Louisiana Children's Medical Center v. Attorney General of the United States

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 27, 2023
Docket2:23-cv-01305
StatusUnknown

This text of Louisiana Children's Medical Center v. Attorney General of the United States (Louisiana Children's Medical Center v. Attorney General of the United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Louisiana Children's Medical Center v. Attorney General of the United States, (E.D. La. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

LOUISIANA CHILDREN’S MEDICAL CENTER CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS No. 23-1305 c/w 23-1311 c/w 23-1890 REF: 23-1890

ATTORNEY GENERAL OF SECTION I THE UNITED STATES ET AL.

ORDER & REASONS Pending before the Court are three motions. First is a motion1 for summary judgment filed by petitioner, the Federal Trade Commission (the “FTC”). Respondents, Louisiana Children’s Medical Center, d/b/a LCMC Health (“LCMC”) and HCA Healthcare, Inc. (“HCA”) (collectively, the “Hospitals”), and intervenor, the State of Louisiana (the “State”), oppose this motion.2 Second is a motion3 for summary judgment filed by the Hospitals. The FTC opposes this motion.4 Third is a motion5 for judgment on the pleadings or alternatively summary judgment filed by the State. The FTC opposes this motion as well.6

1 R. Doc. No. 71. 2 R. Doc. No. 78; R. Doc. No. 79. 3 R. Doc. No. 75. 4 R. Doc. No. 77. 5 R. Doc. No. 74. The State seeks the same outcome as the Hospitals in this case; accordingly, the Court addresses the State’s arguments and the FTC’s responses to those arguments only to the extent necessary to resolve the dispositive questions in this case. 6 R. Doc. No. 76. For the reasons that follow, the Court grants the Hospitals’ motion for summary judgment, denies the FTC’s motion for summary judgment, grants the State’s motion for summary judgment, and dismisses as moot the State’s motion for

judgment on the pleadings. I. BACKGROUND This case concerns LCMC’s acquisition of three hospitals from HCA pursuant to a Certificate of Public Advantage (“COPA”) issued by Louisiana’s Department of

Justice. The parties do not dispute that the Hospitals did not comply with Section 7A of the Clayton Antitrust Act, enacted by the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act (“HSR Act”), which requires parties to transactions that meet certain statutory thresholds to notify federal antitrust authorities of their intended transaction and observe a 30-day waiting period.7 Rather, the parties disagree about whether the Supreme Court’s “state action doctrine” exempts the acquisition from the

federal antitrust laws, including Section 7A, given the issuance of the COPA. Whether Section 7A reaches private parties’ conduct qualifying as “state action” pursuant to that doctrine is a question of first impression. The basic facts of this case are not in dispute. LCMC is a non-profit corporation and health system based in New Orleans, Louisiana.8 HCA is a for-profit corporation that operates 182 hospitals nationwide and previously operated three hospitals in Louisiana through a joint venture with Tulane University.9 On October 10, 2022,

7 See R. Doc. No. 71-2 (FTC’s statement of uncontested material facts), ¶¶ 8–9. 8 Id. ¶ 1; R. Doc. No. 75-2 (Hospitals’ statement of uncontested material facts), ¶ 15. 9 R. Doc. No. 71-2, ¶ 3–4; R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶ 16. LCMC and HCA applied10 for a COPA pursuant to a Louisiana statute known as a “COPA statute.” See La. Stat. Ann. § 40:2254.1 et seq. As the COPA application11 explained, LCMC sought to acquire from HCA three hospitals in the greater New

Orleans area: Tulane Medical Center, Tulane Lakeside, and Lakeview Regional Medical Center.12 Louisiana’s COPA statute provides Louisiana’s Department of Justice (the “LADOJ”) with “direct supervision and control over the implementation of cooperative agreements, mergers, joint ventures, and consolidations among health care facilities for which certificates of public advantage are granted.” La. Stat. Ann.

§ 40:2254.1. The statute states that “[i]t is the intent of the legislature that supervision and control over [such transactions] . . . have the effect of granting the parties to [such transactions] state action immunity for actions that might otherwise be considered to be in violation of state antitrust laws, federal antitrust laws, or both.” Id. The Hospitals supplemented their application multiple times before the LADOJ deemed it complete on November 18, 2022.13 Once the application was complete, Louisiana’s COPA statute required the

LADOJ to provide notice to the public, request public comment, hold a public hearing, and decide the application within a maximum of 180 days. Id. §§ 40:2254.4(B–C).

10 R. Doc. No. 74-2, ¶ 10 (State’s statement of uncontested material facts); R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶ 13. 11 R. Doc. No. 75-4. 12 R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶ 17. 13 R. Doc. No. 74-2, ¶ 16; R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶ 21. After “extensive[] review[],”14 the LADOJ held a notice and comment period, received and reviewed numerous comments from the public, and held a public hearing on December 8, 2022.15

On December 28, 2022, the LADOJ approved the acquisition and granted a COPA.16 The COPA’s “Terms and Conditions” provide for ongoing supervision.17 The COPA states that the LADOJ may “revoke the COPA” if it is “not satisfied with any submitted corrective action plan,” if LCMC “fails to comply with the [COPA’s] terms and conditions,” “fails to comply with any Corrective Action Plan, or if the [LADOJ] otherwise determines that the transaction is not resulting in lower health care costs

or greater access to or quality of health care[.]”18 Following this authorization, the Hospitals closed the transaction on January 1, 2023, and publicly announced it on January 3, 2023.19 As stated, pursuant to Section 7A of the Clayton Antitrust Act, parties to transactions over certain thresholds must file a pre-merger notification and report form (an “HSR Filing”) and wait 30 days before consummating their transaction. 15 U.S.C. §§ 18a(a), 18(b)(1), 18(d)(1). In 2022 and early 2023, firms engaging in mergers

or acquisitions had to file premerger notification reports of transactions between $101 million and $403.9 million, provided that the entities involved in the transactions met

14 R. Doc. No. 74-2, ¶ 17. 15 Id. ¶ 19; R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶ 24–26. 16 R. Doc. No. 74-2, ¶ 20; R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶ 29. 17 R. Doc. No. 74-2, ¶¶ 21–25; R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶¶ 30–34. 18 R. Doc. No. 75-17, at 3. 19 R. Doc. No. 71-2, ¶¶ 5–6; R. Doc. No. 74-2, ¶ 26; R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶ 35. the “size of person” test.20 In January 2023, these thresholds were $20.2 million for the smaller entity and $202 million for the larger entity based on total assets or net sales.21 Parties who consummate mergers without observing the waiting period are

currently subject to daily penalties exceeding $50,000.22 On April 19, 2023, LCMC and HCA filed23 two separate lawsuits in the Eastern District of Louisiana based on Louisiana’s COPA statute. Each action sought a declaratory judgment that their transaction was not subject to Section 7A’s requirements and therefore not subject to penalties for consummating the acquisition without complying with Section 7A. The State of Louisiana, by and through its

Attorney General, moved to intervene in both cases, and this Court granted those motions on May 1, 2023.24 On May 9, 2023, this Court consolidated the Hospitals’ two lawsuits.25 On April 20, 2023, the FTC filed a lawsuit in the District Court for the District of Columbia seeking an order enjoining the hospitals from further consummating the acquisition “until an appropriate time after LCMC has substantially complied with the premerger notification requirements set forth in Section 7A of the Clayton Act.”26

The FTC sought this relief pursuant to Section 7A(g)(2) of the Clayton Act and Section

20 R. Doc. No. 71-2, ¶ 7. 21 Id. 22 R. Doc. No. 75-2, ¶ 44. 23 Louisiana Children’s Medical Center v. Attorney General of the United States et al., E.D. La. Case No. 23-1305; HCA Healthcare Inc. v.

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