new blog to add to my RSS feed: New York Workers Compensation Alliance Law Blog, which I’m delighted to see focuses on substance and policy. This appears to be a very rare beast, a group blog by practitioners;

And, of course, Blawg Review #148, spending its second straight week in Iowa, is up at Blawg IT by Brett Trout, with a theme of the meme. Next week Blawg Review goes to the Antitrust Review. No doubt after the Review does the Review many will want to, ahem, review it.