SUPREME COURT OF FLORIDA
AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, et al.,
Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
v.
ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES OF FLORIDA, INC., et
al.,
Appellees/Cross-Appellants.
No. 86,213
June 27, 1996
OVERTON, J.
We have for review a final order and declaratory judgment
of the Second Judicial Circuit Court holding that significant portions
of the Medicaid Third-Party Liability Act (Act) [ § 409.910, Fla.
Stat. (1995).] are unconstitutional. The trial court also held that the
Agency for Health Care Administration (Agency), the entity charged with
enforcing that Act, was structured in violation of the Florida Constitution.
The First District Court of Appeal certified that this judgment passed
on a matter of great public importance that required immediate resolution
by this Court. We accepted jurisdiction and heard oral argument. Art. V,
§ 3(b)(5), Fla. Const.
At issue is the State's ability to fashion a cause of
action to recover health care expenditures made on behalf of Floridians
and occasioned by the allegedly tortious conduct of others. At the outset,
we note that the judicial branch must be cautious when evaluating the choices
made by the legislative branch as to the appropriate funding for programs
it has deemed important to the public welfare. We must avoid unnecessarily
limiting the funding options available to the legislature when addressing
today's policy problems. With this philosophy in mind, we now proceed.
In summary, we affirm the judgment in part and reverse
the judgment in part. First, we find no legal infirmity in the structure
of the Agency. We next, with two significant caveats, find the Act to be
facially constitutional. We have no cause to invalidate, on its face, this
legislative enactment aimed at the recoupment of Medicaid expenditures
necessitated by the tortious conduct of others. The State concedes that
it must demonstrate a defective product or negligent conduct, it must establish
causation, and it must prove damages. Certainly the legislature may pursue
these legitimate public-policy objectives. We do, however, limit our holding
in the following two ways. First, a ruling of facial constitutionality
does not preclude a later action challenging the manner in which the Act
is applied. Indeed, some provisions of the Act may give rise to some serious
constitutional issues at a later point in time. Second, while the essential
aspects of the Act are facially constitutional, the following provisions
must be modified or stricken to avoid offending the due process guarantees
of the Florida Constitution: (1) the authority to pursue an action without
identifying individual Medicaid recipients must be stricken; (2) the abolition
of a statute-of-repose defense is ineffective to revive time-barred claims;
and (3) the provision for combining the theories of market share liability
and joint and several liability must be stricken even though either theory
may be used separately.
We therefore strike the offensive provisions and leave
the remainder of the Act intact.
Legislative and Case History
Importantly, the underlying basis for the government's
recovery of health care costs expended for its citizens did not begin with
the 1994 modifications to the Act that are at issue in this proceeding.
Instead, the State has been legislatively authorized to pursue such reimbursement
since Medicaid was enacted in 1968. See 42 U.S.C. § 1 396a(a)(25)(
1994). The State originally used federal law as a basis for its actions.
In 1978, however, the legislature enacted statutory authority by which
the State could pursue recovery of expenditures from third parties [ Ch.
78-433, § 14, Laws of Fla.] . At that point, the State was given a
traditional subrogation action. [ The 1978 enactment included the following
provision: (b) A public assistance applicant or recipient shall inform
the department of any rights he has to third-party payments for medical
services. The department shall automatically be subrogated to any such
rights the recipient has to third-party payments and shall recover to the
fullest extent possible the amount of all medical assistance payments made
on behalf of the recipient. § 409.266(3), Fla. Stat. (Supp. 1978).]
Such an action allowed the State to occupy the same position as a Medicaid
recipient in its pursuit of third-party resources. Then, in 1990, the existing
statutory authority was substantially modified with the passage of major
amendments to the Act. [ In 1990, the original subsection containing the
statutory subrogation provision was repealed. Ch. 90-295, § 34, Laws
of Fla. In its stead, a new section was enacted. Ch. 90-295, § 33,
Laws of Florida.] The purpose of this modification was to strengthen the
State's ability to recover funds expended for Medicaid costs. The following
are the 1990 modifications relevant to this case:
(1) . . . Medicaid is to be repaid in full from, and to
the extent of, any third-party benefits, regardless of whether a recipient
is made whole or other creditors paid. Principles of common law and equity
as to assignment, lien, and subrogation are to be abrogated to the extent
necessary to ensure full recovery by Medicaid from third-party resources....
***
(7) When the department provides, pays for, or becomes
liable for medical care under [the Medicaid program], it shall have the
following rights, as to which the department may assert independent principles
of law, which shall nevertheless be construed together to provide the greatest
recovery from third-party benefits:
***
(12) The department may, as a matter of right, in order
to enforce its rights under this section, institute, intervene in, or join
any legal proceeding in its own name in one or more of the following capacities:
individually, as subrogee of the recipient, as assignee of the recipient,
or as lienholder of the collateral.
§ 409.2665, Fla. Stat. (Supp. 1990).
The Act was again modified in 1994. [ Ch. 94-251, §
4, Laws of Fla.] It is these amendments that are directly at issue in this
case. The relevant provisions of the Act affected by the 1994 amendments,
with those amendments identified by underlining or strike-through, read
as follows:
409.910 Responsibility for payments on behalf of Medicaid-eligible
persons when other parties are liable.--
(1) It is the intent of the Legislature that Medicaid
be the payer of last resort for medically necessary goods and services
furnished to Medicaid recipients. All other sources of payment for medical
care are primary to medical assistance provided by Medicaid. If benefits
of a liable third party are available discovered or become
available after medical assistance has been provided by Medicaid,
it is the intent of the Legislature that Medicaid be repaid in full and
prior to any other person, program, or entity. Medicaid is to be repaid
in full from, and to the extent of, any third-party benefits, regardless
of whether a recipient is made whole or other creditors paid. Principles
of common law and equity as to assignment, lien and subrogation, comparative
negligence, assumption of risk, and all other affirmative defenses normally
available to a liable third party, are to be abrogated to the extent
necessary to ensure full recovery by Medicaid from third-party resources;
such principles shall apply to a recipient's right to recovery against
any third party, but shall not act to reduce the recovery of the agency
pursuant to this section. The concept of joint and several liability applies
to any recovery on the part of the agency. It is intended that if the
resources of a liable third party become available at any time, the public
treasury should not bear the burden of medical assistance to the extent
of such resources. Common law theories of recovery shall be liberally
construed to accomplish this intent.
(2) This section may be cited as the "Medicaid Third-Party
Liability Act."
***
(4) After the department has provided medical assistance
under the Medicaid program, it shall seek recovery of reimbursement from
third-party benefits to the limit of legal liability and for the full amount
of third-party benefits, but not in excess of the amount of medical assistance
paid by Medicaid, as to:
(b) Situations in which a third party is liable and
the liability or benefits available are discovered either before or
the department learns of the existence of a liable third party
or in which third-party benefits are discovered or become available
after medical assistance has been provided by Medicaid.
***
(6) When the department provides, pays for, or becomes
liable for medical care under the Medicaid program, it has the following
rights, as to which the department may assert independent principles of
law, which shall nevertheless be construed together to provide the greatest
recovery from third-party benefits:
(a) The agency has a cause of action against a liable
third party to recover the full amount of medical assistance provided by
Medicaid, and such cause of action is independent of any rights or causes
of action of the recipient.
***
(9) In the event that medical assistance has been provided
by Medicaid to more than one recipient, and the agency elects to seek recovery
from liable third parties due to actions by the third parties or circumstances
which involve common issues of fact or law, the agency may bring an action
to recover sums paid to all such recipients in one proceeding. In any action
brought under this subsection, the evidence code shall be liberally construed
regarding the issues of causation and of aggregate damages. The issue of
causation and damages in any such action may be proven by use of statistical
analysis.
(a) In any action under this subsection wherein the
number of recipients for which medical assistance has been provided by
Medicaid is so large as to cause it to be impracticable to join or identify
each claim, the agency shall not be required to so identify the individual
recipients for which payment has been made, but rather can proceed to seek
recovery based upon payments made on behalf of an entire class of recipients.
(b) In any action brought pursuant to this subsection
wherein a third party is liable due to its manufacture, sale, or distribution
of a product, the agency shall be allowed to proceed under a market share
theory, provided that the products involved are substantially interchangeable
among brands, and that substantially similar factual or legal issues would
be involved in seeking recovery against each liable third party individually.
***
(12)(h) Except as otherwise provided in this section,
actions to enforce the rights of the department under this section shall
be commenced within 5 years after the date a cause of action accrues, with
the period running from the later of the date of discovery by the department
of a case filed by a recipient or his legal representative, or of discovery
of any judgment, award, or settlement contemplated in this section, or
of the provision of medical assistance to a recipient. Each item of expense
provided by the agency shall be considered to constitute a separate cause
of action for purposes of this subsection. The defense of statute of repose
shall not apply to any action brought under this section by the agency
or of discovery of facts giving rise to a cause of action under
this section. Nothing in this paragraph affects or prevents a
proceeding to enforce a lien during the existence of the lien as set forth
in subparagraph (6)(c)9.
***
(19) In cases of suspected criminal violations or fraudulent
activity, on the part of any person including a liable third-party, the
department is authorized to take any civil action permitted at law or equity
to recover the greatest possible amount, including without limitation,
treble damages under s. 772.73 F.S. In any action in which the recipient
has no right to intervene, or does not exercise his right to intervene,
any amounts recovered under this subsection shall be the property of the
agency, and the recipient shall have no right or interest in such recovery.
Ch. 94-251, § 4, Laws of Fla. (emphasis added in
part).
Subsequent to the 1994 modifications, Governor Lawton
Chiles ordered the relevant executive branch officials to pursue the recovery
of Medicaid expenditures from only the tobacco industry. [ Fla. Exec. Order
No. 95-105 (Mar. 28, 1995).] Representatives of certain industries affected
by the governor's order (Associated Industries) filed this declaratory
judgment action in the Circuit Court in Leon County. The lawsuit alleged
that the 1994 amendments were unconstitutional and that the Agency was
structured in violation of the Florida Constitution. The trial court ruled
that: (1) the Agency was in fact structured in violation of the twenty-five
department limitation in article IV, section 6, of the Florida Constitution;
(2) the 1994 amendments encroached upon this Court's rule-making authority
and thereby violated the separation-of-powers doctrine; (3) the 1994 amendments,
because they created new substantive rights, could only be applied prospectively;
and (4) the attempted elimination of the statute of repose defense could
not revive time-barred claims. The State has appealed all of these rulings
in this action.
Associated Industries has cross-appealed, raising three
additional issues. It argues that: (1) the 1994 amendments violate article
I, section 21, of the Florida Constitution by denying access to the courts;
(2) the 1994 amendments encroach upon the separation-of-powers doctrine
by prescribing relevancy and admissibility requirements for certain types
of evidence; and (3) due process of law is offended by the 1994 amendments
in violation of both the Florida and federal constitutions.
Numerous amicus briefs have been filed. [ Amicus curiae
briefs were filed by (1) National Federation of Independent Business and
Florida Retail Federation, Inc.; (2) Hillsborough County Hospital Authority;
(3) Good Samaritan and St. Mary's Hospitals; (4) Florida Health Care Association,
Inc.,; (5) Hospital Board of Directors of Lee County, d/b/a Lee Memorial
Health System; (6) Dade County Public Health Trust; (7) Wine and Spirits
Distributors of Florida, Inc.; and (8) Sacred Heart Hospital of Pensacola.]
Many of the challenges outlined above are redundant in
the sense that they attack the same clauses of the Act with differing legal
theories. We choose to organize our analysis by successively addressing
the specific provisions of the Act that are challenged. We will evaluate
each implicated clause and dispose of all legal challenges to that clause
in the same portion of our opinion. Prior to reaching that discussion,
though, it is necessary to address (1) the challenge to the Agency's constitutionality
and (2) the nature and origin of the State's cause of action.
The Constitutionality of the Agency
Associated Industries argues that the Agency was created
in violation of article IV, section 6, of the Florida Constitution because
it resulted in the establishment of a twenty-sixth department. The trial
court agreed. This holding would preclude the Agency from pursuing the
causes of action authorized by the Act.
The relevant part of the Florida Constitution reads as
follows:
All functions of the executive branch of state government
shall be allotted among not more than twenty-five departments, exclusive
of those specifically provided for or authorized in this constitution.
The administration of each department, unless otherwise provided in this
constitution, shall be placed by law under the direct supervision of the
governor, the lieutenant governor, the governor and cabinet, a cabinet
member, or an officer or board appointed by and serving at the pleasure
of the governor ....
Art. IV, § 6, Fla. Const.
This section of the constitution makes it abundantly clear
that Florida shall have a limited executive branch. With the exception
of those departments specifically authorized by the constitution, there
cannot be more than twenty-five executive departments in existence at any
time.
The legislature created the Agency in 1992. That act reads
as follows:
Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
Section 1. Effective July 1, 1992, section 20.42, Florida
Statutes, is created to read:
20.42 Agency for Health Care Administration. -- There
is created the Agency for Health Care Administration within the Department
of Professional Regulation. The agency shall be a separate budget entity,
and the director of the agency shall be the agency head for all purposes.
The agency shall not be subject to control, supervision, or direction by
the Department of Professional Regulation in any manner, including, but
not limited to, personnel, purchasing, transactions involving real or personal
property, and budgetary matters.
(1) DIRECTOR OF HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION.--The head
of the agency is the Director of Health Care Administration, who shall
be appointed by the Governor. The director shall serve at the pleasure
of and report to the Governor.
Ch. 92-33, § 1, at 241, Laws of Fla.
The trial court based its conclusion that this agency
was "unconstitutionally structured in violation of the 25 department
limit of Article IV, § 6 of the Florida Constitution" upon two
assumptions: (1) that the Agency is a department; and (2) that twenty-five
departments were in place prior to the Agency's creation. We disagree.
As set out below, we conclude that the Agency was created as a valid agency
within an existing department by the express language of the statute. Consequently,
we need not determine the number of departments in existence in 1992.
This Court is deferential when reviewing a legislative
determination as to the meaning of a constitutional provision. In Greater
Loretta Improvement Ass'n v. State ex ref. Boone, 234 So. 2d 665, 669
(Fla. 1970), we stated: "[W]here a constitutional provision may well
have either of several meanings, it is a fundamental rule of constitutional
construction that, if the Legislature has by statute adopted one, its action
in this respect is well-nigh, if not completely, controlling." This
rule of construction is tempered by reason, and this Court will not give
a constitutional provision an impossible or irrational construction simply
to validate a given statute. [ See Holley v. Adams , 238 So. 2d 401 (Fla.
1970).]
Our role is to determine whether the legislature has adopted
a rational construction of the constitutional limitation on executive departments.
The legislature has set forth a policy concerning this issue as follows:
20.02 Declaration of policy.--
***
(2) Within constitutional limita-tions, the agencies which
comprise the executive branch should be consolidated into a reasonable
number of departments consistent with executive capacity to administer
effectively at all levels. The agencies in the executive branch should
be integrated into one of the departments of the executive branch to achieve
maximum efficiency and effectiveness as intended by s. 6, Art. IV of the
State Constitution.
***
(5) Departments should be organized along functional
or program lines.
§ 20.02, Fla. Stat. (1993)(emphasis added). Thus,
the legislature has clearly stated its intention that departments should
be organized with special attention given to keeping similar functional
responsibilities within the same department.
The Agency was created as an independent agency within
the Department of Professional Regulation. The Agency's director is appointed
by, and reports directly to, the governor. We find that the placement of
the Agency within the Department of Professional Regulation [ As of July
1, 1993, the Department of Professional Regulation was merged with the
Department of Business Regulation to create the Department of Business
and Professional Regulation. Ch. 93-220, Laws of Fla.] was within the prerogative
of the legislature. It cannot be disputed that the Agency's functional
responsibilities include the regulation of health care activities in the
state. The Agency does much more than initiate claims to recover Medicaid
expenditures from third parties. Numerous amicus briefs filed by the hospital
industry indicate a high level of concern regarding the trial court's adverse
ruling as to the Agency. Those briefs explain the numerous Agency responsibilities
in the regulation of hospitals and health-care providers -- responsibilities
certainly indicating that the Agency is a vital regulatory body within
the health-care industry. The Department of Professional Regulation was
responsible for many similar functions. Thus, the Agency's placement was
a logical extension of the regulatory functions of the Department of Professional
Regulation.
We find no merit in Associated Industries' claim that
our functional analysis will render the disputed departmental limitation
"meaningless." First, nothing changes as to the number of departments
allowed in Florida. To accept Associated Industries' argument would mean
that the legislature could not direct that an agency within a department
must report directly to the governor. That result was neither intended
nor required by the constitutional limitation on the number of departments.
Our decision today does not permit the legislature to create a twenty-sixth
department. Neither does the legislature gain the freedom to create numerous
autonomous agencies. As we have stated, all agencies must be functionally
related to the departments in which they are placed. We certainly are not
sanctioning departments that resemble hodgepodges. [ We note that, instead
of the prophesied governmental expansion, the legislature has actually
consolidated departments since 1992.] However, we do not believe that the
constitutional departmental limitation prevents the legislature from placing
an agency within a department, even though the agency itself reports directly
to the governor, so long as that agency is functionally related to the
department in which it is placed. Accordingly, we find no constitutional
infirmity in the Agency's structure.
The Cause of Action
We now must address the nature of the State's cause of
action. We recognize that many aspects of the Act have been challenged
on constitutional grounds. However, in view of the numerous theories as
to the origin and substance of the State's action, we choose to first define
the contours of that action and then evaluate the Act against constitutional
standards.
Associated Industries asserts that the State was limited
to traditional notions of subrogation, assignment, and lien until the legislature
amended the Act in 1994, and that, under these traditional theories, the
State would be subject to the same legal obstacles that the Medicaid recipient
would face in pursuing a claim. Associated Industries contends that it
was the 1994 modifications that gave the State an independent cause of
action and abrogated the affirmative defenses available to a third-party
tortfeasor. We agree that it was the 1994 modifications, coupled with the
1990 amendments, that established an independent cause of action.
In 1978, the Florida Legislature clarified the State's
rights in recovering third-party payments made to Medicaid recipients by
enacting the following provision:
(b) A public assistance applicant or recipient shall inform
the department of any rights he has to third-party payments for medical
services. The department shall automatically be subrogated to any such
rights the recipient has to third-party payments and shall recover to the
fullest extent possible the amount of all medical assistance payments made
on behalf of the recipient.
§ 409.266(3), Fla. Stat. (Supp. 1978). This statutory
language gave the State the authority to pursue third-party resources.
However, the method of pursuit was limited to traditional subrogation means.
In 1990, the legislature expanded the State's ability to pursue third-party
resources. In amending the Act, the legislature recognized that the State's
traditional subrogation rights were not sufficient. The amending language
used in 1990 is expansive. For instance, a third party, the potential defendant
in any action brought under the Act, was defined as
an individual, entity, or program, excluding Medicaid,
that is, may be, could be, should be, or has been liable for all or part
of the cost of medical services related to any medical assistance covered
by Medicaid.
§ 409.2665(3)(p), Fla. Stat. (Supp. 1990). Certainly
this broad definition of third parties covers tortfeasors that caused a
Medicaid recipient's health problems. The intent of the statute is clear
that "Medicaid be the payer of last resort for medically necessary
goods and services furnished to Medicaid recipients," and that, "if
the resources of a liable third party become available at any time, the
public treasury should not bear the burden of medical assistance to the
extent of such resources." § 409.2665(1), Fla. Stat. (Supp. 1990).
Two other clauses are important. First, the legislature's 1990 language
makes significant changes to the State's traditional subrogation action.
It reads:
Principles of common law and equity as to assignment,
lien, and subrogation are to be abrogated to the extent necessary to ensure
full recovery by Medicaid from third-party resources.
§ 409.2665(1), Fla. Stat. (Supp. 1990).
The second major legislative change in the 1990 Act appears
in subsection (12) of section 409.2665, Florida Statutes (Supp. 1990),
and it states:
(12) The department may, as a matter of right, in order
to enforce its rights under this section, institute, intervene in, or join
any legal proceeding in its own name in one or more of the following capacities:
individually, as subrogee of the recipient, as assignee of the recipient,
or as lienholder of the collateral.
It is clear that the 1990 legislation, at the very least,
moves the State to the front of the line vis-à-vis other innocent
parties if any benefits become available, and these provisions give the
State an expanded right to take priority over innocent parties in claiming
"a pot of money once obtained."
Assuming that the content of the 1990 Act is open to numerous
interpretations, the 1994 amendments clarify the State's cause of action
definitively. After the modifications made in 1994, there can be no doubt
that the Act is intended to create an independent cause of action to which
traditional affirmative defenses do not apply. The major modifications
made in 1994 are summarized below. First, the Act restated and expanded
its language indicating that all affirmative defenses be abrogated to the
extent necessary to ensure the State's recovery. [ § 409.910 (1),
Fla. Stat. (1995).] Second, the Act now relieves the State of any duty
to identify the individual recipients of Medicaid payments. [ § 409.910
(9) (a), Fla. Stat. (1995).] Third, the statute of repose defense was abrogated
in any action pursued by the Agency under the Act. [ § 409.910 (12)
(h), Fla. Stat. (1995).] Fourth, the Act now clarifies that the State has
the authority to pursue all of its claims in one proceeding. [ § 409.910
(9), Fla. Stat. (1995).] Fifth, the State was given the authority to utilize
theories of market share liability in conjunction with the theory of joint
and several liability. [ § 409.910 (1), (9) (b), Fla. Stat. (1995).]
Sixth, the State was given the authority to use statistical analysis in
proving causation and damages. [ § 409.910 (9), Fla. Stat. (1995)]
Indeed, these six modifications are the six substantive aspects of the
Act challenged in this action.
Once again, there can be no argument after 1994 that the
State's cause of action is derivative in the nature of a subrogation, assignment,
or lien. Rather, it is a new, independent cause of action that requires
the State to prove: (1) either negligence or a defective product; (2) causation;
and (3) damages. We have now defined the cause of action as it exists after
the 1994 amendments. We now address the constitutional challenges to each
of the six specific 1994 amendments to the Act. [ We appreciate that many
commentators have written expressing their views on these 1994 amendments.
See Jonathan S. Massey, The Florida Tobacco Liability Law: Fairy Tale Objections
to a Reasonable Solution to Florida's Medicaid Crisis , 46 U. Fla. L. Rev.
591 (1995); Richard N. Pearson, The Florida Medicaid Third-Party Liability
Act , 46 U. Fla. L. Rev. 609 (1995); Scott Richardson, Attorney General's
Warning: Legislation May Now Be Hazardous to Tobacco Companies' Health
, 28 Akron L. Rev. 291 (1995); William W. Van Alstyne, Denying Due Process
in the Florida Courts: A Commentary on the 1994 Medicaid Third-Party Liability
Act of Florida , 46 U. Fla. L. Rev. 563 (1995).]
Abrogation of Affirmative Defenses
As previously explained, the Act created, by legislation
enacted in 1990 and 1994, a new cause of action by which the State may
pursue liable third parties to recover Medicaid expenditures. This new
cause of action was created with the intent that no affirmative defenses
be available to defendants. Specifically, the following language from the
Act is relevant here:
Principles of common law and equity as to assignment,
lien, subrogation, comparative negligence, assumption of risk, and all
other affirmative defenses normally available to a liable third party,
are to be abrogated to the extent necessary to ensure full recovery by
Medicaid from third-party resources; such principles shall apply to a recipient's
right to recovery against any third party, but shall not act to reduce
the recovery of the agency pursuant to this section.
§ 409.910(1), Fla. Stat. (1995). The abrogation of
affirmative defenses has been challenged as being violative of the due
process guarantees in both the federal and Florida [ The due process clause
of the Florida Constitution is found in article I, section 9.] constitutions.
It is also challenged as being violative of Florida's access-to-courts
provision. We reject both contentions insofar as we resolve the facial
challenge to the Act. As with many legislative responses to modern policy
problems, the vehicle chosen here to effectuate the State's policy
goals has the potential to violate the due-process rights of Florida's
citizens. We find, however, that any such problems will arise in the application
of the Act's provisions. [ Art. I, § 21, Fla. Const.] We are not currently
faced with that issue. On its face, the provision allowing for the abrogation
of affirmative defenses is constitutional under both the federal and Florida
constitutions.
The United States Supreme Court has recognized that states
necessarily have the ability to fashion new tort remedies to confront new
situations. The ability of states to properly address the needs of their
citizens is an important function of state government. Indeed, to rule
otherwise would put the states in a straitjacket. Justice Marshall responded
in the following way when confronted with the contention that California
could not alter the common law of trespass:
Such an approach would freeze the common law as it has
been constructed by the courts, perhaps at its 19th-century state of development.
It would allow no room for change in response to changes in circumstance.
The Due Process Clause does not require such a result.
Pruneyard Shopping Center v. Robins, 447 U.S. 74,
94, 100 S. Ct. 2035, 2047, 64 L. Ed. 2d 741 (1980)(Marshall, J., concurring).
Admittedly, the scope of due process jurisprudence has
not been as well defined as other areas of American law. It has been written
that "due process is flexible and calls for such procedural protections
as the particular situation demands." Morrissey v. Brewer,
408 U.S. 471, 481, 92 S. Ct. 2593, 2600, 33 L. Ed. 2d 484 (1972). We approach
the due process analysis in this case by way of analogy.
In 1919, the United States Supreme Court reviewed the
Employers' Liability Law enacted by the State of Arizona. That law was
challenged as being violative of employers' due process rights. The United
States Supreme Court disagreed and affirmed. In a passage strikingly relevant
to today's decision, it wrote:
Some of the arguments submitted to us assail the wisdom
and policy of the act because of its novelty, because of its one-sided
effect in depriving the employer of defenses while giving him (as is said)
nothing in return, leaving the damages unlimited, and giving to the employee
the option of several remedies, as tending not to obviate but to promote
litigation, and as pregnant with danger to the industries of the state.
With such considerations this court cannot concern itself. Novelty is not
a constitutional objection, since under constitutional forms of government
each state may have a legislative body endowed with authority to change
the law. In what respects it shall be changed, and to what extent, is in
the main confided to the several states; and it is to be presumed that
their Legislatures, being chosen by the people, understand and correctly
appreciate their needs. The states are left with a wide range of legislative
discretion, notwithstanding the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment;
and their conclusions respecting the wisdom of their legislative acts are
not reviewable by the courts.
Arizona Copper Co. v. Hammer, 250 U.S. 400, 419,
39 S. Ct. 553, 555, 63 L. Ed. 1058 (1919).
The Hammer ruling is appropriate today for two
reasons. First, it demonstrates that states have the power to address contemporary
problems by creating new causes of action. Such actions need not provide
all of the defenses to which some potential defendants have become accustomed.
Second, the Hammer decision reminds us that we must refrain from evaluating
the wisdom of acts adopted by the legislative branch. See, e.g., University
of Miami v. Echarte, 618 So. 2d 189, 195 (Fla.), cert. denied,
114 S. Ct. 304, 126 L. Ed. 2d 252 (1993) (discussing deference to be given
to legislative determinations of public policy and facts in construing
the medical malpractice provisions attacked as violative of the due process
and access-to-the-courts provisions of the Florida Constitution). At bottom,
we can find no case from the United States Supreme Court that would prohibit
the Florida Legislature from abolishing affirmative defenses in the circumstances
addressed by the Act. We do not stop our analysis at this point, though.
We now discuss the precedent from this Court demonstrating the propriety
of our conclusion.
Associated Industries is essentially arguing that there
is an absolute constitutional right to particular affirmative defenses
once they have been created. We disagree. Certainly any abolition of an
affirmative defense must satisfy the notions of fairness dictated by our
due process jurisprudence. That recognition is quite different, however,
from creating an absolute bar to the elimination of affirmative defenses.
Florida's case law and existing statutes clearly demonstrate that such
a bar has never existed.
First, we recall a striking example. In 1973, this Court
eliminated the defense of contributory negligence, which prohibited a claimant
from recovering any damages if the claimant was even one percent negligent.
In its place, the Court adopted a pure form of comparative negligence,
which allows a claimant to recover even though the claimant is ninety-nine
percent negligent. See Hoffman v. Jones, 280 So. 2d 431 (Fla. 1973).
Second, in Smith v. Department of Insurance, 507
So. 2d 1080 (Fla. 1987), we recognized, by denying constitutional attacks
upon section 768.81, Florida Statutes (Supp. 1986), id. at 1090,
1091, the legislature's authority to legislate in respect to comparative
negligence by legislative modification of the common-law doctrine of joint
and several liability. It is noteworthy that pursuant to section 768.81,
Florida Statutes (1995), the common-law doctrine of joint and several liability
remains applicable to economic damages in instances in which a party's
percentage of fault equals or exceeds that of a particular claimant. Thus,
in respect to economic damages, we have recognized the legislature has
the constitutional authority to statutorily authorize a qualifying plaintiff
to secure a total recovery from a party who, though jointly liable, has
very minimal comparative fault. This is significant because the Act, in
abolishing affirmative defenses, is likewise setting forth, by statute,
the basis for liability for purely economic damages and how liability for
those damages is to be apportioned.
Third, we examine the invasion of privacy action created
by this Court. In Cason v. Baskin, 155 Fla. 198, 20 So. 2d 243 (1945),
this Court recognized and created a distinct right of privacy as part of
our tort law that made particular conduct [ The four types of wrongful
conduct that can all be remedied with resort to an invasion of privacy
action are: (1) appropriation -- the unauthorized use of a person's name
or likeness to obtain some benefit; (2) intrusion -- physically or electronically
intruding into one's private quarters; (3) public disclosure of private
facts -- the dissemination of truthful private information which a reasonable
person would find objectionable; and (4) false light in the public eye
-- publication of facts which place a person in a false light even though
the facts themselves may not be defamatory. Forsberg v. Housing Auth. of
Miami Beach , 455 So. 2d 373, 376 (Fla. 1984) (Overton, J. concurring).]
actionable. In addressing the likely affirmative defenses that defendants
might attempt to use, this Court ruled:
Neither the truth of the published matter, nor the entire
absence of any malice or wrongful motive on the part of the writer or publisher,
constitute any defense to such an action; nor does the plaintiff have to
allege or prove any special or pecuniary damages.
Id. at 217, 20 So. 2d at 252. Surely truth has
historic roots as an affirmative defense. This Court, however, created
a new cause of action and abolished truth as an affirmative defense thereto.
There was no suggestion that such an act violated that Court's understanding
of due process jurisprudence.
Fourth, in Florida's Pollutant Discharge Prevention and
Control Act, chapter 376, Florida Statutes (1995), we find a similar limitation
of long-established affirmative defenses. In proceedings under that chapter,
the State need not prove negligence. The defenses are limited as follows:
The only defenses of a person alleged to be responsible
for the discharge to an action for damages, costs, and expenses of cleanup,
or abatement, shall be to plead and prove that the occurrence was solely
the result of one of the following or any combination of the following:
(a) An act of war.
(b) An act of government, either state, federal, or municipal.
(c) An act of God, which means only an unforeseeable act
exclusively occasioned by the violence of nature without interference of
any human agency.
(d) An act or omission of a third party, without regard
to whether any such act or omission was or was not negligent.
§ 376.12(6), Fla. Stat. (1995).
Fifth, we look at Waite v. Waite, 618 So. 2d 1360,
1361 (Fla. 1993), in which we abolished interspousal immunity as an absolute
bar to liability. Previously, this was a traditional affirmative defense
that had been recognized in this State to varying extents. [ See Sturiano
v. Brooks , 523 So. 2d 1126 (Fla. 1988) (abrogating interspousal immunity
in situations where no public policy reasons exist for its continuance).]
However, we held that "both public necessity and fundamental rights
require[d] judicial abrogation of the doctrine." Id. at 1361.
Once again, there was no suggestion that the abolition of that longstanding
affirmative defense was violative of our due process jurisprudence.
Sixth, in West v. Caterpillar Tractor Company,
336 So. 2d 80, 92 (Fla. 1976), we adopted the doctrine of strict liability.
At that time, we explicitly rejected any affirmative defenses based on
a user's failure to discover a defect or a user's failure to guard against
the possibility of a defect. Restated, we abolished both the longstanding
affirmative defense of contributory negligence and its successor, comparative
negligence. Such abolition did not offend our due process jurisprudence.
As a result, we are left to ask whether the Act is distinguishable,
on its face, from these other situations in which affirmative defenses
have been abolished. We find no such distinction. Therefore, we rule that
the Act's abrogation of affirmative defenses is facially constitutional.
We emphasize, however, that Florida courts will remain free to hear challenges
to the actual application of such abrogation.
Next, we reject the claim that the abolition of affirmative
defenses violates the access-to-courts provision found in article I, section
21, of the Florida Constitution.
In Kluger v. White, 281 So. 2d 1, 4 (Fla. 1973),
we held that where a right of access to the courts for redress for a particular
injury has been provided by statutory law predating the adoption of the
Declaration of Rights of the Constitution of the State of Florida, or where
such a right has become a part of the common law of the State pursuant
to Fla. Stat. § 2.01, F.S.A., the Legislature is without power to
abolish such a right without providing a reasonable alternative to protect
the rights of the people of the State to redress for injuries, unless the
Legislature can show an overpowering public necessity for the abolishment
of such right, and no alternative method of meeting such public necessity
can be shown.
A question has arisen as to the scope of Kluger.
Associated Industries strongly argues that Kluger protects both
claims and defenses. It points to one sentence found in Psychiatric
Associates v. Siegel, 610 So. 2d 419 (Fla. 1992). The Siegel
Court wrote that "[t]he constitutional right of access to the courts
sharply restricts the imposition of financial barriers to asserting claims
or defenses in court." Id. at 424. Ignoring the inapposite
nature of the context in which that statement was made, we can find no
other cases from this Court that stand for the proposition that Kluger
applies to affirmative defenses. Indeed, we look at Hoffman and
Kluger together and find a telling insight as to the original (and
current) meaning of our access-to-courts provision. Hoffman was
decided on July 10, 1973. It abolished the longstanding affirmative defense
of contributory negligence. Kluger was decided on July 11, 1973.
It strains the limits of credibility to argue that Kluger prohibited
the elimination of affirmative defenses just one day after this Court eliminated
a longstanding affirmative defense. [ We find further support for our position
in West . As noted, the Court adopted the theory of strict liability in
tort. At the same time, it refused to acknowledge the longstanding defense
of contributory negligence in situations where the user fails to discover
a defect and where the user fails to guard against the possibility of a
defect. It should come as no surprise that there is no mention of Kluger
in West .] Today we clarify that the constitutionality of the abolition
of affirmative defenses is gauged by our due process jurisprudence. If
applicable in the first place, we recede from any language in Siegel
indicating that such abolition is governed by a Kluger analysis.
To recap, we hold that the provision abrogating affirmative
defenses is facially constitutional. We do not address whether the provision
will always survive a constitutional due process attack as to its application.
It would be inappropriate to speculate as to such application. "When
such application shall be made it will be time enough to pronounce upon
it." J.W. Goldsmith, Jr.-Grant Co. v. United States, 254 U.S.
505, 512, 41 S. Ct. 189, 191, 65 L. Ed. 376 (1921). Further, any speculation
as to the application of this provision would be flawed because we have
no record containing facts, evidence, or expert opinions. Having now addressed
the most contentious provision, we move on to the other challenged clauses.
Identification of Recipients
As part of the 1994 amendments to the Act, the legislature
enacted a paragraph that allows the State to proceed without identifying
each individual recipient of Medicaid payments. The relevant paragraph
in the statute reads as follows:
In any action under this subsection wherein the number
of recipients for which medical assistance has been provided by Medicaid
is so large as to cause it to be impracticable to join or identify each
claim, the agency shall not be required to so identify the individual recipients
for which payment has been made, but rather can proceed to seek recovery
based upon payments made on behalf of an entire class of recipients.
§ 409.910(9)(a), Fla. Stat. (1995).
We find that this portion of the statute does in fact
encroach upon due process guarantees of the Florida Constitution under
article I, section 9. The State asserts that the challenged portion does
not impact a defendant's ability to respond to a claim. We disagree. We
can find no way in which this subsection would allow a defendant to challenge
improper payments made to individual recipients. The paragraph clearly
relieves the State of any obligation to reveal the identities of those
recipients. Procedural due process, in our view, requires that a defendant
be able to rebut a statutory presumption. In Straughn v. K & K Land
Management, Inc., 326 So. 2d 421, 424 (Fla. 1976), we stated: "The
test for the constitutionality of statutory presumptions is twofold. First,
there must be a rational connection between the fact proved and the ultimate
fact presumed. Second, there must be a right to rebut in a fair manner."
(Emphasis added; citations omitted.) The current Act would prevent a defendant
from demonstrating the impropriety of individual payments. Impropriety
could be the result of fraud, misdiagnosis of the patient's condition,
or unnecessary treatments. The defendant's inability to determine individual
Medicaid recipients would also preclude that defendant from proving that
its product was never used by the recipient. Hence, the statutory provision
results in a conclusive presumption that every Medicaid payment is proper
and necessitated by the defendant's product. It is illogical and unreasonable
to call this a fair process. A defendant cannot rebut this presumption
because there is no mechanism for determining to whom the payments were
made. This type of conclusive presumption is violative of the due process
provisions of our constitution, see, e.g., State Farm Mut. Auto.
Ins. Co. v. Malmberg, 639 So. 2d 615 (Fla. 1994), and consequently
the challenged paragraph must be stricken as unconstitutional.
Statute of Repose
The trial court held that the 1994 statutory amendment
that abolishes the statute of repose is unconstitutional. The relevant
portion of the 1994 amendment says that "[t]he defense of statute
of repose shall not apply to any action brought under this section."
§ 409.910(12)(h), Fla. Stat. (1995). We have made it clear that the
legislature cannot revive time-barred claims. In Wiley v. Roof,
641 So. 2d 66, 68 (Fla. 1994), we stated: "Once barred, the legislature
cannot subsequently declare that 'we change our mind on this type of claim'
and then resurrect it. Once an action is barred, a property right to be
free from a claim has accrued." Id. at 68 (emphasis added).
We find that Wiley controls. Therefore, the portion of the Act that
abolishes the statute of repose defense is unconstitutional as violative
of the due process clause of the Florida Constitution, but only as to claims
which are already barred by the statute of repose. There is nothing to
prevent the legislature from repealing a statute of repose. Therefore,
the amendment can be constitutionally applied to claims not yet barred
by the statute of repose when suit is filed.
Joinder of Claims and Liberal Construction
The act, in section 409.910(9), Florida Statutes (1995),
provides for the joinder of multiple claims. It reads, in relevant part:
In the event that medical assistance has been provided
by Medicaid to more than one recipient, and the agency elects to seek recovery
from liable third parties due to actions by the third parties or circumstances
which involve common issues of fact or law, the agency may bring an action
to recover sums paid to all such recipients in one proceeding.
The trial court found that this provision infringed on
the exclusive power of the judiciary to establish practice and procedure
in Florida courts. We disagree under the circumstances of this case. As
we have stated, the Act creates an independent cause of action. The challenged
provision simply allows the State to aggregate its own claims arising from
this new cause of action. The statutory joinder provision is consistent
with court rules. [ Associated Industries places heavy reliance on Avila
South Condominium Association v. Kappa Corporation , 347 So. 2d 599 (Fla.
1976). We find Avila to be inapposite. The Avila case addressed a statute
that created a procedural vehicle for filing claims that was previously
nonexistent. The provision at issue here simply traces the rules already
created by this Court. In that the State is filing claims in its own name,
actions proceeding under the Act are not in the nature of a class action.]
See Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.110(g). Judicial efficiency is promoted when
similar legal issues can be ruled upon in one proceeding. Further., we
note that in condemnation actions it is not unusual to join as many as
fifty to one hundred parcels in one proceeding. Consequently, we find no
constitutional infirmity with the challenged joinder provision.
Next, we analyze the statutory directives indicating the
proper construction of certain portions of the Act. First, the Act directs
that courts should construe all common law theories of recovery in a manner
conducive to effectuating the legislature's intent. [ § 409.910 (1),
Fla. Stat. (1995).] Second, the Act also contains a directive instructing
the courts to liberally construe the evidence code on issues of causation
and damages. [ § 409.910 (9), Fla. Stat. (1995).] These two provisions
are challenged as being violative of our separation-of-powers provision
found in article II, section 3, of the Florida Constitution. We cannot
agree that the Florida Constitution prohibits these types of statutory
directives. We find them to be only directory. In fact, the chapter on
declaratory judgments under which the appellees brought this suit contains
the following provision:
This chapter is declared to be substantive and remedial.
Its purpose is to settle and to afford relief from insecurity and uncertainty
with respect to rights, status, and other equitable or legal relations
and is to be liberally administered and construed.
§ 86.101, Fla. Stat. (1995).
Declaratory judgment actions are well established in Florida
jurisprudence. The directives regarding liberal construction have never
been considered infirm in those actions. Likewise, we refuse to strike
the aspirational language used in the Act.
Market-Share Liability and Joint
and Several Liability
Associated Industries challenges the concept of market-share
liability as enacted by the 1994 amendments to the Act. The market-share
provision reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
In any action brought pursuant to this subsection wherein
a third party is liable due to its manufacture, sale, or distribution of
a product, the agency shall be allowed to proceed under a market share
theory, provided that the products involved are substantially interchangeable
among brands, and that substantially similar factual or legal issues would
be involved in seeking recovery against each liable third party individually.
§ 409.910(9)(b), Fla. Stat. (1995).
In addition to this allowance for the use of market-share
theory, the Act also instructs that all recoveries shall be joint and several.
[ § 409.910 (1), Fla. Stat. (1995).] We find no constitutional basis
to prohibit the legislature from endorsing the use of a market-share theory
for claims pursued under the Act. However, we find that it cannot be utilized
with the concept of joint and several liability. In Conley v. Boyle
Drug Co., 570 So. 2d 275, 285 (Fla. 1990), we expressly held: "The
cornerstone of market share alternate liability is that if a defendant
can establish its actual market share, it will not be liable under any
circumstances for more than that percentage of the plaintiff's total injuries."
(Quoting George v. Parke-Davis, 733 P.2d 507, 513 (Wash. 1987)).
The State's ability to pursue a claim against any defendant for all damages
under the theory of joint and several liability would frustrate the express
holding in Conley that a defendant should be able to limit its liability
to its market share. We find that the theories of market-share liability
and joint and several liability are fundamentally incompatible. Consequently,
we find that the two theories cannot be used together, and that to do so
would violate due process. On the other hand, we find that either theory
may be used independently of the other and, consequently, we need not strike
any statutory language as unconstitutional as to this point.
Statistical Evidence
The Act allows the State to use statistical analysis in
presenting its case. It is claimed that such an enactment by the legislature
violates the separation-of-powers doctrine of article II, section 3 of
the Florida Constitution. We interpret this provision to operate within
the constraints of our rules of procedure and rules of evidence. The State
retains the burden of proving its case within the bounds of these rules.
Consequently, we find no constitutional infirmity.
Accrual of the Cause of Action
There appears to be confusion surrounding the point in
time at which the State's action accrues and, accordingly, we find it important
to address the conduct that gives rise to a claim by the State. The trial
court explicitly ruled that attention should be focused on the "conduct
of potential defendants." In the context of a dangerous product, under
such a focus, a cause of action would presumptively accrue upon the consummation
of a sale. We disagree with this approach and find that a cause of action
under the Act accrues when the State makes a Medicaid payment to a recipient.
Consequently, the State may proceed independently with its new cause of
action to recover all payments made after the effective date of the 1994
act, specifically July 1, 1994. [ Ch. 94-251, § 7, Laws of Fla.] Of
course, the State may also pursue claims accruing prior to that date under
the 1978 traditional subrogation action.
We reject any claim of insufficient notice. It has been
the policy of this State to pursue reimbursement for Medicaid expenses
from available third-party resources since 1968. We find that notice is
not an issue, particularly for claims accruing after 1978.
Applicability
The law is clear in this state that there can be no retroactive
application of substantive law without a clear directive from the legislature.
However, procedural provisions and modifications for the purpose of clarity
are not so restricted. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Laforet,
658 So. 2d 55 (Fla. 1995); Alamo Rent-A-Car, Inc. v. Mancusi, 632
So. 2d 1352 (Fla. 1994).
The 1994 amendments to the Act that have not been stricken
qualify as substantive changes in the law. The State will have to file
its claim under our current rules of procedure. Further, the current Act
applies only to causes of action that accrued after July 1, 1994.
Conclusion
Providing medical coverage for those in need is a legislative
function. How the costs of such coverage are financed is also, primarily,
a legislative decision. Many options exist by which the legislature can
fund such medical services. Three such options are as follows: (1) the
use of general revenue collected from all taxpayers; (2) the creation of
a new cause of action with which to recoup medical expenditures from those
product manufacturers that may have wrongfully caused the recipients' health
problems; or (3) the enactment of a tax to be assessed to those products
that cause the health problems, with the proceeds dedicated to funding
health care. [ See Richard N. Pearson, The Florida Medicaid Third-Party
Liability Act , 46 U. Fla. L. Rev. 609, 631-634 (1995).]
This choice is for the legislative branch and not the
judicial branch. The wisdom of any choice made by the legislature is not
the issue, and we are obligated to construe an act as constitutional if
at all possible.
Not all tort actions carry with them the same elements
or affirmative defenses. The legislature must have the freedom to craft
causes of action to meet society's changing needs. The United States Supreme
Court has acknowledged this necessity and has tempered the legislative
power of the states only with the rule against arbitrary or capricious
actions. The State's action, as we have interpreted it, is neither arbitrary
nor capricious. It is a rational response to a public need.
Finally, we present the following demonstration. Joint
and several liability was established through the common law and later
codified by the legislature. It allows a claimant to recover all damages
from one of multiple defendants even though that particular defendant may
be the least responsible defendant in the cause. Under the present section
768.81(3), Florida Statutes, a party who has more responsibility than the
plaintiff may be made to pay all of the plaintiff's economic losses pursuant
to the doctrine of joint and several liability. Hence, a party who is only
one percent responsible for an accident, but who is jointly liable with
a tortfeasor who is ninety-nine percent responsible, can be made to pay
one hundred percent of the economic damages of a plaintiff who is zero
percent at fault. We find that the Act simply recognizes the State as an
entity analogous to the faultless plaintiff above. It allows the State
to collect one hundred percent of the damages from a culpable third party
even if another party might be considerably more culpable. The crucial
distinction that must be highlighted is that the Act does not allow the
recipient of Medicaid funds to benefit from a change in the basic scheme
of joint and several liability. Instead, it merely treats the State as
any other faultless plaintiff would already be treated under current Florida
law. We can see no reason to find such a statutory scheme, with the exceptions
herein stricken, facially unconstitutional. Accordingly, absent the clauses
that we have stricken, the State may proceed in its efforts to recoup Medicaid
expenditures from third-party tortfeasors under the Act. We stress one
final time, however, that challenges to the Act's application may be properly
addressed in appropriate trial courts.
Therefore, for the reasons expressed, the judgment entered
by the trial court is affirmed in part and reversed in part.
It is so ordered.
KOGAN, C.J., and ANSTEAD, J., concur.
WELLS, J., concurs with an opinion.
GRIMES, J., concurs in part and dissents in part
with an opinion, in which SHAW and HARDING, JJ., concur.
WELLS, J., concurring.
I agree with the majority's thorough and excellent analysis.
I write to express my concern about the breadth of the statute as it pertains
to the abrogating of affirmative defenses.
The statute, by its language, is not limited to tobacco
companies or to products or to any potential tortfeasors. The statute engulfs
"any liable third party." The trial court ruled that the Governor's
limitation of the statute by executive order to the tobacco industry was
not binding. This ruling was not appealed. I agree that executive order
has no future binding effect on the State pursuing recovery of Medicaid
costs pursuant to the statute.
Therefore, in the future, the State could attempt to pursue
recoveries from any tortfeasors, including individuals involved in automobile
accidents and those involved in any kind of accident which results in the
expenditure by the State of Medicaid costs. I agree with the majority that
we should not speculate about such applications.
However, I do believe that constitutional applications
of the statute will require the developing of a record demonstrating a
rational basis for the State being entitled to recover Medicaid costs in
instances in which the party whose conduct contributed to the incurring
of those costs is either completely barred from recovery or whose entitlement
to recovery is reduced by comparative negligence. The State contends that
there is a rational basis for an application of the statute to manufacturers
and distributors of tobacco products. This contention can only be evaluated
on the basis of record facts and expert opinions.
On the other hand, it is difficult for me to conceive
of a rational basis for the application of the statute to automobile or
other types of accidents or to causes of action arising out of the use
of products which do not have the peculiar and substantial Medicaid cost
potential which the State asserts tobacco products have.
GRIMES, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
part.
"[H]istory reflects the traditional and common-sense
notion that the Due Process Clause, like its forebear in the Magna Carta,
see Corwin, The Doctrine of Due Process of Law Before the Civil
War, 24 Harv. L. Rev. 366, 368 (1911), was 'intended to secure the
individual from the arbitrary exercise of the powers of government,' Hurtado
v. California, 110 U.S. 516, 527 (1884)." Daniels v. Williams,
474 U.S. 327 (1986).
Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115,
127 n. 10, 112 S. Ct. 1061, 117 L. Ed. 2d 261 (1992). By its 1994 amendments
to the Medicaid Third-Party Liability Act, the State seeks to place a major
portion of the cost of Medicaid upon third parties without regard to their
constitutional rights. I cannot conclude that the end justifies the means.
I agree that the creation of the Agency for Health Care
Administration did not violate the limitation on the number of departments
of government set forth in article IV, section 6 of our constitution. Beyond
that, I can accept very little of the majority's analysis of this far-reaching
legislation.
The majority treats the statute as if it were limited
to suits against tobacco companies. However, according to its plain language,
the statute would apply to anyone who ever caused an injury to someone
who was later treated for that injury by a Florida Medicaid provider. I
know of no basis for the Governor's order limiting suits under this statute
to those against tobacco companies. In any event, it could not possibly
bind subsequent administrations. Furthermore, such an order flies directly
in the face of Georgia Southern & Florida Railway Co. v. Seven-Up
Bottling Co., 175 So. 2d 39 (Fla. 1965), in which this Court held that
a comparative negligence statute pertaining only to suits against railroad
companies violated the equal protection clause because at that time all
other defendants were entitled to raise the defense of contributory negligence.
Because the majority opinion addresses the various constitutional challenges
under separate headings, I will endeavor to follow the same format.
Abrogation of Affirmative Defenses
The statute purports to eliminate "comparative negligence,
assumption of risk, and all other affirmative defenses normally available
to a liable third party." While the State can now prosecute its claim,
the defendant can no longer defend against it. This provision is unconstitutional
for several reasons.
In Kluger v. White, 281 So. 2d 1 (Fla. 1973), this
Court examined whether the state legislature is empowered to abolish a
common law or statutory right of access in the face of article I, section
21 of our constitution, which guarantees the right of access
to the courts. We held that where the right was embodied in a statute or
was part of the common law of the State when our new constitution was adopted
in 1968, the legislature cannot abolish such a right unless (1) the legislature
provides a reasonable alternative to protect the party whose right is being
abrogated, or (2) the legislature can show there is an overpowering public
necessity for abolition of the right and there is no alternative method
of meeting that necessity. Id. at 4.
Contributory negligence (later changed to comparative
negligence) was a common law defense in 1968 when our new constitution
was adopted. Clearly, the statute does not meet the first test of Kluger
because it abolishes comparative negligence and other affirmative defenses
without providing an alternative remedy to the defendant.
The statute also fails the second test. Ordinarily, when
the legislature has sought to limit access to the courts, it has taken
great care to delineate why an overpowering public necessity requires it.
E.g., University of Miami v. Echarte, 618 So. 2d 189 (Fla.), cert.
denied, 114 S. Ct. 304, 126 L. Ed. 2d 252 (1993). The legislature made
no such effort in the enactment of the 1994 amendments. Clearly, federal
law does not require the creation of any remedy to recoup Medicaid expenses,
with the exception of the traditional remedies of subrogation and assignment.
Moreover, no other state in the country has enacted a statute similar to
the current statute. In any event, even if an overpowering public necessity
for removing the defenses could be implied, there is an absence of any
showing that there is no reasonable alternative for dealing with the Medicaid
costs which are assumed to have been caused by tobacco. One obvious alternative
would be to levy additional taxes upon the sale of tobacco in an amount
sufficient to reimburse the State for expenses it perceives to have spent
through Medicaid on tobacco-related illnesses. Yet, the legislature has
not explained why this is not a viable alternative. Thus, the legislature's
attempt to restrict access fails both tests of Kluger.
The majority dismisses consideration of the access clause
of our constitution by the simple expedient of saying that it applies only
to claims and not defenses. In so doing, it repudiates this Court's recent
statement in Psychiatric Associates v. Siegel, 610 So. 2d 419, 424
(Fla. 1992), that article I, section 21 applies to both claims and defenses.
Moreover, the majority opinion undercuts the holding of State ex ref.
Pittman v. Stanjeski, 562 So. 2d 673 (Fla. 1990), in which we reasoned
that if a statute were construed to permit automatic entry of a judgment
for delinquent support monies without giving the defendant an opportunity
to present defenses, it would violate the right of access to courts. Id.
at 679. See also State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Hassen, 650 So.
2d 128 (Fla. 2d DCA 1995) (holding that right of access to courts applies
to claims or defenses and declaring invalid a statute that impaired an
insurance company's ability to defend itself by requiring advance payment
of $100,000 before company could dispute liability), approved, 21 Fla.
L. Weekly S102 (Fla. March 7, 1996). Incomprehensibly, only plaintiffs
and not defendants can now claim constitutional redress.
There are other compelling reasons why the abrogation
of comparative negligence and other affirmative defenses with respect to
the State's claims is unconstitutional. These may be best illustrated by
example. Suppose John Smith bought an over-the-counter cold remedy manufactured
by the Acme Drug Company. The package contained a warning that the cold
remedy should not be taken by anyone suffering from diabetes, but the wording
was arguably ambiguous. Despite having had diabetes all of his life, Smith
takes the medicine and becomes seriously ill. As a result of his treatment
by Dr. Green, he incurs $1000 in medical expenses. If Smith sued Acme alleging
that the inadequate warning caused him to incur medical expenses as well
as other damages, Acme would be entitled to raise a comparative negligence
defense that the warning was clear enough to alert Smith to the danger,
thereby defeating or at least diminishing Smith's recovery.
However, suppose Smith qualified for Medicaid and because
Dr. Green was a qualified Medicaid provider, Smith's medical bill was not
paid by Smith but by Florida Medicaid. Under these circumstances, the 1994
Medicaid Third-Party Liability Act authorizes the State to sue Acme and
strips Acme of its ability to defend on grounds of comparative negligence.
The distinction between the two examples, which permit the State's claim
against Acme to succeed whereas Smith's may not, has nothing to do with
the circumstances of how the illness was caused but is based only upon
the fortuity that Smith's medical bills were later covered by Medicaid.
A law that presumes to measure the liability of a party based on such a
consideration is completely arbitrary and violates due process. Whether
a claim is Medicaid-eligible has no more relevance in measuring whether
a party may raise an affirmative defense than the question of whether Smith
has brown hair or blond hair. Neither characteristic has any more bearing
than the other as a rational basis for deciding whether Acme Drug Company
may plead comparative negligence.
The same reasoning would apply to the case where driver
A is injured in an automobile intersection collision with driver B. Suppose
the accident occurred when driver A, who ran a red light, was hit by driver
B, who was exceeding the speed limit at the time. In the normal case, driver
A would sue for his damages, including medical expenses, and driver B would
raise the defense of comparative negligence. However, if driver A happened
to have his medical expenses paid by Medicaid, driver B would have no defense
of comparative negligence against the State's suit to recover the medical
expenses. To further illustrate the incongruity, if driver B were also
injured and paid his own medical bills, his counter-suit against driver
A would be met by the defense of comparative negligence. The due process
implications are overwhelming. As the United States Supreme Court said
in Honda Motor Co. v. Oberg, 114 S. Ct. 2331, 2339, 129 L. Ed. 2d
336 (1994), the "abrogation of a well-established common law protection
against arbitrary deprivations of property raises a presumption that its
procedures violate the Due Process Clause."
From another perspective, the statute also constitutes
a denial of equal protection of the law. If one defendant sells a product
or becomes involved in an accident which causes injury to another, he or
she would be entitled to raise comparative negligence or any other affirmative
defense to the lawsuit. Yet, another similarly situated defendant would
not be entitled to raise affirmative defenses to the claim for the injured
party's medical expenses if they were paid by Medicaid. The two hypothetical
defendants' actions are exactly the same except that one is denied the
equal protection of the law because of a fortuity that had nothing to do
with his or her conduct.
Finally, how can it be that only when the State makes
a claim, there can be no affirmative defenses? The State has arrogated
to itself a right that no other plaintiff can claim. The State's action
in this respect is nothing more than a thinly veiled taking which violates
the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
The majority's suggestion that the abolition of affirmative
defenses is merely the equivalent of the modifications to other defenses
that this Court has made from time to time is specious. Evolutionary modifications
of specific defenses cannot be equated to the total abolition of affirmative
defenses. Further, the majority overstates the holding of West v. Caterpillar
Tractor Co., 336 So. 2d 80 (Fla. 1976). In adopting the doctrine of
strict liability, we specifically held that the defense of comparative
negligence could be interposed to demonstrate the injured person's failure
to exercise ordinary due care. Id. at 90. The lack of ordinary due
care is exactly the defense that Acme Drug Company would be precluded from
raising in a suit by the State to recover Medicaid payments made to Mr.
Smith.
Unquestionably, the State has a right of subrogation to
recover medical expenses from the tortfeasor. However, in subrogation,
the claimant stands in the shoes of the injured party. In a suit against
tobacco companies, the injured party would be the smoker whose medical
expenses have been paid by Medicaid. This legislation is an unconstitutional
attempt to strip the tobacco companies of the defenses against smokers'
claims which have been successful in the past because of the health warnings
on tobacco advertising and packages.
I cannot see how the abrogation of affirmative defenses
can be said to be facially constitutional, yet subject to an as-applied
analysis. In particular, there can be no rational basis for making distinctions
as to which defendants might be entitled to raise affirmative defenses.
Any effort to do so would violate the right of equal protection as explained
in Georgia Southern & Florida Railway Co. v. Seven-Up Bottling Co.
as well as other constitutional protections. Moreover, upholding the facial
constitutionality of most of the 1994 amendments but leaving open the possibility
of as-applied attacks will spawn needless and expensive litigation.
Identification of Recipients
I agree with the majority's treatment of this issue.
Statute of Repose
I agree with the majority's treatment of this issue.
Joinder of Claims and Liberal Construction
Section 409.910(9), Florida Statutes (1995), reads in
pertinent part:
In the event that medical assistance has been provided
by Medicaid to more than one recipient, and the agency elects to seek recovery
from liable third parties due to actions by the third parties or circumstances
which involve common issues of fact or law, the agency may bring an action
to recover sums paid to all such recipients in one proceeding.
I cannot agree that this provision does not infringe on
the exclusive power of the judiciary to establish practice and procedure
in Florida courts.
Article V, section 2(a) of our constitution provides that
"[t]he supreme court shall adopt rules for the practice and procedure
in all courts." We have consistently held that statutes are limited
to substantive matters and that the legislature may not prescribe practice
and procedure. Haven Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n v. Kirian, 579 So.
2d 730 (Fla. 1991). To the extent that section 409.910(9) can be said to
establish procedure for class actions, it clearly violates the decision
in Avila South Condominium Ass'n v. Kappa Corp., 347 So. 2d 599
(Fla. 1976). However, the majority suggests that this section more properly
deals with the joinder of causes of action and that its provisions are
consistent with our court rules on joinder. I am not certain of this, but
in any event, the fact that a statute may be consistent with our rules
of procedure on joinder of causes of action is irrelevant. If it involves
practice and procedure, the statute must be stricken even if the same practice
and procedure is authorized by our rules.
Section 409.910(1), Florida Statutes (1995), provides
that "[c]ommon law theories of recovery shall be liberally construed
to accomplish" the intent of the statute. It is not unusual for statutes
to specify that they should be liberally construed. However, this portion
of the statute goes a giant step further in directing how common law theories
of recovery should be construed. Thus, this portion of the statute also
invades the province of the courts to establish practice and procedure.
See In re Alkire's Estate, 144 Fla. 606, 623-25, 198 So. 475, 482-83
(1940) ("The weight to be given to evidence in judicial proceedings
is not a matter for legislative regulation.... Statutes cannot direct or
control the judicial judgment.
Market-Share Liability and Joint
and Several Liability
I agree with the majority that theories of market-share
liability and joint and several liability cannot be used together. I see
no reason why one theory or the other could not be used in a single suit,
provided their use is consistent with established case law on the subjects.
Thus, market-share liability would apply only where there was an inherent
inability to identify the manufacturer of the product that caused the injury.
Conley v. Boyle Drug Co., 570 So. 2d 275 (Fla. 1990). Likewise,
defendants could only be held jointly and severally liable where-their
conduct meets the established criteria for joint and several liability.
See Smith v. Department of Insurance, 507 So. 2d 1080 (Fla. 1987)
(joint and several liability applicable where defendants act in concert
or where they commit separate acts which combine to produce a single injury).
Statistical Evidence
Section 409.910(9), Florida Statutes (1995), also provides
that "the issue of causation and damages in any such action may be
proven by use of statistical analysis." In attempting to dictate the
manner in which cases may be proven, this statute clearly impinges upon
the court's authority to regulate practice and procedure. However, based
upon the majority's interpretation that it does not change the standard
for the admissibility of statistical evidence, it should make no difference.
Accrual of the Cause of Action
I agree with the majority's treatment of this issue.
Applicability
I agree with the majority's treatment of this issue.
Conclusion
It may well be that the use of tobacco has resulted in
inordinate medical expenses for which the State has paid Medicaid. However,
the sale of tobacco has not been declared illegal and its manufacturers
are entitled to just as much constitutional protection as anyone else.
As indicated above, I concur with the majority that there
is no constitutional infirmity in the Agency's structure and in striking
the provision which eliminated the necessity of identifying individual
recipients. I also agree with the majority's treatment of the statute of
repose issue, the market-share and joint and several liability issue, the
accrual of the cause of action issue, and the applicability of the law
to causes of action accruing after July 1, 1994. I would strike as unconstitutional
the provision abrogating affirmative defenses, the provision pertaining
to joinder of claims and liberal construction, and the provision on statistical
evidence.
I respectfully dissent.
SHAW and HARDING, JJ., concur.