Chuck Stock v. Share, a Health Maintenance Organization United Behavorial Systems, Formerly Known as United Clinics of Counseling William Ford

18 F.3d 1419
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 1994
Docket92-3817
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 F.3d 1419 (Chuck Stock v. Share, a Health Maintenance Organization United Behavorial Systems, Formerly Known as United Clinics of Counseling William Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chuck Stock v. Share, a Health Maintenance Organization United Behavorial Systems, Formerly Known as United Clinics of Counseling William Ford, 18 F.3d 1419 (8th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.

Chuck Stock brought this action against Share, United Behavioral Systems (“UBS”), and Dr. William Ford, seeking benefits for his alcohol-dependency treatment as well as declaratory, injunctive, and other remedial relief. The district court 1 denied all of his claims. We affirm.

I.

As part of his employee benefit plan at Union Pacific Railroad, Stock was a member of Share from 1986 through 1988. Share, a health maintenance organization, provides medical, surgical, and hospital services and benefits to its members. Upon enrollment in Share, each member selects a plan physician, who serves as the member’s primary care physician. In general, Share provides or arranges only health care services that are deemed medically necessary by the plan physician. The plan physician either directly provides the necessary care or refers the member to a specialist or hospital.

On November 1, 1986, Share contracted with UBS to provide mental-health treatment *1421 and chemical-dependency treatment to Share members. If a Share member has an alcohol-dependency problem, his plan physician refers him to UBS. UBS then evaluates his ease and either provides or manages his treatment. Under UBS’s established protocols, if a person has been physically detoxified, UBS will authorize inpatient treatment in a hospital only for crisis intervention and medical and psychological stabilization. If a person is physically and mentally stable, UBS typically places him in outpatient services for therapy and rehabilitation.

The Share Subscription Certificate (the “Certificate”) sets forth the terms of Share’s coverage. Prior to November 1990, when the Certificate was revised, Section 10 of the Certificate contained the following provision:

When deemed MEDICALLY NECESSARY by a PLAN PHYSICIAN, SHARE will provide to each MEMBER ... the following health care services and benefits
10.6 Alcohol and Chemical Dependency
Outpatient evaluation and diagnosis and outpatient short-term therapeutic services. Outpatient Services are not to exceed thirty (30) individual visits or forty-five (45) group therapy visits per twelve (12) month period.

Additionally, Section 11 read, in pertinent part, as follows:

When deemed MEDICALLY NECESSARY by a PLAN PHYSICIAN, the PLAN will provide or pay for the following necessary inpatient services ...:
11.4 Alcohol and Chemical Dependency
(a) Inpatient services and supplies at the rate of semi-private accommodations, not to exceed thirty (30) days per twelve (12) month period.
(b) Services, not to exceed thirty (30) days per twelve (12) month period, of a PLAN PHYSICIAN, or CONSULTING PHYSICIAN, or other PLAN personnel while the MEMBER is confined as a bed patient in an approved chemical dependency facility or program.
(c)The MEMBER shall pay 20% of eligible inpatient facility and extended care facility charges.

In May 1987, Stock had alcohol, gambling, and marital problems. On May 31, Stock told his marriage counselor, Dr. Joseph Riz-zo, a clinical psychologist, that he was contemplating suicide. Dr. Rizzo contacted the office of Stock’s plan physician. Stock’s case was then referred to UBS. Upon learning of Stock’s mental state, Dr. Fred Strider, clinical director of UBS, authorized a three-day emergency admission for Stock at University Psychiatric Services (“University”) for inpatient mental-health treatment. After these three days, UBS authorized four additional days for Stock at University.

While at University, Stock was treated by Dr. Jasbir J. Kang, a psychiatrist under contract with and approved by Share. In Stock’s discharge summary, Dr. Kang recommended that Stock receive “inpatient therapy for his gambling as well as his alcohol abuse.” Based upon Dr. Kang’s records, Dr. Ford, a clinical psychologist and executive director of UBS, determined that upon discharge from University Stock should receive four days of alcohol-dependency treatment at St. Gabriel’s Center, a licensed inpatient chemical-dependency treatment center that is not a hospital or medical facility. Dr. Ford further recommend that Stock’s treatment options be re-evaluated after his four days at St. Gabriel’s. Dr. Ford did not believe that Stock needed inpatient treatment in a hospital because Stock was physically as well as psychologically stable. Dr. Ford believed, however, that non-hospital inpatient treatment was warranted because Stock was unstable socially.

Nonetheless, following his discharge from University on June 8, 1987, Stock did not enter St. Gabriel’s. Instead, he entered Im-manuel Hospital’s Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center (“Immanuel”) for inpatient alcohol-dependency treatment. Share informed Stock by correspondence dated June 9, 1987, that his admission to Immanuel had not been an emergency, that prior approval had not been obtained from UBS, and, therefore, that Share would not pay for the treatment. *1422 Stock continued his treatment at Immanuel, however, until July 7, 1987.

Stock presented Share a claim for $4,782, eighty percent of the cost of his treatment at Immanuel. Share denied the claim, finding that the referral to St. Gabriel’s had been appropriate and that Stock’s admission to Immanuel had not been authorized by his plan physician or UBS. Stock appealed the denial through Share’s formal review process. Share again denied the claim, reaffirming that St. Gabriel’s could have provided an appropriate treatment program for Stock and finding that his admission to Immanuel was not medically necessary.

Stock then filed this action. Based upon breach-of-contract and misrepresentation allegations, he claimed that he is entitled to eighty percent of the cost of his Immanuel treatment. Pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3), he also prayed for injunctive, declaratory, and other remedial relief on behalf of past, current, and future Share members.

After Stock had presented his case-in-chief, the district court dismissed UBS and Dr. Ford, stating that Stock had presented no evidence that supported a claim against them. At the close of trial, the court held that Stock’s breach-of-contract and misrepresentation claims were pre-empted by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461. Applying a de novo standard of review, the court denied Stock’s request for benefits. The court found that Stock had failed to show that his treatment at Immanuel was medically necessary, as required by the Certificate’s terms. The court found further that Stock lacked standing to seek relief on behalf of other Share members because he was not a Share member when he filed this action. Last, the court found that Stock had presented no evidence that he was entitled to any declaratory or injunctive relief.

II.

A. Benefits Claim

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Bluebook (online)
18 F.3d 1419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chuck-stock-v-share-a-health-maintenance-organization-united-behavorial-ca8-1994.