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HomeGovernment CodeDiv. 5Pt. 5Ch. 2§ 22947 Health Benefits Trust Liens

§ 22947 Health Benefits Trust Liens

Government Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 22947 Health Benefits Trust Liens

Key Takeaways

  • •If a health plan pays for your medical bills after an accident, they can ask for some of that money back if you get a settlement or win a lawsuit.
  • •You must tell your health plan and any hospitals that treated you if you're suing someone for the accident.
  • •The amount the health plan can take back depends on whether you have a lawyer. If you have a lawyer, they can take up to 1/3 of your settlement. If you don’t have a lawyer, they can take up to 1/2.
  • •If the accident was partly your fault, the health plan has to reduce what they take back by the same percentage.

Example

You get hurt in a car crash, and your health plan pays $10,000 for your hospital bills. Later, you sue the other driver and win $30,000.

If you had a lawyer, your health plan can ask for up to $10,000 (the amount they paid) or $10,000 (1/3 of your $30,000 settlement), whichever is less. So they can take $10,000 back. If you didn’t have a lawyer, they could take up to $15,000 (1/2 of $30,000), but since they only paid $10,000, they can only take that amount.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 22947 Health Benefits Trust Liens

(a) A health benefits trust may assert a lien for health benefits paid on behalf of a participant against any settlement with, or arbitration award or judgment against, a third party. No lien asserted by a health benefits trust under this section may exceed the amount actually paid by the trust to any treating medical provider. (b) The participant, if not represented by an attorney, or the participant’s attorney, shall immediately send, by certified mail, written notice of the existence of any claim or action against a third party, to the following: (1) The health benefits trust. (2) A hospital or any hospital-affiliated health facility, as defined in Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code, that is known to have provided health care services to the participant. (c) If medical costs are paid by the health benefits trust, contract providers may not assert an independent lien against the participant. Contract providers who agree, by contract, to a specified rate may not seek to recover an amount that exceeds the contracted rate against the participant. This subdivision is not applicable to a lien for hospital services pursuant to Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 3045.1) of Title 14 of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code. (d) If the participant engaged an attorney, the lien for health services asserted by a health benefits trust under subdivision (a) may not exceed the lesser of the actual amount paid by the trust or one-third of the moneys due to the participant under any final judgment, compromise, arbitration, or settlement agreement. (e) If the participant did not engage an attorney, the lien for health services asserted by the health benefits trust under subdivision (a) may not exceed the lesser of the actual amount paid by the trust or one-half of the moneys due to the participant under any final judgment, compromise, arbitration, or settlement agreement. (f) If a final judgment includes a special finding by a judge, jury, or arbitrator that the participant was partially at fault, the lien asserted by the health benefits trust shall be reduced by the same comparative fault percentage by which the participant’s recovery was reduced. (g) The lien asserted by the health benefits trust shall be subject to pro rata reduction, commensurate with the participant’s reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, in accordance with the common fund doctrine. (h) The court or arbitrator may also take into account the obligation, if any, of the health benefits trust to make future medical payments on behalf of the participant for the medical condition that gave rise to the claim against the third party. (i) The provisions of this section may not be admitted into evidence nor given in any instruction in any civil action or proceeding between a participant and a third party. (Added by Stats. 2004, Ch. 69, Sec. 22. Effective June 24, 2004.)

Last verified: January 22, 2026

Key Terms

health benefits trustliensettlementarbitration awardjudgmentthird partyparticipantattorneyactual amount paidone-thirdone-halfmoneys due

Related Statutes

  • § 68637 Prevailing Party Fee Recovery
  • § 22948 Lien Recovery Dispute Resolution
  • § 6103.8 Recording Fee Exemptions
  • § 63049 Escrow Agreement Definitions
  • § 63049.4 Tobacco Asset Sale Immunity

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Government Code. Section 22947.
View Official Source