Court Opinion

ID: 4285232
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-06-18 07:51:11.175982+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:49:08.900619
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
                                          444444444444
                                            NO. 16-0125
                                          444444444444

DEBRA C. GUNN, M.D., OBSTETRICAL AND GYNECOLOGICAL ASSOCIATES, P.A.,
AND OBSTETRICAL AND GYNECOLOGICAL ASSOCIATES P.L.L.C., PETITIONERS,

                                                  v.

  ANDRE MCCOY, AS PERMANENT GUARDIAN OF SHANNON MILES MCCOY, AN
                 INCAPACITATED PERSON, RESPONDENT
            4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
                            ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
                  COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
            4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444

       JUSTICE JOHNSON, joined by JUSTICE BOYD, dissenting.

       I disagree that the trial court’s error in excluding the defendants’ expert witness testimony

regarding Shannon McCoy’s future medical care expenses was harmless.

       I also disagree that affidavits by subrogation agents with no disclosed familiarity or

connection with the medical treatment in question provide sufficient basis to either admit the

summaries of medical expenses attached to them, or support jury findings as to the reasonable and

necessary amounts for past medical expenses.

       Further, even if the subrogation agents’ affidavits would have otherwise provided a sufficient

basis to admit the attached documents and support jury findings as to medical expenses, I disagree

that all of the affidavits support the jury findings as to past medical expenses. One of the affidavits
referencing over $300,000 of expenses was not sufficient because it did not address whether the

expenses in the attached exhibits were necessary.

                                  I. Future Medical Expenses

       At trial, the parties did not dispute that Shannon’s conditions would require medical care for

the rest of her life. But they disputed both whether all her conditions were proximately caused by

the allegedly negligent actions of the defendants, Obstetrical and Gynecological Associates, P.A.

(OGA) and Dr. Debra Gunn, as well as the cost of future care that would be medically necessary as

a result of those actions. Shannon’s husband, Andre McCoy (McCoy), suing individually and as

Shannon’s guardian, offered, and the trial court admitted, opinion testimony of Dr. Alex Willingham

regarding the probable costs of Shannon’s future care. The life-care plan he prepared was

introduced in connection with his testimony. To controvert Dr. Willingham’s testimony, OGA and

Dr. Gunn sought to introduce video deposition testimony from Dr. Hellen Schilling. I agree with

the Court that the exclusion of Dr. Schilling’s testimony was error. Ante at ___. However, I disagree

that the error was harmless.

       The standard for reversal of a judgment based on the exclusion of evidence is whether the

error “probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment.” TEX. R. APP. P. 61.1; see Gee v.

Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 765 S.W.2d 394, 396 (Tex. 1989). We have explained that “[i]t is not

necessary for the complaining party to prove that ‘but for’ the exclusion of evidence, a different

judgment would necessarily have resulted.” State v. Cent. Expressway Sign Assocs., 302 S.W.3d
866, 870 (Tex. 2009) (quoting McCraw v. Maris, 828 S.W.2d 756, 758 (Tex. 1992)). Rather, we

have explicated a framework for distinguishing between a harmless exclusion of evidence, one that

                                                 2
did not probably cause rendition of an improper judgment, and a harmful exclusion, one that

probably did cause rendition of an improper judgment. See id. If erroneously excluded evidence

was “crucial to a key issue,” then the error was likely harmful; that is, it probably caused the

rendition of an improper judgment. Id.; see also Diamond Offshore Servs. Ltd. v. Williams, 542
S.W.3d 539, 551 (Tex. 2018) (“[E]xclusion is likely harmful if the evidence is crucial to a key

issue.”); Caffe Ribs, Inc. v. State, 487 S.W.3d 137, 145 (Tex. 2016); JLG Trucking, LLC v. Garza,

466 S.W.3d 157, 165 (Tex. 2015); Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. v. Sevcik, 267 S.W.3d 867, 873

(Tex. 2008). On the other hand, that does not end the inquiry. Because even if the excluded

evidence was crucial to a key issue, “the exclusion . . . is likely harmless if the evidence was

cumulative, or the rest of the evidence was so one-sided that the error likely made no difference in

the judgment.” Cent. Expressway Sign Assocs., 302 S.W.3d at 870 (citing Reliance Steel &

Aluminum Co., 267 S.W.3d at 873).

       Given the extent to which parties engage in discovery in cases such as this, there is very

little, if any, evidence presented at trial that the parties’ lawyers are unaware of before trial. Yet

cases are tried because there is no way of accurately predicting how the evidence, or any particular

piece of evidence, will affect a jury. Likewise, there is no realistic way of accurately determining

how excluded evidence would have affected the jury’s findings if it had been admitted. Thus, the

conclusion that an error in excluding evidence relevant to a key issue “likely was harmful” is as

close as any analysis is going to get. Stated another way, the test this Court has articulated is, in

substance, that an error in excluding testimony is considered to have caused rendition of an improper

judgment (the exclusion was likely harmful) if the excluded testimony was crucial to a key issue,

                                                  3
provided that the excluded evidence was not merely cumulative and that the other evidence was not

so one-sided that the excluded evidence likely would have made no difference. That is a reasonable

and at least somewhat objective test that requires examination of the entire record. Because OGA

and Dr. Gunn are the parties asserting error, the burden is on them to meet the test. Which, as

explained below, in my view they did by demonstrating that the record shows: (1) the excluded

evidence was crucial to what even McCoy’s attorney told the jury was the most important issue; (2)

the excluded evidence conflicted with the testimony of Dr. Willingham as to the amount of treatment

and care that would be necessary for Shannon in the future, thus Dr. Schilling’s testimony was not

merely cumulative in regard to the key issue of the cost of necessary future medical care; and (3)

the opinion testimony of Dr. Willingham was not so one-sided that Dr. Schilling’s testimony likely

would have had no effect at all on the jury’s finding for future medical expenses. After all, Dr.

Willingham’s testimony was opinion testimony predicting the future, not factual testimony relating

past events; Dr. Schilling and Dr. Willingham had substantively equivalent credentials; each

examined Shannon one time for approximately the same amount of time; and each had extensive

experience in preparing life-care plans for predicting the necessity of and costs for future care for

severely impaired patients.

       The Court subtly but importantly departs from the workable legal standard we have

established, as is set out above, for determining whether the exclusion of evidence on a crucial issue

was harmful. The Court opts for merely balancing the evidence admitted and excluded to determine

whether, in its opinion the excluded evidence would have made a difference in the sitting jurors’

minds and findings. The Court says,

                                                  4
       We have, however, noted that the role excluded evidence plays in the context of trial
       is important, and we have provided guidelines to assist trial courts in applying the
       harmful error standard. Exclusion is likely harmless if the evidence was cumulative
       or if the rest of the evidence was so one-sided that the error likely made no difference
       in the judgment. By contrast, exclusion of the evidence is likely harmful if it was
       “crucial to a key issue.” We do not dispute that future medical expenses, which
       made up almost 70% of the trial court’s judgment, was indeed a “key issue.” But
       that does not end the inquiry; our guidelines make clear that the exclusion of such
       evidence is “likely harmful,” not conclusively or per se harmful.

Ante at __ (citations omitted). The Court then, however, proceeds to briefly analyze the evidence

and set out the standard it uses to make its decision:

       An error in excluding evidence is harmful when it “probably” caused the rendition
       of an improper judgment, and “probably” is a higher standard than “might” or “could
       have.” See Caffe Ribs, Inc., 487 S.W.3d at 144–45 (stating that a trial court’s
       exclusion of evidence “is reversible only if it probably caused the rendition of an
       improper judgment”); Aultman v. Dall. Ry. & Terminal Co., 260 S.W.2d 596, 600
       (Tex. 1953) (defining “probably” as “having more evidence for than against,
       supported by evidence which inclines the mind to believe, but leaves some room for
       doubt, likely”) . . . But “likely” does not mean “definitively”—we must review the
       record to determine whether, in this particular case, the exclusion of Dr. Schilling’s
       video deposition testimony “probably,” as opposed to “might have” or “could
       have,” caused the rendition of an improper judgment.

Ante at __ (emphasis added). The Court’s application of the standard ignores the fact that the effect

of particular evidence on a particular jury—whether admitted or excluded—is just not reasonably

predictable to a fine degree. And the questions of whether the excluded evidence was cumulative

and whether it was so one-sided that the error likely made no difference as part of the analysis

disappear for all practical purposes in the Court’s analysis. But they should be the standards for

evaluating the effect of the error after it has been determined that the error was likely harmful

because the excluded evidence was crucial to a key issue. In situations such as this where the

evidence was crucial to a key issue and was not cumulative, the harm analysis should turn on

                                                  5
whether the evidence was so one-sided that the excluded evidence likely made no difference. The

“likely” is tethered to the “so one-sided” part of the standard. Not so in the standard the Court

applies today. And while the standard of “so one-sided” is to a degree subjective, it is not nearly

so subjective as determining whether excluded evidence would “more likely than not” have caused

the jury to return a different verdict, which in effect is merely a second-guessing of the jury’s view

of the evidence.

       The Court’s harm analysis in this case demonstrates the difference. After determining that

the exclusion of Dr. Schilling’s testimony was likely harmful because of its relationship to the key

issue of future medical expenses, the Court moves directly to balancing the evidence. That

necessarily means it considered how the jurors’ thought processes likely would have worked and

what the jury likely would have done had it heard the excluded evidence. Explaining a framework

for that exercise is hard to do, as witnessed by the Court’s explanation-less conclusion:

       Having reviewed the entire record, we cannot say that the erroneous exclusion of Dr.
       Schilling’s video deposition testimony probably caused the rendition of an improper
       judgment.

Ante at __.

       The Court also says that there’s no bright line for deciding the harm question. I agree. But

there must be some articulable standard which differs from merely balancing the evidence admitted

and excluded. The standard we have previously articulated, properly applied, is such a standard.

       Measuring the effect of the exclusion of Dr. Schilling’s testimony once future medical was

determined to be a key issue under the previously articulated standard—the exclusion was likely

harmless if the excluded evidence was cumulative or the rest of the evidence was so one-sided that

                                                  6
the error likely made no difference in the judgment, Cent. Expressway Sign Assocs., 302 S.W.3d at

870—it seems to me that, indeed, (1) the trial court erred by excluding Dr. Schilling’s testimony;

(2) her testimony was crucial to a key issue; (3) the testimony was not merely cumulative; and

(4) the other evidence was not so one-sided that her testimony likely would have made no difference.

Thus, the exclusion was not harmless.

       Giving context to evidence determinative of whether the evidence was so one-sided that Dr.

Schilling’s testimony likely would have made no difference requires examining all the relevant

evidence, beginning with whether the testimony of Dr. Schilling concerned a key issue. The starting

point for analyzing that question is the judgment. Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co., 267 S.W.3d at

871.

       First, that Shannon’s future medical care expenses were a key issue is clear from the fact that

of the jury’s damage findings for over $10.6 million, over $7.2 million was for future medical care.

The amount found for future medical care was more than double the nearly $3.4 million for other

damage findings combined. Second, whether the future medical was a key issue was answered by

McCoy’s attorney in his closing summation to the jury. He stated that the last blank, where the jury

was to place its finding as to Shannon’s future medical care expenses, “is the most important blank.”

       The court of appeals opined that the key dispute was liability, not damages. 489 S.W.3d 75,

112 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2016). Unquestionably, the defendants consistently contested

liability throughout the trial and in the court of appeals. They still do in this Court. But they also

have consistently contested the amount of damages. We have never said that there is or can be only

one key dispute in a trial. Nor does such a concept make sense. Many, if not the great majority of,

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cases involve heated contests over both liability and damages. Although it hardly needs to be said

that there usually are multiple key issues in a trial, we specifically acknowledged that there are in

Central Expressway, where we said that evidence either admitted in error or excluded in error was

likely harmful if the evidence “was crucial to a key issue.” 302 S.W.3d at 870 (emphasis added);

see also Diamond Offshore Servs. Ltd., 542 S.W.3d at 551 (stating exclusion is likely harmful if the

evidence “is crucial to a key issue”) (emphasis added); Caffe Ribs, Inc., 487 S.W.3d at 145 (same);

JLG Trucking, LLC, 466 S.W.3d at 165 (same).

       Next, the harm analysis looks to whether Dr. Schilling’s testimony was crucial to the key

issue of future medical expenses for Shannon. And the answer is “Yes.”

       Lay jurors are deemed to lack the knowledge to determine the reasonable costs of medical

care that was necessary in the past or will probably be necessary in the future. See Watkins v.

Watkins, 2000 WL 1862686, at *4 (Tex. App.—Austin 2000, pet. denied) (stating that a party cannot

recover medical expenses without proof of what costs are reasonable and necessary (citing Dall. Ry.

& Terminal Co. v. Gossett, 294 S.W.2d 377, 382–83 (Tex. 1956))). Thus, jurors must be guided by

expert testimony in making their findings. See id. And almost categorically, both plaintiffs and

defendants present—or at least try to present—experts to opine on the necessity of particular items

of medical care and the cost of those items in the future, even when it is uncontested that future care

will be necessary. And when experts testify, one aspect of persuading the jury to the presenting

party’s position is presenting the expert’s qualifications. That is because it is generally accepted

among experienced trial lawyers that (1) part of the jury’s decision regarding expert testimony will

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turn on whose expert the jury believes is the more credible witness, and (2) a significant part of an

expert’s credibility relates to the expert’s qualifications and experience as to the particular issue.

       As the Court notes, whether sufficient evidence supports the jury’s finding as to expenses

for future medical care is not at issue. Ante at ___. Dr. Willingham’s testimony is evidence to

support the finding. But where Dr. Schilling was the defendants’ only witness as to the question of

future medical care expenses, her testimony was crucial to the question of the differences between

her opinions and those of Dr. Willingham. That conclusion is buttressed by McCoy’s attempts to

keep Dr. Schilling’s testimony out of evidence. Further, Dr. Schilling’s testimony was not

cumulative of Dr. Willinghams’s testimony as to many items of projected care and their cost, as

demonstrated by both her testimony and her marked-up copy of Dr. Willingham’s life-care plan for

Shannon. If it had been, McCoy would not have strived so hard to keep it out, and OGA and Dr.

Gunn to have it admitted. Further, neither the trial court, the court of appeals, nor this Court have

concluded that it was cumulative.

       Which brings us to the question of whether the evidence was “so one-sided” that Dr.

Schilling’s testimony likely would have made “no difference in the judgment.” See Cent.

Expressway Sign Assocs., 302 S.W.3d at 870. The “so one-sided” question necessarily includes

considering both Dr. Willingham’s testimony and the evidence and testimony which would have

been introduced through Dr. Schilling. If it were otherwise, then the testimony of almost every

expert would be so one-sided that excluding opposing expert opinions would be harmless error.

       Dr. Willingham testified extensively about his training, experience in treating patients,

experience in teaching medical students, lectures he had given, and other matters to bolster the

                                                  9
opinions he testified to. However, Dr. Schilling’s testimony showed that she was eminently

qualified to opine as to and calculate the expenses likely to be necessary for Shannon’s future

medical care. Dr. Schilling testified that she was the medical director of the rehabilitation

department at a Houston hospital; taught fourth-year residents in that area of medicine; was on the

faculty at Baylor College of Medicine; reviewed complaints against physicians in the area of

physical medicine and rehabilitation for the Texas State Board of Medicine, as well as Medicare and

the Texas Workers’ Compensation Commission; and performed peer reviews regarding other

practitioners in the field of physical medicine and rehabilitation. But because the trial court

excluded Dr. Schilling’s testimony, the jury never heard about her training, extensive experience,

and expertise.

         Further, the jury heard Dr. Willingham testify about his personal examination of Shannon

during the course of formulating his opinions. He described her conditions based on his personal

observations as well as the medical records he reviewed. He described the records he reviewed in

some detail and explained the amount of time he spent in reviewing them and analyzing them as part

of reaching his opinions, in preparing his life-care plan for Shannon, and in estimating the costs of

her future care. But the jury did not hear of Dr. Schilling’s similar foundation for her testimony: her

personal examination of Shannon, her detailed review of Shannon’s records, the amount of time she

spent in analyzing Shannon’s probable future medical needs, her experience in caring for persons,

such as Shannon, with severely debilitating conditions and her experience in preparing life-care

plans.

                                                  10
       So why would the jury give similar weight—or even any weight—to Dr. Schilling’s views

that were briefly referenced and depreciated by Dr. Willingham when Dr. Schilling’s qualifications

and other testimony were not admitted? The answer, logically, is that it would not. Even more, the

fact that the jury knew the defendants hired Dr. Schilling to examine Shannon and review the life-

care plan prepared by Dr. Willingham could well have led it to conclude that because Dr. Schilling’s

testimony was not presented, Dr. Willingham’s testimony was not only uncontroverted, but that it

was essentially uncontrovertible. Under the circumstances, it is hard to conceive of a jury giving

much, if any, credence to the limited part of Dr. Schilling’s testimony that it heard via the route of

hearsay through Dr. Willingham.

       Dr. Willingham gave his opinions as to a range of future medical care expenses, including

projections of approximately $6.9 million for a home care option and $7.24 million for a facility-

based care option. But through the filter of McCoy’s retained expert, Dr. Willingham, the jury

received a limited view of Dr. Schilling’s opinions regarding Shannon’s future medical care

expenses. Dr. Willingham noted that Dr. Schilling projected $3.3 million as being necessary for

home care and $6.7 million for facility-based care. He referenced a copy of a life-care plan he had

prepared and that had been marked up by Dr. Schilling, and testified as to his disagreement with her

opinions. After noting her projections for care, he opined that Dr. Schilling’s view was, in effect,

to divide the amount needed for Shannon’s care in half. Thus, the jury heard in very cursory manner

of Dr. Schilling’s opinions.

       The jury found $7,242,403 for future medical care—precisely the amount testified to by Dr.

Willingham. That is not surprising, given that the jury heard only Dr. Willingham’s testimony

                                                 11
regarding such care.     Dr. Schilling’s excluded testimony, in part, would have been that

approximately $3.3 million, or 46% of the amount the jury found for future care, would have been

reasonable for a home care situation. Her testimony as to the probable cost of future care in a

facility setting was over $500,000 less than the amount Dr. Willingham testified to. While $500,000

is less than 10% of the amount that the jury found for future care, and is much less than the $3.9

million difference between Dr. Schilling’s home care projection and the jury’s finding, $500,000

is nevertheless a significant amount.

        The Court notes, as did the court of appeals, that the full range of future medical care

expense projections were in front of the jury via the opinion testimony of Dr. Willingham. Ante at

___. But allowing a witness hired by one party to relate to the jury a filtered version of the opinion

testimony of the only witness for an opposing party as to a crucial matter, then having relevant,

direct testimony of the opposing party’s witness as to that matter excluded and calling it a

reasonably fair trial goes too far. The trial court’s ruling placed the attorneys for OGA and Dr. Gunn

in a no-win situation. If they did not cross examine Dr. Willingham and challenge his testimony,

the jury would most likely perceive his testimony as unchallengeable. If they cross examined him

extensively about Dr. Schilling’s testimony, as an experienced expert witness he simply was going

to repeat his opinions and disagreement with her, thus reinforcing the effect of his testimony on the

jury.

        If the exclusion of testimony by witnesses for opposing parties as happened here becomes

the paradigm, then a minimally competent lawyer for the plaintiff—or whichever party presents

evidence first—in most cases should be able to short-circuit the opposing party’s presenting much

                                                 12
evidence at all, merely by having the first, friendly witnesses testify to their version of what the

opposing party and the opposing witnesses have testified to or disclosed in discovery. And it is

almost guaranteed that one party’s evidence presented and filtered through witnesses for the

opposing party will be less adverse to the opposing party than if it were fully presented through the

proponent’s witnesses themselves.

       In sum, I agree with the Court that the trial court erred by excluding the testimony of Dr.

Schilling. But given the differences between her excluded testimony and that of Dr. Willingham

regarding the key issue of the cost for future medical care for Shannon, both percentage-wise and

in absolute numbers, I would hold that the excluded evidence was crucial to that key issue and the

exclusion was harmful. See Diamond Offshore Servs. Ltd., 542 S.W.3d at 552; see also Caffe Ribs,

Inc., 487 S.W.3d at 145; Cent. Expressway Sign Assocs., 302 S.W.3d at 870. Accordingly, I would

reverse as to the future medical care damages.

                                    II. Past Medical Expenses

       The amounts recoverable in a tort action for medical care expenses must be both reasonable

in price and necessary for treatment. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 18.001(b); see also

Haygood v. De Escabedo, 356 S.W.3d 390, 399 (Tex. 2011). Such expenses may be proved by

affidavit. Id. As relevant to the question before the Court regarding Shannon’s past medical

expenses, Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 18.001 provides as follows:

       (b)     Unless a controverting affidavit is served as provided by this section, an
               affidavit that the amount a person charged for a service was reasonable at the
               time and place that the service was provided and that the service was
               necessary is sufficient evidence to support a finding of fact by judge or jury
               that the amount charged was reasonable or that the service was necessary.

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       (c)     The affidavit must:
               ...
               (2) be made by:
                       (A) the person who provided the service; or
                       (B) the person in charge of records showing the
                       service provided and charge made; and
               (3) include an itemized statement of the service and charge.

TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 18.001(b), (c)(2)–(3).

       The amounts actually paid by insurance companies, with their access to large quantities of

data across many health care providers, may represent what are reasonable fees for health care

services, as the Court says. Ante at ___ (citing Haygood, 356 S.W.3d at 394 (stating that agreements

between willing providers and willing insurers can yield reasonable rates)). However, whether fees

paid for health care services rendered to a patient are reasonable is a much different question than

the question of whether those health care services were medically necessary for the treatment of

conditions caused by a particular person, event, or series of events.

       OGA and Dr. Gunn objected to admission of summaries of charges and payments for

Shannon’s past medical care based on affidavits from representatives of three subrogation collection

companies. The summaries contained information in different formats, but as relevant to the issue

before us, they generally set out names of the billing providers, very brief general descriptions of

services rendered by the providers, the amounts charged for the services, and the amounts paid for

the services. For example, one company’s summary had columns entitled “DOS Start,” “DOS End,”

“Provider,” “Service,” “Diagnostic Code,” “Billed,” and “Paid” for each item. An example of the

entries is one that listed “DOS Start” as “3/24/06”; “DOS End” as the same date of “3/24/06”;

“Provider” as “The Methodist Hospital”; “Service” as “D040”; “Diagnosis Code” as “7993”;

                                                14
“Billed” as “71,440.50”; and “Paid” as “20,808.60”. That is it—no other information, explanation,

or detail as to the services provided or cost breakdown for the services. Every DOS Start and DOS

End date on the summary for a particular service are the same date, just as the above example shows

for $71,440.50 of hospital services billed.

       OGA and Dr. Gunn point to the language of section 18.001 and argue that the subrogation

agents who executed the affidavits are not within the pool of persons whose affidavits are sufficient

to support admission of, and judgment based on, past medical expenses. They also argue that the

documents attached to the affidavits do not meet the requirements of section 18.001. The Court

disagrees. Ante at ___. I do not. I cannot agree with the Court’s conclusion that by enacting section

18.001, the Legislature intended to authorize affidavits by subrogration agents located in Kentucky,

Wisconsin, and Illinois to support a finding that particular treatments by health care providers in

Texas were medically necessary where there is no evidence demonstrating that the affiants had any

training in medicine or even had a connection with medical services, apart from their positions in

companies whose business was receiving bills and information from insurance carriers and then

asserting the insurers’ rights of subrogation.

                             A. The Subrogation Agents as Affiants

       McCoy used affidavits by three subrogation agents to support the claim of $703,985.98 for

Shannon’s past medical expenses. One affidavit was executed in Oldham County, Kentucky, by

Carroll C. Rawlings. According to the affidavit, Rawlings was the Subrogation Team Manager for

the Rawlings Company, whose principal place of business was on Eden Parkway in LaGrange,

Kentucky. She averred that the itemized statement of claims attached to her affidavit related to

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Shannon’s care from September 14, 2004, to December 28, 2005; the claims were paid by Aetna;

and the “information contained in the records was transmitted to [her] in the regular course of

business by an employee or representative of the Rawlings Company who had personal knowledge

of the information.” The specific language of her affidavit, in relevant part, was as follows:

       Attached to this affidavit are records that provide an itemized statement of the claims
       paid by Aetna related to the medical care provided to Shannon McCoy from
       September 14, 2004 to December 28, 2005 . . . . The attached billing records are kept
       by me in the regular course of business. The information contained in the records
       was transmitted to me in the regular course of business by an employee or
       representative of The Rawlings Company who had personal knowledge of the
       information. The records were made at or near the time or reasonably soon after the
       time that the service was provided. . . . I am familiar with the customary charges for
       like or similar services rendered in this vicinity and I know that the charges reflected
       on these records are reasonable for like or similar services rendered in this
       vicinity. . . . The services provided were necessary and the amount charged and paid
       for the services were reasonable at the time and place the services were provided.

(Emphasis added).

       The second affidavit was executed in Waukesha County, Wisconsin, by Christi-Jo Buchanan,

a Subrogation Specialist II for Meridian Resource Company, L.L.C., whose principal place of

business was 20725 Watertown Road, Waukesha, Wisconsin. Buchanan’s affidavit was essentially

the same as Rawlings’s affidavit except she averred that the claims itemized in the records attached

to her affidavit covered Shannon’s care from September 14, 2004, to December 23, 2007; they were

paid by Unicare; and the information in the records was transmitted to her in the regular course of

business by an “employee or representative of Meridian Resource Company, L.L.C. who had

personal knowledge of the information.”

                                                 16
       The third affidavit was executed in Cook County, Illinois, by Patricia A. Heeney, the general

counsel for Vengroff, Williams and Associates, Inc., whose principal place of business was 7101

North Cicero Avenue, Lincolnwood, Illinois. Heeney’s affidavit was similar in substance to those

of Rawlings and Buchanan. She averred that the claims itemized in records attached to her affidavit

covered Shannon’s care from March 6, 2006, to March 23, 2011; they were paid by the Federal

Express Benefit Plan through its claims administrators, Cigna and Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield;

and “information contained in the records was transmitted to [her] in the regular course of business

by an employee or representative of the claims administrators, Cigna Healthcare and Anthem Blue

Cross Blue Shield who had personal knowledge of the information.” But Heeney did not state in

her affidavit that the services provided to Shannon were necessary; she stated only that “[t]he

amount charged and paid for the services were reasonable at the time and place that the services

were provided.”

       The contents of the affidavits and their attachments, simply put, do not make sense as to their

purpose of proving the reasonableness and necessity of Shannon’s past medical expenses, as is

explained more fully below. But to briefly summarize:

       1. The documents attached to the affidavits are not itemized statements as the
       affidavits say they are. They are one-line summaries of billings and collections.

       2. The documents attached to the affidavits are not billing records as the affidavits
       say they are. They are summaries of billing records.

       3. The affidavits of Rawlings and Buchanan circularly say that the information in
       the attached records was transmitted to their companies by an employee or
       representative of the subrogation company who had personal knowledge of the
       information, although the information in the attached summaries was for billings and
       collections as to numerous, diverse medical providers in Texas. The affidavit of

                                                 17
       Heeney was of the same nature, except in her affidavit Heeney says that an employee
       or representative of the claims administrators, Cigna Healthcare and Anthem Blue
       Cross Blue Shield had personal knowledge of the information in the attached
       summaries and transmitted it to Vengroff, Williams and Associates.

       4. The affidavits of Rawlings and Buchanan, presented to support charges made in
       Houston, say that Rawlings and Buchanan, as affiants, are familiar with charges
       made “in this vicinity”—that is, in Kentucky and Wisconsin, respectively—and that
       the charges are reasonable for charges made in “this vicinity.” Then, switching
       tracks, Rawlings and Buchanan aver that the services provided were necessary and
       the charges were reasonable “at the time and place the services were provided”—that
       is, in Houston, a completely different area of the country. Heeney’s affidavit is
       better in that she avers that “[t]he amount charged and paid for the services were
       reasonable at the time and place that the services were provided.” But she says
       nothing about whether the services were necessary.

       As noted, Rawlings and Buchanan stated in their affidavits that they were familiar with

customary charges for “like or similar services rendered in this vicinity” and that the charges

reflected on the records attached to their affidavits “are reasonable for like or similar services

rendered in this vicinity.” (Emphasis added). The vicinity of Rawlings’s principal office and the

location where Carroll Rawlings executed her affidavit was Oldham County, Kentucky. The vicinity

of Meridian Resource’s principal office was Waukesha, Wisconsin, and the vicinity of where

Christi-Jo Buchanan executed her affidavit was Waukesha County, Wisconsin. But averring that

they are familiar with customary charges in Kentucky and Wisconsin does not speak to their

familiarity with charges for services provided in Houston. And the affidavits do not demonstrate

that the affiants had any knowledge about the rendering of or the customary charges for medical care

in Houston. It is in that context that both Rawlings and Buchanan averred that “the amount charged

and paid for the services were reasonable at the time and place that the services were

provided”—that is, Houston. Moreover, the affidavits are devoid of information to show that any

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of the three affiants had any training or held any position that would qualify them to give competent

testimony as to the necessity of the medical procedures and services to treat Shannon, even though

Rawlings and Buchanan said they were. Heeney did not bother to aver that the services for which

her company was seeking to recover were necessary.

       The affidavits are internally inconsistent, do not substantially comply with the Legislature’s

intent as to requirements for this type of affidavit, and fail in several ways to support jury findings

based on basic evidentiary requirements. That is understandable because the affiants were asked

to verify the medical necessity of medical services rendered in another state by persons and entities

with whom they had no discernable connection, that were provided to a person whose condition they

had no demonstrated knowledge of, by affidavits containing language distorted to make the

affidavits appear to conform to language specified by the Texas Legislature. But as demonstrated

above, the affidavits do not conform to the Legislature’s requirement for proof of medical expenses

by affidavit. Section 18.001 is designed to allow proof by means of an affidavit as to services and

charges for the services by either the provider of the services or someone in charge of records of the

provider. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 18.001. And when affidavits are made by such providers

or their employees or representatives, then the problems demonstrated by these three

affidavits—internal inconsistency, lack of demonstrated knowledge of the services or of how the

records of the services were made, and violation of basic evidentiary rules that protect the integrity

of the trial process—for the most part disappear.

       The Court’s interpretation fails to cabin the statute within its logical limits. “We look to and

rely on the plain meaning of a statute’s words as expressing legislative intent unless a different

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meaning is supplied, is apparent from the context, or the plain meaning of the words leads to absurd

or nonsensical results.” Pedernal Energy, LLC v. Bruington Eng’g, Ltd., 536 S.W.3d 487, 491 (Tex.

2017). And we do not read parts of a statute in isolation, but read the statute as a whole, seeking the

Legislature’s intent. EXLP Leasing, LLC v. Galveston Cent. Appraisal Dist., ___ S.W.3d ___, ___

(Tex. 2018). Construing section 18.001 to permit anyone, no matter what the person’s training and

qualifications are, and no matter how far removed from the actual provider of the medical care and

that provider’s employees and representatives the person is, to support a judgment by swearing

under oath to the necessity of medical expenses of that provider even though the affiant neither

claimed to have nor demonstrated knowledge of the services rendered except for third-hand

information of an apparent cursory nature, is an absurd and nonsensical result. Id. Further, it may

well subject the statute to a constitutional challenge. See In re Murchison, 349 U.S. 133, 136 (1955)

(“A fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of due process.”). However, as discussed

below, reading sections 18.001 and 18.002 together compels the conclusion that the Legislature did

not intend such results as will flow from the Court’s construction of the statutory language.

                                        B. The Billing Summaries

        As for whether the affidavits comply with sections 18.001(c)(2) and 18.001(c)(3) requiring

the affidavit to “include an itemized statement of the service and charge,” section 18.002

demonstrates the Legislature’s intent by means of providing exemplar forms for the affidavits. Id.

§ 18.002(c).1 The exemplars demonstrate legislative intent that documents attached to section

        1
         The Civil Practice and Remedies Code provides the following examples of adequate affidavits, although the
exemplars are not exclusive, and affidavits that substantially comply with section 18.001 are sufficient:

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18.001 affidavits must be (1) itemized as to the services provided and charges for the services and

(2) the records either of (a) the person who performed the services or records based on information

transmitted by either the person who performed the services or an employee or representative of the

person who performed the services—provided the employee had knowledge of the services

provided, or (b) persons with knowledge of the services provided, or records made based on

information transmitted by persons with knowledge of the services provided. In all instances,

however, the exemplars, when considered in conjunction with the language of section 18.001(c)(2),

demonstrate legislative intent that to comply with the requirements of section 18.001, affidavits must

be made by certain categories of persons, as discussed in the preceding section, and that documents

attached to the affidavits must show that the services and charges were made by persons with

                  I am the person in charge of the records of (PERSON WHO PROVIDED THE
        SERVICE). . . .
                  The attached records are kept by me in the regular course of business. The information
        contained in the records was transmitted to me in the regular course of business by (PERSON WHO
        PROVIDED THE SERVICE) or an employee or representative of (PERSON WHO PROVIDED THE
        SERVICE) who had personal knowledge of the information. The records were made at or near the
        time or reasonably soon after the time that the service was provided. The records are the original or
        an exact duplicate of the original.
                  The service provided was necessary and the amount charged for the service was reasonable
        at the time and place that the service was provided.

TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 18.002(b) (emphasis added). Another form states:

                  I am a custodian of records for ____________. Attached to this affidavit are records that
        provide an itemized statement of the service and the charge for the service that ____________
        provided to __________ on _____. . . .
                  The attached records are kept by ____________ in the regular course of business, and it was
        the regular course of business of ____________ for an employee or representative of ____________,
        with knowledge of the service provided, to make the record or to transmit information to be included
        in the record. The records were made in the regular course of business at or near the time or
        reasonably soon after the time the service was provided. The records are the original or a duplicate
        of the original.

Id. § 18.002(b-1) (emphasis added).

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knowledge of the services rendered or by persons who received information from persons with

knowledge of the services rendered.

        The documents attached to the affidavits in this case do not come close to measuring up.

Rawlings, Buchanan, and Heeney attached to their affidavits what apparently are documents

generated by each of their respective subrogation agencies, as indicated by the fact the documents

attached to each of the three affidavits have different formats with different categories of

information. The documents fairly clearly are not bills from medical providers, because each

document lists numerous different providers. Rather, based on the information in the affidavits, they

can only be summaries of information received from the payer entities. According to the affidavits,

the amounts paid by the three payer entities were as follows: Aetna—$61,428.60;

Unicare—$322,644.30; and Federal Express Benefit Plan—$319,912.99. But, according to the

affidavits, the entities do not claim to have had any part in providing the services rendered to

Shannon. The documents are not itemized billing records from the medical providers; instead, the

attachments to the affidavits are cursory summaries of charges by providers and payments on those

charges by the payer entities. Thus, the statements in the affidavits that “Attached to this affidavit

are records that provide an itemized statement of the claims paid” are patently false. The affiants

refer to the “attached billing records” as having been kept by the affiants or the subrogation entities

in the regular course of business. While the documents attached to the affidavits may have been

kept in the regular course of business by the subrogation entities, the subrogation documents on their

face are not billing records. The affiants each circularly state that the attachments to their affidavits

are based on information transmitted to the affiant by an employee or representative of the

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subrogation company itself, or, in the case of Heeney, by claims administrators for Federal Express

Benefit Plan “who had personal knowledge of the information.” But none of the affiants state that

the persons who transmitted the information had knowledge of the services provided or the necessity

of the services, as the section 18.002 exemplar affidavits show the Legislature intended.

       I would hold that the trial court erred by overruling objections of OGA and Dr. Gunn to the

admission of the documents attached to the subrogation agents’ affidavits. Absent the documents,

there was no evidence to support the finding as to Shannon’s past medical expenses. Accordingly,

I would reverse the court of appeals’ judgment on this issue.

       And even if the documents attached to the affidavits of Rawlings and Buchanan were

properly admitted, the documents attached to the affidavit of Heeney were admitted in error. She

did not state in her affidavit that the services in the documents were necessary for Shannon’s

treatment. Thus, there is no evidence to support that part of the judgment awarding past medical

expenses paid by the Federal Express Benefit Plan.

                                        III. Conclusion

       I would reverse the judgment of the court of appeals as to both the future and past medical

care expenses and remand to the trial court for further proceedings.

       In the alternative, I would reverse the judgment as to the past medical expenses paid by the

Federal Express Benefit Plan and render judgment that McCoy take nothing as to those expenses.

       I respectfully dissent.

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                                   ________________________________________
                                   Phil Johnson
                                   Justice

OPINION DELIVERED: June 15, 2018

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