QualiCenters Salem, LLC v. Shasta Administrative Services, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJanuary 31, 2022
Docket3:21-cv-00295
StatusUnknown

This text of QualiCenters Salem, LLC v. Shasta Administrative Services, Inc. (QualiCenters Salem, LLC v. Shasta Administrative Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
QualiCenters Salem, LLC v. Shasta Administrative Services, Inc., (D. Or. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

QUALICENTERS SALEM, LLC D/B/A Case No. 3:21-cv-295-JR QCI SALEM, Plaintiff, AMENDED ORDER V. SHASTA ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES, INC. and FIRST CHOICE HEALTH NETWORK, INC., Defendants.

RUSSO, Magistrate Judge: Plaintiff QualiCenters Salem is a provider of dialysis treatment to patients with end stage renal disease and/or chronic kidney disease. Patient X began receiving regular outpatient renal dialysis treatments from QualiCenters in July 2019, Patient X provided information indicating coverage under an insurance plan administered by defendant Shasta Administrative Services (Shasta), Shasta and QualiCenters Salem entered into contracts in which QualiCenters agreed to participate in a preferred provider organization which obligates it to accept Patient X and provide outpatient renal dialysis treatment and related services and obligated Shasta to pay for such services in accordance with the health plan it administered and the network provider agreement.

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Defendant First Choice Health Network (First Choice) operates the healthcare preferred provider organization network. Plaintiff alleges defendants Shasta and First Choice have regularly failed and refused to fulfill their contractual obligations to pay plaintiff at the network rates for the treatment of Patient X. Accordingly, plaintiff brings this action seeking approximately $1.5 million for past billing and payments for services it continues to provide to Patient X. Plaintiff specifically alleges claims for: (1) breach of contract as a third-party beneficiary of the payor contract against defendant Shasta; (2) breach of the provider contract against defendant First Choice; (3) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing against both defendants; (4) promissory estoppel against both defendants; (5) breach of network agreement against both defendants; (6) breach of implied- in-fact contract against defendant Shasta; (7) fraud in the inducement against defendant First Choice; (8) fraud against defendant Shasta; (9) specific performance against defendant First Choice; and (10) declaratory judgment against both defendants. Defendant Shasta seeks summary judgment as to all claims against it asserting it is a payor of last resort and plaintiff failed to bill Medicare before attempting to collect from Shasta. Plaintiff moves to continue briefing on the summary judgment motion so that it may seek discovery in order to respond to the motion. Defendant Shasta on the other hand moves to stay discovery pending resolution of the summary judgment motion. For the reasons stated below, the motion to continue briefing is granted to allow plaintiff to conduct further discovery in order to adequately respond to the motion for summary judgment. BACKGROUND Defendant Shasta is the third-party administrator of health insurance plans for Indian tribes and tribal businesses. The Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon is the

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majority owner of Shasta. Shasta administers health programs operated by the Tribe for members and employees including the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Employee Health Plan (Plan). The Plan covers both tribal and non-tribal members. Patient X was an employee of a tribal enterprise and received healthcare through the Plan. As noted above, he received dialysis treatment for end-stage renal disease from plaintiff QualiCenters beginning in July 2019. Defendant Shasta, in its motion for summary judgment, asserts patients receiving end-stage renal dialysis are eligible for Medicare coverage for those services even if under the age of 65. Shasta contends that even though such patients are eligible for Medicare, the Medicare Secondary Payer Act (MSPA) generally requires that employer plans pay as the primary insurer for the first 33 months of treatment, but that under 25 U.S.C..§ 1623, plans operated by tribal organizations shall be the payor of last resort notwithstanding the MSPA. Defendant Shasta asserts the Plan includes a coordination of benefits summary and explains that the MSPA may make Medicare the Secondary Payer in some circumstances but does not actually mandate precisely when or how the MSPA applies to specific circumstances. Thus, Shasta contends, the Plan administrator must coordinate benefits when a claim is received in order to determine who is the primary payer and who is the secondary payer. Regardless of Medicare’s primary or secondary status, Shasta contends the Plan limits coverage to the Medicare amounts or, if the provider has not accepted Medicare coverage, to no more than 115% of the Medicare approved amount. In addition, defendant Shasta argues where the Plan is a secondary payer, it will not pay for any expenses that should have been paid under Medicare regardless of whether the Plan participant actually enrolled in Medicare so long as he is eligible. Accordingly, Shasta asserts it

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has the right to recover any overpayments to providers that result from errors in the coordination of benefits such as paying as a primary insurer when it was later determined it was the secondary insurer, In addition, defendant Shasta contends that as of January 1, 2020, the Plan limited outpatient dialysis benefits to the “usual and reasonable charge after al! applicable deductibles and coinsurance.” Defendant Shasta argues that Patient X was and remains eligible for Medicare due to his end stage renal disease and was in fact enrolled in Medicare, paying the required premium, from October 1, 2019 to January 31, 2020, when coverage terminated for unknown reasons. Defendants Shasta asserts it processed claims submitted by QualiCenters for Patient X’s treatment remitting payment from tribal funds at the rates provided by the Plan based on the information forwarded by QualiCenters. However, Shasta argues QualiCenters was not satisfied with the payments and submitted letters contesting the purportedly insufficient payments. In investigating the matter, Shasta contends it learned that Medicare recognized the Plan as payer of last resort even for services to non-Indian beneficiaries when it had previously thought Medicare would not acknowledge primary status under the MSPA. When initially making the payments, Shasta asserts that challenging Medicare’s position as a secondary payer would not have been an economical benefit to the Plan in light of the administrative and legal expense. But with its new understanding, based on 25 U.S.C. § 1623, it would have denied QualiCenters claims because QualiCenters is a participating provider in the Medicare program and refuses to bill Medicare for Patient X’s treatment. In this proceeding, defendant Shasta asserts its status as a payor of last resort precludes all of plaintiff's claims. Specifically, Shasta claims QualiCenters violated 25 U.S.C. § 1623(b) by

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failing to bill Medicare and attempting to collect from Shasta. Additionally, Shasta contends even if Patient X is not enrolled in Medicare, it still qualifies as a payer of last resort, negating its responsibility for payment, so long as Patient X is “eligible” for Medicare coverage. Moreover, Shasta claims the Plan expressly limits benefits for kidney dialysis when not reimbursed by Medicare, anticipates errors in coordination of benefits may be made, and provides a mechanism for recovery of payments when benefits are erroneously provided under the assumption that Medicare would not pay, thus defeating any claims of estoppel.

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QualiCenters Salem, LLC v. Shasta Administrative Services, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/qualicenters-salem-llc-v-shasta-administrative-services-inc-ord-2022.