Author: Richard H. Adler
A question common to both patient and health care provider is whether
an attorney can be expected to pay for the treatment expenses of a
client pending the resolution of a personal injury claim. The virtually
universal answer is that the attorney may not, and should not, pay the
health care treatment expenses of the client, but may advance costs for
items such as records, reports, and the provider's time to prepare for
and deliver testimony.
Attorneys practicing in Washington State are specifically prohibited
by the Rules of Professional Conduct from " . . . advance[ing] or
guarantee[ing] financial assistance to his or her client . . . "
Financial assistance includes the payment of the client's treatment
bills. The Rules of Professional Conduct are the rules which guide
attorneys in their law practice behavior and mandate minimum standards
of conduct.
The rule barring attorneys from providing financial assistance is but
one of a number of rules and guidelines designed to prevent lawyers
from having or creating a conflict of interest with their clients.
Attorneys are charged with concerning themselves first and foremost
with the legitimate and practical interests of their clients. A
"conflict of interest" is a factual circumstance wherein the loyalties
and interests of the attorney do, or may, take precedence over those of
his or her client. The law has always considered potential conflict
between client and attorney to be an untenable situation, which can
only be resolved by elimination of the subject matter of the conflict
and/or the termination of the attorney-client relationship.
If an attorney pays for a client's treatment bill, a conflict of
interest for the lawyer is presumed to arise. This is because the
attorney has created a circumstance where he/she has a personal economic interest
in the outcome of the case, which in part was created by the hope for
repayment of advances made solely for the benefit of the client. This
conflicts with the lawyer's primary duties to take direction solely
from the client and make important decisions in the legal
representation of the client based upon independent and informed
judgment.
The Washington State Bar Association and the Washington Supreme Court
continue to enforce the prohibition against this conflict of interest.
In effect the line has been drawn at the point of payment of fees and expenses which are not related to the costs of the litigation.
This kind of "investment" in the case oversteps the bounds of a healthy
interest in the client's case. Having determined that the attorney's
judgment on the client's behalf cannot be in conflict with his own
interests in the case, and that the attorney should not have that much
control over the client's claim or health care, payment of treatment
expenses is not allowed.
However, charges of the physician which are solely related to the
preparation and prosecution of the client's personal injury claim
(treatment records, consultation fees, charges for testimony time, and
time and diagnostic tests related to evaluation as opposed to on-going
treatment), are costs "associated with litigation." When such services
are requested by the attorney, the costs are the primary legal
responsibility of the attorney, who is then obligated to pay them in
accordance with the terms agreed upon.
Once the personal injury case is resolved, it is the practice of
competent attorneys to completely pay all outstanding bills to
treatment providers from the proceeds of the settlement. The
motivations for doing so are several-fold. First, there is an ethical
and contractual obligation to pay those providers who have given
treatment to the client in the good faith belief that they will be paid
for their services. Second, the provider may have properly completed
and filed a "statutory lien," therefore obligating the attorney to pay
the outstanding bills of the client related to the case.
Last but not least, it promotes harmony and cooperation between the
professions, ultimately benefitting all personal injury plaintiffs who
so greatly depend upon the competence, good will, and cooperation of
their physicians in the prosecution of their claims.
Very truly yours,
ADLER GIERSCH, P.S.
Richard H. Adler
Attorney at Law