Joan Maurer thought she
had a strong legal case when she sued a local senior home over the
sudden death of her 89-year-old father.
In her
possession, Maurer had a stack of documents showing that the assisted
living facility, Lighthouse of Columbia Heights, had failed to respond
promptly when her father, Gerald Seeger, repeatedly vomited and screamed
for help while pointing to his badly swollen stomach. After hours of
suffering, Seeger died of complications related to a common hernia.
State investigators later cited the facility for failing to provide
timely medical care.
But Maurer
is still fighting for a chance to hold Lighthouse accountable in court.
Attorneys for the facility claim that she forfeited that right when she
signed a densely worded contract that forced the family into private
arbitration if a dispute arose, even one involving a wrongful death
claim.
“I never
believed they would arbitrate my father’s life like he’s a piece of
paper, and not a living, breathing human being,” said Maurer, 59, a
retired loan officer and wedding planner from Woodbury.
Over
mounting objections from consumer groups and regulators, arbitration
agreements like the one Maurer signed are proliferating in the senior
care industry. Hundreds of Minnesota nursing homes and assisted-living
centers now request that elderly people sign arbitration clauses on
admission. The clauses require them to forfeit their right to a court
hearing and, instead, lock elderly residents into a more secretive
process for resolving claims. Even in cases of extreme neglect and
death, nursing homes use the clauses to block residents and their
families from pursuing lawsuits.
But a breakthrough federal rule
has emboldened growing numbers of elderly residents and their relatives
to challenge these clauses. Late last year, federal regulators barred
the 15,000 long-term care facilities that receive Medicare and Medicaid
funds from requiring that residents enter into arbitration before a
dispute arises, known as “pre-dispute” arbitration. The rule has been
blocked in court, but the government’s case is now being cited as
evidence that many such clauses are invalid and that victims of
maltreatment have a right to a day in court.
“More and
more people are waking up to the essential unfairness and lack of
transparency of these clauses,” said Eric Carlson, directing attorney of
Justice in Aging, a legal advocacy group in Washington, D.C.
A
spokesman for Lighthouse’s Eden Prairie-based parent company, New
Perspective Senior Living, declined to discuss Maurer’s case but noted
that arbitration agreements are widely used across all types of
businesses, including senior care. “Arbitration benefits both parties in
dispute resolution by avoiding costly and lengthy court cases,” said
Doug Anderson, the firm’s vice president of marketing.
No 911 call
It was a
crisp September afternoon in 2014 when Maurer arrived at her father’s
room at Lighthouse. She was shocked by what she found. Her father, a
florist who just a week earlier had been laughing and stomping his foot
to old-time music, had turned ashen and was vomiting in plastic cups,
she said. Photographs from that day show that his stomach had swollen
like a balloon. “I knelt by his side, grabbed his hand and said, ‘Dad,
I’ll get you to a hospital,’ ” Maurer said. “But I knew in my heart that
he was dying.”
Despite
Seeger’s visible suffering, the staff had not called for emergency help.
Maurer called 911, and on the ambulance ride to the hospital, Seeger
rated his pain as a “10 out of 10” on the pain scale, state records
show.
“I was horrified,” Maurer said. “I never want to see another human being in that much pain for as long as I live.”
Investigators
from the state Department of Health later found multiple lapses in
Seeger’s care. Despite a history of hernia problems, staff at the senior
home failed to follow a physician’s instructions and notify medical
professionals immediately if he had any pain or tenderness in the groin
area, state records show. On the evening and overnight shift before he
died, Seeger complained of stomach pain and vomited; but such symptoms
were not promptly reported to a nurse, state investigators found.
“The cumulative effect of these omissions represent a system failure,” the state concluded.
No slam-dunk case
But when
Maurer sought advice on how to pursue what she thought would be a “slam
dunk” legal case, she learned of two conflicting arbitration provisions
tucked inside the facility’s 36-page residency agreement. Maurer had
signed the document in 2010, but alleges that no one explained the
clauses in the rush to admit her father. When Maurer asked for time to
review the agreement with an attorney, she was told that the family
would “lose the apartment,” she said. “It was take it or leave it.”
This week,
at an Anoka County court hearing, Maurer’s attorney argued that a
contract signed “under duress” is not enforceable. “Lighthouse had all
the bargaining power when they said, ‘You must sign and you must sign
now,’ ” said the attorney, Suzanne Scheller. “This agreement should be
invalidated.”
An
attorney for New Perspective pointed to the terms of the arbitration
clause, which explicitly covered “any dispute arising out of the
services, treatment or care” of the resident. The provision applied to a
broad range of possible disputes, including eviction, personal injury
and wrongful death. The attorney denied that Maurer had been under
duress, saying the family was free to pursue other options. “There was
no immediacy here,” she said. “The arguments on duress are thin at
best.”
‘I needed answers’
In
Minnesota and nationally, more attorneys are seeking to throw out
arbitration clauses, particularly in cases where there is evidence that
elderly residents were coerced into signing the contracts. In a recent case,
the Kentucky Supreme Court refused to enforce arbitration agreements in
three wrongful-death cases, ruling that legal representatives of
nursing-home residents lack the authority to waive another’s “God-given
right” to a jury trial.
Angela
Menk of Nicollet, Minn., is among those seeking to challenge an
arbitration provision. Last September, Menk’s mother, Sharon Sperl, who
was 71, requested that an on-duty nurse at the Good Samaritan Society
nursing home in Winthrop call 911 because she was short of breath and
unable to breathe.
Instead,
the nurse gave Sperl a nebulizer and sent her to bed without checking
her vitals or periodically monitoring her, police records show. A few
hours later, Sperl died before an ambulance could arrive, the police
found. Sperl’s death was all the more surprising because she was only
scheduled to be at the Winthrop nursing home for 30 days for
rehabilitation from toe surgery, and was scheduled to return home.
“They kept telling me that she ‘died peacefully,’ ” Menk said. “But I needed answers and wasn’t getting any.”
When Menk
reviewed the medical records, she was surprised to discover that her
mother had signed an arbitration clause. Menk and her attorney, Joel
Smith of Plymouth, said they plan to contest the provision because it
was never adequately explained. She also wants the opportunity to expose
any maltreatment by the facility in a public forum — as opposed to
arbitrating the case before a private arbitrator in a closed setting.
“Arbitration would sweep my mother’s death under the rug, so no one would ever find out about it,” Menk said.
Full Article & Source:
Minn. victims of nursing home abuse challenge arbitration clauses
1 comment:
I am glad to see the arbitration clause challenged in Minnesota and I hope other states do the same. It's got to go.
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