Arbitrator rules in favour of Ontario auto claimant refusing to attend insurer's medical examination
An
arbitrator with the Financial Services Commission of Ontario recently
ruled against Unifund Assurance Company, which had refused to pay
medical benefits to an Ontario auto claimant who refused to attend an
insurer's examination.
In a ruling release Nov. 13, FSCO arbitrator
Susan Sapin ordered Unifund to pay Kadian Augustin treatment expenses of
$2,934.90 plus interest.
Sapin also ruled that Augustin is not precluded from pursuing mediation for her claim.
FSCO
records indicate that Augustin was injured in a vehicle accident July
2, 2011. She made a claim for medical and attendant care benefits, as
well as a weekly non-earner benefit (NEB), from Unifund.
Non-earner
benefits are for claimants who suffer "a complete inability to carry on a
normal life as a result of and within 104 weeks after the accident" and
either do not qualify for income replacement, were full-time students
or who graduated less than a year before the accident but are not
employed "in a capacity that reflected his or her education and
training."
Augustin was unemployed at the time of the accident and
was a caregiver to her two children but had not purchased optional
coverage for caregiver benefits.
"Unifund refused to pay for medical
benefits on the basis that Ms. Augustin failed to attend insurer's
examinations (IEs) to determine whether her accident injuries fell
within the Minor Injury Guideline (MIG), and now argues her failure to
attend the IEs precludes her from mediating its refusal," Sapin wrote in
her decision. "Unifund has refused to pay an NEB because it maintains
Ms. Augustin did not apply for it."
The MIG, which took effect in
2010, provides for a $3,500 cap on claims for injuries that can include a
"sprain, strain, whiplash associated disorder, contusion, abrasion,
laceration or subluxation and any clinically associated sequelae."
Sapin
noted that section 38(9) of Ontario Regulation 34/10, also known as the
Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule, requires that if an insurer
"believes that the Minor Injury Guideline applies to the insured
person's impairment," that a notice to the claimant "under subsection (8
) must so advise the person."
FSCO records indicate that Unifund
advised Augustin that the carrier “required an IE to determine if her
impairment was a minor injury within the MIG." But Sapin noted that
Section 38 of SABS requires that, once a claimant's health provider
submits a treatment and assessment plan, an insurer "must send the
insured person a notice that identifies which goods and services the
carrier agrees to pay for,” any goods or services the carrier does not
agree to pay for and "the medical reasons and all of the other reasons
why the insurer considers any goods or services, or the proposed costs
of them, not to be reasonable and necessary."
But Sapin found that Unifund's notice to Augustin "does not state that Unifund 'believes' the MIG applies, or why.”
She added Unifund also does not state "medical reasons" for refusing to pay the benefit claimed.
"Given
that an insured person's treating practitioner must provide a factually
based medical opinion to support a claim for treatment outside the MIG,
I find it is reasonable to require an insurer who chooses to refuse to
pay an initial claim to counter with something more than simply a desire
'to determine if your impairment is predominantly a minor injury as
described in the Minor Injury Guideline,' as Unifund has done in this
case," Sapin wrote.
"This is particularly so where, as in the case
here, Unifund refused to pay for the treatment pending an IE, a response
I find undermines the stated purpose of the MIG to provide access to
early treatment, a purpose based on sound medical principles."
In
explaining why she ruled that Augustin "is not precluded from pursuing
or mediating her claim" for non-earner benefits, Sapin cited a 2002
ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada in the case of Bernadette Smith vs
The Cooperators General Insurance Company.
FSCO records indicate
that Augustin submitted an Application for Accident Benefits (form
OCF-1) while her chiropractor "submitted a Disability Certificate
(OCF-3) to Unifund dated July 4, 2011, indicating Ms. Augustin was
completely unable to carry on a normal life."
In August, Unifund sent
Augustin an Explanation of Benefits (OCF-9) "explaining why she was not
entitled to an income replacement, caregiver or non-earner benefit."
Sapin
noted that SABS requires that "if an application indicates that the
applicant may qualify for two or more of the IRB, caregiver or NEB
benefits, the insurer must advise the person that she must elect which
benefit she wishes to receive."
She found that the OCF-1 and OCF-3
forms "submitted to Unifund together satisfy the requirement of
notifying the insurer of an intent to apply for a benefit under sections
32(1) and (5)" of SABS.
"I find it was up to Unifund to properly
adjust Ms. Augustin's claim for an NEB by exercising its right to
determine her continuing entitlement to the benefit under s. 37(1), and
in failing to do so it cannot now raise the ‘defence’ that she never
applied for the benefit," Sapin wrote.
There is a 26-week waiting
period for NEB benefits, Sapin noted, but added there is nothing in SABS
requiring claimants to resubmit claims for NEB after that waiting
period.
"If there was a requirement,” Sabin noted, “it falls short of
the standard of consumer protection required of insurers since Smith v.
Co-operators and I find Unifund cannot take the position that it is not
required to pay an NEB because Ms. Augustin did not ‘apply’ for it."
Smith's
dispute with The Cooperators was over the two-year limitation period
under Ontario law. In 1996, The Cooperators ceased paying for benefits
claimed by Smith in a vehicle accident that occurred in 1994. An attempt
at mediation in 1997 failed, and Smith filed a statment of claim in
1998. Her claim was dismissed by the Ontario Superior court of Justice,
which ruled it was time-barred. Smith unsuccessfully appealed to the
Court of Appeal for Ontario but was successful in her appeal to the
Supreme Court of Canada.
"There is no dispute that one of the main
objectives of insurance law is consumer protection, particularly in the
field of automobile and home insurance," wrote Mr. Justice Charles
Doherty Gonthier on behalf of the majority of the Supreme Court of
Canada, adding Section 279(2) of the Insurance Act "provides that any
restriction on a party's right to mediate, arbitrate, litigate, or
appeal is void, except as provided in the regulations."
Source: canadianunderwriter.ca Nov 27, 2013 3:33 PM
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