Epstein v. Vision Service Plan

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 22, 2020
DocketA155219
StatusPublished

This text of Epstein v. Vision Service Plan (Epstein v. Vision Service Plan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epstein v. Vision Service Plan, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 10/22/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

GORDON EPSTEIN, Plaintiff and Appellant, A155219 v. VISION SERVICE PLAN, (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. Defendant and Respondent. HG16812864)

Plaintiff Gordon Epstein, an optometrist, entered into a “Network Doctor Agreement” with Vision Service Plan (VSP) to be part of its provider network. After VSP conducted an audit of Epstein’s claims for reimbursement, it concluded he was knowingly purchasing lenses from an unapproved supplier and terminated the provider agreement. As pertinent here, the agreement set forth a two-step dispute resolution procedure. The first step, entitled “Fair Hearing,” (underscoring omitted) provided for an internal appeal process in accordance with the “VSP Peer Review Plan and Fair Hearing Policy.” If the dispute remained unresolved, the second step, entitled “Binding Arbitration,” (underscoring omitted) required arbitration pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) and in accordance with procedures also set forth in the referenced plan and policy.

1 Epstein invoked the first step of the dispute resolution process and appealed the audit and termination decision. A three-member panel, after conducting a hearing during which testimony and documentary evidence was presented, upheld the audit findings and termination of the agreement. Instead of invoking the second step of the dispute resolution process and requesting arbitration, Epstein filed the instant administrative mandamus proceeding (Code Civ. Pro., § 1094.5). He alleged this was proper for two reasons. First, he maintained the second step of the dispute resolution process was contrary to state regulatory law requiring certain network provider contracts to include a procedure for prompt resolution of disputes and expressly stating arbitration “shall not be deemed” such “a provider dispute resolution mechanism.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 28, § 1300.71.38.) He further claimed this state law was not preempted by the FAA by virtue of the McCarran-Ferguson Act, which generally exempts from federal law, state laws enacted to regulate the business of insurance. Epstein secondly maintained that, regardless of any regulatory prohibition of arbitration, the second step of the dispute resolution process was procedurally and substantively unconscionable and therefore unenforceable. The trial court rejected both Epstein’s regulatory law and unconscionability challenges to arbitration and denied his writ petition on the ground he had failed to exhaust administrative remedies because he had failed to request arbitration. We affirm. As did the trial court, we conclude state regulatory law requiring certain network provider agreements to include a dispute resolution process that is not arbitration, pertains only to the first step of the dispute resolution process and does not foreclose the parties from agreeing to arbitration in lieu of subsequent judicial review through administrative

2 mandamus. We also conclude that while the arbitration provision is procedurally unconscionable in minor respects, Epstein failed to establish that it is substantively unconscionable. I. BACKGROUND The Network Doctor Agreement VSP is the largest vision care insurer in California, indeed, in the United States. It provides coverage to approximately 80 million individuals. To deliver the vision coverage promised, VSP contracts with approximately 38,000 medical providers. Thus, when Epstein desired to become one of these providers, he and VSP entered into a “Network Doctor Agreement” (which we refer to as the “provider agreement”). (Capitalization omitted.) As relevant here, this 14-page agreement provided for a two-step dispute resolution process, as follows: “9. Fair Hearing Policy/Binding Arbitration “a. Fair Hearing. In the event of a dispute as to VSP’s imposition of any applicable disciplinary action against Network Doctor, Network Doctor, for himself/herself and on behalf of any derivative associate doctor(s), may appeal such action in accordance with provisions and requirements, including the payment of fees and costs, set forth in the VSP Peer Review Plan and Fair Hearing Policy, as may be amended or replaced from time to time, and incorporated herein by reference (the ‘Fair Hearing Procedure’).

“b. Binding Arbitration. If the above process does not resolve the dispute, then, unless expressly disallowed by state law, the dissatisfied party may request final determination and resolution of the matter by mandatory binding arbitration, pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. Chp. 1-3, in accordance with the Fair Hearing Procedure. This mechanism, the initial costs of which shall be shared equally by the parties, shall be the sole method, in lieu of a jury or court trial, of resolving any permissible dispute that may arise between Network Doctor and VSP. Any such arbitration shall (i) take place in

3 Sacramento, California and (ii) be administered by a mutually agreeable arbitrator, selected from a closed list of neutral-qualified and readily available arbitrators maintained by VSP, who may, in the arbitration award, allocate among or between the parties, all or part of the costs of arbitration, including the fees and costs of the arbitrator, including any legal counsel to the arbitrator, and the reasonable attorney’s fees and costs of the prevailing party. To the extent allowable so as not to invalidate application of the Federal Arbitration Act, this Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the state of California.”

The incorporated “Fair Hearing Procedure” spelled out in detail the procedures for a step-one fair hearing and for a step-two arbitration. With respect to arbitration, these procedures included the deadline to request arbitration after an adverse decision by a hearing panel, the initial fee for arbitration subject to reallocation by the arbitrator, the content of the notice scheduling the arbitration hearing and stating the issues to be arbitrated, the right to counsel, the arbitrator selection process, the extent of discovery, witness disclosure, attendance at the arbitration hearing, and the confidentiality attendant to the “peer review privileged and protected process.” The Underlying Dispute1 VSP requires its contracted providers to use either a VSP lab or a VSP- contracted lab to fabricate eyeglass lenses for VSP insureds. VSP

1 This factual summary is drawn from “Stipulated Facts” filed in connection with Epstein’s writ petition and from facts VSP alleged in its verified answer to Epstein’s writ petition which Epstein failed to refute either in a replication or through evidence presented at the hearing on his writ petition. (See Elliott v. State Contractors’ License Bd. (1990) 224 Cal.App.3d 1048, 1054 [“Factual allegations in an answer to a petition for a writ of mandate must be countervailed by proof at trial or by replication, or they are taken as true.”]; see generally Cal. Judges Benchbook: Civil Proceedings- After Trial (CJER 2019) Mandate, Petitioner’s Replication § 5.22.)

4 “reimburses VSP-contracted labs an agreed upon amount for eyeglass lenses fabricated . . . for a VSP member. The contract between VSP and a lab is considered by the parties to be confidential.” Lenstek was a VSP-contracted lab until its contract was terminated in 2009. After Lenstek’s contract with VSP was terminated, Lenstek entered into an agreement with Nouveau Labs, a VSP-contracted lab, under which Lenstek would fabricate eyeglass lenses for VSP insureds whose eyeglass prescriptions were sent to Nouveau. In short, Lenstek continued to fabricate lenses for VSP insureds, but did so indirectly through Nouveau.

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Epstein v. Vision Service Plan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epstein-v-vision-service-plan-calctapp-2020.