|
Salgado
v. County of Los Angeles
80 Cal.Rptr.2d 46 ( Cal.1998)
Dec. 7, 1998. As Modified Feb. 17, 1999. Rehearing
Denied
Infant
patient brought medical malpractice action against
county to recover for injuries he suffered
during birth. The Superior Court, Los Angeles County,
No. SCC 22624, Philip H. Hickok, J., entered
judgment on jury verdict awarding damages
to patient, and thereafter granted county's motion
to cap noneconomic damages at statutory maximum
of $250,000, and to allow periodic payment of
future damages. Both parties appealed. The Court
of Appeal reversed award of attorney fees
and costs to patient, but affirmed award of periodic
payments in its entirety. The Supreme Court
granted review, superseding opinion of Court of
Appeal. The Supreme Court, Mosk, J., held that:
(1) patient was entitled to receive amount
that capped future noneconomic damages award would
have yielded if invested prudently at time of judgment;
(2) trial court could not disregard jury's determination
as to present value of patient's future medical
costs; (3) county was properly permitted to pay
patient's future damages, both economic and noneconomic,
in equal installments over remaining 66.8 years
of his life expectancy; and (4) patient was not
entitled to award of attorney fees and costs.
Reversed
and remanded with directions.
Opinion, 67 Cal.Rptr.2d 256, vacated.
Facts
Law
- Annuitizing damage awards(economi and non-economic
damages)
Application
A.
Present value of non-economic damages
B.
Present value of economic damages
C.
Validity of annuitizing plaintiff's awards
D. Attorney fees
Conclusion
MOSK,
Justice. This
matter involves the application of Code of Civil
Procedure section 667.7
and Civil Code section 3333.2, both of which
were enacted as part of the Medical
Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA).
The former provision requires the
superior court, at the request of either
party, to order that an award for future
damages exceeding $50,000 in an action against
a health care provider be paid
on a periodic basis rather than in a lump
sum. The latter provision places a cap
of $250,000 on the liability of a health
care provider, in an action based on
professional negligence, for an injured
plaintiff's noneconomic losses.
Through
his guardian ad litem, Jabes Salgado (hereafter
plaintiff) brought this
action for medical malpractice against,
among others, the County of Los Angeles
(hereafter County) for permanent injuries
sustained at Harbor UCLA Medical
Center during his birth. For his noneconomic
injuries, the jury awarded plaintiff
$10,000 for past and $550,000 for future
pain and suffering. The superior
court applied the statutory cap of $250,000
and, subtracting the $10,000
award, reduced the award for future pain
and suffering to $240,000. It ordered
that sum to be paid on a periodic basis
in equal installments over the course of
plaintiff's life expectancy of 66.8 years,
funded by a $61,785 annuity purchased
by defendant. For his economic injuries,
the jury awarded $125,000 for future
medical costs and found that the present
value of that award was $50,000. The
superior court ordered that the $125,000
award also be paid on a periodic basis
in equal installments over the course of
plaintiff's life expectancy of 66.8 years,
funded by a $32,179 annuity purchased by
defendant.
For
the reasons stated below, we conclude that, although
the superior court not
unreasonably **588 ***49 required payment
of noneconomic damages over a
period of 66.8 years, it erred in reducing
the sum used to fund the stream of
future periodic payments from $240,000 to
$61,785. As will appear, plaintiff
was entitled to periodic payment of future
noneconomic damages totaling, over
time, the equivalent of an immediate lump-sum
award of $240,000 at the time
of judgment, i.e., what the sum of $240,000
would have yielded if invested
prudently at the time of judgment. The superior
court also erred in *636
disregarding the jury's present value calculation
of future economic damages.
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of
the Court of Appeal and remand for
recalculation of the awards.
I
[Facts]
On
June 15, 1988, plaintiff was born at Harbor UCLA
Medical Center owned by
County. During a difficult vaginal delivery,
physicians fractured plaintiff's left
arm and damaged the brachial plexus nerves
in his right arm, resulting in a
permanent disability to his upper arm known
as Erb's Palsy. As a consequence of
his injuries, plaintiff has no reflexes
and a 30 percent loss of strength in his right
arm; he holds it in an unusual position,
with the shoulder turned inward, and is
unable to rotate it; nor can he raise the
arm above shoulder height.
On
January 26, 1989, plaintiff filed a medical malpractice
action against County.
At trial, the jury was instructed regarding
the measure of damages for pain and
suffering. The instruction explained: "No
definite standard or method of
calculation is prescribed by law by which
to fix reasonable compensation for
pain and suffering. Nor is the opinion of
any witness required as to the amount of
such reasonable compensation. Furthermore,
the argument of counsel as to the
amount of damages is not evidence of reasonable
compensation. In making an
award for pain and suffering you shall exercise
your authority with calm and
reasonable judgment and the damages you
fix shall be just and reasonable in the
light of the evidence. [¶] This is
non-economic damage."
The
jury was also instructed regarding the measure
of damages for future
economic losses. The instruction explained
that an award for such losses "shall
include the reasonable value of medical
care and therapy reasonably certain to
be required and given in the future. [¶]
This is economic damage." In addition,
the jury was instructed regarding future
economic losses as follows: "Any award
for future economic loss must be only for
its present cash value. [¶] Present cash
value is the present sum of money which,
together with the investment return
thereon when invested so as to yield the
highest rate of return consistent with
reasonable security, will pay the equivalent
of lost future benefits at the times, in
the amounts, and for the period that you
find such future benefits would have
been received. [¶] The present cash
value will, of course, be less than the amount
you find to be the loss of such future benefits."
The
jury was instructed that it could consider the
fact that the life expectancy of
plaintiff, who was then five years old,
was 66.8 additional *637 years. In closing
argument, counsel for plaintiff showed the
jury amounts indicated by experts for
future economic damages, stating that "the
present value is what the court
instructed you to follow." Counsel for County
did not refer to the issue.
The jury returned a verdict of liability
against County. In a special verdict, it
found that plaintiff sustained injury in
the amount of $10,000 for past pain,
suffering, inconvenience, physical impairment
or disfigurement, and would
sustain injury in the amount of $550,000
for future such noneconomic injuries.
It found that he would sustain injury in
the amount of "approximately
$125,000" for future medical care and therapy,
and determined the present
value of that award was $50,000. It found
that he would sustain "zero amount
[of] dollars" in injury for loss of future
earnings.
County
brought posttrial motions to cap noneconomic damages
at $250,000,
pursuant to Civil Code section 3333.2, and
for periodic payment of future
damages, pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
section 667.7. Plaintiff submitted
a variety of proposals for periodic payments,
which would have provided for a
stream of payments over a short period of
years, during the time of his
educationand early job training. After considering
the proposals,
the superior court determined that because
plaintiff would suffer noneconomic
injury from his disability throughout his
life, "setting periodic payments to
correspond with his life expectancy is proper
in this case." It authorized County
to purchase annuities to fund the periodic
payments.
The
superior court entered a judgment for plaintiff
to the following effect.
County was ordered to pay to plaintiff,
if living, monthly payments of $299.26
over a period of 66 years, 10 months, "representing
the future pain and suffering award of $240,000."
It was ordered to pay to plaintiff, if living,
monthly
payments of $155.87 over a period of 66
years, 10 months, "representing the
future medical expenses award of $125,000."
It was also ordered to pay
plaintiff's attorney fees and costs. Liability
for the periodic payments was to be
assigned to an annuity provider, which would
purchase an annuity contract
from an insurance company. On purchase of
the annuities, plaintiff was to
execute a satisfaction of judgment against
County. The order did not include
provision for payment of plaintiff's award
of $10,000 for past pain and suffering
or an outstanding Medi-Cal lien of $2,623.89.
Both parties appealed.
The
Court of Appeal reversed the judgment to the extent
that it required the
County to pay plaintiff's attorney fees
and costs, but affirmed in its entirety the
award of periodic payments, observing: "We
acknowledge this result is harsh as
applied to Jabes. Nevertheless it is compelled
by the *638 express terms of Civil
Code section 3333.2 and Code of Civil Procedure
section 667.7." It remanded
the matter to the superior court with directions
to enter a new judgment
consistent with its opinion. We granted
review.
II
[Annuitizing
damages award - economic and non-economic damages]
Code
of Civil Procedure section 667.7, subdivision
(a), provides that "[i]n any
action for injury or damages against a provider
of health services, a superior
court shall, at the request of either party,
enter a judgment ordering that money
damages or its equivalent for future damages
of the judgment creditor be paid in
whole or in part by periodic payments rather
than by a lump-sum payment if the
award equals or exceeds fifty thousand dollars
($50,000) in future damages." "
'Future damages' includes damages for future
medical treatment, care or
custody, loss of future earnings, loss of
bodily function, or future pain and
suffering of the judgment creditor." (Id.,
subd. (e)(1).) With the exception of
damages awarded for loss of future earnings,
periodic payments are subject to
modification in the event of the death of
the judgment creditor. (Id., § 667.7,
subds. (b)(1), (c).) [FN1]
FN1.
"Although the statute does not expressly provide
what modification should follow the plaintiff's
death, in context it is
evident that the Legislature contemplated that
a defendant's continuing
liability for future damages other than damages
for loss of
future earnings would be subject to termination
on the plaintiff's death."
(American Bank & Trust Co. v. Community
Hospital (1984) 36
Cal.3d 359, 368, fn. 8, 204 Cal.Rptr. 671, 683
P.2d 670; see also id.
at p. 373, 204 Cal.Rptr. 671, 683 P.2d 670;
Code Civ. Proc., § 667.7,
subds. (b)(2), (c), (f).)
Code
of Civil Procedure section 667.7, subdivision
(f), explains the legislative
purpose as follows: "By authorizing periodic
payment judgments, it is the ...
intent of the Legislature that the courts
will utilize such judgments to provide
compensation sufficient to meet the needs
of an injured plaintiff and those
persons who are dependent on the plaintiff
for whatever period is necessary
while eliminating the potential windfall
from a lump-sum recovery which was
intended to provide for the care of an injured
plaintiff over an extended period
who then dies shortly after the judgment
is paid."
In
American Bank & Trust Co. v. Community Hospital,
supra, 36 Cal.3d 359, 204 Cal.Rptr. 671, 683 P.2d
670, a majority upheld Code of Civil Procedure
section 667.7 against claims that it violated
the state and federal constitutional guarantees
of due process, equal protection, and the right
to jury trial, concluding, inter alia, that it
was rationally related to the legitimate objective
of reducing insurance costs. "As the legislative
history of MICRA indicates, one of the factors
which contributed to the high cost of malpractice
insurance was the need for insurance companies
to retain large reserves to ***51 **590 pay out
sizable immediate lump sum awards. The adoption
of a periodic payment procedure permits insurers
to retain fewer liquid reserves and to increase
investments, thereby reducing *639 the costs to
insurers and, in turn, to insureds. In addition,
the portion of section 667.7 which provides for
termination of a significant portion of the remaining
future damage payments in the event of the plaintiff's
death is obviously related to the goal of reducing
insurance costs." (36 Cal.3d at pp. 372-
373, 204 Cal.Rptr. 671, 683 P.2d 670.) If requested
by a party, periodic payments are mandatory. "[T]he
legislative history of section 667. 7 leaves little
doubt that here the Legislature intended to impose
a mandatory duty on the trial court to enter a
periodic payment judgment in cases falling within
the four corners of the section." (Fein v.
Permanente Medical Group (1985) 38 Cal.3d 137,
155, 211 Cal.Rptr. 368, 695 P.2d 665, fn. omitted.)
American
Bank & Trust Co. requires that, in order to
preserve the right to a jury trial, Code of Civil
Procedure section 667.7 should be interpreted
to require the jury to designate the portion of
its verdict that is intended to compensate for
future damages. (36 Cal.3d at p. 376, 204 Cal.Rptr.
671, 683 P.2d 670.) "Under section 667.7's
procedure, this 'future damage' figure plays a
number of crucial roles: (1) it identifies the
amount that the jury has determined as attributable
to past and present damages, an amount which the
plaintiff will be entitled to receive in an immediate
lump sum payment at the time of judgment, and
(2) it determines whether the periodic payment
procedure will be applicable to the case or not--depending
on whether future damages are found to equal or
exceed $50,000." (Ibid.)
The
periodic payment schedule is based upon the award
of future damages. Hrimnak v. Watkins (1995) 38
Cal.App.4th 964, 974, 45 Cal.Rptr.2d 514 explains:
"When a party properly invokes section 667.7,
'... the [trial] court must fashion the periodic
payments based on the gross amount of future damages.'
[Citations.] This is because if a present value
award is periodized, a plaintiff might not be
fully compensated for his or her future losses;
the judgment, in effect, would be discounted twice:
first by reducing the gross amount to present
value and second by deferring payment." (Italics
in original.) "The proper approach ... is
for the jury to determine the gross amount of
future damages and for the court to structure
a periodic payment schedule based on that amount."
(Ibid.) "In structuring a periodic-payment
schedule under section 667.7, a trial court is
'guided by the evidence of future damages' introduced
at trial. [Citations.] The fundamental goal in
this respect is to attempt to match losses with
compensation 'to ensure that money paid to an
injured plaintiff will in fact be available when
the plaintiff incurs the anticipated expenses
or losses in the future.' " (Id. at p. 975,
45 Cal.Rptr.2d 514.)
Code
of Civil Procedure section 667.7 applies equally
to economic and noneconomic damages. (Id., subds.
(a) & (e).) In both cases, the fundamental
goal is to match losses with compensation as the
losses occur. [FN2]
FN2.
The Uniform Periodic Payment of Judgment Act
does not require periodic payment of damages
for future noneconomic losses. (14 West's U.
Laws Ann. (1998 supp.) U. Periodic Payment of
Judgments (1990) § 2.) The comment to section
2 of the act explains: "Although most states
consider noneconomic loss to be sufficiently
quantifiable to permit a jury to assign a lump-sum
dollar amount to such loss, it does not appear
to be realistic to carry the concept of quantification
to the point of yearly (or monthly) payments
for noneconomic loss, adjusted for inflation....
There is no universal measure of the value of
pain, embarrassment over facial scars, or the
crippling loss of limbs or bodily functions.
Yet, juries do determine the monetary value
of these injuries. Asking a jury to annualize
a value for these types of noneconomic losses
and fix an inflation factor for each future
year seems to compound the unreality of the
task.... For these reasons and because practicality
requires that funds be made available for the
payment of attorney's fees and expenses, it
was decided that future damages for noneconomic
loss should not be subject to periodic payments
under the Act." (Id. at p. 15.) In providing
for periodic payment of noneconomic damages
under Code of Civil Procedure section 667.7,
the Legislature evidently rejected the concerns
expressed in the comment. Nonetheless, at oral
argument counsel for amici curiae California
Medical Association, California Dental Association,
and California Healthcare Association observed
that defendant's request for periodic payment
of noneconomic damages in this matter was "aberrational";
defendants generally prefer payment of an up-front
lump sum.
Civil
Code section 3333.2, subdivision (b), places a
cap on a defendant's liability for noneconomic
damages: "In no action shall the amount of
damages for noneconomic losses exceed two hundred
fifty thousand dollars ($250,000)." The purpose
of the provision is to limit the out-of- pocket
costs of defendants to $250,000. It places no
limit on the amount of injury sustained by the
plaintiff, as assessed by the trier of fact, but
only on the amount of the defendant's liability
therefor.
Civil
Code section 3333.2 applies to the total of all
noneconomic damages, past and future. Thus, an
immediate lump-sum award of past noneconomic damages
exceeding $250,000 must be capped at that amount.
An immediate lump-sum award of future noneconomic
damages exceeding $250,000 is subject to the same
cap.
If
the award for future noneconomic damages is to
be paid out periodically pursuant to Code of Civil
Procedure section 667.7, the plaintiff is entitled
to receive, over time, the equivalent of the immediate
lump-sum award at the time of judgment, capped
at $250,000, i.e., the amount that the capped
award would have yielded if invested prudently
at the time of judgment. Any other result would
be neither logical nor consistent with the MICRA
provisions plainly entitling an injured plaintiff
to an award not exceeding--i.e., up to the amount
of--$250,000. Thus, a plaintiff who receives an
award of noneconomic damages in an immediate lump
sum at the time of judgment *641 will be recompensed
no more and no less than a plaintiff who receives
the identical award, in terms of its value in
current dollars, in the form of a stream of periodic
payments, either at his own request or at the
request of the defendant. Similarly, a defendant
who pays an award in an immediate lump sum at
the time of judgment will pay no more and no less
than a defendant who pays out the identical award,
in terms of its value in current dollars, in the
form of a stream of periodic payments, either
at its own request or at the request of the plaintiff.
In this way, neither the plaintiff nor the defendant
will achieve an undue windfall simply depending
on whether the full award for noneconomic damages
is paid at once at the time of judgment or is
paid over time.
As
discussed, Code of Civil Procedure section 667.7,
was enacted for the express purpose of avoiding
a windfall to the plaintiff's family in the event
of his or her premature death, not of providing
an unfair benefit to the defendant by reducing
its obligation to less than the equivalent of
a lump-sum award of $250,000 received at the time
of the judgment. Indeed, such a reduction would
appear to contradict the legislative directive
of the provision "to provide compensation
sufficient to meet the needs of an injured plaintiff
... for whatever period is necessary...."
(Code Civ. Proc, § 667.7, subd. (f).) In
addition, under the superior court's approach,
the time- related penalty would affect plaintiffs
differently depending on their life expectancy:
a child, with a long life expectancy would receive
far less in terms of the real value of an award
than would an older person. Such an arbitrary
result would appear to be inconsistent with the
purpose of Code of Civil Procedure section 667.7.
"It
must be remembered that the $250,000 limitation
established by MICRA represents the Legislature's
attempt to cap noneconomic damages and does not
reflect a legislative determination that a person
injured as a result of medical malpractice does
not suffer such damages." (Schiernbeck v.
Haight (1992) 7 Cal.App.4th 869, 880, 9 Cal.Rptr.2d
716.) The $250,000 cap, then, is not a legislative
attempt to estimate the true damages suffered
by plaintiffs, but rather an attempt to control
and reduce medical malpractice insurance costs
by placing a predictable, uniform limit on the
defendant's liability for noneconomic damages.
In
Fein v. Permanente Medical Group, supra, 38 Cal.3d
at page 163, 211 Cal.Rptr. 368, 695 P.2d 665,
we explained the Legislature's choice of a uniform
dollar limit rather than, for example, a percentage
reduction of all noneconomic damage awards: "One
of the problems identified in the legislative
hearings was the unpredictability of the size
of large noneconomic damage awards, resulting
from the inherent difficulties in valuing such
damages and the great disparity in the price tag
*642 which different juries placed ***53 **592
on such losses. The Legislature could reasonably
have determined that an across-the-board limit
would provide a more stable base on which to calculate
insurance rates. Furthermore, ... the Legislature
may have felt that the fixed $250,000 limit would
promote settlements by eliminating 'the unknown
possibility of phenomenal awards for pain and
suffering that can make litigation worth the gamble.'
" Because predictability was the goal, as
Fein suggests, Civil Code section 3333.2 should
be interpreted to provide a uniform limit of $250,000
in current dollars at the time of judgment regardless
of when the damages are actually to be paid. Any
lower limit simply provides the defendant with
a windfall, without adding to the predictability
of judgments.
In
addition, the general view at the time of MICRA's
adoption, in 1975, appears to have been that the
"present value rule" --the rule that
future damages must be reduced to the present
value if awarded as a lump sum--does not apply
to pain and suffering damages. (See, e.g., Braddock
v. Seaboard Air Line Railroad Company (Fla.1955)
80 So.2d 662, 666 [observing that the "weight
of authority" is against reduction of noneconomic
damages to present value]; see also Oliveri v.
Delta S.S. Lines, Inc. (2d Cir.1988) 849 F.2d
742, 750- 751 [citing decisions from the Fifth,
Eighth, Ninth and Tenth Circuits and Florida,
Pennsylvania, Georgia, Texas, and Illinois to
the effect that most courts hold that awards for
future noneconomic damages should not be discounted
to present value in the same manner as awards
for future economic losses, because of the arbitrariness
and artificiality of such a method].)
As
Oliveri explains, in the case of an award of economic
damages such as lost future earnings, the jury
makes an estimate of the actual amounts that plaintiff
would have received over the course of his working
years. (Oliveri v. Delta S.S. Lines, Inc., supra,
849 F.2d at p. 749.) "Since those dollars
will be received now, rather than in the years
they would have been earned absent the injury,
it makes sense to discount them to present value.
And since the interest rate used to discount to
present value is a function of lenders' estimates
of future inflation, it makes sense to reflect
the likely inflation rate in the discounting process,
either by adjusting the wages upward to reflect
inflation or adjusting the interest rate downward
to arrive at an inflation-adjusted discount rate."
(Ibid.) In the case of an award of noneconomic
damages, however, "the jury is not determining
the precise amount of dollars the plaintiff would
have received in future years. On the contrary,
the jury is invited to select some general sum
that the plaintiff should receive now as compensation
for the pain and suffering he will endure in future
years. Normally, that sum is a round number, determined
without any precise calculation. It is rather
artificial to take such a number *643 ... and
then refine it with precision to present value
by an inflation-adjusted discount rate."
(Ibid.)
As
these cases suggest, a jury award for future pain
and suffering has generally been regarded as the
jury's rough estimate of the amount of money paid
at the time of judgment that would compensate
the plaintiff for all his future pain and suffering,
rather than as the gross amount of an annuity
that would compensate the plaintiff year by year
for his suffering in each year. It would seem
to follow, in the absence of any legislative history
to the contrary, that when the Legislature capped
such awards at $250,000, it meant the limit to
apply to a lump sum paid at the time of the judgment,
or to the present value of periodic future payments,
but not to the gross sum of such future payments.
[7] The defendant liable for periodic payments
may itself fund the periodic payments ordered
by the superior court or the parties may stipulate
to satisfaction of the judgment through the purchase
of an annuity. (See Schneider v. Kaiser Foundation
Hospitals (1989) 215 Cal.App.3d 1311, 1314, 264
Cal.Rptr. 227 [attorney fees on the periodic payment
portion of a judgment are to be based on the present
value of the periodic payments, which is "normally
best represented by the cost of the annuity purchased
to fund the payments"]; 14 West's U. Laws
Ann., supra, U. Periodic Payment of Judgments
(1990) § 11 [authorizing the funding of periodic
payments by annuity].) If an annuity is used,
it must be sufficient to cover a stream of periodic
payments that total the ***54 **593 amount of
future damages. (See American Bank & Trust
Co. v. Community Hospital, supra, 36 Cal.3d at
pp. 376-377, 204 Cal.Rptr. 671, 683 P.2d 670 [court
fashions details of a periodic payment schedule
based on the amount of future damages designated
by the jury].) The plaintiff is entitled to no
less, and to no more. [FN3]
FN3.
In this case, as discussed, defendant sought
to satisfy the judgment through purchase of
annuities, presumably to reduce its overall
out-of-pocket costs. As amici curiae California
Medical Association, California Dental Association,
and California Healthcare Association point
out, defendants may, in some instances, obtain
an additional savings by funding periodic payments
with an annuity purchased from an insurance
company. Even though the jury, based on the
evidence presented at trial, concludes that
the plaintiff has a fairly long life expectancy,
life insurance companies, after reviewing the
plaintiff's medical records and applying actuarial
principles, frequently are willing to assume
a shorter life expectancy and price an annuity
accordingly. Such a savings to defendant has
no adverse impact on the plaintiff because the
annuity must continue to pay periodic payments
even if the plaintiff lives longer than the
life insurance company anticipated.
Of
course, a defendant preferring to avoid making
a lump-sum payment cannot be required by the court
to purchase an annuity or otherwise to immediately
satisfy in full a judgment of periodic payments
by means of a lump- sum payment. Rather, Code
of Civil Procedure section 667.7 may be *644 used
by the defendant to avoid buying an annuity or
taking any other step that is tantamount to immediate
satisfaction of a future damages award of $50,000
or more. (See Hrimnak v. Watkins, supra, 38 Cal.App.4th
at p. 982, 45 Cal.Rptr.2d 514 [permitting parties
to stipulate to satisfaction of judgment through
purchase of an annuity, but suggesting that the
court cannot compel the arrangement].) Nor can
a plaintiff be required to agree to the use of
an annuity as a means of funding future payments.
" 'If plaintiff wishes to accept an annuity
as satisfaction of the judgment she may do so,
but the law does not require her to agree to that.
Defendants' obligation is to pay the money, in
the amounts and at the times that will be specified."
(Ibid.) As Hrimnak observes, Code of Civil Procedure
section 667.7 makes no reference to a requirement
concerning annuity funding or to satisfaction
of judgment. "[I]f the law is to impose such
a requirement, the law should come from the Legislature
and not from the courts." (38 Cal.App.4th
at p. 982, 45 Cal.Rptr.2d 514.) [FN4]
FN4.
County has conceded that the trial court erred
in requiring plaintiffs to execute a satisfaction
of judgment. (See Hrimnak v. Watkins, supra,
38 Cal.App.4th at p. 982, 45 Cal.Rptr.2d 514.)
The
Court of Appeal thus erred in concluding that
its concededly "harsh" result was compelled
by American Bank & Trust Co. v. Community
Hospital, supra, 36 Cal.3d 359, 204 Cal.Rptr.
671, 683 P.2d 670, which it understood to authorize
"insurers to purchase annuities to fund periodic
payments at a smaller cost than would be required
to make a lump sum payment." Not so. American
Bank & Trust Co. makes no mention whatever
of annuities; nor does it otherwise permit the
defendant who requests periodic payments to drastically
reduce the total value of a capped award of future
noneconomic damages by making periodic payments
without any adjustment to account for what the
award would have yielded if invested prudently
at the time of judgment. Rather, as discussed,
American Bank & Trust Co. points to the savings
achieved simply by virtue of permitting the defendant
or insurer to avoid making a large one- time lump-sum
payment: "The adoption of a periodic payment
procedure permits insurers to retain fewer liquid
reserves and to increase investments, thereby
reducing the costs to insurers and, in turn, to
insureds. In addition, the portion of section
667.7 which provides for termination of a significant
portion of the remaining future damage payments
in the event of the plaintiff's death is obviously
related to the goal of reducing insurance costs."
(American Bank & Trust Co. v. Community Hospital,
supra, 36 Cal.3d at p. 373, 204 Cal.Rptr. 671,
683 P.2d 670.) Such savings may be substantial.
For example, if a health care provider statistically
calculates that it will experience one judgment
against it a year, it knows that its annual noneconomic
damages will be statutorily capped at $250,000.
Under Code of Civil Procedure section 667.7, it
may make periodic payments of those damages, and
thereby reduce the annual reserves by a corresponding
amount. Excess reserves may be further reduced
in the event of a plaintiff's premature death.
The potential profits to the insurer *645 from
investing those excess reserves may be passed
on to the health providers in the form of lower
insurance costs.
III
[Application
to court-ordered annuities]
Turning
to the matter before us, we apply the foregoing
principles to the issues
presented.
A
[Present
value of non-economic damages]
[9]
The jury awarded plaintiff $10,000 for past noneconomic
damages and $550,000 for future noneconomic damages.
The superior court reduced the award for future
noneconomic damages to $240,000 (the statutory
cap of $250,000 minus $10,000 for past noneconomic
damages.) It permitted County to pay the judgment
for future noneconomic damages by purchasing an
annuity for $61,785.
County
argues that the award of $550,000 for future noneconomic
damages was correctly treated as representing
the jury's finding of the amount of future damages,
not the value in current dollars of the pain and
suffering plaintiff would suffer in the future.
According to County, the jury in fact understood
that it was arriving at a figure in inflated future
dollars and the superior court properly reduced
that future sum of $550,000 to $240,000, to be
paid periodically and funded by an annuity that
would cost $61,785 (roughly the present value
of $240,000).
Plaintiff
argues that the $550,000 represented the value
in current dollars of the pain and suffering plaintiff
would suffer in the future. According to plaintiff,
the jury understood that it was arriving at a
figure in current dollars. He argues that when
the superior court reduced the award to comply
with the $250,000 MICRA cap, that reduced amount
also represented current dollars whose value must
be preserved if the award is to be paid periodically
over the course of time. [FN5]
FN5.
As stated by plaintiff: "When the County
elects to pay Jabes' award for future noneconomic
damages in one lump sum, the $240,000 jury award
(in 1993 dollars) literally translates to $240,000
in cash paid (again, in 1993 dollars). Where the
County elects to pay Jabes' award through periodic
payments, the $240,000 jury award in 1993 dollars
must still translate to the 'equivalent' of $240,000
in 1993 dollars, though paid in installments."
Instead, County was permitted to take the same
$240,000 that it would otherwise be required to
pay at once at the time of judgment and dole it
out over 66.8 years, retaining for itself all
of the value of investing the money during those
years. By purchasing an annuity, it could reap
that value all at once, paying only a total of
$61,785 to fund the judgment, instead of the $240,000
for which it was liable. In effect, then, the
superior court erroneously treated the capped
award of $240,000 as a sum in future dollars,
and reduced it, for all purposes, to a present
value of $61,785.
The
record as a whole suggests that plaintiff is correct:
the jury calculated the value of plaintiff's future
noneconomic losses in current dollars--i.e., *646
what he was entitled to receive from the County
in an immediate lump- sum payment--not in future
dollars. The special verdict form required the
jury only to state the amount of damage that "will
be sustained by plaintiff ... for future pain,
suffering, inconvenience, physical impairment
or disfigurement." It was instructed that
"[n]o definite standard or method of calculation
is required by law by which to fix reasonable
compensation for pain and suffering." Moreover,
it was not told that damages for past and future
noneconomic losses may be subject to periodic
payments. Nor was it told over what period such
periodic payments could be made. For this reason,
too, it is more likely than not that the jury
assumed that the sum it fixed as reasonable compensation
for future noneconomic losses would be paid to
plaintiff in an immediate lump sum at the time
of judgment, i.e., that, like "[a]ny award
for future economic loss," the award for
future noneconomic loss "must be only for
its present cash value." We note, moreover,
that neither party mentioned future pain and suffering
damages in closing argument. Thus, this does not
appear to be a case in which plaintiff's counsel
suggested that future noneconomic damages should
reflect anything other than a present value estimate
or otherwise attempted to ensure an inflated award.
Accordingly,
although the instruction and the verdict form
made no express reference to present value, the
jury's task is logically best understood as having
required it to determine the present value of
future pain and suffering; the jury was not asked
to discount the special verdict for noneconomic
damages because it was already a present value
sum.
We
conclude, therefore, that the superior court was
required to apply the statutory cap to the amount
plaintiff would have received in an immediate
lump- sum payment at the time of the judgment.
The total of periodic payments would have to be
sufficient to pay, over time, the equivalent,
in current dollars, of that immediate lump-sum
payment, i.e., the amount that the award would
have yielded if invested prudently at the time
of judgment. Thus, the superior court correctly
reduced the verdict of $550,000 to $240,000 under
MICRA. It erred, however, in permitting County
to pay out that sum over 66.8 years, in a stream
of payments that would amount in total only to
the equivalent of an immediate lump-sum payment
of $61,785 at the time of judgment, rather than
of the $240,000 to which plaintiff was entitled
in compensation for his injury. [10] To avoid
confusion regarding the jury's task in future
cases, we conclude that when future noneconomic
damages are sought, the jury should be *64 instructed
expressly that they are to assume that an award
of future damages is a present value sum, i.e.,
they are to determine the amount in current dollars
paid at the time of judgment that will compensate
a plaintiff for future pain and suffering. In
the absence of such instruction, unless the record
clearly establishes otherwise, awards of future
damages will be considered to be stated in terms
of their present or current value.
As
Oliveri observes, in determining "the sum
that the plaintiff should have now as compensation
for the pain and suffering he will endure,"
juries "[n]o doubt ... intuitively make some
sort of rough present value discount in determining
awards for non-pecuniary losses, recognizing that
their awards may be invested." (Oliveri v.
Delta S.S. Lines, Inc., supra, 849 F.2d at p.
751.) Indeed, because the sum to be awarded is
compensation for the pain and suffering to be
incurred in future years and because the money
received now can be invested, it makes sense to
give some recognition to the time value of money
in determining the sum the plaintiff should have
available now and during the future years throughout
which his disability will continue. Oliveri explains
that the jury, in determining the amount that
the plaintiff should be awarded now as compensation
for pain and suffering, can properly be told to
consider the time value of the award, but the
trial court "should make it clear that the
precise method appropriate for discounting awards
for pecuniary losses need not be followed."
(Ibid.) Indeed, it seems anomalous to assume that
juries can and generally do determine the amount
of money that must be paid now to compensate for
future pain and suffering, but then to withhold
instructional language that would describe the
nature of this task. Such instructional guidance
will reduce the risk of a jury delivering a future
noneconomic damages award that is inflated or
excessive based on the misleading arguments of
counsel. For these reasons, we recommend the adoption
of a similar approach by our trial courts.
Instructing
that the jury must calculate a present value will,
as a practical matter, also simplify application
of the statutory cap of $250,000 under Civil Code
section 3333.2. (See Hrimnak v. Watkins, supra,
38 Cal.App.4th at pp. 981-982, 45 Cal.Rptr.2d
514 [assuming that future pain and suffering award,
which was reduced to the statutory maximum of
$250,000, was a present value sum].) If the final
award of noneconomic damages exceeds $50,000,
in current dollars, it remains subject to periodic
payment upon request of either party, under Code
of Civil Procedure section 667.7. [FN6]
FN6.
The present value of the judgment is also ordinarily
used to determine attorney fees. Additional
uses of the present value figure include determining
whether a prejudgment interest penalty is owed
under Code of Civil Procedure section 998 and
Civil Code section 3291, and in setting off
a codefendant's settlement. (Hrimnak v. Watkins,
supra, 38 Cal.App.4th at p. 979, 45 Cal.Rptr.2d
514.) We do not address the question posed by
defendant, but which was not raised below, whether
the cost of an annuity to fund the judgment
can properly be used by the trial court as the
basis for calculating attorney fees. (See Bus.
& Prof.Code, § 6146, subd. (b); Schneider
v. Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, supra, 215 Cal.App.3d
at p. 1314, 264 Cal.Rptr. 227["[T]he value
of an award of periodic payments for the purpose
of calculating a contingent attorney's fee is
the present value of the periodic payments,
normally best represented by the cost of the
annuity purchased to fund the payments."
(Italics in original.) ]; Hrimnak v. Watkins,
supra, 38 Cal.App.4th at p. 979, 45 Cal.Rptr.2d
514.)
County
contends that the trial court was "legally
and constitutionally" required to fashion
the periodic payment schedule based on the jury's
*648 determination of the total amount of future
noneconomic damages, not its present value, i.e.,
the amount of an immediate lump-sum award. It
argues that any other approach violates the plaintiff's
constitutional right to a jury trial. The point,
as applied to noneconomic damages, is without
merit. Indeed, Gorman v. Leftwich (1990) 218 Cal.App.3d
141, 150, 266 Cal.Rptr. 671, which it repeatedly
cites in support of this proposition, holds to
the contrary: "[W]here the jury returns only
a present value verdict, a trial court can consider
the trial testimony and, if necessary, supplement
that evidence with postverdict testimony in order
to determine the gross damages and in turn to
fashion a schedule of periodic payments based
thereon. We find nothing in such a procedure which
denies either party its constitutional right to
jury trial so long as the resulting judgment falls
within the parameters of the verdict and the integrity
of the fact finder's determination is maintained."
(Citing American Bank & Trust Co. v. Community
Hospital, supra, 36 Cal.3d at pp. 374-378, 204
Cal.Rptr. 671, 683 P.2d 670.)
County
also argues that the superior court's calculation
of payments was appropriate because plaintiff
"exaggerates the gravity of his injury."
It points out, for example, that plaintiff's arm
is not paralyzed and that his disability "should
not prevent him from playing softball underhanded,
catching a football, guarding for passes or playing
tackle." We reject the suggestion that we
should uphold an erroneous calculation of the
award by the superior court because plaintiff
"really" deserved less than the amount
of the jury's award. Plaintiff urges that because
of the difficulties of matching periodic compensation
with future pain and suffering, a MICRA-capped
award of noneconomic damages should be made in
a lump-sum payment at the time of the judgment.
He argues that such periodic payment will often
result in a plaintiff being denied compensation
for noneconomic damages already incurred, that
use of a lump-sum payment does not impair the
medical malpractice cost control objectives of
MICRA, and that a lump-sum award can be used to
pay attorney fees and other costs of litigation.
He points out *649 that malpractice defendants
and their insurers frequently stipulate to lump-sum
payment of noneconomic damages upon entry of judgment.
[FN7]
FN7.
Significantly, the MICRA Manual prepared for
the California Medical Association recommends
that "the defendant should not request
periodic payments for future noneconomic damages,"
(Horvitz & Levy, Medical Injury Compensation
Reform Act of 1975 (MICRA) Implementation Manual
(1993 rev.), at p. 98, italics in original.)
Amici curiae California Medical Association,
California Dental Association, and California
Healthcare Association reiterate that position,
arguing that unless evidence of the impact of
inflation on damages for future noneconomic
losses is allowed, trial courts should not periodize
damages for future noneconomic losses, except,
perhaps, when the period over which the payments
will be made is short, so that the impact of
the decreasing purchasing power of the dollar
will be minimal.
It
remains the case, however, that under the present
statutory scheme, County was entitled to request
periodic payment of the award, and the superior
court was required to so order. Plaintiff's arguments,
whatever their merits, are more appropriately
addressed to the Legislature.
B
[Present
value of economic damages]
The
superior court ordered periodic payment of the
jury's award of $125,000 for future medical care
over the course of plaintiff's life expectancy
of 66.8 years, to be funded by an annuity at the
present cost of $32,179. Plaintiff argues that
the present value of its future damages was $50,000,
the amount determined by the jury to be thepresent
value of his future medical costs, not $32,179.
He contends that once that present cash value
was decided by the jury, it could not be disregarded
in favor of a determination by the superior court
of the present value of the jury's award of future
damages, based on the cost of an annuity to fund
future payments, without "usurping the jury's
established constitutional role and prerogative
as the sole judge of the facts." We agree.
We
have previously held that it is not a violation
of the plaintiff's jury trial right for the court
to submit only the issue of the gross amount of
future economic damages to the jury, with the
timing of periodic payments--and hence their present
value--to be set by the court in the exercise
of its sound discretion. (American Bank &
Trust Co. v. Community Hospital, supra, 36 Cal.3d
at pp. 376-377, 204 Cal.Rptr. 671, 683 P.2d 670.)
That was not, however, the procedure followed
in the present case. As plaintiff points out,
the jury was expressly required to determine both
the future amount of damage for medical care and
therapy, and also the "present cash value"
of that amount. Both defendant and plaintiff were
afforded the opportunity to present expert testimony
and to offer argument concerning calculation of
the present value of the gross amount of future
damages.
Plaintiff
presented evidence from which the jury could reasonably
have found that plaintiff would suffer greater
economic losses relatively early in *650 life,
thereby increasing the present value of the total
losses. It appears that the jury was not persuaded
by defendant's arguments to the contrary. For
these reasons, we conclude that the superior court
erred in second-guessing the jury's finding by
fashioning a periodic payment scheme based on
a different present value than that determined
by the jury.
C
[Validity
of annuitizing plaintiff's damages]
Plaintiff
contends that the superior court violated MICRA
and his federal and state constitutional rights
to due process, equal protection, and trial by
jury by allowing County to pay his future damages,
both economic and noneconomic, in equal installments
over 66.8 years. He urges that, in ordering that
"a net present value award" be paid
over that "arbitrary" period, the superior
court was effectively "wiping out all of
its economic value."
We
review the order for error under an abuse of discretion
standard. (Atkins v. Strayhorn (1990) 223 Cal.App.3d
1380, 1398, 273 Cal.Rptr. 231.) Under that deferential
standard, no error appears. Nor did the judgment
violate his constitutional rights. We are unpersuaded
that the superior court selected an "arbitrary"
period over which future damages are required
to be paid. It was not unreasonable for it to
conclude that plaintiff will suffer losses over
the full course of his lifetime. Plaintiff's expert
testified, for example, that he will need specialized
examinations and physical therapy for the rest
of his life. It is true that the real value, over
time, of the equal monthly payments to plaintiff
will decrease; to that extent, the periodic payments
are "front loaded," i.e., they have
greater spending value while plaintiff is young
than they will when he is older. Such a result
is not, however, arbitrary: it is not unreasonable
to assume that plaintiff's losses will be greater
in his earlier years, when it is possible that
he will, for example, incur the costs of attending
college, receiving job training, and undergoing
occupational therapy. Indeed, as discussed, it
appears that the jury made a similar assumption
in calculating the present value of plaintiff's
economic damages. Accordingly, we conclude that
the payment schedule does not fail to minimally
satisfy the fundamental goal under MICRA of matching
losses with compensation as the losses occur.
While the trial court's equal payment schedule
was, therefore, not itself an abuse of discretion,
on remand the court retains the discretion to
order a different payment schedule in order to
give effect to the jury's finding as to the present
value of the future economic damages.*651
D
[Attorney's fees]
Finally,
we affirm the Court of Appeal's holding that plaintiff
is not entitled to attorney fees.
As
discussed, after the superior court, correctly,
reduced the jury's award of future noneconomic
damages by more than half pursuant to MICRA, and
then, incorrectly, treated the amount as a future
rather than a present value sum, it was apparently
unwilling to further reduce plaintiff's damages
by subtracting therefrom a sum for attorney fees.
Instead, it ordered defendant to pay plaintiff's
attorney fees. It erred thereby. MICRA does not
provide for an award of attorney fees to the prevailing
party. Accordingly, the ordinary rule, that each
party bears the cost of its own attorney fees,
must prevail. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1033.5,
subd. (a)(10) [providing for recovery of attorney
fees as an item of costs to the prevailing party
only when authorized by contract, statute, or
law].) Indeed, plaintiff concedes that he is not
entitled to attorney fees.
As
there is presently no provision in the judgment
for deduction of plaintiff's attorney fees or
costs from the udgment, these will have to be
calculated and deducted from plaintiff's damages
on remand. Periodic payments will have to be calculated
from the total judgment, after deductions for
attorney fees, costs, the award for past noneconomic
damages, and payment of any outstanding liens.
IV
[Conclusion]
For
the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment
of the Court of Appeal and remand the cause to
the Court of Appeal with directions to remand
it in turn to the superior court to enter a new
judgment consistent with this decision.
GEORGE,
C.J., and KENNARD, BAXTER, WERDEGAR, CHIN, and
BROWN, JJ., concur.
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