State ex rel. Wilson v. Superior Court

227 Cal. App. 4th 579, 174 Cal. Rptr. 3d 317, 79 Cal. Comp. Cases 874, 2014 WL 2918872, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 571
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2014
DocketNo. B252073
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 227 Cal. App. 4th 579 (State ex rel. Wilson v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Wilson v. Superior Court, 227 Cal. App. 4th 579, 174 Cal. Rptr. 3d 317, 79 Cal. Comp. Cases 874, 2014 WL 2918872, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 571 (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

CHANEY, Acting P. J,

This proceeding arises out of a qui tarn action against Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. to impose civil penalties for violation of the Insurance Fraud Prevention Act (IFPA), Insurance Code section 1871 et seq. The relators allege Bristol-Myers employed runners and cappers to induce physicians to prescribe its drugs to their patients.

[586]*586The California Insurance Commissioner and related petitioners seek a writ of mandate challenging a summary adjudication order in which the trial court concluded that proof of liability under Insurance Code section 1871.7 requires (1) that a claim for payment be presented to an insurer; (2) that the claim must itself be fraudulent, containing express misstatements of fact; and (3) that the claim would not have been presented but for Bristol-Myers’s unlawful conduct. Petitioners contend that the order unduly limits the application of section 1871.7.

We conclude that for the assessment of monetary penalties (but not the imposition of other available remedies), Insurance Code section 1871.7 requires proof of resulting claims that are in some manner deceitful, though not necessarily containing express misstatements of fact, and that causation may be established under the standard substantial-factor test, not the but-for test. Accordingly, we grant the writ and reverse the trial court’s order.

Background

The Underlying Action

Michael Wilson, a former Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. sales representative, on behalf of the People of the State of California, filed the underlying qui tam action1 against Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (BMS) on March 16, 2007, and later amended it to add Lucius and Eve Allen, also former BMS sales representatives, as relators.2 (State of California ex rel. Michael Wilson, Lucius Allen, and Eve Allen, Relators v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (Super. Ct. L.A. County, No. BC367873).) The complaint was filed in the name of the State of California, under seal, as required by statute (Ins. Code, § 1871.7, subd. (e)), and was later unsealed by the court. In March 2011, the California Insurance Commissioner (the Commissioner) intervened, and an amended [587]*587complaint was filed on March 29, 2011. The third amended complaint—the operative pleading—was filed in November 2011.3

The lawsuit alleges, in a factually detailed pleading, that in marketing its drugs, BMS engaged in a course of illegal and fraudulent conduct aimed at doctors, health care providers, pharmacists, and insurance companies. It alleges BMS targeted high-prescribing physicians, members of formulary committees,4 and sometimes their families, to be recipients of lavish gifts and other benefits (such as tickets to sporting events and concerts, free rounds of golf, resort vacations, meals, gifts, and other such incentives—characterized in the complaint as “kickbacks”), in order to induce physicians to prescribe BMS’s drugs and to reward them for doing so. The suit alleges BMS specifically targeted these benefits to physicians who had large numbers of patients enrolled in private health insurance plans, and instructed its sales representatives to hold the targeted physicians responsible for increased prescriptions—expressly characterizing this as “shaking the doctors down.” And it alleges the targeted physicians “wrote prescriptions and submitted them to the private insurance companies ... as a result of kickbacks BMS provided to them.”5 The suit alleges that in carrying out this program, BMS effectively employed physicians and others to act as runners and cappers, paying them for the purpose of procuring patients whose prescriptions will be covered by insurance. This conduct, the suit alleges, violated the IFPA, Insurance Code section 1871.7, subdivisions (a) and (b), as well as a number of provisions of the Penal Code. The complaint seeks monetary penalties, equitable relief, and “such other and further relief as [the court] deems proper.”

BMS has not yet answered, but in its return to the petition it denies the complaint’s material allegations. For example, BMS denies “any assertion that its sales representatives gave doctors items of value to try to influence prescription decisions”; that “either the promise to provide or the provision of an item of value to a doctor constitutes a ‘kickback’ ”; or that “its sales representatives or the doctors they called on constitute ‘runners, cappers, [588]*588steerers or other persons’ ” to which the provisions of Insurance Code section 1871.7, subdivision (a), apply.

The IFPA

This petition concerns the proof required to establish a violation of subdivision (a) of Insurance Code section 1871.7, a portion of the IFPA that relates to health insurance and workers’ compensation insurance fraud, entitled by Deering’s, “Employment of persons to procure clients or patients.”6 Subdivision (a) makes it unlawful to knowingly employ runners or cappers to procure clients or patients to obtain insurance benefits.7

Insurance Code section 1871.7, subdivision (b) prescribes civil penalties and other remedies for violation of either subdivision (a) of that section or Penal Code sections 549, 550, or 551, which target insurance and workers’ compensation fraud.8 The remaining subdivisions of section 1871.7 relate to the rights, duties, and procedures to be followed by governmental entities and other interested parties in the prosecution, settlement and dismissal of actions brought under subdivisions (a) and (b), and the allocation of fees and costs for the prosecution of such actions.

The Summary Adjudication Motion

The parties submitted below a stipulated motion for summary adjudication pursuant to subdivision (s) of Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, which [589]*589permits summary adjudication of legal issues that the parties stipulate and the trial court agrees will reduce the time to be consumed in trial or will significantly increase the likelihood of settlement. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. • (s)(l)-(7); Stats. 2011, ch. 419, § 3.)9 The motion submitted two legal questions based on hypothetical facts to which the parties stipulated for purpose of the motion.

Question 1 postulated three hypothetical facts:

i. BMS provided or promised to provide an item or service of value to a physician;

iL one purpose of BMS providing or promising the item or service was to influence the physician to prescribe BMS drugs;

iii. subsequent to BMS providing or promising the item or service, the physician prescribed a medically appropriate BMS drug.

Question 1 asked whether there can be a violation of subdivision (a) or (b) under these hypothetical facts absent proof that the item or service caused the prescription.

Question 2 postulated two additional hypothetical facts:

iv. express factual assertions on the claim submitted to the third party for payment of a health care benefit were not misstated;

v. the claim for payment does not disclose the item or service provided or promised to the physician.

Question 2 asked whether subdivision (a) or (b) is violated under these facts.10

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 Cal. App. 4th 579, 174 Cal. Rptr. 3d 317, 79 Cal. Comp. Cases 874, 2014 WL 2918872, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wilson-v-superior-court-calctapp-2014.