Washington County Health Care Authority, Inc. v. Baxter International Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 3, 2020
Docket1:16-cv-10324
StatusUnknown

This text of Washington County Health Care Authority, Inc. v. Baxter International Inc. (Washington County Health Care Authority, Inc. v. Baxter International Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington County Health Care Authority, Inc. v. Baxter International Inc., (N.D. Ill. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION WASHINGTON COUNTY HEALTH ) CARE AUTHORITY, INC. ET AL., ) Plaintiffs, v. No. 16-CV-10324 BAXTER INTERNATIONAL INC. ET Judge John J. Tharp, Jr. AL. ) Defendants. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER In the age of COVID-19 and other public health challenges, supply levels in the medical industry occupy a prominent place in our national consciousness. In this antitrust suit, the plaintiffs allege, for a second time, that the defendants conspired to artificially manipulate the market of a crucial supply in that industry: intravenous (“TV”) saline solution. In their previously dismissed consolidated amended complaint (“CAC”), the plaintiffs—direct purchasers of IV saline solution—alleged that Baxter and Hospira, the two biggest IV saline solution producers in the country, violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act by using a series of bogus voluntary recalls designed to reduce supply and increase prices. The Court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss the CAC without prejudice, concluding that the allegations did not suffice to plausibly show an agreement between the defendants to restrict output. Although the Court allowed the plaintiffs the opportunity to amend the CAC, it also cautioned that “there is reason to doubt” that amendment could make the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim plausible. Mem. Op. and Order, ECF No. 113. Perhaps as a result of the Court’s skepticism, the plaintiffs’ second consolidated amended complaint (“SCAC”) abandoned the theory that the defendants created an artificial shortage of IV

saline solution through bogus voluntary recalls. In its stead, the SCAC now advances a theory, based on information provided by an anonymous former Hospira employee, that the defendants restricted output by setting production quotas and discarding any IV saline solution manufactured in excess of those quotas. This theory suffers all of the defects of the plaintiffs’ “voluntary recall” theory and then some. Most notably, where the CAC at least alleged facts that showed conduct reducing the available supply of IV saline solution by each defendant, the SCAC alleges only facts concerning Hospira’s unilateral conduct; the SCAC offers no non-conclusory allegations that Baxter engaged in similar conduct. The SCAC similarly dispenses with fact allegations concerning new defendant ICU Medical, which is alleged to have done nothing more than purchase Hospira’s solutions business unit in early 2017. Substituting unilateral action for parallel conduct, however, is no way to make an antitrust conspiracy claim more viable. For this and the other reasons discussed below, the SCAC, and this case, are dismissed with prejudice. BACKGROUND Although the facts alleged in the SCAC are largely the same as those originally set forth in the CAC, there are some significant differences between the two pleadings. First and foremost, the SCAC has abandoned the CAC’s allegations and theory that Baxter and Hospira conspired to reduce their output by engaging in a series of coordinated recalls of IV saline solution. Whereas the CAC alleged that the recalls were not legitimate and were a means for restricting the supply of IV saline solution, the SCAC deleted all of the specific allegations detailing the recalls. Instead, the SCAC alleges only that, whether or not legitimate, the recalls exacerbated existing shortages in the IV saline solution market. That is not evidence of antitrust conspiracy, of course, and the plaintiffs’ response to the defendants’ motions to dismiss the SCAC mentions the recalls only in passing and offers no argument that the recalls provide any support for the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim. And, as this Court noted in dismissing the CAC, “without any fact allegations to plausibly

establish that the recalls were shams, the plaintiffs’ theory that the defendants raised prices by artificially restricting output by conducting a series of spurious recalls collapses: no sham recalls means no collusive scheme to restrict output means no agreement to charge supracompetitive prices.” Mem. Op. and Order 12. In the SCAC, the plaintiffs now allege that “the defendants” restricted output by imposing production quotas and discarding production in excess of those quotas. These allegations rest on information provided to the plaintiffs’ counsel by “a former production line employee” of Hospira, who reported that “he and his co-workers had standing instructions from their supervisors not to produce IV Saline Solution above a certain supply quota and to discard any IV Saline Solution that had been produced above that limit but not yet placed in container bags.” SCAC 4 78, ECF No. 120. The SCAC includes no allegations that Baxter imposed production quotas on IV saline solution or that it had discarded any saleable saline solution that it had produced. The SCAC also names a new defendant, ICU Medical, but similarly omits any allegations that the newcomer engaged in any output restricting practices. ICU Medical acquired Hospira’s infusion systems business (“HIS”), the division that produced Hospira’s IV Saline Solution, in February 2017. /d. § 43. Beyond the fact that ICU Medical purchased HIS, the SCAC alleges only that ICU Medical received subpoenas for documents in a grand jury investigation by the Department of Justice Antitrust Division and in an investigation by the New York Attorney General’s office (and complied with those subpoenas) and that ICU Medical “sent representatives to” several large healthcare conferences; of the four conferences identified, three took place in 2015 and 2016, more than a year before ICU Medical acquired HIS. The plaintiffs tag the commencement of the DOJ and NYAG investigations as another significant new development pled in the SCAC that was not part of the CAC. It is true enough that

the CAC did not include allegations about these investigations (whether because they had not then begun or become known to the public), but in any event the plaintiffs advised the Court about these investigations before it ruled on the motions to dismiss the CAC. The Court found the investigations to add nothing to the plausibility of the plaintiffs’ claim. Mem. Op. and Order 26- 27 n.16. The SCAC’s allegations about the ongoing investigations, then, add nothing new to the mix. The only new information concerning the investigations is that, after the plaintiffs filed the SCAC, the DOJ closed its investigation without taking any action at all against any of the defendants. Hospira’s Reply in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss Ex. A, ECF No. 151; Baxter’s Reply in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss 12, ECF No. 153. The plaintiffs also allege that the saline solution shortage that began in 2013 still continued when the SCAC was filed. As of the filing of the SCAC, the plaintiffs allege that the defendants manufactured just over 75% of the IV saline solution produced in the United States. That combined market share, however, has declined from the 90% of the market Baxter and Hospira shared equally as of 2013, when the shortage of IV saline solution first hit the country. The SCAC also shows that while Baxter’s share of the market increased to almost 50% by 2018, Hospira’s share decreased by more than 40%, declining from about 45% to 26.4%. Other producers accounted for almost 25% of production in 2018, up from just 10% in 2013. The SCAC also adds a few other miscellaneous factual allegations: the continued rise in price of saline; the public comments made by Baxter’s CEO about the favorable pricing and sales conditions in the industry; additional healthcare conferences that both Baxter and Hospira executives (but not ICU executives, apparently) attended; the board of directors on which executives of Hospira and Baxter both serve; and the transition of multiple employees from Hospira to Baxter over the course of the prior decade and a half.

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Bluebook (online)
Washington County Health Care Authority, Inc. v. Baxter International Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-county-health-care-authority-inc-v-baxter-international-inc-ilnd-2020.