Liberty Mutual Group v. 700 Pharmacy, LLC

2022 Pa. Super. 19, 270 A.3d 538
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 1, 2022
Docket3357 EDA 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 Pa. Super. 19 (Liberty Mutual Group v. 700 Pharmacy, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liberty Mutual Group v. 700 Pharmacy, LLC, 2022 Pa. Super. 19, 270 A.3d 538 (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A27020-20

2022 PA Super 19

LIBERTY MUTUAL GROUP, INC., : IN THE LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE : SUPERIOR COURT OF COMPANY, AMERICAN STATES : PENNSYLVANIA INSURANCE COMPANY, COLORADO : CASUALTY COMPANY, EMPLOYERS : INSURANCE COMPANY OF WAUSAU, : EXCELSIOR INSURANCE COMPANY, : LIBERTY INSURANCE CORPORATION, : LIBERTY MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE : COMPANY, LIBERTY MUTUAL : No. 3357 EDA 2019 INSURANCE : COMPANY/CONSOLIDATED : INSURANCE COMPANY, LIBERTY : NORTHWEST INSURANCE : CORPORATION, LM INSURANCE : CORPORATION, PEERLESS : INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY, : PEERLESS INSURANCE COMPANY, : AND SAFECO INSURANCE COMPANY : OF ILLINOIS : : Appellants : : : v. : : : 700 PHARMACY, LLC, INSIGHT : PHARMACEUTICAL SOLUTIONS, LLC, : D/B/A INSIGHT PHARMACY, UNITED : PHARMACY SERVICES, LLC, D/B/A : UNITED PHARMACY, ARMOUR : PHARMACEUTICAL SOLUTIONS, LLC, : D/B/A ARMOUR PHARMACY, OMNI : PHARMACY SERVICES, LLC, D/B/A : OMNI PHARMACY, EMPIRE PHARMACY : SERVICES, LLC, D/B/A EMPIRE : PHARMACY, MEDARBOR, LLC, D/B/A : MEDARBOR PHARMACY, 1ST CHOICE : PHARMACY, LLC, MEDICINE WORX, : LLC, PHILLIP SHIN, MIROSLAV KESIC, : MANDEEP GILL, RISHIN A. PATEL, : N.D., JASON CHONG, MINA NAKHLA, : J-A27020-20

STEVEN KATSARAKES, YOUNG HOON : GIM, NINA LUU, GRACJA OSINSKA, : CHRISTINE VU, HAJIRA EBADY, : JULIETTA LEUNG, MITESH K. PATEL, : M.D., MITESWAR PUREWAL, M.D., : SHAILEN JALALI, M.D., MARK AVART, : D.O., LAURA SECZECH, PA-C, : THERESA DIJOSEPH, PA-C, AVNER R. : GRIVER, M.D., DENNIS W. IVILL, : M.D., JONAS JOAGUIN GOPEZ, M.D., : JOSEPH DAVID PAZ, D.O., RONALD : LUBER, D.O., THOMAS SKEEHAN, : M.D., UPLEKH PUREWAL, M.D., SCOTT : EPSTEIN, M.D., MARK ESKANDER, : M.D., CORY HAWLEY, D.P.M., : RONALD B. LINCOW, D.O., GERALD E. : SWORKIN, D.O., STEVEN VALENTINO, : D.O.

Appeal from the Order Entered September 13, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at No(s): No. 170901541

BEFORE: STABILE, J., NICHOLS, J., and COLINS, J.*

OPINION BY NICHOLS, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 1, 2022

Appellants, Liberty Mutual Group, Inc., and its related companies,

underwriters, and subsidiaries, appeal from the order granting the motion for

summary judgment filed by Appellees, a group of pharmacies, pharmacists,

physicians, physician assistants, and lay investors, and entering judgment in

favor of Appellees on all claims. We affirm.

We adopt the trial court’s thorough summary of the facts underlying this

matter. See Trial Ct. Order & Op., 9/13/19, at 2-9. By way of brief

background, we note that Appellants filed a complaint against Appellees ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.

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alleging fraud, insurance fraud, aiding and abetting, and unjust enrichment.1

Therein, Appellants claimed that Appellees had created an unlawful business

structure under which doctors prescribed topical compound pain creams to

patients who had been injured at work or in automobile accidents. The

patients then filled the prescriptions at pharmacies in which the doctors had a

financial interest. Appellees alleged that the compound pain creams were

formulated by pharmacies for the sole purpose of generating a profit and that

Appellee doctors were receiving unlawful kickbacks.

Specifically, Appellants claimed:

[Appellees] engaged in illegal compounding by producing and dispensing vast quantities of the fraudulent compounded creams in set formulations, in violation of federal and Pennsylvania state regulatory and licensing requirements imposed on drug manufacturers and outsourcing facilities, rendering them ineligible to receive reimbursement for their services;

The fraudulent compounded creams were provided pursuant to predetermined fraudulent treatment protocols designed solely to financially enrich [Appellees], rather than to treat or otherwise benefit the patients who purportedly received them;

[Appellees] participated in illegal, collusive relationships in which licensed physicians prescribed fraudulent compounded creams in exchange for unlawful kickbacks paid by the Pharmacy [Appellees];

[Appellees] made false and fraudulent statements and/or representations to [Appellants] by submitting, or causing to be submitted for payment, invoices for fraudulent compounded ____________________________________________

1 Appellants also alleged that Appellees committed insurance fraud under the

Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act, 77 P.S. § 1039.3(b), and that Appellees violated the disclosure provision for self-referrals under 35 P.S. § 449.22. However, the trial court dismissed these counts after Appellees filed preliminary objections.

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creams. These invoices were provided pursuant to invalid, duplicitous, and formulaic prescriptions; and

[Appellees] made false and fraudulent misrepresentations to [Appellants] concerning the maximum permissible charges for the fraudulent compounded creams allegedly provided to the patients in order to induce [Appellants] to reimburse [Appellees] for benefits to which they were not entitled.

Am. Compl., 11/6/17, at ¶ 33(i)-(v) (formatting altered).

Appellees subsequently moved for summary judgment, arguing that

Appellants had neither “presented nor produced any evidence to support the

allegations in the [c]omplaint.” See 700 Pharmacy Defendants’ Mot. for

Summary Judgment, 5/9/19, at 1.2 Specifically, Appellees explained:

Rather than produce witnesses and other evidence to support their claims, [Appellants] have instead failed to produce any fact witnesses, or any other evidence, to support the assumptions underlying their complaint and their experts’ reports.

[T]he universe of testimony and documents exchanged during discovery establishes that [Appellee] pharmacies (1) dispense a wide range of medications, including compound medications, (2) are licensed and operate within the boundaries of state and federal law, (3) have physicians with minority ownership consistent with state and federal law, (4) paid each owner (whether or not a physician) profits based solely upon their percentage of ownership, i.e., there were no kickbacks, (5) did not require physician owners to prescribe any medications through the pharmacies, and (6) operated legally even according to William Welch, who has overseen [Appellants’] investigation since 2014.

____________________________________________

2 In filing their motions for summary judgment, individual defendants incorporated and fully adopted the arguments raised by other defendants in this case. See Pa.R.Civ.P. 1019(g) (stating that “[a]ny part of a pleading may be incorporated by reference in another part of the same pleading or in another pleading in the same action”). Therefore, for purposes of brevity, we cite only one of Appellees’ motions.

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Id. at 2. Further, Appellees claimed that the trial court lacked subject matter

jurisdiction because Appellants failed to join indispensable parties, including

at least two doctors who had received dividends from the pharmacies after

prescribing compound pain creams in 2016. Id. at 31-32.

In response, Appellants argued:

The majority of the key evidence in this case comes not from [Appellants,] but from discovery obtained from [Appellees] in the form of written documents, including tax documentation, and deposition testimony, which has revealed a complex scheme perpetrated by [Appellees] whereby multiple pharmacies were created to facilitate and promote submission to [Appellees] of fraudulent claims for compounded medications using pre-printed, non-individualized prescriptions and letters of medical necessity.

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Related

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Liberty Mutual Group v. 700 Pharmacy, LLC
2022 Pa. Super. 19 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2022)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 Pa. Super. 19, 270 A.3d 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-mutual-group-v-700-pharmacy-llc-pasuperct-2022.