Why Trust This Analysis
This article is part of our ongoing no-fault coverage, with 273 published articles analyzing no-fault issues across New York State. Attorney Jason Tenenbaum brings 24+ years of hands-on experience to this analysis, drawing from his work on more than 1,000 appeals, over 100,000 no-fault cases, and recovery of over $100 million for clients throughout Nassau County, Suffolk County, Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, and the Bronx. For personalized legal advice about how these principles apply to your specific situation, contact our Long Island office at (516) 750-0595 for a free consultation.
Key Takeaways
- In Florida PIP litigation, the reasonableness of a medical charge is a contested, provable fact — unlike first-party New York no-fault, where the fee schedule fixes the price.
- The Third District’s State Farm v M & E Diagnostic opinion shows the kind of expert foundation used to address reasonableness: community rates, fee schedules across coverage types, and the provider’s actual accepted reimbursements.
- The issue is far from academic in New York: in third-party cases where the patient treats on a lien, the value of the billed services must be proven, not assumed.
- The expert recitation quoted below is a usable template for building (or attacking) a charge-reasonableness opinion.
When a personal injury case includes boardable medical expenses, someone has to prove what the treatment was worth. New York practitioners are spoiled on the first-party side — the fee schedule answers by regulation — but outside its reach, a charge’s reasonableness becomes live, contested, and hard to prove. This Florida decision shows how the issue gets litigated where it is contested daily.
The Decision
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY, vs M & E DIAGNOSTIC SERVICES, INC., etc., 3D20-1193 (Fla 3d DCA 2021)
When trying a boardable medical case, a really thorny issue becomes what is the value of the services billed. NY generally does not get into that issue because no-fault has a fee schedule, thereby obviating the issue on the first-party case. But how about on the third-party case where the patient solely treats on a lien? Yes, this is rare in NY save some surgery cases. But here is something of relevance, at least to me:
“
“Dr. Dauer attested that he has personal knowledge and expertise regarding the range and rate of charges for medical care in the relevant community, including the range and rate of charges for radiological services
provided in the area to patients by credentialed and experienced diagnostic centers and hospitals. Dr.
Dauer considered the reimbursement levels an charges in the community, his own charges in the community, various federal and state medical fee schedules applicable to motor vehicles and other
insurance coverages including worker’s compensation, Medicare, HMO/PPO, and other third-party insurance carriers, and the payments and reimbursements that M & E accepts from all sources. Dr. Dauer attested to conducting numerous peer reviews and obtaining extensive personal knowledge and professional expertise regarding medical care and medical charges and medical reimbursements in the Miami-Dade and Broward
communities. Dr.
The Legal Framework: Why New York Rarely Litigates Reasonableness — Until It Does
On a first-party New York no-fault claim, the price of treatment is set by the workers’ compensation fee schedules adopted into the no-fault regulation. A provider charges what the schedule allows; a carrier asserting an overcharge raises a fee schedule defense keyed to the published rates. There is no jury question about what an MRI is “worth” — the regulation answers it.
The third-party bodily injury case is different. When a plaintiff boards medical expenses — past treatment paid outside no-fault, or future care — the recoverable amount is the reasonable value of the services. Where the patient treated entirely on a lien, with no carrier payment and no fee schedule anchor, the billed amount is just a number on an invoice. Defense counsel can and should contest it; plaintiff’s counsel has to prove it.
What the Florida Expert Foundation Teaches
Florida’s PIP statute reimburses reasonable charges, so its courts have spent years refining what a reasonableness opinion looks like. The recitation from Dr. Dauer quoted above is a checklist of the data sources a charge-valuation expert draws on:
- Community rates — what comparable credentialed providers in the same geographic market charge for the same services.
- Cross-coverage fee schedules — workers’ compensation, Medicare, HMO/PPO and other third-party payor rates, used as benchmarks for the market value of the service.
- The provider’s own acceptance history — what the billing provider actually accepts as payment from all sources, which is often dramatically lower than the face amount of the bill.
- Professional experience — peer review work and personal familiarity with charges and reimbursements in the relevant communities.
For a New York lawyer building or attacking a reasonable-value case, that structure transfers directly. A plaintiff’s expert who can speak to community rates and the provider’s actual reimbursement experience presents a defensible number. A defendant who cross-examines on the gap between billed charges and amounts the provider routinely accepts can deflate an inflated lien.
Why This Matters on Long Island and in NYC Practice
Lien-based treatment tends to cluster in cases where no-fault benefits exhaust or coverage is unavailable — serious surgical cases chief among them. In those cases the medical specials often drive settlement value, so a credible methodology for valuing the charges matters to both sides of the caption. Carriers and defense counsel should not reflexively accept billed amounts in a car accident case; plaintiffs’ counsel should anticipate the challenge and have the foundation ready rather than relying on the invoice alone.
Practice Pointers
- Plaintiffs: If your client treats on a lien, retain a valuation-capable expert early and gather the provider’s reimbursement data. The bill alone will not survive a serious challenge.
- Defendants: Demand discovery on what the lien provider accepts from insured patients and other payors; the delta between billed and accepted is your cross-examination.
- Both sides: Fee schedules — workers’ compensation, Medicare, the no-fault schedule itself — are persuasive benchmarks of market value even where they do not legally control.
- Watch the foundation. The opinion must rest on identified, professionally reliable data; a conclusory “the charges are reasonable” gets nowhere.
Related Resources
- Fee schedule defense in no-fault insurance — the firm’s cluster hub on fee schedule litigation
- The firm’s Legal Encyclopedia
- Personal Injury practice
- New York No-Fault Insurance Law
- The CPLR 3212(g) paradigm
- Understanding IME No-Shows in New York No-Fault Insurance: Rights, Consequences, and Strategic Considerations
- Happy Mother’s Day
- The amendments to the regulations and what they mean to you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why doesn’t New York litigate the reasonableness of medical charges in no-fault cases?
Because the no-fault regulation adopts fee schedules that fix the maximum reimbursable amount for each service. The “price” of treatment on a first-party claim is set by regulation, so disputes take the form of a fee schedule defense rather than a battle over reasonable value.
When does the reasonable value of medical bills become an issue in a New York injury case?
Primarily in third-party bodily injury cases where the plaintiff boards medical expenses that no fee schedule controls — most often when the patient treated on a lien, as can happen in surgical cases after no-fault benefits exhaust. There, the plaintiff must prove the reasonable value of the services, and the defense may contest it.
How does an expert prove medical charges are reasonable?
The expert ties the opinion to community rates for comparable providers, benchmark fee schedules (workers’ compensation, Medicare, HMO/PPO), the billing provider’s own accepted reimbursements, and professional experience with charges in the relevant market.
Legal Context
Why This Matters for Your Case
New York's no-fault insurance system, established under Insurance Law Article 51, is one of the most complex insurance frameworks in the country. Every motorist must carry Personal Injury Protection coverage that pays medical expenses and lost wages regardless of fault, up to $50,000 per person.
But insurers routinely deny valid claims using peer reviews, EUO scheduling tactics, fee schedule reductions, and coverage defenses. The Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum has handled over 100,000 no-fault cases since 2002 — from initial claim submissions through arbitration before the American Arbitration Association, trials in Civil Court and Supreme Court, and appeals to the Appellate Term and Appellate Division. Jason Tenenbaum is one of the few attorneys in the state who both writes his own appellate briefs and tries his own cases.
His 2,353+ published legal articles on no-fault practice are cited by attorneys throughout New York. Whether you are dealing with a medical necessity denial, an EUO no-show defense, a fee schedule dispute, or a coverage question, this article provides the kind of detailed case-law analysis that helps practitioners and claimants understand exactly where the law stands.
About This Topic
New York No-Fault Insurance Law
New York's no-fault insurance system requires every driver to carry Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage that pays medical expenses and lost wages regardless of who caused the accident. But insurers routinely deny, delay, and underpay valid claims — using peer reviews, IME no-shows, and fee schedule defenses to avoid paying providers and injured claimants. Attorney Jason Tenenbaum has litigated thousands of no-fault arbitrations and court cases since 2002.
273 published articles in No-Fault
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Apr 18, 2022Frequently Asked Questions
Common Questions About This Topic
3 answers from the firm's New York personal-injury and employment-law practice. Click any question to expand.
Why doesn't New York litigate the reasonableness of medical charges in no-fault cases?
Because the no-fault regulation adopts fee schedules that fix the maximum reimbursable amount for each service. The "price" of treatment on a first-party claim is set by regulation, so disputes take the form of a fee schedule defense rather than a battle over reasonable value.
When does the reasonable value of medical bills become an issue in a New York injury case?
Primarily in third-party bodily injury cases where the plaintiff boards medical expenses that no fee schedule controls — most often when the patient treated on a lien, as can happen in surgical cases after no-fault benefits exhaust. There, the plaintiff must prove the reasonable value of the services, and the defense may contest it.
How does an expert prove medical charges are reasonable?
The expert ties the opinion to community rates for comparable providers, benchmark fee schedules (workers' compensation, Medicare, HMO/PPO), the billing provider's own accepted reimbursements, and professional experience with charges in the relevant market.
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About the Author
Jason Tenenbaum, Esq.
Jason Tenenbaum is the founding attorney of the Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum, P.C., headquartered at 326 Walt Whitman Road, Suite C, Huntington Station, New York 11746. With over 24 years of experience since founding the firm in 2002, Jason has written more than 1,000 appeals, handled over 100,000 no-fault insurance cases, and recovered over $100 million for clients across Long Island, Nassau County, Suffolk County, Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island. He is one of the few attorneys in the state who both writes his own appellate briefs and tries his own cases.
Jason is admitted to practice in New York, New Jersey, Florida, Texas, Georgia, and Michigan state courts, as well as multiple federal courts. His 2,353+ published legal articles analyzing New York case law, procedural developments, and litigation strategy make him one of the most prolific legal commentators in the state. He earned his Juris Doctor from Syracuse University College of Law.
Disclaimer: This article is published by the Law Office of Jason Tenenbaum, P.C. for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this content. The legal principles discussed may not apply to your specific situation, and the law may have changed since this article was last updated.
New York law varies by jurisdiction — court decisions in one Appellate Division department may not be followed in another, and local court rules in Nassau County Supreme Court differ from those in Suffolk County Supreme Court, Kings County Civil Court, or Queens County Supreme Court. The Appellate Division, Second Department (which covers Long Island, Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island) and the Appellate Term (which hears appeals from lower courts) each have distinct procedural requirements and precedents that affect litigation strategy.
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