CNA Insurance Companies v. Family Health Services, Inc. (In re Family Health Services, Inc.)

130 B.R. 314, 91 Daily Journal DAR 11037, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1235
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 1991
DocketBAP No. CC-90-1010-VPO; Bankruptcy Nos. SA 89-01549 JW, SA 89-1550 JW to SA 89-01594 JW, SA 89-2535 JW and SA 89-02536 JW
StatusPublished

This text of 130 B.R. 314 (CNA Insurance Companies v. Family Health Services, Inc. (In re Family Health Services, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CNA Insurance Companies v. Family Health Services, Inc. (In re Family Health Services, Inc.), 130 B.R. 314, 91 Daily Journal DAR 11037, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1235 (bap9 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

VOLINN, Bankruptcy Judge:

OVERVIEW

This is a consolidated appeal by five sub[315]*315scribers1 to a nationwide system of health maintenance organizations (“HMOs”) from an Order (“Order” or “Second Supplemental Order”) clarifying the automatic stay contained in Bankruptcy Code § 362.2 The Order provides that no subscriber may terminate or prevent the automatic renewal of its contract with the HMOs, or interfere with the debtors’ participation in the “open enrollment” periods during which employees choose their health insurance carrier. The appellants, each of whom had previously terminated their relationship with the HMOs, appeal this Order on a variety of grounds.

We reverse and vacate the Order.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This bankruptcy case arises from the Chapter 11 petitions filed by Family Health Services, Inc. and forty-seven of its related companies, all of which petitions were consolidated for joint administration. These companies (referred to collectively herein as “debtor” or “Maxicare”) operate a national network of health maintenance organizations which at one time provided health care coverage to over 600,000 enrollees and their dependents in seven states. This number has decreased considerably since the filing of the petitions. Most enrollees, or Plan members, are current or retired employees of companies (also referred to herein as “subscribers”) that purchase health insurance coverage from Maxicare. Maxicare in turn contracts with hospitals, physician groups, medical laboratories, and other health care organizations. There is also a group of medical providers who have no pre-arranged agreements with Maxi-care. This group includes medical specialists and emergency medical personnel.

When most of the Chapter 11 petitions were filed on March 15, 1989, Maxicare had total assets of $668 million and liabilities of $800 million. There were over 100,000 creditors and an unknown number of en-rollees who might have claims against the estate. There is no dispute that the income generated by the agreements between Maxicare and employers was critical to the continued operation of Maxicare and to the debtor’s ability to pay the outstanding claims.

Prior to the issuance of the Second Supplemental Order, the debtor obtained a series of orders designed to clarify the scope of the automatic stay as it applies to subscribers and to medical providers. Initially, on motion by the debtor, the trial court issued an order in late March, 1989 which set forth the terms of the automatic stay and specifically enjoined all persons from “[tjaking any act to obtain possession of property of the Debtors or [taking] property from any of the debtors” and from “in any ... way interfering with any and all property of the Debtors.”

Debtor moved for a further clarification of the automatic stay on May 3, 1989. After a hearing on July 20, 1989, the trial court entered an order (“First Supplemental Order”) which made clear that the automatic stay applied to the subscribers, who were enjoined from, inter alia, withholding payments due to Maxicare and from taking any other action, by offset or otherwise, to collect on claims against the debtor. Thus, the contractual relationships between all subscribers and the debtor were deemed continued by virtue of the court’s orders.

Notwithstanding these orders, which were not appealed, over eighty subscribers, without first obtaining relief from stay, sent Maxicare notices of termination and in many cases refused to offer Maxicare to its employees. In response, debtor initiated a limited number of adversary proceedings and, as a result, obtained favorable settlements or court orders prohibiting such actions.

In a motion dated November 16, 1989, debtor moved for a further clarification of the automatic stay. It complained that [316]*316there remained dozens of employers who were not deterred by the successful prosecution of the adversary proceedings or by debtor’s efforts to persuade them that their actions violated the automatic stay. Many had terminated their agreements and had failed to include Maxicare among the options offered during their “open enrollment” periods, i.e., periods of time during which employees had the option of changing or remaining with current health insurance coverage. Debtor asserted that the problem was “so widespread” that the “only practical means available” to put an end to these contract terminations was a further clarifying order.

Specifically, the debtor sought to enjoin all subscribers from terminating their agreements, and from taking any action to prevent the contracts’ automatic renewal without first obtaining relief from stay. The debtor also requested that the court require the subscribers to offer Maxicare to their employees during the open enrollment periods.

It is apparent that the debtor was faced with the need to initiate numerous adversary proceedings (or, possibly, an unwieldy class action) in order to prevent or inhibit defections which could have the effect of unravelling a large and complex network designed to provided health care for hundreds of thousands of persons. Maxicare’s “clarification” motion was an effort calculated to hold together its constituent components: the subscribers (and, ultimately, their employees) as well as the health care providers.

Maxicare’s motion specified forty-two subscribers that had terminated their agreements, but the record does not reveal how many of these subscribers received notice of the motion. The motion referred to only one specific contract (with appellant CNA Insurance Companies (“CNA”)) which was said to be “typical” of the agreements with the “vast majority of subscribers, including virtually all, if not all ... ” of the forty-two employers named in the motion.

Numerous employers opposed debtor’s motion. The trial court held a hearing on the motion on December 11, 1989. The court, apparently referring to the CNA-Maxicare contract as well as to the other agreements attached to the opposition papers, stated that the contractual relationships were “relatively simple” in that either party “has the option to renew or terminate every year,” and that if nothing is done, the contracts automatically renew. The court held that the subscribers “must get relief from stay in order to give that [nonrenewal] notice. Any notice that they give without having the stay lifted, even though it’s timely in the agreement, is a violation of 362, and the notice is of no effect.” The trial court also indicated that it was “presently not inclined” to grant to the subscribers who terminated their agreements either prospective or retroactive relief from stay.3

Counsel for several of the subscribers requested an evidentiary hearing so that the court could examine the various subscriber agreements. The court refused the request stating “absent a ... settlement between the debtor and your clients, we’ll, I suggest do that in the context of either a contempt proceeding or an adversary proceeding for damages.”

After considerable colloquy in open court, the trial court entered the Second Supplemental Order. The Order was issued pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 105 and 362

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130 B.R. 314, 91 Daily Journal DAR 11037, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cna-insurance-companies-v-family-health-services-inc-in-re-family-bap9-1991.