7 results for 'cat:"Arbitration" AND cat:"Health Care" AND cat:"Wrongful Death"'.
J. Ashmann-Gerst finds that the trial court should have granted a nursing facility's motion to compel arbitration of a wrongful death claim filed by the parents of a dependent adult who died in its care. The arbitration agreement signed by their son plainly bound his heirs to arbitrating a wrongful death claim based on an allegation of professional negligence. Reversed.
Court: California Courts Of Appeal, Judge: Ashmann-Gerst, Filed On: May 10, 2024, Case #: B323237, Categories: arbitration, health Care, wrongful Death
J. Brown, in this interlocutory appeal, finds the circuit court properly denied the nursing center's motion to compel arbitration in this wrongful death suit. The estate alleges that due to insufficient staffing, the decedent was not turned often enough to prevent the stage 2 wound to her left coccyx, a boil to her left buttock and an unstageable wound to her right heel. The patient was also dehydrated and malnourished, which prevented healing. There is insufficient evidence the decedent authorized her daughter to bind her to arbitration, and the daughter did not have actual authority to enter into the agreement on her mother's behalf. Affirmed.
Court: Arkansas Court Of Appeals, Judge: Brown, Filed On: May 8, 2024, Case #: CV-23-182, Categories: arbitration, health Care, wrongful Death
J. Campbell finds the lower court improperly determined that the decedent’s attorney-in-fact’s action of signing an arbitration agreement upon his admittance to an assisted living center was outside the scope of her power of attorney and was a health care decision. The instant court finds that the arbitration agreement was a stand-alone agreement and the decedent’s admission to the center was not contingent upon the signing of the agreement, therefore it was a legal decision and fell within the parameters of the the attorney-in-fact’s authority. As such, the arbitration agreement is binding in its terms, extending beyond the signing parties to the decedent’s other surviving family, including his son, and requires the wrongful-death claims to be submitted to arbitration. Reversed.
Court: Tennessee Supreme Court, Judge: Campbell, Filed On: February 16, 2024, Case #: M2021-00927-SC-R11-CV, Categories: arbitration, health Care, wrongful Death
J. Gladwin finds the trial court properly denied the nursing home's motion to compel arbitration. The estate executor attests that admissions paperwork did not contain an arbitration provision, and a separate, voluntary arbitration agreement was sent for her review prior to the deceased party's admission. The executor says that the agreement she reviewed was not the same as the provision incorporated into the admissions agreement, and nothing in the record disputes the executor's sworn statements. Affirmed.
Court: Arkansas Court Of Appeals, Judge: Gladwin , Filed On: February 14, 2024, Case #: CV-22-510, Categories: arbitration, health Care, wrongful Death
J. Gladwin finds the circuit court properly denied the nursing home's motion to compel arbitration on a daughter's negligence claims for injuries and the wrongful death of her mother. The mother allegedly sustained injuries from falls, was subject to inaccurate assessments and incurred a UTI. The arbitration agreement lacks mutuality of obligation and, therefore, is not a valid agreement. Affirmed.
Court: Arkansas Court Of Appeals, Judge: Gladwin , Filed On: February 7, 2024, Case #: CV-22-517, Categories: arbitration, health Care, wrongful Death
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J. Abramson finds the county court properly denied the nursing center’s motion to compel arbitration in this negligence and wrongful death suit. The deceased party’s sister and administrator of his estate signed the agreement as the “Responsible Party.” A check box indicating whether a “copy of my guardianship papers, durable power of attorney or other documentation has been provided to the Facility and is attached” is left blank. The deceased’s name was not listed within the arbitration agreement, though it was listed on the admission agreement. The nursing center has failed in its burden to prove that the sister “signed in a representative capacity with the legal authority to bind” the deceased party. Affirmed.
Court: Arkansas Court Of Appeals, Judge: Abramson, Filed On: October 4, 2023, Case #: CV-22-397, Categories: arbitration, health Care, wrongful Death