Which Parts of Tort Reform Apply When an Injury Occurs Outside the Forum State?

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PRODUCT LIABILITY A Movable Feast? By David Neal Allen, Benjamin Smith Chesson, and Anna Christina Majestro Which Parts of Tort Reform Apply When an Injury Occurs Outside the Forum State? Since most tort reform has occurred on the state level, defense attorneys look for opportunities to invoke a foreign state s tort reform in every case that presents choiceof-law questions. As part of wide-ranging tort reform in the United States, state legislatures have enacted a number of measures for defendants to improve their position in defending tort actions. These reforms range from substantive provisions, including caps on the amount of recoverable damages, to procedural rules, including mandatory bifurcation of trials. And since tort reform is occurring on the state level, personal injury litigation in one state may dramatically differ both procedurally and substantively from personal injury litigation in a neighboring state. For instance, in North Carolina, a personal injury plaintiff may recover only the medical bills actually paid, or reasonably necessary to be paid, not the total amount billed by the provider, and a defendant has a near- automatic right to bifurcation of any tort trial when the amount in controversy exceeds $150,000. In an action governed by Tennessee law, that same personal injury plaintiff is much more likely to receive a single trial on the issues of liability and damages, and she may recover all medical bills billed to her regardless of whether the bills were ever paid. But in Tennessee, the plaintiff s noneconomic damages are statutorily capped in all personal injury cases. Depending on the nature and extent of the damages allegedly suffered by the plaintiff and the evidence allowed in a bifurcated trial, the same case will be David Neal Allen is a senior partner, Benjamin Smith Chesson is a partner, and Anna Christina Majestro is a litigation associate in Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP s Charlotte, North Carolina, office. Mr. Allen practices in litigation in a variety of industries and has been trying lawsuits for more than 30 years, with close to 100 juries empaneled during that time. He is a former president of the North Carolina Association of Defense Attorneys. In addition to serving as national counsel for the world s largest consumer appliance manufacturer, Mr. Chesson focuses his practice on product liability defense and multi-plaintiff tort litigation. Ms. Majestro s practice includes general commercial litigation, consumer financial litigation, product liability litigation, toxic tort litigation, and appeals. 68 For The Defense April 2018 2018 DRI. All rights reserved.

meaningfully different in North Carolina than in Tennessee. While the defendant in this example cannot control if the plaintiff files in North Carolina or Tennessee, a defendant should not be fooled into thinking that the plaintiff s filing choice may deprive the defendant of the benefit of certain tort reform measures simply by filing in another state. Instead, when an action is controlled by a foreign state s substantive law, a defendant may be able to benefit from both the procedural elements of the forum state s tort reform and the substantive elements of the nonforum state s tort reform. Since the majority of tort reform has occurred on the state level, a defendant must be on the lookout for opportunities to invoke a foreign state s tort reform in every case that presents choice-of-law questions. Choice-of-law issues are interjected into a case any time a jurisdiction other than the forum state is involved in a tort action. In those cases, the procedural rules of the case are always governed by the forum state. But, a defendant will want to argue that the substantive law is governed by the jurisdiction with the most defense-friendly tort reform under the forum state s choiceof-law rules. States use three distinct approaches to establish the substantive law on a case involving multiple states: a traditional approach, lex loci delici; the most significant relationship test approach; or the government interest analysis test. The traditional approach, espoused in the Restatement (First) of Conflict of Laws, is lex loci delici. Under this rigid approach, the substantive law of torts is governed by the law of the place where the last wrong giving rise to the harm occurred, unless the foreign law violates the substantial public policy of the forum state. In product liability cases, the last place of wrong is generally the place of injury. The majority of states have now moved away from lex loci. The majority approach at present is the most significant relationship test, which is set forth in the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws. The most significant relationship test is a flexible approach that allows courts to determine the governing substantive law by considering factors such as the place where the injury occurred, the place where the conduct causing the injury occurred, and the domicile, residence, nationality, place of incorporation, and place of business of the parties. Some states, such as California, have started to move away from the most significant relationship test in favor of the government interest analysis test. Under this three-step analysis, courts determine the governmental policies underlying the pertinent laws and then decide which jurisdiction has an interest in the litigation. Of the jurisdictions that have an interest in the litigation, courts decide which jurisdiction s policy would be the most advanced or the most impaired by the application of its law to the facts of the case. Unlike the other two approaches, the law of the forum presumably applies unless it is demonstrated that another state s law should apply. Regardless of the choice-of-law approach adopted by the forum state, a defendant should analyze every potential state that may govern the substantive elements of a case and argue for application of the state s law with the most favorable tort reforms. In some cases, this argument may also turn on whether a particular tort reform is procedural or substantive law. For example, mandatory bifurcation is plainly procedural, and statutory damages caps are plainly substantive, but evidentiary limitations on the type of admissible damages could qualify as either. Each of those tort reform measures is discussed more below. Bifurcation Mandatory bifurcation is one of the least discussed but very influential modifications to traditional personal injury trials. Many states have enacted statutes to require separate trials for punitive damages and some have even made it near mandatory to have separate trials in highexposure personal injury cases. Both types of bifurcation serve to minimize the prejudice of evidence that is irrelevant to a jury s liability determination, which is likely to generate sympathy toward a plaintiff or anger toward a defendant. In product liability cases involving complex or sensitive personal injuries, bifurcation conserves time and resources by limiting the evidence to only what is relevant to the liability determination. In most cases, the excluded evidence relates to a plaintiff s injuries or the defendant s previous conduct that may give rise to punitive Regardless of the choiceof-law approach adopted by the forum state, a defendant should analyze every potential state that may govern the substantive elements of a case and argue for application of the state s law with the most favorable tort reforms. exposure. While limited evidence relevant to the liability phase may necessarily discuss a plaintiff s injuries, the limitation on damages evidence should lessen the risk of a jury deciding the liability phase of the trial based on sympathy, anger, or the defendant s financial status. It is important for a defendant to understand that they do not lose the benefit of defense- friendly procedural rules such as bifurcation merely because the substantive aspects of a case are governed by a foreign state. Even if a state has not enacted one of the more recent near- automatic bifurcation statutes in high- exposure product liability cases, a majority of states allow bifurcation when the bifurcation avoids the prejudicial impact of complex damages evidence, based on consideration of the factors in the state s rule of civil procedure that allows a court to order separate trials on issues. Moreover, an increasing number of states are enacting statutes requiring bifurcation of punitive damages claims. These statutes remove the discretion from a judge to determine whether one of the applicable factors merely warrants bifurcation and instead requires bifurcation. While certain judges may still allow a plaintiff to present evidence related to a defendant s potentially relevant previous conduct, in all cases, a judge should exclude any evidence For The Defense April 2018 69

PRODUCT LIABILITY of the defendant s financial wealth until the second phase of the trial. Statutory Damages Caps The most significant and controversial element of tort reform is the enactment of various state- specific caps on noneconomic damages in personal injury cases. A handful of the statutory caps have not survived Even when a forum state has not adopted statutory damages caps, the caps enacted by a foreign state should apply when the substantive law is controlled by a state that has enacted a cap covering a personal injury action. judicial review, but the caps are a powerful tool for defendants in jurisdictions where the caps have been upheld or have not yet been reviewed. See, e.g., Moore v. Mobile Infirmary Association, 592 So.2d 156 (Ala. 1991); North Broward Hosp. Dist. v. Kalitan, 219 So.3d 49 (Fla. 2017). Even when a forum state has not adopted statutory damages caps, the caps enacted by a foreign state should apply when the substantive law is controlled by a state that has enacted a cap covering a personal injury action. State general assemblies across the country began enacting statutory caps on damages as part of medical malpractice tort reform in the 1970s. As part of that legislative revolution, more aggressive state legislatures have extended those caps beyond just the medical malpractice setting to cover punitive damages awarded in any civil action and even all noneconomic damages awarded in any personal injury action. In total, more than half of the states have adopted some form of statutory cap on damages in some or all personal injury cases. 70 For The Defense April 2018 The statutory damages caps differ significantly from state to state. Some apply only to malpractice actions, and others apply to all personal injury actions. Some caps apply only to noneconomic damages, while others limit both economic damages and noneconomic damages. In some states, the caps apply to punitive damages as well. But in almost all jurisdictions, juries are not informed about the caps during their deliberations. Instead, a court applies a cap to reduce any jury awards that exceeds the cap. Caps, therefore, can significantly affect the value of a product liability case when the majority of the damages are noneconomic injuries such as pain and suffering or emotional distress. In determining whether a defendant gets the benefit of a foreign state s statutory damages cap, it appears clear that caps are substantive elements of damages law. Thus, when a foreign state s law governs a case, so do the statutory damages caps. However, since the caps so greatly affect a defendant s potential exposure in litigation, a creative plaintiff will advance several arguments opposing the imposition of any caps. At the outset, most trial courts will refuse to determine the applicability of a cap before a jury awards a verdict exceeding the cap. Trial courts generally view a pretrial ruling on the caps as an advisory opinion on an issue that is not yet ripe. A defendant, therefore, is unlikely to have complete certainty about the application of foreign statutory damages caps prior to trial. However, a court s decision on which state s substantive law applies may be a potent indicator and aid in settlement negotiations. If and when the time comes for a court to decide on a cap s constitutionality, the plaintiff likely will first argue that the statutory cap violates the foreign state s constitution. For example, in Tennessee and Mississippi, the state appellate courts have not reviewed the statutory noneconomic damages cap for all personal injury actions. If a trial court in a forum state is applying the substantive law of one of these states, the trial court (and ultimately the appellate court) in the forum state is put in the precarious position of determining whether the statutory damages cap violates the enacting state s constitution with no guidance from that state. The constitutional arguments over statutory damages caps have focused on whether caps violate a constitutionally guaranteed right to a jury trial. Analyzing this issue, many courts have focused on how the right to a fair trial is defined in the state constitution. For instance, caps have been less likely to survive judicial review when the state s constitution provides an inviolate right to a jury trial. Courts have held that an inviolate right to a jury trial prohibits any legislation limiting the damages awarded by a jury for causes of action that existed at common law. See, e.g., Atlanta Oculoplastic Surgery v. Nestlehutt et al., 691 S.E.2d 218 (Ga. 2010). But even these courts have allowed legislatures to implement statutory caps on damages awarded for causes of action that did not exist at common law. See id. Courts have been less likely to strike down damages caps in states with constitutions that define a jury trial as preferable instead of inviolate. See, e.g., Etheridge v. Medical Center Hospitals, 376 S.E.2d 525 (Va. 1989). And a few state appellate courts have extended the arguments upholding statutory damages caps even when the state s constitution includes an inviolate provision. See Arbino v. Johnson & Johnson, 880 N.E.2d 420 (Ohio 2007). In these jurisdictions, the appellate courts have accepted the argument that only a jury s fact-finding function is protected but not the jury s ultimate award of damages. These courts have equated statutory damages caps to remittiturs or other statutory measures on damages that constitute public policy choices left to the legislative branch. Other courts have accepted arguments that statutory damages caps violate the separation of powers, constitute impermissible special legislation, violate the open courts doctrine, or even violate a state s Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses. See Best v. Taylor Machine Work, 689 N.E.2d 1057 (Ill. 1997).; see also, e.g., Knowles ex. Rel. Knowles v. United States, 544 N.W.2d 183 (S.D. 1996); North Broward Hosp. Dist., 219 So.3d 49 (holding that the noneconomic cap on damages in personal injury cases violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Florida Constitution); State ex rel. Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers v. Sheward, 715 N.E.2d 1062 (Ohio 1999) (finding cap violated the state s Due Process Clause). But see Arbino, 880 N.E.2d at 420 (finding new Ohio noneconomic damages cap enacted in 2007 con-

stitutional). Each of these arguments has also been rejected by state supreme courts across the county, but they will no doubt be part of any plaintiff s argument against enforcing foreign statutory damages caps. See, e.g., Miller v. Johnson, 289 P.3d 1098 (Kan. 2012) (cap on noneconomic damages does not violate Equal Protection Clause or separation of powers doctrine); Gourley ex. rel Gourley v. Nebraska Methodist Health System Inc., 633 N.W.2d 43 (Neb. 2003) (cap on total damages does not violate the state constitution s Equal Protection Clause, right to a jury trial, open courts doctrine, separation of powers, or principles prohibiting special legislation); Evans v. State, 56 P.3d 1046 (Alaska 2002) (cap does not infringe on right to trial by jury, does not deny substantive due process, violate the Equal Protection Clause, separation of powers, or the prohibition against special legislation).to be sure, a defendant must be prepared to argue the constitutionality of the damages caps to any trial court when requesting that a court apply a damages cap from another state. This is especially true when the forum state has not yet adopted a damages cap and the trial court is unfamiliar with the particular issues surrounding that legislation. Once a defendant overcomes the constitutional argument, a plaintiff generally will next argue that the statutory damages cap is unenforceable under the forum state s choice-of-law rules. All three of the choiceof-law approaches previously described include some requirement that a trial court analyze whether the foreign state s law violates the forum state s public policy. Even in a jurisdiction that adheres to the most significant relationship test or the government interest analysis, because a court considers public policy in the choice-of-law determinations, whether the law violates the constitution of an interested state has a bearing on the outcome of the choice-oflaw analysis. In the most significant relationship or government interest analysis test, this can take the form of an argument about whether the law at issue impedes the forum state s interest to ensure that its litigants receive full and fair compensation. Where lex loci is the rule, a court will consider whether the foreign state s law violates the public policy of the forum state. Under any test, a defendant must argue that the statutory damages cap does not offend the public policy or legitimate interest of the forum state. As mentioned, in a lex loci state, a court will consider whether the application of the nonforum state s law violates the public policy of the forum state. Whether a law is contrary to the public policy of a forum state for lex loci purposes is a state- specific inquiry. In almost every case, this is simply a regurgitation of the same contentions of unconstitutionality. However, here, a plaintiff will tailor the argument to the forum state s precedent, because some states have adopted a more expansive approach to the public policy exception than others. A plaintiff s attorney may argue, for example, that the application of the damages cap violates a citizen s right to a trial by jury under the forum state s constitution, and the cap should therefore not apply. In addition to the counters to this argument that have been previously discussed, a defendant should examine the scope of the public policy exception in the forum state to determine whether there is a colorable argument that the public policy exception does not apply in such a situation. Statutory damages caps so greatly affect product liability litigation that defendants should be constantly monitoring opportunities to invoke statutory damages caps enacted by another state with a connection to the litigation. And defendants should be prepared to fight vigorously to defend the caps against a plaintiff s onslaught of arguments against enforcement. Admissibility of Medical Bills One growing tort reform trend involves putting limitations on a plaintiff s right to present evidence of the total amount billed by a health-care provider in treating a plaintiff for the injuries that he or she sustained. In these jurisdictions, a plaintiff may present evidence only of the amount actually paid for the medical services rendered. As defendants well know, these rules are more important than ever as the medical community continues to stray further into illusory billing practices. In most jurisdictions, medical providers now regularly send bills for amounts four or five times the amount that a medical provider has previously agreed to accept from a plaintiff s insurance company for the medical services provided. In other words, the medical provider, the patient s insurance company, and the patient all know that the medical provider will never collect the entire billed amount from any source. Nonetheless, the amount billed has traditionally constituted one measure of a plaintiff s damages. In unreformed states, a plaintiff can introduce evidence of the entire amount billed by a medical provider, and a defendant is not permitted to rebut this evidence to establish that portions of a bill that were never paid. This leads to inflated damages for a plaintiff, who receives a windfall because she can receive as damages an amount greater than that which was expended on her medical care. In an effort to curb these arbitrary and illusory billing practices, state legislatures and state courts have limited the recovery of damages to only the amount paid or reasonably necessary to be paid to satisfy the outstanding bill. At first glance, such a limitation on damages appears to be a substantive provision related to recoverable damages. And if a nonforum state has adopted a medical bills-paid rule, then a defendant should argue that the rule is substantive. But a defendant that does not have the benefit of an applicable nonforum state bills-paid rule, and is in a forum state that has enacted a medical bills-paid rule, still has room to argue otherwise. The case law in this area is sparse, and a defendant can make a number of good-faith arguments that the provision is a procedural rule of evidence instead of a substantive rule of damages. First, it is generally accepted in most jurisdictions that the method of proof admissible in a case, including damages, is a procedural issue governed by the forum state. Where a rule prohibits a party from introducing evidence of medical bills, it can be argued that the rule limits only the method permitted to prove damages, not the actual damages recoverable. Indeed, the Arkansas Supreme Court reached this same result in Johnson v. Rockwell Automatic, Inc., 308 S.W.3d 135 (Ark. 2009). In Johnson, the Arkansas Supreme Court addressed the statutory bar on any evidence of medical bills not actually paid. In striking down the statute because the constitution only permitted the Arkansas Supreme Court to enact rules of procedure, Tort Reform, continued on page 84 For The Defense April 2018 71

Tort Reform, from page 71 the court held that it is undisputed that the rules of evidence are rules of pleading, practice, and procedure. Id. at 142. A defendant in a bills-paid state can use this decision to support an argument that such a rule is indeed procedural. While a plaintiff may argue that a rule barring the introduction of the amount of medical bills billed is substantive because it alters the substantive collateral- source doctrine, a closer examination reveals that such a rule does not implicate the forum state s collateral- source rule. In general, the collateral- source rule prohibits a party from offering evidence of [p]ayments made to or benefits conferred on the injured party from other sources. Restatement (Second) of Torts 920A (1977). In addressing the purported conflict between the collateral- source rule and a rule limiting a plaintiff s medical bills to those paid, the Supreme Court of California in Howell v. Hamilton Meats & Provisions, Inc. held that a medical bills-paid rule does not implicate the collateral- source rule for two reasons. 257 P.3d 1130 (Cal. 2011). First, the court held that the collateral- source rule is inapplicable to full bills the plaintiff never incurred since the rule does not speak to losses or liabilities the plaintiff did not incur and would not otherwise be entitled to recover. Id. at 1143. Stated differently, [t]he collateral source doctrine does not address the amount of damages that a plaintiff can recover in the first instance. Id. The collateral- source rule, therefore, cannot apply to bills that have not been paid, will never be paid, and represent an entirely illusory amount. Second, the court held that the contractual insurance discounts given by a medical provider are not primarily a benefit to the plaintiff and not provided as compensation for [the plaintiff s] injuries. Id. at 1143 44 (internal citations omitted). Instead, the benefits are to the insurance companies and the medical providers who negotiate rates in pursuit of their own business interests. Id. In light of this undisputed reality, the discounted rates are not a collateral benefit to any plaintiff. In sum, the court conclude[d] the negotiated rate differential is not a collateral payment or benefit subject to the collateral source rule. Id. at 1144. Courts in Idaho, Pennsylvania, and Delaware have reached the same conclusion. See Dyet v. McKinley, 139 Idaho 526, 81 P.3d 1236 (Idaho 2003), abrogated on other grounds by Verska v. Saint Alphonsus Reg l Med. Ctr., 81 P.3d 1236, 1238 39 (Idaho 2011); Moorhead v. Crozer Chester Medical Center, 765 A.2d 786 (Pa. 2001) (abrogated on other grounds); Smith v. Mahoney, 150 A.3d 1200, 1206 (Del. 2016). A defendant in a bills-paid jurisdiction can advocate these procedure- based arguments to gain the benefit of evidentiary limitations, and in doing so, limit the defendant s damages exposure in a case. Conclusion States have provided defendants with a trove of tools to use in their defense of product liability litigation. Those state specific tools are not, however, bound by a state s geographic boarders. A defendant is well served to actively analyze all potential sources of governing law and leverage all available tort reform measures to strengthen its position in litigation. 84 For The Defense April 2018