Your Legal Protections Against Insurance Reimbursement Claims in Washington

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When your insurance company sends a reimbursement demand after your settlement, most people assume the amount is fixed. It usually isn’t. Washington law has five specific protections that can reduce or eliminate what your insurer takes from your settlement. The Made Whole Doctrine says you come first. The Common Fund Doctrine says the insurer has to share in the cost of recovering that money. The Winters Reduction cuts PIP reimbursement when an attorney is involved. The Ahlborn Limitation protects most of your Medicaid settlement. And ERISA employer plans operate under federal law where most of those protections don’t apply. None of these reductions happen automatically. They require someone who knows to invoke them.

This post covers each Washington legal protection in plain English: the Made Whole Doctrine, the Common Fund Doctrine, the Winters Reduction, the Ahlborn Limitation, and the ERISA exception. If you received a reimbursement demand, read this before you respond.

Not sure what subrogation is or why your insurance wants money back? Start with the overview here.

Washington Law Is on Your Side, If You Know How to Use It

When your insurance company sends a reimbursement demand after your settlement, it can feel like the decision is already made. It’s not.

Washington law builds real protections into the system for injured people. These protections don’t eliminate your insurer’s right to be repaid, but they can significantly reduce the amount, and in some cases bring it down to zero. The catch is that they don’t apply automatically. Someone has to identify which rules apply to your specific situation and actually invoke them.

Here’s what each protection does and when it applies.

The Made Whole Doctrine

Established in Thiringer v. American Motors Insurance Co., 91 Wn.2d 215 (1978), the Made Whole Doctrine says your private health insurer cannot collect a single dollar from your settlement until you have been fully compensated for every loss you suffered: medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, future care costs, and anything else the injury took from you.

If your settlement doesn’t cover your full losses (which is often the case when insurance policy limits are low or when injuries are severe) the insurer’s reimbursement claim may be reduced to zero. You come first. They come second.

This doctrine applies to private health insurance plans purchased on your own or through the ACA marketplace. It does not apply to ERISA employer plans, Medicare, or Medicaid, which follow separate rules.

The Common Fund Doctrine

From Mahler v. Szucs, 135 Wn.2d 398 (1998), the Common Fund Doctrine is built on a simple fairness argument: your attorney did the work that produced the money your insurer wants to take back. The law says they have to help pay for that work.

The answer under Washington law is yes. The insurer must pay a proportionate share of the attorney fees and costs that produced the recovery. They can’t benefit from your attorney’s work for free.

This doctrine applies when an attorney was involved in producing the recovery. Without an attorney, there is no fee to share, and the insurer pays nothing toward the cost of getting repaid. That is not a technicality. It is the reason this work matters.

The Winters Reduction

Under Winters v. State Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co., 144 Wn.2d 869 (2001), PIP insurers (the coverage that pays your medical bills immediately after a car accident) must reduce their reimbursement by the proportionate share of attorney fees and costs. Here’s how that plays out in a real case:

 

Component

Amount

Total Settlement

$20,000

Attorney Fee (1/3)

$6,667

Case Costs

$500

Combined Fee and Cost Share

~35.8% of recovery

PIP Paid

$6,000

Reduction Applied (~35.8%)

 

Actual PIP Reimbursement Owed

$2,150

 

~$3,850

That $2,150 stays with you instead of going back to State Farm or whoever your PIP carrier is. The insurer is getting repaid because your attorney did the work to recover the settlement. The law says they have to contribute to that. Without an attorney, no reduction applies.

For more on how PIP works in Washington car accident cases, see: How Your Insurance Type Affects Your Settlement Reimbursement

The Ahlborn Limitation

Under Arkansas Dept. of Health and Human Services v. Ahlborn, 547 U.S. 268 (2006), Medicaid’s right to reimbursement is limited to the portion of your settlement specifically allocated to past medical expenses. It cannot touch your lost wages, pain and suffering, future medical care, or any other non-medical damages.

This is significant because in most personal injury settlements, medical expenses represent only a fraction of the total recovery. A $100,000 settlement might include $18,000 in past medical bills, $25,000 in lost wages, $40,000 in pain and suffering, and $17,000 in future care. Under Ahlborn, Medicaid can only recover from that $18,000 slice.

Getting the allocation of your settlement right is one of the more meaningful things your attorney does in any case involving Washington Apple Health.

Want to understand how medical bills are broken into categories in the first place? See how medical billing works in a personal injury case.

The ERISA Exception: Where State Protections Don’t Apply

If your health insurance comes through your employer and the plan is self-funded, it’s governed by ERISA, a federal law that overrides Washington state law. Under U.S. Airways, Inc. v. McCutchen, 569 U.S. 88 (2013), ERISA plans can enforce reimbursement to the exact letter of the plan contract, regardless of whether you were fully compensated.

The Made Whole Doctrine doesn’t apply. The Common Fund Doctrine largely doesn’t apply. Reductions are sometimes still possible under ERISA, but the pathways are narrower and require someone who understands federal plan language.

You can’t tell from your insurance card whether your plan is self-funded. It requires reviewing the actual plan document. This is one of the first things we check.

All Five Protections at a Glance

Protection

Washington Case Law

What It Does for You

Made Whole Doctrine

Thiringer v. Am. Motors Ins. Co. (1978)

Your insurer can’t recover anything until you’ve been fully compensated for every loss

Common Fund Doctrine

Mahler v. Szucs (1998)

Your insurer must pay its share of the attorney fees that made the recovery possible

Winters Reduction

Winters v. State Farm (2001)

PIP insurers must reduce their reimbursement by the proportionate attorney fee and costs

Ahlborn Limitation

Ahlborn, 547 U.S. 268 (2006)

Medicaid can only recover from the medical expense portion of your settlement

ERISA Exception

U.S. Airways v. McCutchen (2013)

State protections generally don’t apply to employer self-funded plans

For a full breakdown of how each insurance type handles reimbursement, see: How Your Insurance Type Affects Your Settlement Reimbursement

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Made Whole Doctrine and does it apply to my case?

The Made Whole Doctrine, from Thiringer v. American Motors Insurance Co., 91 Wn.2d 215 (1978), says your private health insurer cannot collect reimbursement from your settlement until you have been fully compensated for every loss. If your settlement falls short of your total damages, their claim may be reduced to zero. It applies to private non-ERISA plans and PIP coverage in Washington. It does not apply to ERISA employer plans, Medicare, or Medicaid.

Does the Made Whole Doctrine apply to my ERISA employer plan?

Generally no. ERISA is federal law and it overrides Washington state law, including the Made Whole Doctrine. If your health insurance came through a self-funded employer plan, the insurer can enforce reimbursement to the letter of the plan contract even if your settlement didn’t cover your full losses. Reductions are sometimes still possible, but they require a different approach and a careful review of the actual plan document.

What is the Winters reduction and how does it work?

The Winters reduction comes from Winters v. State Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co., 144 Wn.2d 869 (2001). It requires PIP insurers to reduce their reimbursement claim by the proportionate share of attorney fees and costs that produced the recovery. The logic is that the insurer is benefiting from your attorney’s work, so they have to contribute to the cost. Without an attorney involved, no reduction applies. You repay the full PIP amount.

Most people who receive a reimbursement demand assume the number on the letter is what they owe. Often it isn’t. Knowing which rules apply, invoking them correctly, and making sure the math is right is a large part of how we protect what you actually take home. That is not extra work. It is the standard for how we handle every case.

Questions about your specific situation? Schedule a free consultation. The first conversation is free.

Ready to Protect Your Recovery?

Schedule a free consultation with Scott & Scott, PLLC.

(206) 622-2200

scottlawseattle.com/contact | 4800 Aurora Ave. N., Seattle, WA 98103

Disclaimer: This content is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is different. Please consult an experienced personal injury attorney for advice specific to your situation.

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