DocketNumber: File Nos. CV94357615S, CV94363234S, CV94356995S
Citation Numbers: 683 A.2d 1362, 44 Conn. Super. Ct. 274, 44 Conn. Supp. 274, 1995 Conn. Super. LEXIS 1886
Judges: Hadden
Filed Date: 6/22/1995
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff, Yale New Haven Hospital, Inc., has brought two separate actions against the defendant Clifford Mitchell, and one action against the defendants Laureen Wilczynski and Vincent Wilczynski, seeking payment for medical services rendered on two separate occasions to Mitchell and on one occasion to Laureen Wilczynski.1 Vincent Wilczynski has not appeared. Mitchell and Laureen Wilczynski have each filed an answer, two special defenses and a counterclaim. The special defenses and counterclaims are functionally identical in each of the three pending cases. Each defendant's first special defense is based on the plaintiffs alleged violation of the Hill-Burton Act;
Pursuant to Practice Book § 384, summary judgment is appropriate when "the pleadings, affidavits and any *Page 276
other proof submitted show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Suarez v. Dickmont PlasticsCorp.,
In the present cases, the plaintiff is moving for summary judgment on the ground that there is no genuine issue of material fact that medical services were rendered to the defendants, that the charges for those services were reasonable, and that the defendants owe the plaintiff payment for those services. Further, the plaintiff claims that the two special defenses and the counterclaims are invalid as a matter of law and, therefore, that summary judgment should enter in its favor on both the complaints and counterclaims. In the motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff is not disputing the factual allegations of the special defenses and counterclaims, but claims that, irrespective of the facts alleged, the legal conclusions are wrong and, therefore, the special defenses and counterclaims are legally without merit.
The first special defense alleges that the plaintiff has failed to comply with its obligations under the Hill-Burton Act regulations, specifically
The second special defense alleges that the defendants qualified for free medical care under one or more of the plaintiff's hospital bed funds trusts, that the plaintiff failed to comply with its statutory obligations regarding notice of availability of coverage through these trusts, and, therefore, the plaintiff cannot recover from the defendants.
The counterclaim alleges that in violating the notice provisions of both the Hill-Burton Act and the statutes pertaining to its hospital bed funds trusts, the plaintiff has engaged in unfair or deceptive acts, has violated §
With respect to the two special defenses, it is the plaintiffs position that an alleged failure to comply with the Hill-Burton Act is not a valid defense to a suit on an unpaid hospital bill, and that a private cause of action for personal relief does not exist under the hospital bed funds statutes. The primary basis of these claims is a reliance on a 1974 case decided by the Appellate Division of the Court of Common Pleas of the state of Connecticut. That case held: "All the cases brought to our attention by counsel or our own research involve the question of standing of nongovernmental plaintiffs in class action suits to compel compliance with the provisions of the Hill-Burton Act. No case has been cited, nor have we found any which holds that a private party has the individual right to enforce commitments made by a hospital to either the state or the federal government. Even if it were assumed that private parties might have standing as interested plaintiffs to enforce obligations under Hill-Burton, it does not logically follow that former patient defendants in a collection action by a hospital for services previously rendered have the right to refuse payment of a hospital bill because of the alleged failure of the hospital to comply with its Hill-Burton obligations." Yale-New *Page 278 Haven Hospital v. Matthews,
The plaintiff also refers in its memorandum to a case from a United States District Court in Pennsylvania, which stated: "In reviewing [the Hill-Burton Act] the court cannot find any provision permitting a person to bring a private cause of action for personal relief." Whitev. Moses Taylor Hospital,
In response to the plaintiffs claims concerning the special defenses, the defendants maintain that the Hill-Burton Act and the hospital bed funds statute were intended to benefit indigent persons, that the defendants have established indigency by their affidavits, and, therefore, that the defendants do have a private right to enforce the provisions of both the federal and state laws. Further, the defendants claim that even if it is found that they have no private right of action, this does not prevent them from raising a claim of a violation of these statutes by way of a special defense to a suit seeking to collect a hospital bill.
Courts in several cases have ruled that persons in the position of these defendants do have both a private right of action to enforce the provisions of Hill-Burton, as well as the right to raise noncompliance as a defense in a suit on a hospital bill. "Thus the legislative history and the expressed purposes of Congress indicate that the Act was passed to ensure that the indigent would be supplied sufficient hospital services when needed. With this clear intent, it is not decisive that the language of the Act included no explicit indication that indigents were to have a right to enforce the Act's provisions. A civil remedy may be implied for those clearly within the protective realm of legislation or regulations in the *Page 279
public interest. . . . In receiving federal funds, appellees obligated themselves to dispense a reasonable amount of free hospital services to those unable to pay. With the obligation established, it is clear that appellants have standing to enforce the obligation. The appellants are the intended beneficiaries of the Federal obligation sought to be enforced here and have standing to maintain this action." Euresti v. Stenner,
In a New Jersey case that involved a suit by a hospital to collect an unpaid hospital bill the court held that the defendant could plead in defense the failure of the hospital to comply with Hill-Burton, and that failure of the hospital to give the required notice under Hill-Burton would constitute an absolute bar to the right of the hospital to sue for its bill. The court specifically rejected the holding of Yale-New Haven Hospital v. Matthews,
supra,
"The final question, then, is the effect of the Hospital's noncompliance here on its right to collect its bill. We conclude that the nature of the noncompliance here precludes it from so doing. For the reasons we have heretofore indicated, the most effective and expeditious way to ensure hospital compliance with its Hill-Burton responsibilities is to ensure that persons eligible for that assistance request it. They obviously cannot request it unless they know about its availability. And they will not know about its availability unless the hospital tells them about it. . . . Accordingly, we hold that the failure of a Hill-Burton obligated hospital to have given required notice to a medical indigent or one who is presumptively a medical indigent, as defendant here clearly is, constitutes an absolute bar to the right of *Page 281
the hospital to sue for its bill for services rendered to such person." Id., 303; see Flagstaff Medical Center,Inc. v. Sullivan,
This court is of the opinion that the cases holding that persons in the position of the defendants here do have a private right of action under Hill-Burton are more persuasive than the cases cited by the plaintiff to the contrary and, therefore, that the defendants do have the right to make the claim asserted in their first special defense.
This court agrees with the reasoning of Judge Sponzo in his dissent in Yale-New Haven Hospital v. Matthews,
supra,
Although the determination that the first special defense is legally valid is dispositive of the motion for summary judgment on the complaints, the court is of the opinion that the reasoning of the cases cited as applied to the first special defense raising a violation of the Hill-Burton Act is equally applicable to the claim of a violation of the hospital bed funds statute made *Page 282
in the second special defense. In addition, these statutes clearly satisfy the three-pronged test enunciated by the United States Supreme Court in Cort v. Ash,
The statute in question was obviously enacted for the benefit of indigent persons like the defendants, there is no indication in the statute that either creates or denies a private remedy, and to allow a private cause of action is consistent with the purposes of the statute.
The motion for summary judgment, insofar as it pertains to the counterclaims filed by the defendants, asserts that since the defendants have no private cause of action under either the Hill-Burton Act or the hospital bed funds statute, then they also do not have a private action under CUTPA for violations of those statutes. In view of the court's conclusion that private causes of action do exist under both the Hill-Burton Act and the hospital bed funds statute, it is apparent that allegations of violations of those statutes can be the basis of a CUTPA claim.
Even if the court had found that no private cause of action exists under the Hill-Burton Act or the hospital bed funds statute, however, this finding would not entitle the plaintiff to summary judgment on the CUTPA counterclaims. *Page 283
The Connecticut Supreme Court has consistently held that CUTPA is a remedial statute that should be broadly interpreted so as to protect consumers from unfair or deceptive trade practices. Normand JosefEnterprises, Inc. v. Connecticut National Bank,
There are a considerable number of cases decided by the Connecticut Supreme Court where the court allowed a CUTPA claim to be made even though the alleged unfair acts were proscribed by a statute that did not provide for a private cause of action.
In Mead v. Burns,
Similarly, the court held that one could maintain a CUTPA claim for alleged violations of the Landlord and Tenant Act, even though it had held in a previous case that no private cause of action existed under the Landlord and Tenant Act. Conaway v. Prestia,
In State v. Leary,
The plaintiff also claims that since the hospital bed funds statute does not explicitly make a violation of the statute a CUTPA violation, such violation cannot *Page 284
be the basis for a CUTPA claim. While the legislature can indicate that a violation of a statute is a violation of CUTPA, as was done in the Home Improvement Act; General Statutes §
It will be for the trier to determine whether the alleged conduct of the plaintiff, as set forth in the counterclaims, rises to the level of a violation of CUTPA. The allegations of the counterclaims raise factual issues that cannot be resolved on a motion for summary judgment.
Last, the plaintiff claims that the Hill-Burton Act preempts CUTPA under the supremacy clause of the United States constitution. This claim is without merit. Allowing state actions for conduct that is also a violation of the Hill-Burton Act does not interfere with or undermine the federal objectives in adopting the Hill-Burton Act. Flagstaff Medical Center, Inc. v. Sullivan,
supra,
For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs motions for summary judgment, filed November 16, 1994, in each of the three cases above, are denied.
Lally v. Copygraphics , 173 N.J. Super. 162 ( 1980 )
Lola Saine v. The Hospital Authority of Hall County and the ... , 502 F.2d 1033 ( 1974 )
Rafaela Euresti v. Richard Stenner, as Administrator of the ... , 458 F.2d 1115 ( 1972 )
Valley Credit Service, Inc. v. Mair , 35 Or. App. 637 ( 1978 )
Cooper Medical Center v. Joyner , 165 N.J. Super. 482 ( 1979 )
Hospital Center at Orange v. Cook , 177 N.J. Super. 289 ( 1981 )
flagstaff-medical-center-inc-v-louis-w-sullivan-secretary-department , 962 F.2d 879 ( 1992 )
Conaway v. Prestia , 191 Conn. 484 ( 1983 )
Yale-New Haven Hospital v. Matthews , 32 Conn. Super. Ct. 539 ( 1974 )
United Oil Co. v. Urban Redevelopment Commission , 158 Conn. 364 ( 1969 )