Massachusetts Medical Service v. Commissioner of Insurance

182 N.E.2d 298, 344 Mass. 335, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 743
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 9, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 182 N.E.2d 298 (Massachusetts Medical Service v. Commissioner of Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts Medical Service v. Commissioner of Insurance, 182 N.E.2d 298, 344 Mass. 335, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 743 (Mass. 1962).

Opinion

Whittemore, J.

These are appeals from final decrees in the Superior Court which dismissed the petitions of Massachusetts Medical Service (Blue Shield), a medical service corporation under G. L. c. 176B, and of a physician who practises surgery witMn the Commonwealth. The *336 petitions seek to revise an order of the Commissioner of Insurance which disapproved a filing by Blue Shield of a new schedule showing increases in fees for surgical services to “Plan B” subscribers, certain increased benefits available to subscribers, and certain increases in charges.

The order of the Commissioner, after a hearing and without a finding, recited: “after full consideration of all the evidence and under the authority conferred by [G. L.] c. 176B ... I disapprove the filing made by Blue Shield dated June 9, 1961.”

The petitions allege in substance that Blue Shield had introduced evidence before the Commissioner that the increased fees were reasonably required and that there had been no substantial evidence contradictory thereto. The judge in the Superior Court found that there was substantial evidence to support the order of the Commissioner. It is not contended that the increases to subscribers are unnecessary if the fees are increased. The issue before us is in respect of the proposed increases in surgical fees.

Blue Shield operates a nonprofit medical service plan under which it has an agreement with each participating physician by which the latter agrees to furnish medical and surgical services to subscribers and their covered dependents and to accept as full payment for his services to those subscribers who are entitled to “service benefits” the amount paid by Blue Shield. There is provision for payment of physicians on a pro rata basis in the event that, in any accounting period, Blue Shield funds are inadequate for full payment. A physician may terminate the agreement only by twelve months’ notice.

The Blue Shield subscribers’ certificate provides that a “service-benefit member” shall (with certain exceptions) not be subject to an additional charge by a participating physician. It defines a “service-benefit member” in respect of its two plans, “Plan A” and “Plan B.” A service-benefit member is any subscriber without member dependents whose annual income is $2,000 or less under Plan A, or $5,000 or less under Plan B; either one of a family of two *337 members the annual income of which is $2,500 or less under Plan A, or $6,000 or less under Plan B; or any one of a family of three or more members, the combined annual income of which is $3,000 or less under Plan A, or $7,500 or less under Plan B.

The fees provided to be paid physicians under Plan A are substantially less than under Plan B. There was evidence that over ninety-nine per cent of the physicians in active practice in Massachusetts are participating physicians, that over fifty per cent of the people of the State are “covered by Blue Shield,” and that about eighty-five per cent of the people 1 are eligible for service benefits.

Chapter 176B was inserted by St. 1941, c. 306. The preamble of that statute recites: “This act provides for the preservation of the public health by furnishing medical services at low cost to members of the public who become subscribers . . ..”

Under G. L. c. 176B, § 14, Blue Shield as a medical service corporation is a charitable corporation exempt from all provisions of the insurance laws of the Commonwealth except as provided in c. 176B, and its property “except as hereinafter provided . . . [is] exempt from all state and local taxes.”

Section 4 of c. 176B (as appearing in St. 1960, c. 307, § 1) provides in part that: “The form of agreement with participating physicians . . . and the rates at which . . . [they] are compensated for their services to the subscribers or to covered dependents shall at all times be subject to the written approval of the commissioner, [¶] Any agreement between a medical service corporation and a person whereby such corporation undertakes to furnish benefits for medical service to said person and his covered dependents, if any, shall be considered a non-group medical service agreement. Under such an agreement the form of subscription certificate and the rates charged . . . shall be filed with and receive the prior approval of the commis *338 sioner. No such agreement shall be approved if he finds that the benefits provided therein are unreasonable in relation to the rate charged, nor if the rates charged are excessive, inadequate or unfairly discriminatory.”

Section 12 of c. 176B provides in part that: “All decisions and orders of the . . . commissioner made under any provision of this chapter may be revised as justice and equity may require upon a petition in equity filed ... in the superior court within and for the county of Suffolk by any party aggrieved . . . [thereby].”

1. We consider first the standard governing the Commissioner’s approval of rates of compensation of physicians. The Blue Shield plan is designed to serve the purpose of low cost medical service by furnishing insurance, by doing so free of the burden of profit and taxes, and by the commitment of participating physicians not to charge to persons within certain income brackets more than the scheduled fees approved by the Commissioner.

The public through the Commissioner is concerned that the insurance plan be actuarily sound so that there will be assets to meet liabilities; that the administrative plan and costs be reasonable; and that rates to members be reasonable.

Hence § 4 expressly provides that no subscriber’s agreement shall be approved if the Commissioner “finds that the benefits provided therein are unreasonable in relation to the rate charged, nor if the rates charged are excessive, inadequate or unfairly discriminatory.”

The public concern in respect of these matters is further protected by the requirement that the agreement with participating physicians and the fee schedules be subject to the Commissioner’s approval. In this way the Commissioner may exercise some control over the principal cost item underlying rates to members. There is an interrelation between the two paragraphs of § 4 which provide for approval by the Commissioner. The standards expressed in the second paragraph in respect of rates to members are implicitly the standards to be applied by the Commissioner *339 under the first paragraph in determining the rates at which the physicians are to be compensated. See Bay State Harness Horse Racing & Breeding Assn. Inc. v. State Racing Commn. 342 Mass. 694, 699-700; G. L. c. 152, § 52; c. 174A, § 5 (a) 2; c. 175, § 113B; c. 175A, § 5 (a) 4.

It follows that the Commissioner may disapprove the fee schedule only if the fees are inadequate, excessive or unfairly discriminatory.

This, of course, does not give the Commissioner the power to fix the fees; he may not require that they be at the figures he finds reasonable. Necessarily there is a range of reasonableness and the statute permits disapproval only if the Commissioner finds the fees to be outside that range.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.E.2d 298, 344 Mass. 335, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-medical-service-v-commissioner-of-insurance-mass-1962.