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Vanhoy v. United States, 06-31318 (2008)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit Number: 06-31318 Visitors: 6
Filed: Feb. 12, 2008
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: REVISED February 8, 2008 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit FILED No. 06-31318 January 17, 2008 Charles R. Fulbruge III Clerk TEDDY J VANHOY; TAMRA VANHOY Plaintiffs-Appellees v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Defendant-Appellant Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana USDC No. 2:03-CV-1090 Before JONES, Chief Judge, and WIENER and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges. WIENER, Circuit Judge: The governm
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                     REVISED February 8, 2008

       IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
                                                           United States Court of Appeals
                                                                    Fifth Circuit

                                                                FILED
                                 No. 06-31318               January 17, 2008

                                                         Charles R. Fulbruge III
                                                                 Clerk
TEDDY J VANHOY; TAMRA VANHOY

                                           Plaintiffs-Appellees
v.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

                                           Defendant-Appellant


                Appeal from the United States District Court
                   for the Eastern District of Louisiana
                          USDC No. 2:03-CV-1090


Before JONES, Chief Judge, and WIENER and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
WIENER, Circuit Judge:
      The government appeals the district court’s ruling requiring it to make an
immediate lump-sum payment of future medical care damages to Plaintiff-
Appellee Teddy J. Vanhoy in this Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”) action. The
government reurges its contention that the district court should create a
reversionary trust into which the government could deposit the amount of the
award and from which Mr. Vanhoy’s future medical care damages would be
distributed on an as-incurred basis, with any balance remaining in the trust at
Mr. Vanhoy’s death reverting to the government. Having been referred to no
authority expressly supporting the government’s proposition or requiring the
                                      No. 06-31318

district court to create such a trust (and having found none independently), we
affirm.
                          I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
      On October 4, 1999, Teddy J. Vanhoy, a Navy veteran who had attained
the rank of Master Chief prior to his retirement, underwent coronary artery
bypass surgery, without complications, at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center
in New Orleans. Following surgery, Mr. Vanhoy was taken to the surgical
intensive care unit and placed on a ventilator, which supported his breathing
through an endotracheal tube. Two days after the surgery, while being weaned
from his ventilator support according to hospital protocol, Mr. Vanhoy was left
unattended for several hours by the nursing personnel. During that time, the
endotracheal tube that was supplying Mr. Vanhoy with oxygen became
dislodged, causing him to go into respiratory and cardiac arrest. Medical records
indicate that he was likely extubated for more than twenty-one minutes before
his condition was discovered and attempts were made to reintubate him. While
extubated, Mr. Vanhoy was deprived of normal oxygen flow and suffered anoxic
brain injury, which has left him profoundly and permanently disabled.
      Mr. Vanhoy and his wife, Tamra Vanhoy, sued the government for
damages under the FTCA. In its answer, the government pleaded La. R.S. §
40:1299.42 of the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act (“MMA”) as an affirmative
defense. Section 40:1299.42B(1) specifies that the total amount recoverable in
private malpractice actions for injuries to or death of a patient shall not exceed
$500,000, exclusive of future medical care and related benefits.1 A companion
provision found in § 40:1299.43 of the MMA specifies, in pertinent part, that
private malpractice awards for future medical care expenses are payable, not by
the negligent health care provider but from the Patients’ Compensation Fund



      1
          LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 40:1299.42B(1).

                                             2
                                       No. 06-31318

(“PCF”),2 and then only as those charges accrue, with payment ceasing on the
death of the victim.3 The government is not a private health care provider and
thus is not a contributor to or exonerated by the PCF; and the government did
not plead § 40:1299.43 of the MMA as an affirmative defense. The government
did, however, move for partial summary judgment on the issue of future medical
expenses, urging that La. R.S. § 13:5106(B) authorizes the depositing of future
medical expenses awarded in an FTCA action into a reversionary trust.4
      The district court denied the government’s partial summary judgment
motion, ruling that § 13:5106 was inapplicable, as it relates only to the liability
of states, state agencies, and political subdivisions. The government then filed
a motion in limine, asserting that, in the event of an award for future medical
expenses, “the government is entitled to be treated in the same manner and to
the same extent as a private health care provider under like circumstances”
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2674 of the FTCA.5 Specifically, the government insisted
that a reversionary trust should be created, as it would most closely approximate
the Louisiana Legislature’s treatment of future medical expenses under §
40:1299.43. After the trial concluded, the district court denied this motion and
ruled that “any future medicals awarded will be in the form of a lump sum
payment.”
      The district court entered judgment against the government, ruling that
the hospital nursing staff had breached the applicable standard of care when it



      2
        The PCF is an insurance fund financed by the state’s health care providers and
administered by the PCF Oversight Board. The Oversight Board has the authority to receive
and evaluate claims, and to pay, settle, or reject them. Claims are paid when they are
approved.
      3
          LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 40:1299.43.
      4
          See LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 13:5106B(3)(a).
      5
          28 U.S.C. § 2674.

                                              3
                                       No. 06-31318

failed to monitor Mr. Vanhoy’s endotracheal tube and failed to respond
immediately after he began experiencing distress. The Vanhoys were awarded
a total amount of $4,591,300, of which $3,500,000 was awarded to Mr. Vanhoy
for his future medical care and services. The government timely filed a notice
of appeal, challenging the ruling that it is required to make an immediate lump-
sum payment of future medical care damages.6
                                     II. ANALYSIS
A.     Waiver
       The Vanhoys assert that the government’s claim to a damage limitation
based on § 40:1299.43 is an affirmative defense that the government waived by
failing to introduce supporting evidence at trial. The Vanhoys point out that the
government offered no evidence regarding the availability of a trust mechanism
that would approximate § 40:1299.43's treatment of future medical expenses, nor
any evidence regarding how the trust would be created or operated.
       Assuming that the applicability of § 40:1299.43 is an affirmative defense
as the Vanhoys argue, we nevertheless conclude that it was not necessary for the
government to introduce factual evidence pertaining to how the trust would be
fashioned or whether it would afford an equivalent remedy to that provided
under Louisiana law. The applicability of § 40:1299.43, and the question
whether it requires the creation of a reversionary trust, are legal issues that can
be resolved without the need for factual proof.7 The availability of a reversionary
trust mechanism under these circumstances has no bearing on the Vanhoys’s
proof of future medical care damages; instead, it merely concerns how such


       6
        On appeal, the government does not challenge the district court’s finding of liability
or the amount of damages awarded. It only challenges the requirement that it pay Mr.
Vanhoy’s future medical care damages in one $3,500,000 lump sum.
       7
         See Lucas v. United States, 
807 F.2d 414
, 418 (5th Cir. 1986) (noting that the
applicability of the Texas statutory cap on malpractice damages is a legal issue that can be
resolved without the need for factual proof).

                                              4
                                        No. 06-31318

damages may be distributed. Only if the district court had ruled in favor of the
government on its motion in limine would the government have been required
to submit factual evidence pertaining to the details of the reversionary trust
mechanism.
       Moreover, the government raised the applicability of § 40:1299.43 in a
timely fashion. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(c) requires an affirmative
defense to be set forth in a defendant’s responsive pleading, with the failure to
comply usually resulting in waiver of the defense.8 “If, however, a defendant
raises the issue at a ‘pragmatically sufficient time,’ and if the plaintiff is not
prejudiced in its ability to respond, there is no waiver of the defense.”9 Here, the
government failed to plead § 40:1299.43 in its answer. It did, however, raise the
applicability of the provision in its motion in limine as well as in the pretrial
order.10 Additionally, the government had filed a motion three months before
trial in which it advocated the use of a reversionary trust as an alternative to a
lump-sum award of future medical damages.11                    As the applicability of §
40:1299.43 was raised on multiple occasions prior to trial, and as the Vanhoys
had adequate notice of the government’s intention to claim the benefit of the
provision, the defense was raised at a pragmatically sufficient time and the
Vanhoys were not prejudiced in their ability to respond.12 We hold that the

       8
           
Id. at 417.
       9
           Simon v. United States, 
891 F.2d 1154
, 1157 (5th Cir. 1990) (citing 
Lucas, 807 F.2d at 418
).
       10
          See McGehee v. Certainteed Corp., 
101 F.3d 1078
, 1080 (5th Cir. 1996) (“It is a well-
settled rule that a joint pretrial order signed by both parties supersedes all pleadings and
governs the issues and evidence to be presented at trial.”) (internal quotations omitted).
       11
        Granted, the government cited to the wrong Louisiana statute in support of its
argument in this initial motion; however, the pretrial order and the motion in limine
subsequently clarified the government’s legal basis for its proposition.
       12
        See 
Simon, 891 F.2d at 1158-59
(holding that the government had waived its
argument because it had failed to inform the court or the opposing party that it intended to

                                               5
                                         No. 06-31318

government did not waive its argument for the creation of a reversionary trust
premised upon § 40:1299.43.
B.     Reversionary Trust
       The government asserts that it is entitled to be treated in the same fashion
as a private defendant in a Louisiana malpractice action based upon the “like
circumstances” test of the FTCA. Specifically, the government argues that the
district court should create a reversionary trust from which Mr. Vanhoy’s future
medical care damages may be distributed as needed. It maintains that such a
trust mechanism most closely approximates § 40:1299.43's treatment of future
medical expenses by ensuring that the damages are used only for their intended
purpose, viz., compensating Mr. Vanhoy for the expenses he actually incurs
during the remainder of his lifetime.               The question whether § 40:1299.43
requires the district court to provide protection to the government in the form
of a reversionary trust, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2674 of the FTCA, is a legal one
requiring interpretation of both Louisiana and federal statutes. We therefore
review the district court's ruling de novo.13
       “Louisiana law cannot by its law make the United States liable. The
United States is liable only to the extent it waives sovereign immunity, here by
the Federal Tort Claims Act.”14 Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2674, the United States
is liable in tort claims “in the same manner and to the same extent as a private
individual under like circumstances . . . .”15 Section 40:1299.43 provides that


claim the benefit of the provision until after judgment had been entered); 
Lucas, 807 F.2d at 418
(holding that the government had not waived its argument because it had raised the
applicability of the provision at trial); Owen v. United States, 
935 F.2d 734
, 736 (5th Cir. 1991)
(holding that the government had not waived its argument in part because the applicability
of the relevant provision was included in the pretrial order).
       13
            Exxon Mobil Corp. & Affiliated Cos. v. C.I.R., 
484 F.3d 731
, 733 (5th Cir. 2007).
       14
            
Owen, 935 F.2d at 736
.
       15
            28 U.S.C. § 2674.

                                                6
                                         No. 06-31318

whenever a victim has future medical damages that exceed the $500,000 cap on
malpractice damages under Louisiana law, as is the case with Mr. Vanhoy,
future medical care damages will be paid only as those charges are incurred and
only for as long as care is required.16 When the victim dies, his heirs do not
receive any remainder of the award intended for future medical care.
       In support of its argument, the government cites our decision in Owen v.
United States,17 which concerned the question whether the MMA’s $500,000
damages cap on the liability of private malpractice defendants applies to FTCA
claims against the government. The MMA cap, provided in § 40:1299.42,
protects only qualified health care providers, meaning those who have filed proof
of financial responsibility with the state insurance commissioner and have
contributed to the PCF.18 More important to our consideration today, the cap
applies only to basic tort damages and does not apply to future medical care
costs. Despite the fact that the government had neither filed nor contributed,
we held in Owen that the government was in “like circumstances” with private
qualified health care providers for purposes of tort damages and therefore was
entitled to the cap’s protection. We noted there that “the ‘like circumstances’
inquiry is not overly stringent.”19
       We conclude that Owen does not require or even support the result that
the government seeks in the instant case, as the reasoning for the dollar cap on
tort damages is inapplicable to either the quantum or the methodology of


       16
            LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 40:1299.43.
       17
            
935 F.2d 734
(5th Cir. 1991)..
       18
            LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 40:1299.42A.
       19
          
Owen, 935 F.2d at 737
(quoting Roelofs v. United States, 
501 F.2d 87
, 92 (5th Cir.
1974) (“[The FTCA] is given broad interpretation to effectuate the legislative aim of putting
citizen and national sovereign in tort claim suits on a footing of equality as between private
parties within that state. Nice pieces of casuistry and hypersensitive legalisms are avoided.”)).

                                                 7
                                        No. 06-31318

distributing payments for future medicals.                 In Owen, we held that the
government was in “like circumstances” with private individuals who had
contributed to the fund because the government had met the objectives of §
40:1299.42 by virtue of its “certain and perpetual” solvency.20 And, in reaching
this conclusion, we noted that the liability of state health care providers for basic
tort damages is limited to $500,000, even though, like the U.S. government,
state providers do not contribute to the PCF.21 In that case, the government and
the victim could be placed on a “footing of equality as between private parties”
under Louisiana law: The victim could be assured of receiving the same amount
of damages that he otherwise would, and the government could benefit from the
same limited liability enjoyed by qualified health care providers.
       Here, the government’s proposed reversionary trust would not afford the
Vanhoys and the government like treatment for purposes of future medicals, and
nowhere does the FTCA authorize damage awards that require the United
States to perform continuing obligations.22 The government cannot be obligated
to make periodic payments of future medical care damages to Mr. Vanhoy on an
as-incurred basis the way that the PCF does under the MMA scheme.23
Moreover, Mr. Vanhoy cannot be assured of receiving such payments for as long
as necessary and without limit. And, for the purpose of further distinguishing
the tort damages cap from future medical care obligations, it is helpful to

       20
            
Owen, 935 F.2d at 737
-38.
       21
            
Id. at 737.
       22
         See Hill v. United States, 
81 F.3d 118
, 120 (10th Cir. 1996) (citation omitted); Hull
v. United States, 
971 F.2d 1499
, 1504-05 (10th Cir. 1992) (citing Frankel v. Heym, 
466 F.2d 1226
(3rd Cir. 1993)).
       23
          Under the MMA framework, a plaintiff’s malpractice judgment may include a finding
by the trier of fact that the plaintiff needs future medical care. If a judgment containing this
finding is entered, the plaintiff then makes his claims for future medical care expenses to the
PCF. Funds are distributed on an as-needed basis, with the court ordinarily having no more
role to play in the process.

                                               8
                                       No. 06-31318

observe that the cap is a passive, one-time line drawn in the dust whereas
payment for future care is an active, continuing, and indeterminable obligation
for the lifetime of the victim. Simply put, § 40:1299.43's treatment of future
medicals for private individuals cannot be replicated—by a reversionary trust
or other such mechanism—whereas § 40:1299.42's treatment of basic damages
for professional negligence and its statutory cap thereon are susceptible of
replication.
       The government’s argument based on La. R.S. § 13:5106B is similarly
unavailing.      Section 13:5106B(3)(a) provides for the establishment of a
reversionary trust for the payment of future medical damages awarded in
ordinary personal injury suits brought against political subdivisions of the
State.24    And, the government concedes that § 13:5106B is not directly
applicable, as the FTCA makes the government liable in the same manner and
to the same extent as a private individual, not a state political subdivision.
Despite the fact that Louisiana law affords to its political subdivisions the
remedy sought by the government, it does not afford such a remedy to a private
individual: Absent like treatment to that afforded to an individual, the
reversionary trust mechanism simply may not be imported and applied as the
government argues.
       Finally, the Ninth and Tenth Circuit opinions to which the government
refers for support are distinguishable from the instant case.25 All three cases
concern guardian ad litem situations, and, in Hill v. United States and Hull v.



       24
          LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 13:5106B(3)(a). The reversionary trust instrument must
specify that such future medical care damages be paid directly to the provider as the expenses
are incurred. 
Id. Any funds
remaining in the reversionary trust revert to the political
subdivision that established the trust on the death of the claimant. LA. REV. STAT. ANN. §
13:5106B(3)(b).
       25
        Dutra v. United States, 
478 F.3d 1090
(9th Cir. 2007); Hill, 
81 F.3d 118
; Hull, 
971 F.2d 1499
.

                                              9
                                         No. 06-31318

United States, the Tenth Circuit qualified its authority to create a reversionary
trust, remarking that it could do so only if it were “in the best interests of the
child.”26 Similarly, the Washington provision at issue in Dutra v. United States
requires the court to select the manner of paying future medical care damages
that “best provides for the future needs of the claimant.”27 Here, the Vanhoys
vociferously oppose the creation of a reversionary trust, and the government fails
to advance any argument to support the proposition that the trust would
somehow be in Mr. Vanhoy’s best interest. In addition, in Dutra and Hill, the
state statutes at issue—specifically the manner in which they treat future
medical care damages—are distinguishable from § 40:1299.43.28 We conclude
that these cases do not impose an obligation on the district court creatively to
fashion a remedy out of the whole cloth that approximates the result provided
in § 40:1299.43.




       26
            
Hill, 81 F.3d at 121
; 
Hull, 971 F.2d at 1504-05
.
       
27 478 F.3d at 1091-92
; see also WASH. REV. CODE § 4.56.260(2). Pursuant to §
4.56.260(2), the court is required to request that each party submit a proposal for periodic
payment of future economic damages prior to entry of the judgment. WASH. REV. CODE §
4.56.260(2). After each party has submitted a proposal, the court is required to select the
proposal, with any changes it deems proper, which in the discretion of the court and the
interests of justice best provides for the future needs of the claimant. 
Id. 28 See
Dutra, 478 F.3d at 1091-92
; 
Hill, 81 F.3d at 120
. Under the relevant Washington
provision, the court must, at the request of a party, enter a judgment that provides for the
periodic payment of future economic damages. With respect to the judgment, the court must
make a specific finding as to the dollar amount of periodic payments intended to compensate
the judgment creditor for the future economic damages. WASH. REV. CODE § 4.56.260(2).
Under the Colorado Health Care Availability Act, the trier of fact is required to make a lump-
sum award in favor of the victim, which sum is then paid out in equal installments on a
periodic basis until the time of the victim’s death. 
Hill, 81 F.3d at 120
. As such, the Colorado
and Washington systems place a similar burden on the court as does the reversionary trust
mechanism proposed by the government. The distinguishing feature, though, is that under
§ 40:1299.43, the trier of fact makes only an unquantified finding that the victim is entitled
to future medical care damages, then the PCF assumes responsibility for the review of claims
and the distribution of funds when and as future care is provided.

                                               10
                                           No. 06-31318

      We understand the government’s desire to avoid a windfall in favor of Mr.
Vanhoy’s heirs, and we note that the Louisiana Legislature did not provide for
a lump-sum payment of future medical care expenses.            The government’s
proposal for the court to be the settlor of a reversionary trust, though, fails to
place the parties on a “footing of equality as between private parties” in
Louisiana. Moreover, the government fails to point to any applicable authority,
in the FTCA or elsewhere, that requires the district court to fashion a remedy
that approximates § 40:1299.43's treatment of future medical care damages.
Rather than direct the district court to create a reversionary trust from scratch,
we shall follow the Third Circuit’s reasoning in Frankel v. Heym,29 an FTCA case
in which the government requested that a damages award take the form of a
judicially established trust for the victim’s benefit. In refusing the government’s
proposal, the Third Circuit stated:
             We agree with the district court that in administering the
      legislation in question a district court should not make other than
      lump-sum money judgments unless and until Congress shall
      authorize a different type of award. The relaxation of sovereign
      immunity is peculiarly a matter of legislative concern, responsibility
      and policy. If novel types of awards are to be permitted against the
      government, Congress should affirmatively authorize them.30

We cannot help but observe that Congress has not accepted the Third Circuit’s
invitation in the ensuing 35 years since Heym was handed down.
      The First Circuit adopted the Heym position in Reilly v. United States,31
another FTCA case in which the government argued for an even simpler
structured payout of damages—an award payable over time in periodic
installments—rather than in the form of a lump sum.              In rejecting the

      29
           
466 F.2d 1226
(3rd Cir. 1972).
      30
           
Id. at 1228-29.
      31
           
863 F.2d 149
(1st Cir. 1988).

                                               11
                                        No. 06-31318

government’s proposal, the First Circuit noted that “[w]hen a tortfeasor loses at
trial, then—absent a statute or the parties’ contrary agreement . . .—it must pay
the judgment in one fell swoop.”32 The Reilly court acknowledged that it had the
authority to ensure that the award benefits the victim and to supervise the
investment and use of the funds if the victim is in need of protection; however,
it rejected “the proposition that the wrongdoer has a right to pay in installments
where the plaintiffs are unwilling” and held that the court does not “have a right
to impose a periodic payment paradigm on the parties, over protest, solely to
ease the tortfeasor’s burden or to suit some fancied notion of equality.”33 Reilly
concerned a proposed structured payout rather than the creation of a
reversionary trust; yet the First Circuit’s reasoning is applicable. Like the First
and Third Circuits before us, we refuse to deviate from a conventional lump-sum
award by insisting that, absent particular circumstances34 (none of which are
present here), the district court create a reversionary trust—at least not until
or unless Congress expressly authorizes such an arrangement.
       Our unwillingness to fashion a remedy in the absence of any statutory or
precedential requirement is bolstered by consideration for the district court and
the burden it would face were we to remand this case with instructions for it to
create a reversionary trust. The district court would be forced to assume a
substantial amount of responsibility, as well as an administrative role in the




       32
          
Id. at 170.
Also, we reject the government’s argument that § 40:1299.43 is a
“controlling statute” justifying a deviation from a lump-sum payment. See 
id. at 169
n.16.
       33
            
Id. at 170.
       34
            “Periodic damage awards are permissible in lieu of lump sums in certain situations.
They can be made, for instance, if a controlling statute permits . . . . Such an outcome can also
be achieved by agreement of the parties in interest . . . or whether a trust, annuity, or other
prophylactic arrangement is necessary to ensure that the injured party will in fact receive his
due . . . .” 
Id. at 169
n.16 (citations omitted).

                                              12
                                     No. 06-31318

medical malpractice scheme that the Louisiana Legislature did not provide.35
The court would be confronted with a plethora of decisions relating to the
creation and operation of the trust, including, but not limited to: Who should be
appointed trustee? What are the terms and conditions of the trust? How should
the corpus be invested? What are the terms and conditions for covered services?
How are claims to be submitted? Who is responsible for reviewing them, proving
them, and paying them? In addition to these initial decisions, the district court
would bear the continuing burden of supervision for the indeterminate life of the
trust.36 Absent express statutory authorization for the creation of a reversionary
trust like that found in La. R.S. § 13:5106B, we will not require a district court
to practice trust and estate law.
      Inasmuch as (1) a reversionary trust would not place the Vanhoys and the
government on a “footing of equality as between private parties” in Louisiana,
(2) there is no authority requiring the creation of such a trust, and (3) ordering
the district court to create and oversee a reversionary trust would place a
considerable burden on it, we are convinced that the district court properly ruled
that the government is required to pay future medical care damages to Mr.
Vanhoy in the form of a lump sum. As the district court aptly noted, the
imposition of a reversionary trust is neither required nor warranted under the
circumstances of this case.
                                 III. CONCLUSION
      The government did not waive its right to assert a claim for a damage
limitation based on § 40:1299.43 of the Louisiana MMA: The applicability of §
40:1299.43, and the question whether it requires the district court to create a
reversionary trust, are legal issues that the government raised in timely fashion.

      35
           See supra note 26.
      36
         See 
Heym, 466 F.2d at 1229
(noting that continuing judicial supervision is another
consideration weighing against the government’s proposal).

                                            13
                                  No. 06-31318

As such, it was not necessary for the government to introduce factual evidence
pertaining to how the trust would be fashioned prior to the district court’s ruling
on the issue. For the aforestated reasons, however, we reject the government’s
argument in support of the creation of a reversionary trust. The district court’s
ruling requiring the government to make an immediate lump-sum payment of
future medical care damages to Mr. Vanhoy was proper and, accordingly, it is
AFFIRMED.




                                        14

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