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Florida Justice Reform Institute

Florida Legislature Is Set to Push Sweeping

March 6, 2023/in Flagler Live

FlaglerLive

Florida Legislature Is Set to Push Sweeping Changes to Legal System, Favoring Business and Government at Individuals’ Expense

MARCH 6, 2023

Paul Renner

Paul Renner, the Palm Coast Republican and House Speaker, is enthusiastically
leading a House that has lurched further to the right than under any administration
since the Jim Crow era. (© FlaglerLive)

Shortly after a state House committee last month OK’d sweeping changes to the state’s litigation process, Speaker Paul Renner gathered a powerful array of business and insurance representatives in the Capitol’s Fourth Floor rotunda for a news conference.

They all agreed that, in making it harder to sue insurance companies, the legislation would reduce frivolous lawsuits and thereby protect businesses and everyday Floridians. At least that’s what certain GOP lawmakers and lobbyists believe.

One of those everyday Floridians, amid dozens who’d come to Tallahassee to oppose the bill, was watching the lobbyists speak that day in late February. His name is Gary Miracle, and he’s a former salesman who’d suffered amputation of all four of his extremities following a medical crisis, rendering him unable to perform basic life functions, much less hold a job.

He’s able to support his family because of a medical malpractice settlement — precisely the kind of legal process that the fellows in suits that day were intent on limiting. Standing there on prosthetic legs in the same room with them, Miracle felt completely unseen.

“They did not portray one single bit that they just listened to two hours of people complaining about this bill. They stood up there as if this was from the Bible and everybody was in agreement,” Miracle told the Phoenix later, in a telephone interview.

“And it was all fairies and unicorns when in all actuality everyone that stood up was fighting against it.”

As monumental a change to the law as the legal reforms under discussion would represent, Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Republican-led Legislature aren’t stopping there.

During the 60-day regular session that opens on Tuesday, lawmakers also will consider making it easier to sue journalists for libel and requiring bloggers who write about the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, chief financial officer, commissioner of agriculture, or legislators to register with the state and report any income their posts generate.

The inconsistency between suppressing the ability to sue on one hand and encouraging it on the other makes Florida First Amendment Foundation executive director Bobby Block’s head spin.

“All over the place he’s limiting lawsuits and in this particular instance he’s opening the door to a wild west of litigation where the only beneficiaries would be trial lawyers,” Block said of DeSantis. “It makes no sense unless if you look at it as an attempt to punish critics.”

Valentine Day’s massacre
DeSantis launched the push for the insurance lawsuit bill on Valentine’s Day, during a joint appearance with Renner and Senate President Kathleen Passidomo.

“For decades, Florida has been considered a judicial hellhole due to excessive litigation and a legal system that benefitted the lawyers more than people who are injured,” DeSantis said at the time. “We are now working on legal reform that is more in line with the rest of the country and that will bring more businesses and jobs to Florida.”

The legislation (HB 837) is a stab at “tort” reform — meaning a wrongful act or infringement of a right amendable to a civil lawsuit.

It seeks to discourage insurance litigation by making these cases less lucrative to trial attorneys. That means making lawsuits against a range of industries including insurance harder to win and crimping the ability to force carriers to pay fee awards in litigation over rejected or low-balled claims.

For example, existing law apportions liability for accidents according to plaintiffs’ and defendants’ comparative liability: If the injured party bears 40 percent of the blame, the defendant can be ordered to pay 60 percent of the damages. The bill, however, would spare the defendant from paying any damages if the plaintiff is found more than 50 percent liable.

There’d be changes to policyholders’ ability to sue insurers for failing in their legal obligation to handle claims in good faith by improperly denying, underpaying, or stalling them — that is, operate in bad faith. Insurers would gain a grace period to offer settlements and policyholders would be required to act in good faith themselves by providing information needed to review claims. If not, a judge could reduce their recovery.

The bill would limit what evidence plaintiffs can present regarding their medical bills to reflect what they themselves have actually paid, since medical providers sometimes accept discounts on high initial invoices; the theory is that people should recover their real losses only, and not reap windfalls based in artificially inflated medical list prices. Courts would have to offset any payments to a plaintiff by government or private insurance.

Similarly, plaintiffs would have to disclose whether their medical providers issued “letters of protection,” agreeing not to collect bills until the plaintiff prevails in court.

One-way attorney fee
Furthermore, the bill eliminates Florida’s one-way attorney fee, adopted by the Legislature in 1893 to even the balance of power between policyholders and insurance companies with their stables of lawyers. Instead, each side would bear its litigation costs.

The amount of attorney fees plaintiffs can recover is limited to a reasonable number of hours worked by the attorney multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate, unless the plaintiff can demonstrate that number wouldn’t allow him or her to retain counsel.

Sponsor and state Rep. Tommy Gregory of Manatee County, who is an attorney, argued during Renner’s news conference that consumers would be the ultimate beneficiaries.

“It’s common sense to them. They can tell by the number of insurance companies going bankrupt and fleeing the state and they can tell by the insurance premiums that there’s something amiss in the legal climate here. There’s something off in the civil remedy and the pursuit of damages,” he said.

“The civil justice system really is operating like a casino; all you need is an attorney. Once you get in there, you’re going to win. You can call it a casino, you can call it an ATM — they’ve got the PIN number. And they have the PIN number because we have one-way attorney fees; because we have inflated fee multipliers; because we have excessive and damages.

“This bill is designed to address those problems, bring the civil justice back into equilibrium, and that’s going to save all Floridians, all of our constituents, money, so they can stop paying that Florida tort tax, the insurance premium or surcharge,” Gregory said.

The American Tort Reform Association was represented during the news conference. So were Associated Industries of Florida, the Florida Chamber of Commerce, the Florida Justice Reform Institute, the Florida Retail Association, the Florida Trucking Association, the National Federation of Independent Business, the James Madison Institute, and Uber.

Separate bills could cover construction-defect claims (HB 85); nursing-home claims (HB 1029) asbestos claims (HB 755)l auto-glass claims (SB 1002); and RV park and premises liability immunity (SB 1054).

Jacksonville trial attorney Curry Pajcic, president of the Florida Justice Association, is lobbying hard against the legislation.

“This isn’t tort reform. This is an effort to deform our entire justice system, tilt the playing field in favor of the insurance industry by taking away the rights of Floridians … to hold people accountable and responsible when they harm you or your family,” he told the Phoenix by telephone.

Negligence doesn’t count
Pajcic complained the tort reform bill would specify that negligence by a carrier in handling a claim couldn’t be ground for a bad-faith lawsuit and that medical damages would be limited to 140% of what Medicaid would pay for similar care.

He cited an amendment added to the bill in committee that in premises-liability claims involving, say, a criminal act committed against a hotel guest, juries would be required to consider the criminal’s contribution to the injury — not just the hotel operator.

“That reduces their responsibility when someone provides negligent security,” Pajcic said.

In the case of the school shooting in 2018 at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, it would mean assessing the role played by the gunman as well as failures by the school system and law enforcement.

“Who do you think the jury would give 90% to 99% of the liability to? The murderer of course. Why would the insurance company want to do that? Because they want to sell policies for general liability and not pay a dadgum nickel. It would make Florida a more dangerous state,” he said, because it would disincentivize hotels from investing in reasonable security,” he said.

“You can’t put the dog on a verdict form in a dog-bite case because the owner of the dog has a responsibility to protect you from the dog. It would be like putting the fire on the verdict form when the house burns down — well, it’s the fire’s fault, not the electrician’s fault for negligently putting the wiring together.”

As for the comparative negligence language, Pajcic proposed this scenario: A motorcyclist suffers catastrophic injuries after getting hit by a driver running a stop sign. Under the new contributory negligence rule, if a jury decides the biker was even slightly more to blame for an accident, he collects nothing from the driver’s insurer.

On the other hand, if the driver is found 49% responsible, she would pay only 49% of the biker’s medical costs.

“This would result in the largest increase in the Medicaid rolls in the history of this state, because he would be on the public dole instead of State Farm and Progressive and Geico and Liberty Mutual paying their fair share, their 49%,” Pajcic said.

‘A pretty solid seven to 10 years’
Miracle, whose malpractice settlement provides for his continuing care and financial support for him, his wife, and seven children, said the medical cost limits would have been devastating to him.

“I’m guessing I would have had a pretty solid seven to 10 years of living with the money that was awarded to me based on what this bill would look like. And I’m only 41 years old. That means that by the time I’m 50 I’m out of money and not physically able to go back to work,” he said.

“We spend four or more hours [in committee] talking about attorneys and insurance and auto-glass repair inspectors and all of the other aspects to what this bill encompasses, and in the very fine print with the small whispers, ‘Oh, by the way, if you’re catastrophically injured and it’s not your fault, you don’t deserve what a jury would award you.

“The most hurtful part of all of this is all they’re doing to people like me is telling what I’m worth with a dollar amount — not telling me what my value is,” he said. “My identity across the board has been taken from me and now you’re telling me that my worth is going to be devalued as well, only to provide I don’t even know what.”

Libel law
Also on the agenda this session is a bill to redefine libel law in Florida. DeSantis, who has a pattern of attacking the press, lay the groundwork for the legislative effort during a panel discussion in early February.

“We’ve seen over the last generation legacy media outlets increasingly divorce themselves from the truth and instead try to elevate preferred narratives and partisan activism over reporting the facts,” he said at the time.

ry falsehoods and the ability to make their own policy judgments regarding the prevention of defamation,” the preamble reads.

‘Devastating effect’
“It’s bad. It’s very bad,” said Block, of the First Amendment Foundation.

“It basically puts anyone that comments or reports on any political or important social happenings in the crosshairs of a potential lawsuit. And I don’t mean just CNN or The New York Times or the Miami Herald or the Tampa Bay Times. I mean Facebook users, conservative broadcasters, citizen bloggers — everybody and anybody. It will have more than a chilling effect on public discourse; I expect it would freeze it. And it will have a devastating effect on media in the state — all media,” he said.

“Some people I know think it’s about helping little guys who don’t have a chance against big media companies. And I know that a lot of people think it’s about correcting excesses of the press. But, in reality, neither of those are true. It’s really about enabling powerful people to bring critics to heel. It’s an awful, un-American piece of legislation.”

Does Block think the U.S. Supreme Court will take up the bill’s offer?

“I’m not sure the votes are there. This is not Roe v. Wade,” he said.

“But what I’m concerned about if it’s challenged in court, and if courts don’t issue an injunction against it — which has been the trend of late — then the law will stand until its heard by the U.S. Supreme Court and, in that period of time, will have a devastating impact on how people participate in public discourse and how people participate in government, local as well as state.”

The blog regulation bill (SB 1316) comes courtesy of Jason Brodeur, who represents Seminole and part of Orange counties. It conflates bloggers with lobbyists, who take money to represent clients before elected officials. Accordingly, they would have to register with the state, like lobbyists do, and disclose any payments received for posts or series of posts.

They’d be subject to fines of $25 per day for late reports, up to $2,500.

It defines “blog” as “a website or webpage that hosts any blogger and is frequently updated with opinion, commentary, or business content. The term does not include the website of a newspaper or other similar publication.” It defines “blogger” as anyone “that submits a blog post to a blog which is subsequently published.”

“Paid bloggers are lobbyists who write instead of talk. They both are professional electioneers. If lobbyists have to register and report, why shouldn’t paid bloggers?” Brodeur told Florida Politics of his bill.

Block, of the First Amendment Foundation, compared the bill to censorship in the Russian Federation, the apartheid government in South Africa, and other repressive regimes.

“If you take this proposed bill in conjunction with the attempts to remake national defamation law and you add rules about who can hold an event at the Capitol, you start to wonder whether the Florida legislators and Florida politicians have not declared an all-out war on the First Amendment and free speech,” he said.

“I find all of this — there’s no other way to say it — un-American. It serves no purpose as far as I’m concerned other than intimidating and chilling and trying to punish free speech and bring critics to heel. I can’t come to any other conclusion.”

–Michael Moline, Florida Phoenix

https://flaglerlive.com/187055/lurch-house-litigation-revamp/ 

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Florida Justice Reform Institute

Auto-glass bill aims to put the brakes on excessive car insurance litigation

March 6, 2023/in Florida Record

FLORIDA RECORD

Linda Stewart

State Sen. Linda Stewart said that some attorneys and glass vendors have churned out unneeded litigation. | Facebook
By Michael Carroll – Mar 6, 2023

Supporters of an auto-glass lawsuit bill introduced last week say the reform would shatter current incentives that allow repair shops and attorneys to file excessive claims litigation, driving up the cost of auto insurance.

State Sen. Linda Stewart (D-Orlando) filed her auto-glass bill on Feb. 21, while in the House of Representatives, Rep. Phillip “Griff” Griffitts (R-Panama Beach) introduced a version of the reform aimed at ending unnecessary litigation over windshield repairs.

Both bills would ban vendors from accepting an assignment of insurance benefits for auto glass claims, while Stewart’s SB 1002 would bar repair shops from offering potential auto glass customers anything of value, such as a gift card or cash, in exchange for making an insurance claim for the replacement of auto glass. SB 1002 would also mandate that consumers be fully informed about information relating to calibrating or recalibrating advanced electronic safety systems – a process that is required on windshield repairs of many late-model cars.

Windshield or auto glass lawsuits have ballooned in Florida in recent years, going from 591 litigated claims in 2011 to more than 37,000 lawsuits last year, according to reform supporters.

“We have all seen the signs offering us cash or gift cards to have our windshields replaced,” Stewart said in a prepared statement. “These incentives sound great, but the reality is some of these services are using you to sue your insurance for more money than the replacement actually costs. This behavior ultimately contributes to the ever-increasing auto insurance rates as insurers raise rates to compensate for their losses from this practice.”

William Large, president of the Florida Tort Reform Institute, said the auto-glass bills dovetail with a broader effort this year to pass a far-reaching tort reform plan, House Bill 837.

“”Gov. (Ron) DeSantis called for legislation to create a more predictable, stable legal environment, and HB 837, HB 541 and SB 1002 will do just that,” Large said in a statement emailed to the Florida Record. “The Florida Justice Reform Institute commends Gov. DeSantis, Senate President (Kathleen) Passidomo and House Speaker (Paul) Renner, and the bill sponsors … for their leadership on the most consequential civil litigation reforms in a generation.”

The actions of 20 Florida attorneys make up 95% of the state’s auto-glass lawsuits, according to data from the Florida Department of Financial Services. A small group of repair shops is also involved in the claims litigation, reform supporters say.

https://flarecord.com/stories/639970882-auto-glass-bill-aims-to-put-the-brakes-on-excessive-car-insurance-litigation 

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Florida Justice Reform Institute

How Republicans’ latest insurance reform proposals could restrict your ability to sue

March 5, 2023/in South Florida Sun-Sentinel

 

South Florida Sun Sentinel

How Republicans’ latest insurance reform proposals could restrict your ability to sue

By Ron Hurtibise – South Florida Sun-Sentinel • Mar 05, 2023 at 7:00 am

Insurance reforms are back on the front burner heading into the spring session of the Florida Legislature.

Republicans are again targeting plaintiffs attorneys with a wish list of pro-insurance industry reforms that attorneys warn will erode consumers’ ability to fight back when claims are denied or underpaid.

After enacting two packages of property insurance reforms last year, legislative leaders are pushing to extend those reforms to most remaining types of insurance, including auto, liability, business interruption, health and life.

As the spring session of the Florida Legislature approaches its March 7 opening, a multifaceted reform bill filed in the state House by Rep. Tommy Gregory, who represents parts of Sarasota and Manatee counties, has already advanced from a House subcommittee while a Senate version was filed on Thursday and is scheduled for debate by the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee on Tuesday.

Supporters say the newest round of reforms are needed to reduce “frivolous” lawsuits they say are driving up insurance costs for individuals and businesses.

“This bill is designed to bring our justice system back to equilibrium,” Gregory said in introducing the bill during its first committee hearing on Feb. 24. “The bill is drafted to correct three problems: First, excessive litigation; second, asymmetrical fees; and third, inflated damages.”

Critics, including the Florida Justice Association, a trade organization for plaintiffs attorneys, and vocal Democrats in the Legislature, caution that the reforms reduce liability exposure for insurers and large businesses while making it difficult for accident and negligence victims to find an attorney when insurers covering the at-fault party denies or underpays a claim.

Steve Cain, president-elect of the Florida Justice Association, called the proposals “a gift” to insurance companies and large industries because they would reduce prospects of being held liable for negligence.

“This was a bill written in the dark,” he said Friday. “No one was consulted other than insurance companies and big business.”

Janet Varnell, a Tampa-area consumer product liability attorney, said the package is designed to erode the ability of insurance policyholders to hire attorneys to represent them in small claims cases. “The hurdles might seem innocuous but it’s going to cause lawyers to rejected cases,” she said in an interview.

The Florida Justice Association is coordinating opposition to the bills as they wind through committee hearings.

Numerous people who have sued over major injuries stepped up to the podium at a Feb 24 hearing of the House Civil Justice Subcommittee and argued that the proposals, if they had been in place, would have stymied their ability to recover damages.

It remains to be seen whether the plaintiffs attorneys organization or any other interest group can dissuade the Legislature from enacting the proposals favored by the Florida Chamber, the Florida Justice Reform Institute, several large insurers and others.

The association and members of the Democratic minority in the Legislature hosted a steady stream of opponents who testified during two special sessions in May and June to consider property insurance reforms intended to reduce litigation and eventually bring down property insurance rates. In both cases, reforms crafted by Republican House and Senate leaders were enacted largely on party line votes with no major changes.

In addition, proposals in the current bill are laden with complicated legal terminology and concepts unfamiliar to typical consumers who might not be able to grasp their implications.

Here are the major provisions of the bills:

Elimination of so-called “one-way attorneys fees.” Part of Florida law since 1893, one-way attorney fees allow insurance customers to file suit against carriers without the threat of having to pay insurers’ legal fees if the lawsuits fail. Reform proponents argue that this law incentivizes attorneys to file lawsuits that they would not otherwise file, essentially because they have nothing to lose.

The one-way attorney fee provision, which was eliminated from property insurance litigation during the December special session, also incentivizes unnecessary litigation against carriers of other forms of insurance, bill proponents argue. Attorneys argue that eliminating it will force consumers to pay attorneys upfront to represent them or agree to pay their attorneys 30% to 35% of whatever money they recover.

Lee Gunn, a Tampa-area attorney and board member for the consumer-focused watchdog group Federal Association for Insurance Reform, said eliminating the one-way fee provision would leave many policyholders with no effective way to challenge insurance claim denials. “If it’s a $10,000 claim that’s denied, a policyholder is not going to spend $15,000 to fight it,” Gunn said in an interview.

Wiliam Large, president of the Florida Justice Reform Institute, said policyholders will have other ways to challenge their insurers, including filing what’s known as a “first party bad faith claim” that begins with filing a Civil Remedy Notice with the Department of Financial Services.

Reducing the statute of limitations for filing negligence lawsuits from four years to two years. Insurers say shortening the eligibility period will discourage plaintiffs from finding reasons to sue long after suffering alleged harm.

Large says insurers find it difficult to defend claims filed after two years because too many witnesses might have forgotten details or be hard to find. Cain, however, says reducing the window to sue will force attorneys to sue more parties at the onset because they won’t have as much time to investigate culpability.

Varnell concurred. “It is so difficult to bring a claim already and uncover facts necessary to meet the standards of law,” she said. “Anything you do to require lawyers to do it faster will decrease the potential of filing claims.”

Elimination of fee multipliers. Courts have allowed attorneys to “multiply” their fees in cases that are difficult or when representing clients who wouldn’t otherwise be able to find competent representation. Instead of calculating their fees by multiplying their hourly rate by the number of hours involved in the case, judges in some situations allow multiples of that calculation.

Attorneys say that insurers exaggerate the percentage of cases that result in fee multipliers.

But Large said that even if fee multipliers are awarded in a small minority of cases, attorneys have an unfair advantage of using them as a threat to induce a defendant to settle the case.

If the proposal is enacted, Florida would revert to a national standard that awards multipliers only in rare circumstances.

Varnell counters that eliminating fee multipliers would cause attorneys to reject difficult cases. “I’ll only take the dead-sure winners,” she said

Eliminating attorney-client privilege regarding medical referrals. In court cases right now, insurers cannot ask for evidence that would reveal any financial relationship between attorneys and physicians to whom they refer injured clients for treatment. In some cases, insurers say, physicians have incentives to inflate their treatment costs.

Large says an attorney might tell a client, “Don’t use your doctor or bill your insurer. My doctors is going to treat you under an agreement we call a Letter of Protection.” Then the doctor submits an invoice that’s five to eight times more than the market price for that treatment.” The invoice is submitted during the litigation, and the doctor can recover a windfall, reform proponents say.

The arrangements can be kept secret from insurance companies, but plaintiffs are allowed to find out what insurers are paying their own medical experts to estimate what treatments should cost. That imbalance is unfair, insurers say.

The proposed reform would allow juries to find out whether such an agreement was in place between the doctor and the attorney when the client was referred, Large says.

Revamping how at-fault responsibility is calculated. Currently, juries determine each party’s percentage of fault in negligence lawsuits and award damages based on those percentages. For example, if a plaintiff is determined to be 60% at fault and a defendant is 40% at fault, the defendant would be required to pay 40% of the damages amount. Under the proposed reform, a defendant would have to be at least 51% at fault before they could be forced to pay damages.

A plaintiff, meanwhile, would receive nothing if found to be 51% or more at fault.

The proposal would returns Florida to a standard that was replaced decades ago, Gunn said, in favor of a more equitable standard agreed to after years of debate.

Damages could not exceed policy limits. Claims made by two or more plaintiffs over a single incident could not result in damages exceeding the policy limit. Each plaintiff would receive only a prorated share of that limit.

This would also benefit insurers by reducing potential damage awards, plaintiffs attorneys say.

Making it harder to file “bad faith” lawsuits against insurers. Typically, bad faith lawsuits involve allegations that an insurer did not fulfill its responsibility to settle claims. Critics say bad faith laws are abused by attorneys looking to recover money in excess of a policy’s limit.

The proposal would bar bad faith lawsuits if insurers correct violations or pay damages within 60 days of being notified. It some instances, a finding of negligence would not be enough to sustain a claim against an insurer if intentional wrongdoing, or malfeasance, was also not established.

Gunn says limiting bad faith lawsuits would leave insurance clients on the hook for claims by third-party accident victims if insurers decline to pay them.

Insurance contracts require insurers to take over the affairs of its clients when third parties file claims against them, he said.

“Florida courts have said insurers must act as a fiduciary would. Why shouldn’t the insurance company be held to the same standard of reasonable care and due diligence as doctors, attorneys, brokers and accountants?” he asked.

Proponents of the reforms say they do not substantially change plaintiffs’ rights to seek damages from negligent parties.

Rep. Gregory noted in the Feb. 24 hearing that many of the Florida residents who came to the podium with stories of suffering horrible health problems would not have been barred from filing lawsuits if the proposals were in place.

“And the reason is many of these stories dealt with medical malpractice, pain and suffering damages, and non-economic damages. None of those issues are covered in this bill. Pain and suffering is not capped in this bill.

But Varnell noted that previous reforms to medical malpractice laws have made it difficult for injured people to find lawyers willing to take their case.

“If you can’t find a lawyer, it doesn’t matter what your rights are,” she said.

News Service of Florida contributed to this report.

Ron Hurtibise covers business and consumer issues for the South Florida Sun Sentinel. He can be reached by phone at 954-356-4071, on Twitter @ronhurtibise or by email at [email protected]. 

 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/business/fl-bz-potential-effects-of-latest-insurance-reforms-20230305-ktayaxnrvzcbxkumlmo7wnbkym-story.html

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Florida Justice Reform Institute

Proposed Civil Litigation Reforms Now Extend to Nursing Homes

March 3, 2023/in Florida Bar News

 

Florida Bar News

Proposed Civil Litigation Reforms Now Extend to Nursing Homes

Mar 03, 2023 By Jim Ash

The Legislature’s civil litigation reforms have expanded to nursing homes less than a week before the March 7 launch of the regular, 60-day session.

Sen. Colleen Burton, R-Lakeland, filed SB 1304 on February 28. A companion, HB 1029 by Rep. Randy Maggard, R-Zephyrhills, was filed February 22.

Collen Burton Sen. Colleen Burton

The proposals would prohibit adult children of senior living facility residents from collecting non-economic damages and prohibit expert witnesses from testifying on a contingency fee basis.

Florida Justice Reform Institute President William Large said the measures “update code regarding nursing homes and adult living facilities to create parity” with existing medical malpractice protections, and inject “specificity” and “strict requirements” into the “evidence and expert witness process.”

“Current long-term care liability law incentivizes plaintiffs to file lawsuits against any and every possible defendant, especially those with deep pockets, and encourages the dubious use of experts outside of their scope of practice,” Large said in a statement.

The measures are in addition to HB 837, a sweeping civil litigation reform proposal by House Judiciary Chair Tommy Gregory, R-Lakewood Ranch. The House Civil Justice Subcommittee approved the measure 12-6 on February 24.

The larger reform package would repeal a one-way attorney fee provision in Florida law that requires insurance companies to pay a policy holder’s legal fees and costs when a court determines they unfairly denied or underpaid a claim.

Jacksonville attorney Curry Pajcic, president of the Florida Justice Association, called HB 837, “an insurance company giveaway.”

Another HB 837 provision would switch Florida from a “pure” to a “modified” comparative negligence standard and prohibit plaintiffs from collecting damages when they are found to be 50% or more at fault.

Critics of HB 837, and other “tort reform” measures, argue they would leave accident victims and the catastrophically injured unable to fight an insurance company’s arbitrary decisions.

Another measure filed for the 2023 session, the “Roller Skating Rink Safety Act,” would make rink operators and owners immune from civil liability if they post signs, follow state and local regulations, and take “reasonable” safety precautions. Freshman Rep. Susan Plasencia, R-Winter Springs, filed HB 1129 on February 24.

Sen. Linda Stewart, D-Orlando, and Rep. Philip “Griff” Griffitts, R-Panama City, have filed SB 1002 and HB 541, respectively. The measures would prohibit motorists from assigning their insurance benefits to auto glass repair companies.

Unlike the House companion, Stewart’s bill would ban auto-glass companies from offering a “rebate, gift card, cash, coupon, or any other thing of value,” in exchange for making an insurance claim for motor vehicle glass or repair.

“These incentives sound great, but the reality is that some of these services are using you to sue your insurance for more money than the replacement actually costs,” Stewart said.

https://www.floridabar.org/the-florida-bar-news/proposed-civil-litigation-reforms-now-extend-to-nursing-homes/ 

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Florida Justice Reform Institute

Proposed Florida Laws are Good News for Insurers—as Plaintiff Lawyers Push Back

March 3, 2023/in Law.com

 

Law.com

Proposed Florida Laws are Good News for Insurers—as Plaintiff Lawyers Push Back

“Governor DeSantis has repeatedly pledged to take on the toughest issues, and he has delivered,” William Large said. “Now, with help from the legislature, he’s taking on the trial lawyers in dramatic fashion.”

March 03, 2023 at 02:24 PM

Senate Chamber The large meeting hall of Senate Chamber in the Old Capital of Florida, Tallahassee, FL, USA. Credit: Cheri Alguire/Shutterstock.com

As the larger tort reform bill, HB 837, is making its way through the legislature in Tallahassee, South Florida plaintiffattorneys and clients are up in arms over not only about the proposed law, but another bill introduced this week, Senate Bill 1274.

Collen BurtonRep. Colleen Burton, R-Lakeland, debates on the House floor. Florida House of Representatives

This bill, introduced by state Sen. Colleen Burton, is anticipated to be up in the Senate Tuesday afternoon, and thenagain in the House on Wednesday afternoon, said Miami lawyer Stephen Forst Cain of Stewart Tilghman Fox Bianchi &Cain.

Cain is in the state capitol fighting the bill and a slew of proposed amendments surrounding the controversial piece oflegislation aimed at what Gov. Ron DeSantis says is “comprehensive reforms to decrease frivolous lawsuits and preventpredatory practices of trial attorneys that prey on hardworking Floridians.”

“I think this is Big Insurance companies convincing legislators that we need to be a business-friendly state. The problemis that in the meantime, they’re trampling on the rights of everyday Floridians and making our safe state unsafe,” Cainsaid. ”That bill, frankly, makes our state unsafe. It disincentivizes business owners and apartment complexes fromtaking appropriate security measures, and I think will result in more crime not less—all to get big insurance moremoney.”

Stephen Forst Cain Stephen Cain, with Stewart Tilghman Fox Bianchi & Cain in Miami. Courtesy photo

‘All Types of Lawsuits’

Both bills plus the proposed amendments are the talk of Tallahassee and South Florida.

Davie legal ethics professor Robert Jarvis said 837 is a terrible bill.

Jarvis NSU Law Professor Robert Jarvis. (Credit: Melanie Bell/ALM) 

Jarvis, who teaches at Nova Southeastern University, says at its base level, the bill continues the insurance industry’slong effort to reduce payouts to plaintiffs.

“The industry has never had a more supportive governor or legislature, and that is why it is striking now and findingsuccess,” Jarvis said.

Jarvis said it would be a change to the comparative negligence system—used for decades— and designed to helpdefendants, who in most cases are companies.

“All plaintiffs, whether crime victims or not, take a chance when they file a lawsuit that they will be unsuccessful,” hesaid. “And HB 837’s changes are not specifically aimed at crime victims. Instead, they apply broadly to all types oflawsuits.”

Changes Would Affect Premises Liability

Crime victims press conferenceVictims of local crime ask Stute Leaders to ‘lote No on tort reform bills HB 837* and HB 1165 during the upcoming legislative
session, in Miami Lakes, on Thursday, March 2, 2023. Photo: Lisa Willis/ALM

But that’s of little comfort to former victims of crime who gathered in Miami Lakes Thursday to voice their concerns.

The group was comprised of victims of violent crime, victims of negligence and those who lost loved ones to tragedy,most of which sought financial restitution via lawsuits in the past.

Spokesperson Renee Williams with the advocacy group National Center for Victims of Crime said the proposedchanges make her worried for Floridians “… and a little bit angry.”

“I think that there has been a misnomer that this is tort reform,” Williams said. “And while I totally respect some of thepolicy purposes behind this bill, it’s disheartening that the amendment that joined this week was done with absolutely noconsideration to crime victims.”

Williams is concerned with the wording of the “premises liability for criminal acts” by third parties in the bill, which shesaid alludes to owners or principal operators of multifamily properties and businesses having certain presumptionsagainst liability.

“If business owners and if businesses in the state of Florida have a crime committed on their property, as long as theycan point to the perpetrator or the criminal as being responsible, they’re no longer responsible for anything, includingcommon sense safety measures that keep individuals and communities safe,” she said.

‘Slip It Through the Legislature’

Jarvis, the ethics expert, said some lawyers are reluctant to discuss the proposed changes.

“Plaintiffs’ lawyers, of course, clearly are against it, (but) why won’t any defense lawyers speak? I think the answer isobvious: This is a bad bill for consumers, and its opponents are hoping to slip it through the legislature,” he said.“Recognizing, however, that this is not going to slip through the legislature, they are calling it tort reform, when ofcourse, it is no such thing.”

“I can’t think of any lawyer who might be willing to give you a quote supporting bill, ” Jarvis added.

‘Taking on the Trial Lawyers’

But some business groups welcomed the bills.

William Large William W. Large, President of the Florida Justice Reform Institute.  Courtesy photo

Calling the proposed changes the most consequential civil litigation reform in a generation, William Large, president ofthe Florida Justice Reform Institute, applauded.

“Governor DeSantis has repeatedly pledged to take on the toughest issues, and he has delivered,” Large said. “Now,with help from the legislature, he’s taking on the trial lawyers in dramatic fashion, and leading Florida towards a morepredictable, stable legal environment that focuses on fairness and personal responsibility.”

John Uustal John Uustal Founding Partner Kelly Uustal Fort Lauderdale.  Credit Kelly Uustal Trial Attorneys

Meanwhile, Fort Lauderdale attorney John Uustal, founding partner with Kelly Uustal, said the proposed changes soundgreat at first, but the bills’ authors need to consider the real-life ramifications if the bills were to have been law when theParkland shooting occurred.

Parkland shooting victims and survivors were among the South Florida residents gathered Thursday in opposition to the proposed changes. They wanted to share their concerns about how they think the bill would affect others like them inthe future, should something like the Marjory Stoneman Douglas massacre happen again.

“It would have destroyed the Parkland families’ ability to hold anyone else accountable,” Uustal said. “It would be a get-out-of-jail-free card for all types of businesses and government entities that violate the law or in other ways commitnegligent acts that result in people getting killed or hurt.”

https://www.law.com/dailybusinessreview/2023/03/03/proposed-florida-laws-are-good-news-for-insurers-as-plaintiff-lawyers-push-back/ 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2023-03-03 15:54:572024-11-24 21:43:24Proposed Florida Laws are Good News for Insurers—as Plaintiff Lawyers Push Back
Florida Justice Reform Institute

Litigator Warns of ‘Collateral Damage’ as Lawmakers Pursue Tort Law Legislation

March 2, 2023/in Florida Bar News

 

Florida Bar News

LITIGATOR WARNS OF ‘COLLATERAL DAMAGE’ AS LAWMAKERS PURSUE TORT LAW LEGISLATION

Mar 02, 2023 By Jim Ash

But supporters of the bill say one-way attorney fees invite ‘lawsuit abuse,’ and all Floridians pay the price through higher insurance premiums

Florida lawmakers are risking collateral damage with a “shotgun” approach, when more targeted civil litigation reforms will do, says a veteran South Florida trial attorney.

West Palm Beach attorney Jeff Liggio, managing partner of Liggio & Cornell, has represented policy holders — individuals, families, and small businesses — in insurance disputes for more than 40 years.

The Annapolis grad and board certified civil trial lawyer warns that the sweeping reform measure, HB 837 — which includes repealing the one-way fee provision — would leave his clients at the mercy of the insurance industry.

“I represent people who are desperate, they have cancer, and they’re not getting chemotherapy, and they’re dying, and we have to go and get injunctions,” Liggio said.

But supporters of the bill say one-way attorney fees invite “lawsuit abuse,” and all Floridians pay the price through higher insurance premiums.

In a recent opinion column, Liggio described several clients — hurricane victims, cancer patients, rare disease sufferers — who needed legal help after being improperly denied benefits and care.

The list includes a Lake County couple whose young son was diagnosed with adrenoleukodystrophy, a disease that costs “thousands and thousands of dollars” to manage. The couple’s health insurer lowered a $1 million annual limit to a $1 million lifetime limit, Liggio said.

“You hear people say, ‘I don’t have to worry, I have great insurance,’” Liggio said. “You don’t know if you have good insurance until you need it.”

The reform package would repeal a one-way fee provision that makes insurers responsible for a policy holder’s legal fees and costs — but only if a court determines the company acted improperly, Liggio stresses.

“I could lose,” he said.

Liggio said none of his clients could have afforded to fight an insurance company without the one-way fee provision, a statute that he says Florida adopted in 1959.

“Because of that law, the clients whose situations I described were able to have my law firm represent them, in some cases for several years, in some very contentious and expensive litigation, and we did not charge them a penny for attorney’s fees,” he said.

The House Civil Justice Subcommittee voted 12-6 on February 24 to approve HB 837, over the objection of Democrats, the Florida Justice Association, and other critics who echoed Liggio’s concerns. It has at least one more committee stop before reaching the House floor.

Gregory Rep. Tommy Gregory

House Judiciary Chair Tommy Gregory, R-Lakewood Ranch, told the committee he is sponsoring the measure to restore “equilibrium” to the system.

“You don’t have to wonder if your constituents’ insurance prices are rising too high, because yours are,” he said. “Economic activity responds to incentives — the litigation environment is no different.”

In addition to repealing the one-way fee provision, the measure would switch Florida from a “pure” to a “modified” comparative negligence standard and limit the awarding of fee multipliers to rare and unusual circumstances. A “damages transparency” section would repeal a 2017 Supreme Court decision, Worley v. Central Florida YMCA, and negate attorney client privilege “when a communication is relevant to the lawyer’s act of referring the client for treatment by a health care provider.”

Gov. Ron DeSantis has called for civil justice reforms, and the bill has the backing of House Speaker Paul Renner and Senate President Kathleen Passidomo. With Republicans enjoying a supermajority in the Legislature, passage seems all but assured.

The Florida Chamber of Commerce, Associated Industries of Florida, the Florida Personal Insurance Federation, and the Florida Justice Reform Institute, are enthusiastic supporters.

In a statement, Florida Chamber President and CEO Mark Wilson said that “Florida’s lawsuit abuse spending tops every other state in the nation and accounts for 3.6% of Florida’s $1.4 trillion economy, with no other state surpassing 3% of their state GDP.”

DeSantis and others like to cite an example where a dispute over less than $2 generates a lawsuit, and the awarding of thousands of dollars in attorney fees.

Liggio laments that the example has become a “poster child.”

The suits aren’t being filed by people like his clients, Liggio says, but by “commercial entities, primarily in the medical bill collection area.”

The entities are filing small claims cases “as an assignee of,” the insured, Liggio said.

Liggio recently searched appellate court dockets and found hundreds of “a/a/o” cases. If there are that many in the appellate courts, “there must be thousands in the trial courts,” Liggio says.

One, a Third District Court of Appeal decision, was issued two days before the committee vote.

It involved a dispute between a medical entity — as assignee of an insured — and an automobile insurance company.

A lower court ordered the insurance company to pay $4,782 in attorney fees after the medical entity sued to collect a statutory late payment fee, and postage, totaling $10.55.

The Third DCA reversed the lower court and denied the attorney fee award. The appellate court noted that the insurance company paid the $10.55 approximately four months after the suit was originally filed.

“You can’t justify that, you just can’t,” Liggio says. “You can file a class action, perhaps, if the insurance company is routinely not paying statutorily required penalties and postage, but you don’t file a lawsuit for $10.”

Lawmakers could easily end the practice, Liggio said.

He notes that the Legislature recently prohibited homeowners from assigning their property insurance benefits to a third party, a practice known as “AOB.”

This year, a bipartisan measure would prohibit motorists from assigning their insurance benefits to auto glass repair companies.

“If the Legislature wants to curb these types of insignificant lawsuits by medical bill collection entities that lead to outsized attorney fee awards, there are more limited and focused ways to do so without taking away benefits provided to Florida citizens, families, and small businesses since 1959,” Liggio said.

https://www.floridabar.org/the-florida-bar-news/litigator-warns-of-collateral-damage-as-lawmakers-pursue-tort-law-legislation/ 

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Florida Justice Reform Institute

Fla. Tort Reform Bill Aims to Pick Up Where Lawmakers Left Off

March 1, 2023/in Claims Journal

 

Claims Journal

Fla. Tort Reform Bill Aims to Pick Up Where Lawmakers Left Off

By William Rabb | March 1, 2023

Medical Malpractice

Outside of insurance attorneys, plaintiffs’ lawyers and some doctors, few people in Florida may be familiar with what are known as letters of protection.

But critics say the instruments, in which doctors agree to take a share of the judgment in an injury lawsuit, are responsible for greatly inflating some medical costs, which are often paid by liability and auto insurers.

And now, thanks to a tort-reform bill filed Wednesday, those letters would have to be disclosed by plaintiffs.

It’s just one of a multitude of what some are calling “monumental” legal changes proposed by House Bill 837, which was submitted by Florida Rep. Tommy Gregory, R-Lakewood Ranch.

GregoryGregory

Few people this year were talking publicly about another round of reforms designed to limit litigation costs for insurers, after Florida lawmakers approved sweeping legislation in December. But after huddling quietly over the last few weeks with the Florida governor and the newly sworn Republican leaders of the House and Senate, along with some of the biggest business and legal reform groups in Florida, Gregory has drafted a bill that checks the remaining boxes that property-casualty insurers and other corporations have been asking for.

“This has been a key priority for the business community,” said George Feijoo, a former Florida insurance regulator and now a government affairs consultant at Floridian Partners. “It’s a perfect alignment of the governor and the Senate and the speaker on these issues.”

Some plaintiffs’ attorneys were caught off guard by the bill.

“This came out of nowhere,” said West Palm Beach attorney Gina Clausen Lozier, who represents policyholders in claims litigation. “They’re really trying to tie up all the loose ends.”

No more attorney-client privilege on treating physicians for plaintiffs. In Worley vs. Central Florida YMCA, the Florida Supreme Court in 2017 decided that when claimants’ attorneys refer their injured clients to doctors for treatment, the financial relationship between the lawyer and the doctor does not have to be revealed in discovery. Without that, the jury can’t fairly decide if the physician has an incentive to inflate medical treatments and costs, said William Large, president of the Florida Justice Reform Institute, which has lobbied for tort reforms.

The Worley decision has stuck in the craw of the insurance industry for years, because insurers’ payments to their own medical expert witnesses are considered discoverable in litigation. HB 837 ends the perceived double standard. “There is no lawyer-client privilege under this section when: A communication is relevant to the lawyer’s act of referring the client for treatment by a health care provider,” the bill reads.

50% at fault means no recovery. Florida statutes have allowed juries to allocate responsibility for an accident or negligent act that caused harm. HB 837 states flatly that if a plaintiff is found to be more than 50% at fault, he or she cannot recover damages in a lawsuit.

Policy limits equal damage limits. If two or more third-party claimants make competing claims on a single incident, which, taken together, would exceed the policy limits, an insurer cannot be liable beyond the policy limits, the bill reads. The claimants will be entitled to a prorated share, as determined by the court or arbitrator in the case.

Medical costs must be real. The bill would require that evidence provided by plaintiffs in injury claims must be limited to the “amount actually paid, regardless of the source of payment.” That means that if the injured party has health care insurance, the amount paid by insurance should be explained and damages should not be based on unsupported medical estimates.

FeijooFeijoo
If the claimant has signed a letter of protection with a medical provider, circumventing health insurance, the plaintiff’s demand must still be guided by what health coverage would have paid. If the injured party has no medical insurance, the Medicare reimbursement rate should be considered.

Letters of protection. The letters are big reasons why medical costs and damages in an injury verdict have often seemed higher than what a health insurer would normally pay for treatment, critics have said. A Justice Reform Institute white paper in 2019 argued that even if an injured person has health coverage, the plaintiff’s lawyer might recommend an LOP in order to avoid damage awards based on the lower, negotiated rates generally paid by health insurers to medical providers.

In addition, some providers sell their LOPs to medical lien-purchasing companies, or factoring companies, which can pay less than the doctor’s claimed amount, but still more than a health insurer would pay.

Under HB 837, all letters of protection, along with the amount the third-party factoring company agreed to pay the doctor, would be divulged in the personal injury or wrongful death lawsuit proceedings. Doctors’ bills would have to be itemized and must include procedure codes where possible.

No more multipliers. What Senate Bill 2D did for property insurance litigation, HB 837 would do for auto and liability insurance claims litigation. Thanks in part to another 2017 opinion by the Florida Supreme Court, courts have allowed plaintiffs’ attorneys to use a multiplier, on top of a “Lodestar” factor, to calculate higher fees when they prevail in litigation, in many cases. The idea is that fee multipliers help ensure that qualified law firms will accept difficult cases, or will travel distances when other lawyers can’t be found.

Gregory’s bill would allow only the Lodestar fee, except in rare circumstances when evidence shows that competent counsel could not otherwise be retained. Lodestarwas the name of a federal court decision that set out a formula for determining reasonable attorney fees and is widely followed in federal litigation.

Bad-faith claims. While SB 2A in December raised the threshold for making bad-faith claims against property insurers, HB 837 extends that to auto and liability insurance claims. Mere negligence by an insurer would not be sufficient to sustain a bad-faith action, the bill notes. And the judge or jury would have to consider whether the insured and the insured’s attorney acted in good faith and may reduce damages accordingly.

Insurers have for years complained that Florida law encourages unwarranted third-party, bad-faith claims by law firms looking to recover damages in excess of policy limits. The reform bill would give a “safe harbor,” barring a suit if the insurer pays damages or rectifies violations within 60 days of being notified.

One-way attorney fees. At the heart of Florida’s property insurance crisis, many insurers have said, were Florida statutes and court rulings that granted hefty attorney fees, even if the insured prevailed by only a marginal amount in court. Gregory’s bill simply repeals Florida Statutes 627.428 and 626.9373, which authorized the fee structure. While SB 2A ended one-way fees for property insurers, HB 873 would effectively end them for claims litigation against other types of insurers, including surplus lines.

The bill also would strike another section of state law, which now reads: “The provisions of s. 627.428 do not apply to any action brought pursuant to this section against the uninsured motorist insurer unless there is a dispute over whether the policy provides coverage for an uninsured motorist proven to be liable for the accident.”

William LargeLarge
At the two special sessions of the Florida Legislature in 2022, insurance bills crafted by the governor and legislative leaders sailed through both chambers virtually unchanged. But at the regular session, which begins March 7 and lasts for 60 days, things may be a little different, Tallahassee insiders and lobbyists suggested. With more time for lawmakers to review and more corporate interests involved, it’s possible that some provisions in HB 837 could be revised before the bill is finalized.

But probably not by much.

After hearing the business community’s cries, DeSantis “is taking on the trial bar in dramatic fashion and is leading Florida towards a more predictable legal environment,” said Large, of the Justice Reform Institute. “And he’s poised to deliver.”

https://www.claimsjournal.com/news/southeast/2023/03/01/315602.htm 

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