Steven A. Mueller, Bradley J. Brown, Mark A. Kruse, Kevin D. Miller, and Larry E. Phipps, on Behalf of Themselves and Those Like Situated v. Wellmark, Inc. D/B/A Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa, an Iowa Corporation and Wellmark Health Plan of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation

818 N.W.2d 244, 2012 WL 3194162, 2012 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 27, 2012
Docket10–0010
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 818 N.W.2d 244 (Steven A. Mueller, Bradley J. Brown, Mark A. Kruse, Kevin D. Miller, and Larry E. Phipps, on Behalf of Themselves and Those Like Situated v. Wellmark, Inc. D/B/A Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa, an Iowa Corporation and Wellmark Health Plan of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Steven A. Mueller, Bradley J. Brown, Mark A. Kruse, Kevin D. Miller, and Larry E. Phipps, on Behalf of Themselves and Those Like Situated v. Wellmark, Inc. D/B/A Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa, an Iowa Corporation and Wellmark Health Plan of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, 818 N.W.2d 244, 2012 WL 3194162, 2012 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 83 (iowa 2012).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Justice.

In this complex interlocutory appeal from a putative class action, we must decide whether the district court correctly granted several dispositive motions. Plaintiffs are doctors of chiropractic who allege they have been victimized by the discriminatory practices of Iowa’s largest health insurer, Wellmark, Inc. 1 The plaintiffs claim Wellmark wrongfully imposes restrictions and pays lower rates for chiropractic services than for equivalent services offered by medical doctors or osteopathic physicians. Plaintiffs allege that Wellmark not only has violated various insurance regulatory statutes, but also has engaged in unlawful conspiracy and monopolization in violation of the Iowa Competition Law.

First, the district court granted Wellmark’s motion to dismiss claims brought under Iowa’s insurance regulatory statutes because no private cause of action is provided therein. We affirm that ruling based on Seeman v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 322 N.W.2d 35, 42-43 (Iowa 1982). The proper forum for raising alleged violations of those regulatory statutes is through administrative proceedings in the Iowa Division of Insurance.

Second, the district court granted Well-mark’s motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs’ antitrust claims based on the “state action” exemption found in Iowa Code section 553.6(4) (2009). We reverse in part because the summary judgment record fails to establish the challenged conduct falls within the exemption.

Third, the district court granted summary judgment on claims alleging Well-mark breached its obligations under a judicially approved national class action settlement in Love v. Blue Cross Blue Shield Ass’n, No. 03-21296-CIV (S.D.Fla. Apr. 19, 2008). We affirm because the record contains no evidence Wellmark’s implementation of the Love settlement violated the Iowa Competition Law.

Fourth, we affirm summary judgment on several specific antitrust claims for reasons explained below. We remand the remaining claims and defenses for further proceedings.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

This litigation began in December 2007 when Steven A. Mueller, D.C., filed a *248 breach-of-contract claim against Wellmark over a $17,376 billing dispute. On May 20, 2008, plaintiffs filed a first amended petition adding plaintiffs, Bradley J. Brown, D.C.; Mark A. Kruse, D.C.; Kevin D. Miller, D.C.; and Larry E. Phipps, D.C. Plaintiffs are doctors of chiropractic who have billed for services provided to patients enrolled in Wellmark health insurance plans. Their amended pleading asserted class action claims on behalf of a putative “class of Iowa-licensed doctors of chiropractic who are citizens of the State of Iowa as of the date of filing.” 2 Plaintiffs sought damages and injunctive relief against Wellmark, alleging discriminatory and anticompetitive practices that harmed chiropractic doctors. Division I contained the new class action claims, and Division II retained Mueller’s individual claim. This appeal only concerns the class action claims in Division I.

Wellmark’s business consists of selling health insurance plans to employer groups and providing administrative services to assist others who provide health insurance coverage, such as self-funded governmental entity plans. Wellmark is one of a dozen health insurers in the state, but retains the largest market share. Well-mark creates a network of preferred health care providers, including doctors of chiropractic, medical doctors, and osteopathic doctors, and incentivizes its members to use its preferred provider panel. Wellmark develops its preferred provider panel by entering into contracts with providers that, govern the terms and conditions of treatment as well as fee schedules, at times on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. Preferred providers must adhere to these contracts to receive compensation from Wellmark for services provided to Well-mark’s members. Preferred provider arrangements are expressly encouraged by the Iowa legislature as a health care cost control mechanism. See Iowa Code § 514F.2. The legislature has directed the Iowa Insurance Commissioner to regulate these preferred provider arrangements. Id. § 514F.3.

Stated simply, the plaintiffs in this lawsuit allege Wellmark has employed preferred provider arrangements in an unlawfully discriminatory and anticompetitive manner in violation of statutory insurance provisions and state antitrust laws.

Division I of the first amended petition contains five counts, spanning forty pages. *249 Count I provides factual background for the claims that follow. Count II seeks declaratory relief based upon allegations that Wellmark engages in discriminatory practices that violate insurance regulatory provisions contained in the Iowa Code that prevent health insurers from taking actions “on a basis solely related to the [chiropractor’s] license.” Iowa Code § 514F.2; accord Iowa Code §§ 509.3(6), 514.7, 514.23(2), 514B.1(5). Count III pleads Wellmark entered into a contract, combination, or conspiracy to unlawfully restrain trade against chiropractors in violation of section 553.4 of the Iowa Competition Law. Count III seeks money damages. Count IV also seeks money damages, alleging Wellmark “abused [its] monopoly power in the relevant geographic and product markets” to injure plaintiffs in violation of section 553.5 of the Iowa Competition Law. 3 Count V repleads the statutory insurance violations alleged in Count II, but seeks injunctive relief.

Division I of the first amended petition alleges Wellmark engaged in substantially similar unlawful conduct for each count in ways that

(a) violate the various provisions of H.F. 2219 (1986 (71 G.A.) ch. 1180) in their contracts and dealings with chiropractors and chiropractic patients in order to diminish and restrict the care for human ailments by chiropractors for which payment will be made by the Wellmark Defendants;
(b) impose definitions of “chiropractic” and “medical necessity” contrary to Chapter 151, Code of Iowa (2007) in order to diminish and restrict the care for human ailments by chiropractors for which payment will be made by the Wellmark Defendants;
(c) usurp the authority of the Iowa General Assembly, to the detriment of Iowa chiropractors and the treatment and therapy offered to their patients, in requiring the use of and promulgating standards and rules of practice for “Chiropractic Assistants,” a category of health care practitioner found nowhere in the present Code of Iowa in Chapters 147 through 158 or elsewhere, and in limiting the employment of certain modes of physiotherapy if not applied by chiropractors or “chiropractic assistants;”

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818 N.W.2d 244, 2012 WL 3194162, 2012 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-a-mueller-bradley-j-brown-mark-a-kruse-kevin-d-miller-and-iowa-2012.