Angelina Emergency Medicine Associates PA v. Health Care Service Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 2024
Docket3:18-cv-00425
StatusUnknown

This text of Angelina Emergency Medicine Associates PA v. Health Care Service Corporation (Angelina Emergency Medicine Associates PA v. Health Care Service Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angelina Emergency Medicine Associates PA v. Health Care Service Corporation, (N.D. Tex. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION

ANGELINA EMERGENCY § MEDICINE ASSOCIATES P.A., § et al., § § Plaintiffs, § § v. § Civil Action No. 3:18-CV-0425-X

§ HEALTH CARE SERVICE § CORPORATION, et al., § § Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein tells a story of Victor Frankenstein grieving his mother’s death and discovering a way to create human life. As a result, he created a large, brooding, living, breathing, sentient, humanoid creature. But when Victor looked upon the creature’s face, he did not see the beauty of life. He saw a monster. His monster. And his monster would later go on to wreak havoc, killing those whom Victor loved. This case is the legal version of Frankenstein’s Monster. In 2018—a year before the undersigned became a judge—49 physician associations brought an 11- count complaint against Blue Cross Blue Shield, arguing it had underpaid 250,000 claims.1 It has grown larger since, broadening this legal monster to over fifty

1 Doc. 1 (original complaint) ¶ 13. As the parties note, the operative complaint in this dispute is now the second amended complaint. See Doc. 423 at 1 n.1. physician associations suing around fifty defendants.2 At the motion-to-dismiss stage, the Court lopped off Counts III–VII of the operative complaint.3 The defendants now seek to wound Frankenstein’s Monster by moving to dismiss the 182

bellwether claims4 set for trial (Doc. 423) and strike certain expert testimony, (Docs. 417, 419). After reviewing the filings, and the law, the Court GRANTS the defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment as to the bellwether claims and FINDS AS MOOT the motions to strike expert testimony. But the Court is well aware that the demise of the bellwethers doesn’t mean the whole case is dead yet.5

I. Background The defendants are members of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (“BCBSA”). BCBSA is comprised of thirty-three independent and locally operated Blue Cross Blue Shield Plans (“Blue Plans”). These thirty-three independent Blue Plans are each licensed to use BlueCross BlueShield Trademarks within their

2 Doc. 55 (second amended complaint). 3 Angelina Emergency Med. Assocs. PA v. Health Care Serv. Corp., 506 F. Supp. 3d 425, 428 (N.D. Tex. 2020) (Starr, J.) (granting in part the defendants’ motion to dismiss). 4 It is somewhat unclear to the Court the precise number of bellwether claims the defendants are seeking to dismiss. Throughout their motion, the defendants state that there are 158 bellwether claims at issue. See e.g., Doc. 424 at 1 n.2. But in the defendants’ chart, defendants seek dismissal of 182 bellwether claims. See Doc. 435-2. Perhaps the reason for this discrepancy, 158 versus 182 bellwether claims, is because many parties have dropped out of this case while the Court was considering this motion, response, reply, and sur-reply. See Docs. 444, 451, 456. Nevertheless, the Court analyzed all 182 bellwether claims. To the extent this memorandum opinion and order resolves a bellwether claim on the merits featuring a dismissed party, that party should file a motion for reconsideration. That motion should briefly explain (1) where in the docket the party was dismissed, (2) identify the specific bellwether claim a dismissed party seeks for this court to reconsider, and (3) where, specifically, in this memorandum opinion the court examined the merits of that bellwether claim. Only one motion for reconsideration per side should be filed. 5 See Jones, T., & Gilliam, T. (1975). Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Cinema 5 Distributing (relevant clip at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfOW9QrLs0o). specific, designated service area. These service areas are geographically based, typically a state or a portion of a state. Generally speaking, the thirty-three independent Blue Plans are prohibited from contracting with providers outside of

their geographically based service areas. Sometimes members need—or rather, obtain—health care services outside of a Blue Plan’s geographically limited service area. When this occurs, the health care provider who administered services to the member submits a claim to the local Blue Plan (the “Host Plan”). This out-of-network submission process to the local Host Plan is part of the BlueCard program.

The out-of-network submission process also includes a claim-shifting component. For example, when a health care provider submits a claim for non- contracted health care services for an out-of-state Blue Plan member to the Host Plan, the Host Plan reviews the claim and sends it to the member’s Home Plan. In addition to sending the claim, the Host Plan sends the proposed amount for the member’s out- of-network health care services to the Home Plan. The Home Plan reviews the claim’s information, processes the claim pursuant to the terms of the member’s insurance

policy, and calculates the amount the Home Plan must pay. In 2018, approximately half-a-hundred physicians associations sued Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas arguing that Blue Cross Blue Shield underpaid 250,000 medical claims. Nearly a year later, plaintiffs filed the operative complaint in this case, their second amended complaint, which now included around fifty defendants. In December 2020, the Court dismissed Counts III, IV, V, VI, and VII of plaintiff’s complaint. After dismissal, only Counts II, III, VIII, and IX of plaintiffs’ complaint remained.6 In these counts, plaintiffs seek to recover benefits under individualized health benefit plans. For the sake of judicial economy, the parties agreed to deem a

small subset of these claims, known as “bellwether claims,” as a representative sample of all claims in this case. The defendants now move for partial summary judgment on 182 “bellwether” claims. While each of these 182 bellwether claims contains particular, individualized, and unique facts concerning out-of-network health care services received by a patient, there are also a subset of general facts common among the 182 bellwether claims.

The plaintiffs are “physician associations” comprised of various, unidentified members. Some members of these physician groups purportedly staff emergency rooms throughout Texas. When a patient arrives at one of these medical facilities possibly staffed by one member of the plaintiff physician associations, the patient fills out a series of forms provided by the medical facility. Relevant here, one of these forms is an “assignment of benefits” form or contains an assignment-of-benefits clause. As a preview of the upcoming resolution of this motion, these assignment-of-

benefits forms, which vary based on the specific bellwether claim at issue, are key in determining whether the plaintiffs have standing to sue the defendants in this case. In any event, after signing all relevant intake forms, patients receive health care services by potentially one of the physician members in one of the plaintiffs’

6 Claims VIII and IX of plaintiffs’ complaint are claims for attorney’s fees under ERISA and Texas law. These claims are derivative of plaintiffs remaining substantive claims. Doc. 136 at 53. physician associations. That health care facility then submits a claim for reimbursement to BlueCross BlueShield Texas (the services are provided in Texas) which then transmits the claim information and allotted (pricing) amount to one of

the defendants, who then administers the patients’ health benefit plan. The claim is then sent back to BlueCross BlueShield Texas for processing. The price of the claim, or alternatively, the pricing of the out-of-network health care services received is the substantive, merits issue in this motion. II. Legal Standard Summary judgment is appropriate only if, viewing the evidence in the light

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Angelina Emergency Medicine Associates PA v. Health Care Service Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angelina-emergency-medicine-associates-pa-v-health-care-service-txnd-2024.