State v. Workman , 300 Or. App. 622 ( 2019 )


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  •                                       622
    Submitted November 5, 2018, affirmed November 20, 2019
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    CHRISTOPHER LEE WORKMAN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Deschutes County Circuit Court
    16CR57308; A165068
    455 P3d 566
    Defendant was convicted of third-degree assault, ORS 163.165(2)(a), based on
    an Alford plea. The sentencing court imposed $8,274.84 in restitution, payable
    to the Crime Victims’ Compensation Program (CVCP), for medical expenses and
    lost wages paid on behalf of and to the victim. Defendant challenges the award of
    restitution for the medical expenses, contending that, under State v. McClelland,
    
    278 Or App 138
    , 372 P3d 614, rev den, 
    360 Or 423
     (2016), there is insufficient
    evidence to support a finding that the claimed medical expenses were reason-
    able. Held: The sentencing court did not err in its award of restitution, because
    evidence that CVCP reimbursed the victim based on Oregon’s workers’ compen-
    sation fee schedules supported the court’s conclusion that the medical expenses
    paid were reasonable.
    Affirmed.
    Wells B. Ashby, Judge.
    Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate
    Section, and Kristin A. Carveth, Deputy Public Defender,
    Office of Public Defense Services, filed the brief for appellant.
    Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General, and Michael A. Casper, Assistant Attorney
    General, filed the brief for respondent.
    Before Lagesen, Presiding Judge, and James, Judge, and
    Haselton, Senior Judge.
    LAGESEN, P. J.
    Affirmed.
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 622
     (2019)                                                  623
    LAGESEN, P. J.
    Defendant was convicted of third-degree assault,
    ORS 163.165(2)(a), based on an Alford plea.1 The sentenc-
    ing court imposed $8,274.84 in restitution, payable to the
    Crime Victims’ Compensation Program (CVCP),2 for medical
    expenses that CVCP paid on behalf of the victim (a total of
    $5,154.84), and lost wages ($3,120) that CVCP paid to the
    victim. On appeal, defendant challenges the award of res-
    titution for the medical expenses, contending that, under
    State v. McClelland, 
    278 Or App 138
    , 372 P3d 614, rev den,
    
    360 Or 423
     (2016), there is insufficient evidence to support a
    finding that the claimed medical expenses were reasonable.
    On review for legal error, State v. Campbell, 
    296 Or App 22
    ,
    26, 438 P3d 448 (2019), we affirm.
    When the state seeks restitution for amounts paid
    for medical charges, it must prove that the charges were
    reasonable. ORS 137.103(2); ORS 31.710; McClelland, 
    278 Or App at 143-44
    . A medical charge is reasonable if it is at (or
    below) the market rate for the services, drugs, or other medi-
    cal items provided: “[T]he market rate is a reasonable amount
    for a victim to recover for medical expenses.” Campbell, 
    296 Or App at 30
    . Medical bills, standing alone, are insufficient
    to prove that the charges reflected therein are market rate
    (or below) and, therefore, reasonable for purposes of the res-
    titution statutes. State v. J. M. E., 
    299 Or App 483
    , 487, 451
    P3d 1018 (2019). Rather, “[s]ome additional testimony or
    evidence is required to support the reasonableness of the
    bill for the hospital or medical services.” McClelland, 
    278 Or App at 144
    . As we recognized in Campbell, that additional
    evidence may consist of evidence that the medical charges
    for which restitution is sought “were at or below the usual
    1
    “An Alford plea is a guilty plea in which the defendant does not admit com-
    mission of the criminal act or asserts that he is innocent. In such a situation,
    the trial court must determine that there is a factual basis for the plea.” State v.
    Sullivan, 
    197 Or App 26
    , 28 n 1, 104 P3d 636 (2005), rev den, 
    340 Or 673
     (2006)
    (emphasis in original).
    2
    ORS 137.103(4)(c) provides that the “Crime Injuries Compensation Account”
    qualifies as a “victim” entitled to receive restitution “if it has expended moneys on
    behalf” of “[t]he person or decedent against whom the defendant committed the
    criminal offense, if the court determines that the person or decedent has suffered
    or did suffer economic damages as a result of the offense.”
    624                                          State v. Workman
    and customary rate for those services in that market.” 
    296 Or App at 32
    .
    Although defendant argues otherwise, this is not a
    case in which the trial court awarded restitution for medi-
    cal charges based on bills alone. At the restitution hearing,
    the state called Shaw, the manager of CVCP. She testified
    that, before paying medical expenses, CVCP would review
    the bill, the chart notes, and, in the case of a victim with
    insurance, the explanation of benefits. She testified further
    that the amounts it paid for the victim’s medical expenses
    were for hospital bills, doctor bills, and bills for medication.
    Most significantly with respect to the issue of reasonable-
    ness, Shaw explained that CVCP “did not pay the major-
    ity of those bills at 100 percent.” Instead, at least when the
    victim is uninsured, CVCP pays medical charges using the
    workers’ compensation fee schedule for medical services. In
    this case, the victim was uninsured and CVCP, in fact, paid
    the medical charges at issue in accordance with the work-
    ers’ compensation fee schedules, writing off amounts that
    exceeded what was allowed by the fee schedule.
    That evidence is sufficient to support a finding that
    the medical charges for which restitution was sought in this
    case were at or below market rate and, therefore, reasonable.
    By statute, ORS 656.248, the rates contained in Oregon’s
    workers’ compensation fee schedules “shall represent the
    reimbursement generally received for the services provided”
    and must be based on “any one or all of the following” types
    of information about the medical services market:
    “(a) The current procedural codes and relative value
    units of the Department of Health and Human Services
    Medicare Fee Schedules for all medical service provider
    services included therein;
    “(b) The average rates of fee schedules of the Oregon
    health insurance industry;
    “(c) A reasonable rate of markup for the sale of medical
    devices or other medical services;
    “(d) A commonly used and accepted medical service
    fee schedule; or
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 622
     (2019)                                  625
    “(e)   The actual cost of providing medical services.”
    ORS 656.248(1).
    In view of those statutory requirements, it can be
    inferred that workers’ compensation fee schedules reflect
    customary market rates for medical services and, conse-
    quently, that medical charges paid at those rates, as hap-
    pened here, were reasonable. The trial court did not err in
    awarding restitution for the claimed medical expenses on
    this record.
    We observe that our recent decision in J. M. E., 
    299 Or App at 488-89
    , which also involved restitution payable
    to CVCP, is not to the contrary. In that case, “[n]o witness
    testified that the amount charged—or the amount subse-
    quently paid by CVCP—was at or below the market rate for
    those services, nor was there any other evidence as to the
    reasonableness of the medical bill.” 
    Id. at 488
    . Here, by con-
    trast, the state introduced the type of evidence omitted in
    J. M. E.—testimony that the charges were paid in accordance
    with the workers’ compensation fee schedule. That evidence,
    as noted, allows for the conclusion that the amounts paid
    were reasonable.
    Affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A165068

Citation Numbers: 300 Or. App. 622

Judges: Lagesen

Filed Date: 11/20/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024