United States ex rel. Garbe v. Kmart Corp.

73 F. Supp. 3d 1002, 2014 WL 5819374
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 12, 2015
DocketCase No. 12-CV-881-NJR-PMF
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 73 F. Supp. 3d 1002 (United States ex rel. Garbe v. Kmart Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States ex rel. Garbe v. Kmart Corp., 73 F. Supp. 3d 1002, 2014 WL 5819374 (S.D. Ill. 2015).

Opinion

AMENDED MEMORANDUM . AND ORDER

ROSENSTENGEL, District Judge:

Pending before the Court are five motions filed by Defendant Kmart Corporation (“Kmart”): a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Based on Payers Definitions of Usual and Customary Price (Doc. 204); a Motion to Exclude the Expert Testimony of Dale A. Chamberlain (Doc. 212); a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Based on Claims in Other Than 90-Day Quantities (Doc. 203); a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Based on Pre-FERA Claims Relating to Medicare Part D (Doc. 205); and a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Based on All Claims Submitted to Medicare Part D (Doc. 206). For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants in part and denies in part the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Based on Payers Definitions of Usual and Customary Price (Doc. 204), denies the Motion to Exclude the Expert Testimony of Dale A. Chamberlain (Doc. 212), denies the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Based on Claims in Other Than 90-Day Quantities (Doc. 203), denies the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment based on Pre-FERA Claims Relating to Medicare Part D (Doc. 205), and denies the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Based on All Claims Submitted to Medicare Part D (Doc. 206).

Summary of the Relevant Facts & Procedural History1

Relator James Garbe (“Relator”) has brought this action qui tam on behalf of the United States Government.2 Relator was an employee of Kmart and worked in Kmart stores in Ohio and Michigan as a pharmacist from May 2007 through October 2010, when he resigned (Doc. 207, p. 1). Relator is currently retired (Id.).

Kmart Corporation currently operates 780 pharmacies in its stores in forty-six states, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands (Doc. 207, p. 1). In 2005, Kmart operated 1,120 pharmacies in its stores, and the number has been declining since then (Id.). Kmart’s current national market share for pharmacy is less than one percent of the market (Id.).

Relator asserts that from approximately 2005 to the present, Kmart has violated the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3729(a)(1), § 3729(a)(2), § 3729(a)(7) (Count I) (“FCA”) and the related false claims acts of twenty-six states (Counts II, IV-VIII, XI, XIII-XXXI), and four other related state statutes (Counts III, IX, X and XII),3 by misrepresenting its “usual [1007]*1007and customary” prices for certain generic prescription drugs and thereby overcharging Medicare Part D programs, Medicaid, Tricare, state and federal worker’s compensation programs, and other state and federal prescription drug benefit programs. By specific example, Relator alleges in paragraphs 145-146 of his Second Amended Complaint as follows:

145. Relator discovered this scheme through his own experience as a Medicare Part D beneficiary. For example, on September 22, 2007 Relator (a Medicare Part D beneficiary) had Kmart fill a prescription for generic [Lisinopril]. [Lisinopril] is among the drugs covered by Kmart’s RMP Program, and Relator expected that, after his $10 co-payment, Kmart would claim a $15 charge (the same amount paid by the cash-paying public) to his Part D plan (Paramount Elite), and seek reimbursement from Paramount for the remaining $5 (Doc. 98, p. 47).
146. Relator discovered, however, that his Part D plan received a claim for $60.84 charge for the [Lisinopril], and billed the Part D plan $50.84 ($60.84— $10.00 co-payment). Kmart was reimbursed $85.84, about 240 percent more than the true “usual and customary” price (Id.).

In order to understand the way in which Kmart allegedly committed this fraud, it is important to understand the process by which prescriptions are dispensed. Each party’s position as to how this process works is summarized as follows. A patient comes to the counter with a prescription (Doc. 207, p. 2). The pharmacist validates the prescription and submits the prescription claim through Kmart’s dispensing system (referred to as a “PDX” system) (Id.). The PDX system enables the entry of patient information, prescriber and prescription information, and insurance or other benefit information (Id.). Once the appropriate information is entered (or verified — if the patient is a returning customer), the prescription is submitted for dispensing and “adjudication.” (Id.). ■

Adjudication is the process by which a prescription claim is submitted, generally to a third party processor, to check patient eligibility for any insurance benefit, discount card, or other prescription benefit (Id.). As part of the adjudication, the processor returns to the Kmart pharmacy the correct pricing for the drug and any patient pay amount (copay or co-insurance) (Id.). Relator asserts that this process of adjudication is unnecessary for cash transactions (ie. those involving self-paying customers that are not using insurance) (Doc. 236, p. 2). More specifically, Relator asserts that adjudication did not occur in any of Kmart’s generic drug programs, because they did not involve insurance (Id.).

Kmart asserts that third-party processors adjudicate prescription claims to third-party payers, or a pharmacy may utilize a “switch vendor” or “pharmacy benefit manager” (“PBM”) (Doc. 207, p. 3). To submit a pharmacy claim for adjudication by the third-party processor or PBM, Kmart explains that the pharmacist looks up the patient in PDX (or, in the case of a new patient, enters the information into PDX), selects the applicable insurance, government, or discount program benefit to which the patient wishes to adjudicate his or her claim, sends the claim through the switch vendor to the processor, and waits for the processor to process the claim and either return a price or reject the claim (Id.). As part of this process, the third-party processor or PBM submits the claim to the appropriate private or government payer for reimbursement (Id.). Specific identifiers, referred to as the BIN/PCN combination, are used in a [1008]*1008pharmacy system to designate the specific processor to which a specific pharmacy claim should be routed (Id. at 4).

Over the years, Kmart has implemented various drug discount programs. In 2004, Kmart implemented a pilot generic drug discount program at a single pharmacy in Ohio, which was known as the Kmart Maintenance Program (“KMP!’) (Doc. 207, p. 5). The program was designed to compete with mail order pharmacies that were taking customers away from retail pharmacies (Id.). Kmart alleges that this program only applied to ninety-day supplies of certain generic maintenance medications and was enrollment based (Id.). But whether this program applied only to ninety-day supplies is in dispute.

In 2006, Kmart expanded KMP chain-wide, and the program became known as the Retail Maintenance Program (“RMP”) (Doc. 207, p. 6). Kmart asserts that this program also was limited to ninety-day supplies of certain generic maintenance medications (Id.). This fact, however, is also in dispute, because Relator asserts that Kmart also provided discounts on thirty-day and sixty-day supplies of drugs (Doc. 236, p. 8).

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Bluebook (online)
73 F. Supp. 3d 1002, 2014 WL 5819374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-garbe-v-kmart-corp-ilsd-2015.