Larry Smith, Gloria Smith vs Philadelphia American Life Insurance Co. , 433 F. App'x 731 ( 2011 )


Menu:
  •                                                                 [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________                         FILED
    U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 10-14975                       ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    Non-Argument Calendar                      JULY 6, 2011
    ________________________                      JOHN LEY
    CLERK
    D.C. Docket No. 7:07-cv-00140-WLS
    LARRY SMITH,
    GLORIA SMITH,
    llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiffs - Appellants,
    versus
    PHILADELPHIA AMERICAN
    LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
    llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellee,
    CENTRAL STATE HEALTH &
    LIFE CO. OF OMAHA,
    lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllDefendant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Georgia
    ________________________
    (July 6, 2011)
    Before CARNES, BARKETT and MARCUS, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Larry and Gloria Smith appeal from the district court’s order granting
    judgment on partial findings in favor of their insurer, Philadelphia American Life
    Insurance Company, which the court entered after a bench trial on the Smiths’
    breach of contract claims against Philadelphia.
    I.
    Because this case comes to us after the grant of judgment on partial findings
    under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(c), the facts are taken from the district
    court’s findings of fact after the court had heard the Smiths’ evidence and made
    decisions concerning the credibility of their witnesses. See Caro-Galvan v. Curtis
    Richardson, Inc., 
    993 F.2d 1500
    , 1504 (11th Cir. 1993).
    A.
    In March 2006 Larry Smith of Thomasville, Georgia, was diagnosed with
    prostate cancer and a local surgeon recommended “radical prostatectomy,” or in
    layman’s terms, prostate removal surgery. Concerned about the risks of surgery,
    the Smiths sought a second opinion from Dr. Gary Onik, an interventional
    radiologist with an office in Celebration, Florida, a suburb of Orlando. The
    Smiths scheduled a consultation with Dr. Onik for May 2, 2006. Dr. Onik asked
    Larry Smith to get MRI imaging completed at a facility in Port Charlotte, Florida,
    2
    before the consultation. The Smiths testified that they visited an MRI imaging
    facility on May 1, 2006 and introduced evidence of a statement they received from
    a facility in Port Charlotte showing charges for MRI services rendered on that day.
    The next day the Smiths attended their scheduled consultation at Dr. Onik’s
    office. Dr. Onik testified that as part of the evaluation process, numerous biopsies
    of Larry’s prostate were taken using a “brachytherapy grid,” which mapped the
    location of each biopsy taken from Larry’s prostate. Other than that testimony and
    the statements showing charges from medical service providers, the Smiths
    presented no evidence of what Dr. Onik asked the Smiths to do to evaluate Larry
    Smith’s cancer and need for surgery. At the consultation, Dr. Onik recommended
    that in his opinion, given Larry’s particular risks and circumstances, cryoablation
    would be a better alternative than surgical removal of the prostate.1
    The Smiths received a statement of charges from Dr. Onik’s office, the
    Center for Surgical Advancement at Florida Hospital Celebration Health, one
    charge for “Prostate Biopsy (saturation biopsy)” and the other for “Consultation.”
    The Smiths also received several other statements, which showed charges incurred
    1
    Dr. Onik testified that the cryoablation procedure performed some six months later on
    Larry Smith involved making a small incision near the prostate gland and inserting several
    hollow probes into the prostate. Once in place, gases were circulated within the probes causing
    the probes and any tissue in the vicinity of the probes to freeze at subzero temperatures. The
    freezing process killed the tumor and a limited amount of tissue surrounding the tumor, which, as
    dead tissue, was absorbed back into the body.
    3
    for services provided to Larry Smith on May 2, 2006. One such statement
    contained an itemized list of charges incurred from Florida Hospital Celebration
    Health. That statement listed 19 items, two of which were for a “Needle Biopsy,”
    and a “Grid Brachy-Disp Temp.” Other items included medications, tests,
    instruments, surgery time, anesthesia, and post-operative bed rest time, but none of
    those items were addressed by any testimony or other evidence presented by the
    Smiths.
    The Smiths also received a statement from JLR Anesthesia for “Biopsy
    Prostate Needle” at “FH Celebration Main” and a statement of charges from
    Central Florida Pathology Associates, PA located in Orlando, Florida for services
    at “Celebration Health.” Finally, the Smiths received a statement showing 48
    instances of “Level IV Surg Path.” done on samples taken “5-02-06” from
    Bostwick Laboratories, Inc. located in Atlanta, Georgia. There was no indication
    on that statement about where the samples that were tested by Bostwick were
    taken. All told, the charges for services performed for Larry Smith on May 1 and
    May 2, 2006 totaled $21,148.09.
    After meeting with Dr. Onik, the Smiths decided on the cryoablation
    procedure. Dr. Onik informed the Smiths that to prepare for the procedure Larry
    would need to undergo testing and hormone therapy for six months leading up to
    4
    the cryoablation procedure.2 The testing involved a bone scan, CT, and ultrasound
    to monitor the size of the prostate during hormone treatment. Larry Smith had
    both his initial testing done and began his six months of hormone therapy at a
    hospital in Tallahassee, Florida, a few weeks after his consultation with Dr. Onik.
    In October 2006 after the six months of hormone therapy, more tests were
    performed on Larry Smith at the hospital in Tallahassee. The Smiths received
    statements for the initial testing services and the October 2006 services from the
    Tallahassee hospital, which totaled $9,166.00.
    After completion of the hormone therapy Dr. Onik performed the
    cryoablation procedure on Larry Smith at the hospital in Celebration, Florida. The
    Smiths received several statements from various entities indicating charges
    associated with the cryoablation procedure. The charges for the services on those
    statements totaled $71,324.10.
    At all times relevant to this case Larry Smith was covered under his wife’s
    supplemental health insurance policy issued by Philadelphia.3 The policy was not
    a major medical expense policy, but a supplemental one that provided coverage
    2
    Hormone therapy limits the amount of testosterone in the body, which causes the
    prostate and any cancerous tissue in it to shrink. The Smiths do not dispute that they were
    properly compensated under the policy for the hormone therapy.
    3
    The policy was actually issued by Central States Health & Life Insurance Co. of Omaha
    in 2001, but in 2005 Philadelphia assumed all obligations and liabilities under the Smiths’ policy.
    5
    only for certain, specific costs relating to the diagnosis and treatment of cancer
    and other specified diseases. Thus, instead of blanket coverage for all costs
    related to cancer or any other disease, the policy only covered certain costs for
    certain diseases.
    One cost covered by the Smith’s policy was a “second surgical opinion
    benefit.” For that, Philadelphia agreed to “pay the actual charges incurred for a
    second . . . surgical opinion,” and the policy defined “second surgical opinion” as
    “an evaluation of the need for surgery by a second physician.”
    Another cost covered by the policy was a “surgical benefit.” For that,
    Philadelphia agreed to “pay up to $7,500.00 for actual charges made by a surgeon
    for surgery in or out of a hospital as outlined in the . . . Surgical Benefits Schedule.
    For operations not listed, a comparable reasonable benefit will be paid.”
    Cryoablation was not a listed operation in the policy’s surgery benefits schedule.
    One procedure that was listed in the schedule of surgical benefits was “Resection
    of Prostate, Complete,” with a maximum of $1,950 allotted to the procedure.
    Another procedure provided for under the policy, but not listed in the
    surgical benefits schedule, was the “Radiation, Radio-Active Isotopes Therapy,
    Chemotherapy, or Immunotherapy” benefit. For that radiation benefit,
    Philadelphia agreed to “pay 50% of the first $50,000 of the actual charges, and
    6
    100% of the next $100,000 of the actual charges . . . for the following treatment
    provided it is used for the purpose of modification or destruction of cancerous
    tissue: . . . (3) chemical substances and their administration including hormonal
    therapy.” That included “the actual charges for only those chemical substances
    which modify or destroy cancerous tissue and does not include other drugs or
    medicines given in conjunction with this treatment.” And “the treatment must be
    administered by a Radiologist.”
    After Larry Smith’s cryoablation procedure, his wife Gloria Smith made two
    claims under the policy for all charges associated with the consultation with Dr.
    Onik, the treatment before the procedure, and the procedure itself—one for second
    opinion benefits and the other for a “comparable reasonable” surgical benefit for
    the cryoablation procedure. Philadelphia paid both claims in part. Specifically it
    paid $11,458.00 of the $30,314.09 claimed for second opinion benefits and
    $2,625.50 of the $71,324.10 claimed for the cryoablation procedure.
    B.
    The Smiths filed suit in March 2007 in state court against Philadelphia,
    seeking damages for breach of the supplemental insurance policy, which
    Philadelphia removed to federal court. After some issues were resolved on
    summary judgment, the case proceeded to a two-day bench trial in May 2010. At
    7
    trial after the close of the Smiths’ evidence, Philadelphia moved for judgment on
    partial findings under Rule 52(c). The district court declined to rule on the motion
    until the close of all of the evidence. After the close of all of the evidence,
    Philadelphia again moved for judgment on partial findings, and the district court
    took Philadelphia’s motion under advisement.
    On September 29, 2010, the district court entered an order granting
    Philadelphia’s motion for judgment on partial findings. The court entered
    judgment for Philadelphia the next day from which the Smiths timely appealed. In
    its order granting judgment on partial findings, the district court held that the
    Smiths had “failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Defendant
    breached either (1) the second surgical opinion benefit or (2) the surgical benefit’s
    ‘comparable reasonable benefit’ clause.” The Smiths contend that the district
    court erred in both of its conclusions. We address each in turn, “deciding
    questions of law de novo and reviewing the district court’s factual findings for
    clear error.” Locke v. Shore, 
    634 F.3d 1185
    , 1191 (11th Cir. 2011).
    II.
    The Smiths argue that the district court misinterpreted the second opinion
    benefits provision of the policy by reading into it limiting language that was not
    there. Specifically, the Smiths argue that the district court erred by interpreting
    8
    the policy to cover only tests “necessary” for Dr. Onik to render his second
    opinion where the plain language of the policy included no such limitation. A
    district court’s interpretation of an insurance policy, like its interpretation of any
    contract, is a question of law we review de novo. Chalfonte Condo. Apartment
    Ass’n, Inc. v. QBE Ins. Corp., 
    561 F.3d 1267
    , 1274 (11th Cir. 2009).
    In reaching its conclusion, the district court first rejected Philadelphia’s
    narrow reading, which would have included only the opinion of Dr. Onik (i.e., the
    charge for his consultation with the Smiths). It concluded that the unambiguous
    language of the benefit provision covered “both the physician’s opinion and the
    tests necessary for the physician to render that opinion.” (emphasis added).
    Turning to the question of which charges fit under that interpretation, the
    district court found that “Dr. Onik was the only witness to testify as to what he
    required to render his second opinion,” and that he “testified at length about
    biopsies and grid mapping.” The district court found:
    Dr. Onik, however, did not provide any testimony as to what was
    necessary to procure the biopsy and grid mapping. The Court finds that
    it lacks any evidentiary basis to rule that, for instance, the anesthesia
    administered to Mr. Smith on May 2, 2006, or the MRI obtained on May
    1, 2006, were necessary for Dr. Onik to obtain the biopsy and grid
    mapping. There was simply no evidence submitted thereon by [the
    Smiths]. While it would be logical to infer that a patient would wish to
    be under anesthesia during a biopsy of the prostate, or that said biopsy
    would occur in a hospital operating room, the Court is constrained to
    9
    considering the evidence presented at trial, not drawing unsupported
    inferences. The Court finds that the record is devoid of evidence
    indicating that all of the charges contained in [the statements submitted
    by the Smiths] were necessary for Dr. Onik to evaluate Mr. Smith’s need
    for surgery. In short, just because charges were incurred on May 2,
    2006 does not mean that the evidence shows that they were among “the
    actual charges incurred for . . . an evaluation of the need for surgery.”
    (emphasis added). The court found that the policy covered only the itemized
    charges in the statements that specifically referenced “biopsy” or “grids,” but
    nothing more. It even found that the itemized charges that were on the same
    statement as the “biopsy” and “grids” charges, such as medications, tests,
    instruments, surgery time, anesthesia, and post-operative bed rest time, were not
    covered under the second opinion benefits provision.
    The district court interpreted that provision to cover only the charges that
    were “necessary” to render Dr. Onik’s opinion were covered. The plain language
    of the second opinion benefits provision of the Smiths’ policy, however, does not
    support such a reading. That provision requires Philadelphia to “pay the actual
    charges incurred for a second . . . surgical opinion.” The policy defined “second
    surgical opinion” as “an evaluation of the need for surgery by a second physician.”
    This is a diversity case to which Georgia law applies. See World Harvest
    Church, Inc. v. Guideone Mut. Ins. Co., 
    586 F.3d 950
    , 956 (11th Cir. 2009).
    “Under Georgia law, contracts of insurance are interpreted by ordinary rules of
    10
    contract construction.” Boardman Petroleum, Inc. v. Federated Mut. Ins. Co., 
    498 S.E.2d 492
    , 494 (Ga. 1998). “Where the terms are clear and unambiguous, and
    capable of only one reasonable interpretation, the court is to look to the contract
    alone to ascertain the parties’ intent.” 
    Id. And “[t]erms
    in an insurance policy are
    given their ordinary and common meaning, unless otherwise defined in the
    contract.” 
    Id. We agree
    with the district court to the extent it held that the tests must have
    a causal connection to Dr. Onik’s opinion. We disagree, however, that the Smiths
    must have introduced evidence proving that the tests were “necessary.” Instead,
    the plain language requires only that the charges be “incurred” for the “evaluation
    of the need for surgery.” The ordinary and common meaning of “incur” in this
    context is “to become liable” for. Random House Webster’s Unabridged
    Dictionary 969 (1997). Thus any actual charges for any medical services
    performed for Larry Smith that the Smiths became liable for as part of Dr. Onik
    forming and rendering his opinion for surgery are covered by the policy.
    Although the district court has yet to make fact findings under the proper
    interpretation of the policy, we note that there is some direct evidence in addition
    to strong circumstantial evidence that many of the charges were incurred as part of
    the biopsy and grid mapping tests Dr. Onik needed for his evaluation. First, Larry
    11
    Smith and Dr. Onik both testified that Dr. Onik asked Larry Smith to get MRI
    imaging of his prostate before the consultation, and the statement from the MRI
    imaging facility indicated that imaging services were performed on May 1,
    2006—the day before Larry’s appointment with Dr. Onik.
    Regarding the other charges, almost all of them resulted from services
    performed on the same day that Larry Smith had biopsies taken and had his
    consultation with Dr. Onik.4 Many of those charges resulted from services
    performed in the same hospital.5 Some of the itemized charges were on the same
    statement as the “biopsy” and “grid” charges that the district court found were
    covered, even under the court’s more limited interpretation of the policy.
    Additionally, the Smiths put forth evidence that they were in Celebration
    (and Port Charlotte where the MRI occurred) for the purpose of procuring Dr.
    Onik’s second opinion. No evidence suggests to the contrary that Larry Smith had
    any other tests or doctor’s appointments scheduled in Celebration, a city over 250
    4
    We agree with the district court’s conclusion that the charges for the testing services
    associated with the hormone therapy done at the Tallahassee hospital were clearly not a part of
    Dr. Onik forming and rendering his opinion. Some of the tests were performed in late May 2006
    and the others in October 2006, long after Dr. Onik had rendered his opinion. Additionally,
    circumstantial evidence indicates the testing was done to track the effectiveness of the hormone
    therapy in shrinking Larry’s prostate.
    5
    We also note that the statements from Dr. Onik’s office indicate that his office is either
    a part of or associated with the hospital.
    12
    miles from the Smiths’ hometown of Thomasville, Georgia. The circumstantial
    evidence thus strongly points to the fact that all of the charges for services
    performed on May 1 and May 2, 2006, for Larry Smith in Celebration and Port
    Charlotte were incurred as part of Dr. Onik’s evaluation. We also note that one
    statement of charges does not reference Celebration but does appear to show that
    the samples tested were taken on May 2, 2006. It also shows that nearly 50
    samples of something were tested, which is in line with the numerous biopsies that
    Dr. Onik testified were required to properly map the prostate with a brachytherapy
    grid.
    The actual fact findings, however, are not for us to make in the first
    instance. Accordingly, we remand this issue to the district court to make findings
    and conclusions in light of the proper interpretation of the policy’s second opinion
    benefits provision that we have set forth in this opinion.
    III.
    The Smiths also contend that the district court erred in holding that they did
    not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Philadelphia had breached the
    policy by not paying the full amount of the Smiths’ claim for the cryoablation
    procedure. As discussed above, under the policy provision titled “surgical
    benefits,” Philadelphia agreed to:
    13
    pay up to $7,500.00 for actual charges made by a surgeon for surgery in
    or out of a hospital as outlined in the . . . Surgical Benefits Schedule.
    For operations not listed, a comparable reasonable benefit will be paid.
    The cryoablation procedure was not an operation listed in the policy, so the
    question became what “comparable reasonable benefit” Philadelphia had to pay
    for that procedure. Before the Smiths brought suit, Philadelphia had paid the
    Smiths $2,625.50 of the amount they had claimed for the cryoablation procedure,
    which was the $675.50 more than the maximum amount listed in the surgical
    benefits schedule for surgical removal of the prostate.
    Claiming that the policy required Philadelphia to pay more, the Smiths
    argued in the district court that “comparable reasonable benefit” was ambiguous
    and should thus be interpreted under Georgia law against their insurer,
    Philadelphia. The Smiths argued that “comparable reasonable benefit” should not
    be read as referring only to the “surgical benefits schedule” and the $7,500.00 cap
    from the provision’s preceding sentence, but as also referring to a “comparable
    reasonable benefit” found anywhere else in the policy. The district court agreed,
    and Philadelphia does not contest the court’s interpretation of that policy
    language.
    The Smiths also argued that they had interpreted the benefits that the policy
    provided for “Radiation, Radio-Active Isotopes Therapy, Chemotherapy, or
    14
    Immunotherapy” to be “comparable” to what should be paid for the cryoablation
    procedure performed on Larry Smith because both procedures “modif[ied] or
    destroy[ed] cancerous tissue.” And because the language of ambiguous insurance
    provisions must be interpreted in light of how a layperson would reasonably
    interpret them and since the Smiths were laypeople, their interpretation that
    cryoablation was “comparable” to radiation should prevail.
    The district court, however, disagreed. While acknowledging that the
    Smiths provided evidence of a layperson’s interpretation of the policy, the court
    held that they did not provide sufficient evidence to show that their layperson
    interpretation was reasonable. See Boardman Petroleum, Inc. v. Federated Mut.
    Ins. Co., 
    498 S.E.2d 492
    , 494 (Ga. 1998) (“[I]nsurance contracts are to be read in
    accordance with the reasonable expectations of the insured where possible.”
    (emphasis added)). The court explained:
    [The Smiths] have provided no evidence showing that [they are]
    qualified to compare one medical procedure to another. While a
    layperson’s reasonable interpretation of insurance contract terms may be
    considered reliable, a layperson’s comparison of two medical procedures
    lacks reliability. [The Smiths] failed to present a reliable medical
    witness who might support the theory that the two medical procedures
    favorably compare. [The Smiths] have not presented sufficient evidence
    to reasonably explain why the Amendment Rider’s [radiation benefit]
    can be compared to [Larry] Smith’s prostate cryosurgery procedure, in
    light of Dr. Onik’s testimony that the procedure did not involve
    radiation, radio-active isotopes, chemotherapy, or immunotherapy.
    15
    The district court found that the evidence the Smiths presented did not prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence that cryoablation was comparable to radiation.
    Thus, Philadelphia did not breach its obligation under the policy by refusing to
    pay benefits for cryoablation comparable to the benefits that the policy provided
    for radiation.
    The Smiths argue that there was evidence from which a factfinder could
    infer that the two benefits were comparable. They point to various snippets of Dr.
    Onik’s testimony about the three prostate procedures — cryoablation, radiation,
    and prostate removal — that they argue could “provide enough facts from which
    the factfinder could draw reasonable inferences and make the comparisons for
    himself.”
    That argument, however, ignores the clear error standard with which we
    review the factual findings of a factfinder, and in the case of a bench trial, that
    factfinder is the district court. See 
    Locke, 634 F.3d at 1191
    (11th Cir. 2011);
    O’Ferrell v. United States, 
    253 F.3d 1257
    , 1265 (11th Cir. 2001) (“A district
    court’s bench trial findings of fact are reviewed to determine whether they are
    clearly erroneous.”). The court found, after weighing the evidence and making
    credibility determinations, that the Smiths did not “present sufficient evidence to
    16
    reasonably explain” why the two procedures should be considered comparable.
    That finding was not clearly erroneous. Other than Mrs. Smith’s layperson
    testimony, which the district court found unreliable for purposes of comparing
    medical procedures, the Smiths presented no direct evidence comparing
    cryoablation to radiation. While inferences could be made from circumstantial
    evidence such as Dr. Onik’s testimony about the different prostate procedures, the
    district court as factfinder was not required to draw those inferences.
    IV.
    In sum, while we affirm in all other respects, we vacate the district court’s
    order granting judgment on partial findings and remand this case for the limited
    purpose of determining in light of this opinion which charges in the statements
    submitted by the Smiths are covered under the policy’s second opinion benefit
    provision.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
    17