Lefler v. United Healthcare of Utah, Inc.

72 F. App'x 818
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 2003
Docket01-4228
StatusUnpublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 72 F. App'x 818 (Lefler v. United Healthcare of Utah, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lefler v. United Healthcare of Utah, Inc., 72 F. App'x 818 (10th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

O’BRIEN, Circuit Judge.

In 1995, Ms. Kathy Lefler and other plaintiffs (Class) brought this class action against United Healthcare of Utah, Inc. (United), a health maintenance organization, under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) 2 , seeking to recover benefits due under an employee welfare benefit plan, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) 3 , and for other equitable relief, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). The Class challenged United’s method of calculating co-payments, which it alleged violated the terms of the plan because it effectively increased their percentage contribution to the actual cost of covered services. Concluding United’s practice resulted from a reasonable interpretation of the benefit plan, the district court granted summary judgment to United and denied summary judgment for the Class. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (2002), we affirm.

*820 Factual Background

United is licensed in Utah, but owned by parent United Healthcare Services, Inc., located in Minnesota. During the class period, 1992 to 1995, United provided health insurance to approximately 100,000 people in Utah through employer-sponsored health insurance plans governed by ERISA. In most instances, employees contributed to the premiums. United was a fiduciary 4 under the plans. Policy terms were stated in a Certificate of Coverage, which along with its Schedule of Benefits constituted the plan documents for an employer unit. The Schedule of Benefits varied according to the coverage elected by a particular unit, but provided for beneficiary co-payments stated as a percentage of eligible expenses, usually ten or twenty percent.

The participants were required to obtain health services from “participating providers” with whom United had negotiated contracts. Among other things, those providers charged United discounted rates. United calculated participant co-payments based upon full billed charges but paid providers against the discounted rates. 5 That is the source of the Class’ dissatisfaction. As a consequence of United’s practice, the Class members claim to have unknowingly and inappropriately paid a greater percentage of the actual cost of the service than the co-payment percentage stated in their Schedule of Benefits.

In none of the plan documents did United promise to pay the difference between the co-payment and the amount billed, or any other specified amount. 6 United did not disclose in the plan documents or in any Explanation of Benefits provided to the Class members that it had negotiated a discount from participating providers’ regular, full billed charges. Nor did it reveal the amount it paid to participating providers (the difference between the co-payment and the discounted rate). The Certificate of Coverage only described a participating provider as one with whom United had entered into “a written agreement ... to provide health services to covered persons.” (R. at 246).

During the Class period, Utah Code Ann. § 31A-26-301.5(2)(c) provided: “[T]he insurer shall notify the insured of payment and the amount of payment made to the provider.” 7 On its Explanation of Benefits, United only indicated the amount it paid to a provider was a “contracted fee.” (R. at 486-87). But occasionally a bill from a participating provider to a participant would clearly state the amount paid by United, and the co-payment methodology employed. There were common instances where a co-payment was the only amount paid for the service because of *821 United’s negotiated discounted fee with the provider.

Borrowing established Medicare practice, United routinely considered the full billed charges submitted by participating providers to be “reasonable and customary charges” under the plan. In support of this practice, it filed an affidavit from Dr. William Cleverly, an expert in the health care industry. According to Dr. Cleverly, hospitals submit a standard charge for services to insurers and other payors on a form used industry-wide and generated by the federal Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), which administers the Medicare program. But those standard charges are typically discounted in accordance with individual contracts negotiated between payors and service providers. Under Medicare, for example, the patient’s percentage co-payment is calculated against the full billed charge, even though Medicare pays the hospital a reduced fee set by government regulation and tied to a provider’s reasonable cost.

United also submitted the affidavit of Terry Cameron, a consultant for health care providers, who stated individual physicians also submit standard charges on a widely used HCFA form. Like hospital fees, these charges are based on a uniform schedule even though the amounts the physicians actually receive often vary according to the payor. According to Mr. Cameron, the standard charges are fed into databanks maintained by the Health Insurance Association of America (HIAA) and others, and used to compile information on reasonable and customary charges around the country. Significantly, in her deposition, Class expert Mary Covington, an insurance claims auditor, pointed out that United considers any charge at or below the eighty to eighty-fifth percentile of the HIAA schedules to be “reasonable and customary.” Charges above the eighty to eighty-fifth percentile were considered ineligible.

United’s evidence revealed that co-payment methods were routinely explained to units enrolled in the plan and to the Class members, usually when employers were comparing different insurance plans in the market or during enrollment meetings with employees. 8 The declared advantage of this practice was lower premiums since United’s premiums were experience-rated, that is, directly tied to actual expenditures for health care service. 9 The named Class members denied knowledge of this practice. But, in affidavits submitted by United, two participants who were not named members of the Class stated they were aware of United’s co-payment methodology. Each considered United’s practice an advantage since it lowered premium rates and slowed rate increases. The Minnesota Department of Health, an agency with jurisdiction over United’s parent company, had approved an identical co-payment methodology.

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Bluebook (online)
72 F. App'x 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lefler-v-united-healthcare-of-utah-inc-ca10-2003.