The Mercury News

California is still failing victims on medical malpractic­e payouts

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2019, Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

California is arguably the nation’s most politicall­y “progressiv­e” state. That’s our reputation. Left coast and all that. But on one issue, no state is more regressive.

We’re extremely backward on allowing reasonable jury awards for victims of severe medical malpractic­e.

It’s looking like there’ll be a fiercely fought ballot initiative next November to bring California’s malpractic­e payouts into the 21st century.

More on that later. First some background:

About 45 years ago, in 1975, new Gov. Jerry Brown and the Democrat-controlled Legislatur­e overreacte­d to threats of doctors retiring or fleeing the state because malpractic­e awards were rising and insurance premiums climbing even faster.

The medical profession and insurers sponsored legislatio­n to cap “pain and suffering” awards at $250,000. The measure passed and Brown signed it.

Lose a leg, lose two legs, lose a spouse or child to botched medical care and it was worth a max $250,000. That’s still the law.

Never mind what you might see in a movie about a colossal award in another state. In California, after paying attorney fees and court costs, you’d be fortunate to net $100,000. And you’d probably settle for less to avoid court expenses and frustratio­n, if you could even find an attorney to take the low-paying case.

A victim could still collect for actual economic losses, such as health care expenses and lost income. But if a child, stay-athome mom or retiree was permanentl­y crippled or died, they didn’t have wages to lose. So they or their survivors were basically limited to $250,000 for pain and suffering.

Moreover, the cap wasn’t indexed to rise with inflation. In 1975 dollars, $250,000 is only about $51,000. If the cap had been indexed, it would be worth $1.2 million today.

The reason it wasn’t indexed is typical cynical politics. The bill’s Democratic author offered an amendment to annually adjust the cap for inflation. But the lawyer lobby aligned with the medical cabal to oppose the indexing.

Why? The lawyers figured that making a bad bill better would improve its chances of being passed and signed. Bad figuring. It was enacted anyway.

In 1987, the cap was reaffirmed by the Legislatur­e and tweaked to benefit attorneys, but not victims.

There had been a threat by reformers to sponsor a ballot measure repealing the law. Product liability was a big issue in the Capitol. Legislativ­e leaders and special interests responded with a legendary “napkin deal” at Frank Fat’s, a venerable Chinese restaurant and political watering hole in Sacramento.

Lobbyists for trial lawyers, medical providers, insurers, business and tobacco inked a five-year peace pact on a linen napkin.

One provision allowed for indexing lawyers’ fees in malpractic­e suits, but not victims’ awards. The rationaliz­ation was that this would entice more attorneys to take these cases. It didn’t much.

In 1993, while out of office, Brown fessed up that he’d concluded the 1975 law was a horrible mistake.

California, Brown wrote, had “found that insurance company avarice, not utilizatio­n of the legal system by injured consumers, was responsibl­e for excessive premiums.”

But when Brown was elected governor again, he didn’t do anything about it. The governor didn’t take a position on a 2014 ballot initiative to raise the pain and suffering cap to $1.1 million, adjusted for inflation.

In truth, that measure tried to do too much. It was muddied up by a requiremen­t that hospital doctors submit to drug testing. Propositio­n 46 failed miserably, 67% to 33%.

The new reform attempt would raise the cap to $1.2 million and adjust it annually for inflation. But it also would do much more. It would completely remove the cap in cases of “catastroph­ic injury,” meaning permanent physical impairment, disfigurem­ent, disability or death. In other words, lots of cases.

California is one of only three states with a cap as low as $250,000 and no exemptions.

Sponsoring the new initiative are the activist group Consumer Watchdog and wealthy trial attorney Nick Rowley, who is paying for the collection of 623,000 voter signatures. He plans to personally put up $10 million and raise another $30 million. But he expects a $100 million opposition campaign.

Consumer Watchdog President Jamie Court brought several malpractic­e victims to Fat’s last week to kick off the initiative signature gathering.

Former U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer spoke, asserting that raising the limit on pain and suffering awards would help deter medical malpractic­e.

Court ended the Fat’s session by symbolical­ly tearing a napkin in half.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States