Title: Legal Aspects Of Optometric Practice
1Welcome
2Legal Aspects Of Optometric Practice
- Pamela J. Miller, O.D., F.A.A.O., J.D.
- Highland, California
3Pamela J. Miller, O.D., J.D.
- Became owner 1974
- Staff size 3
- Member AOA, former member CA St. Bd. of
Optometry, National Academies of Practice in
Optometry, staff O.D. San Bernardino Co. Medical
Center - SCCO 1973
4Dr. Miller and staff
Mission statement To provide premium vision
care by a warm, caring and supportive doctor and
staff
5Legal terms you need to know
- Plaintiff
- Defendant
- Doctrine of informed consent
- Duty to warn
- Duty to mitigate
- Document
- The average reasonable person standard
6Legal concepts you need to know
- Respondeat superior Let the master answer
- Deep pockets
- Joint and severable liability
- Res ipsa loquitur The thing speaks for itself
- Rebuttable presumption of negligence instrument
causing injury was in defendants exclusive
control and the accident was one which ordinarily
does not occur in the absence of negligence
7Documentation
- The most important piece of legal advice
- Document completely but judiciously
- Do not change, erase or alter a writing
- Adding to a writing is permissible sign, date,
state why you are adding to the document (ex. new
information, research, addendum, etc.)
8Contract law
- A promissory agreement between two or more
persons that creates, modifies, or destroys a - legal relation.
- An agreement consisting of a promise or mutual
promises which the law will enforce or the
performance of which the law in some way
recognizes as a duty.
9Contract basics
- Oral or written
- Express or implied
- UCC commerce, goods
- Statute of frauds
10Contract statute of frauds
- No action shall be maintained on certain classes
of contracts or engagements unless there shall be
a note or memorandum thereof in writing signed by
the party to be charged or his authorized agent. - Personal services, sale of land, etc.
11Contract requirements
- Four corners of the document
- Offer
- Acceptance (mirror image)
- Consideration
- Parties with at least limited capacity (duress,
fraud, free will, mental capacity) - Mutuality of terms
12Its as simple as
- A Act
- B Breach
- C Consequences
- D Damages
13Damages
- Actual
- Compensatory
- Unforeseeable future earnings
- Foreseeable actual expenses, retraining, lost
wages, counseling - Nominal
- Punitive
14Contracts youll encounter
- Real estate - office
- Purchase rental
- Lease
- Rent
- Construction
- Practice
- Purchase
- Partnership
- Merger
- Shared overhead
- Employment
- Independent contractor
- Employee
- Equipment
- Purchase
- Lease
- Third party provider
- Panel member
- Employee health care
15Always read the fine print!
16Pre-nup
- Pre-nuptial agreement
- Pros and cons
- Spousal involvement in business
- Purchase/sale of office and assets
- Protection from liability
- Tax filing married, filing separately
- Keeping it separate vs. co-mingling
-
17Legal entities
- Solo its just you, all the way
- Partnership joint owners (equal?)
- Group 3 or more
- Affiliation share overhead separate (but
equal?) - Merger 2 or more practices join
- Franchise purchase the right to be part of a
- larger organization in return for
- specific privileges, expense sharing, etc
18Hiring Your responsibilities
- Human resources
- Educate
- Inform
- Follow-up
- Oversee
- Evaluate and re-evaluate
19Stop litigation before it starts
- Review your policies
- Keep up on the law
- Post required notices
- Accept no nonsense
- Set an example
- Treat everyone equally and fairly
- Watch your opinions
20New hires
- Contract
- Office policy manual
- Verify education, experience, references
- Background check, criminal or court records
- Complete all hiring forms copy of right to work
verification federal forms - Introduce to office, duties
- Continued employment predicated on successful
completion of physical and - drug test, if applicable
- Provide training
- Safety training passwords, keys, etc.
- Employee has opportunity to explain or refute
information - Learning, not probationary period
21Independent contractor orassociate
22Independent contractor
- New practice owners often are also
- independent contractors (or employees) in
- other settings to supplement their income
- Clearly defined by the IRS
- Not an employee
- Responsible for all taxes and contributions
- Look to the relationship between the parties
23Employee contracts
- Policy vs. contract
- What should I include
- What should I exclude
- How comprehensive should it be
- Court interpretation
- Burden of proof
24Employment at will
- Disclaimer
- Termination at any time
- With or without cause
25Protect interests by
- Confidentiality agreements
- Covenant not to solicit patients
- Covenant not to solicit employees
- Covenant not to compete during employment
- Return of property upon leaving the practice
- Beware of out-of-state corporations
26Confidentiality agreementNon-disclosure
agreements
- Designed to protect the employer, seller or
partner from disclosure of trade secrets - i.e. May contain trade secret protections
- Separate from non-competition clause
- May be severable from a non-compete agreement so
not to violate right to work
27Confidentiality agreementNon-disclosure
agreements cont.
- Covenant not to compete arising from sale of
business or partnership dissolution may be valid - Employers may not force an employee to sign a
covenant not to compete or a condition of
employment unfair competition - Look to geographic area, time, activity, publics
right to receive care - State court may differ from federal court
28Covenants
- Covenant not to compete
- Competition agreement
- Purpose To protect practice value and goodwill
29Covenant not to compete
- Restrictive or a restraint of trade
- Is it reasonable, consistent with public welfare
and bargained for pursuant to lawful contact? - Goal is to prevent patient or record stealing or
punish someone who does - Enforceable if reasonable in light of the facts
and circumstances
30Covenant not to compete cont.
- Cannot restrain trade cannot be too restrictive
and unfair to the parties involved or public
welfare - Generally not honored in CA check state law
- Reasonable time limit only long enough to enable
former employer or buyer to protect the practice - Part of an employment contract, purchase
agreement, partnership or pre-existing
relationship
31Compete clause(Employees, partners, mergers,
associates)
- Shows greater durability and enforceability
- Doctor 2 can leave doctor 1, BUT to practice in
the same town, he or she must pay X to 1 - Holds up in court
- Must have consideration
- Must be reasonable and specific
- Designed to mitigate damages
- liquidated damages
32Boilerplate language
- Confidentiality
- Employment at will
- Privacy
- Electronic media
- Harassment
- Discrimination
- Zero tolerance
33Employer
34Taxes 2008
- Paid by Employer Employee
- FICA social security 6.20 6.20
- Medicare 1.45 1.45
- SDI (CA) 0.08
- Federal schedule
- State schedule
- SUI 3.4
- ETT 0.10 on 1st 7000
- (employer training tax)
- Workers comp schedule
35Hire to fire documentation
- Handbooks policy manual
- Handbooks vs. Application
- Be understanding of personal problems
- Supervisor Training
- Evaluations written warnings document
- Communicate, communicate, communicate
- Dont stress out
- Consistency praise suggestions for
improvement - Resignation
- Post-Termination
- No surprises
- No discussion once termination is necessary end
of day, end of pay stand and escort to door - Return keys, change codes
36Hire defensively
- Be specific about rules
- Be vague about rights
- Progressive discipline policies
- Oral warnings
- Written warnings
- Suspensions
- Terminations
37Employment application
- Authorizations
- Background check
- Reference check
- Drug alcohol testing
- Certification that all info provided by
- applicant is true
38Successfully enforce policies
- Dont ignore a situation or conflict
- Take action to achieve resolution
- Document your actions
- Employee should sign all performance
- reviews keep a copy
- Pyramid any disciplinary measures if possible
39Develop a game plan
- Address a complaint or issue immediately
- Employee rights
- Following through - consistency
- Posting
- Right of Privacy
- Annual review - Do not puff
- Review/update office policy manual periodically
40Boilerplate language
- Employment at will
- Employees are forbidden from disclosing, taking,
or copying confidential information - Zero tolerance
- Right of privacy
- ADA - reasonable accommodation
41What is sexual harassment or discrimination?
- Unwanted and offensive touching
- Objectionable behavior
- Unwelcome sexual advances
- Requests for sexual favors
- Boss has no special right
- Hostile environment
42Protect yourself
- Prompt and effective action to end alleged
harassment after complaint - Employee must make a complaint
- If no action is taken to resolve the complaint,
the employee may sue and receive actual damages,
court costs, attorneys fees, and even punitive
damages for willful violation
43RED YELLOW GREEN
- RED Not allowed - always unacceptable
- YELLOW Questionable - Usually unacceptable or
inappropriate - GREEN Allowed - acceptable
44The golden rule
- All employees must be treated with dignity and
mutual respect - By everyone, at all times
- You set the example and are responsible for the
whole office
45Office illness and injury prevention manual
46Leases purchase agreements
- Equipment
- Real property
- Practice
47Equipment lease
- Lease purchase annual tax paid
- 1 buy out or fair market value buy out
- May be higher cost shown as expense
- Doesnt show as an asset or liability
- Outright purchase vs. finance
- Write-off value depreciation per year
- Lease without option of purchase
48Office lease considerations
- Mistake to pay operating expenses based on leased
space rather than on leasable space - Lease rate rent operating expenses and how
calculated increases - Maintenance and upkeep remodeling
- Amount of free rent
- Length of time space has been available
occupancy length of current tenants leases,
lease incentives to current residents - Any exclusionary businesses (i.e. other optical)
49Office lease considerations cont.
- In event of fire, loss of use, loss of
space/contents remodeling, improvements, change
of entrances, relocation hours of business
square footage, parking - Termination clause right to sublet
- Tax indemnification clause
- Ownership change buy-out clauses and
- down payments
- Insurance specifications
- Warranties on premises, equipment, etc.
- Included services, signage, hours of operation
50Is it better to purchase or own?
- Real property
- Purchase outright
- Finance
- Lease to own
- Equipment
- Purchase outright
- Finance
- Lease to own
- Employees
51Practice purchase or sale
- Lump sum is not the best option
- Serial sale interest on sale is paid monthly
(with principal). Tax may be computed on this
interest as a gift tax against the selling
doctor unless the interest is already worked into
the price - Structured sale (best option) buyer has option
to speed up payments - Check with your accountant and tax attorney
52Own your own
- Advantages
- Cash accounting system
- Liability mitigation notice not required
- Control
- Disadvantages
- Repair and upkeep
- Annual price hikes or upon lease renewal
- Liability
53Partnerships
54Protect your partnership
- Choose wisely, carefully, consider a trial run
- Balance the work load establish your roles
- Compromise
- Have a contingency plan
- Consult an attorney and put it in writing
- Communication is important to avoid a divorce
- Keep your spouse out of the business
55Considerations
- Events causing termination of a relationship
- Retirement
- Voluntary termination to leave
- To start a competitive practice
- Involuntary termination principals disagree
- Death
- Disability
- Felony conviction loss of license
56Partnership contracts
- Name, time commitment prohibited acts, duration
- Contributions, allocations cash flow
- Loans leases partnership sale or adding new
partner - Income, expenses, capital expenditures
withdrawals - Books records
- Competition agreements
- Partner relations death, disability, buy out,
- resignation
- Insurance how to be paid?
-
57Read carefully
- Document everything
- Never argue never yell
- Never get angry
- Do your research
- Dont be greedy
- Remember, act in haste, repent in leisure
- Plan and prepare for the worst
58Going for help
- State chamber of commerce
- Professional associations
- Buying groups
- State/federal employment agencies
59To do list
- Take a basic tax preparation class
- Select a CPA for small businesses
- Review contracts and categorize by topic
- Create a profit-and-loss statement
- Set 5- 10-year financial practice goals
- Write or re-evaluate office policy document
- Establish emergency protocols
- Develop a mentor relationship
60References
- Classe, John, O.D., J.D. - Legal Aspects of
Optometry - Dufour, James T. - Optometric Office Injury
Illness Prevention Guide - Miller, Pamela J. O.D., J.D. - A Handbook for the
Ophthalmic Practice Documentation and Record
Keeping Made Easy - AOA
61References cont.
- Primary Eyecare Network - Personnel File Desk
Reference Set - Steinberg, Craig S. O.D., J.D. - Employers Guide
for Optometrists - The Optometric Office and Illness Prevention
Guide - Vision West - California Compliance Catalog www.calbizcentral.c
om
62Thank you
- Pamela J. Miller, O.D., F.A.A.O., J.D.
- 909.862.4053
- drpam_at_omnivision.com