UNITED STATES, et al., ex rel. August BOGINA III, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. MEDLINE INDUSTRIES, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 15-1867.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Decided Jan. 4, 2016.
808 F.3d 1100
Argued Dec. 10, 2015.
More puzzling is Brown‘s assertion that United‘s attorney may have misled him about the status of his case. Brown hired a new attorney in 2010 to “figure out what had happen[ed] to his claims in the bankruptcy case.” United‘s attorney allegedly informed that lawyer that a check for between 4% and 8% of the amounts claimed (presumably the $80,000 asserted in Brown‘s pro se proof of claim) “had been mailed to him care of his former counsel in California.” Brown denies receiving a check, but he does not say whether he tried to follow-up with his former counsel about the matter. His position now appears to be that United‘s counsel was mistaken in reporting that Brown‘s claim had been paid. We assume for our purposes that that is correct, but surely Brown himself knew that United had never paid him on his claim. Even the possibility of some initial confusion on Brown‘s part could not explain either why he had already waited years to inquire about the adversary action or why he then waited an additional two and a half years to move to reopen the bankruptcy.
The bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion by denying Brown‘s motion to reopen the UAL bankruptcy, so the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Anton R. Valukas, Attorney, Thalia L. Myrianthopoulos, Attorney, Monica Pinciak-Madden, Attorney, Charles B. Sklarsky, Attorney, Jenner & Block LLP, Asher Doren Funk, Attorney, Polsinelli PC, Chicago, IL, Timothy J. Sear, Attorney, Polsinelli PC, Overland Park, KS, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before POSNER, MANION, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
This appeal is from the dismissal of a suit filed in 2011 under the False Claims Act,
Medline is a major seller of medical equipment to institutions reimbursed by Medicare and similar federal programs for part of the price they pay for their medical supplies. The Tutera Group is a chain of nursing homes that is a Medline customer. Bogina claims to have discovered through his business associate Michael Tutera, a former member of the ownership group of the Tutera Group and brother of one of its current principals, that Medline gives bribes and kickbacks to the Tutera Group to induce it to purchase from Medline.
We‘ll see that Medline has been sued before for engaging in such conduct, though until the present suit the Tutera Group had not been specifically accused of being one of Medline‘s partners in fraud. Some of the corrupt payments that Medline has been accused of making are in the form of lump-sum cash payments, and thus conventional bribes; others are kickbacks—returning some of the purchase price to the purchaser off book, thus inducing him to buy from Medline rather than from a competitor. Whether bribes or kickbacks, such payments operate as discounts to Medline customers, and discounts are normally an innocent means of competing. But not discounts in the form of bribes and kickbacks to government contractors. For then the purchaser of a discounted item will seek reimbursement from the government of the authorized percentage of the price charged the purchaser (Tutera being the purchaser identified by Bogina) by the seller (Medline)—including the part of that price that the seller rebates to the purchaser. And as a result the government makes inflated reimbursements and medical providers are induced to purchase from the discounting seller even if substitute products of the same or higher quality are available at lower prices from other sellers. In submitting these inflated claims for reimbursement the purchasers also falsely certify compliance with federal anti-bribery and anti-kickback laws.
So suppose the nominal price of a piece of equipment sold by Medline is $100,000 but Medline kicks back $10,000 to the buyer. The buyer‘s cost is only $90,000 but he would report it to the government as $100,000 and thus receive a greater reimbursement than he was entitled to. That is fraud and a person (or a firm or other institution) violates the False Claims Act if he “knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval” by the government.
Bogina is thus suing as a volunteer on behalf of the federal government—a kind of private attorney general in the hope of course of being handsomely compensated if the suit succeeds. (We‘ll encounter such compensation shortly.) He thus is a bounty hunter, and federal law places some obstacles in the path of its bounty hunters. Thus
Before the 2010 amendment “original source” was defined as “an individual who has direct and independent knowledge of the information on which the allegations [in his complaint] are based.”
We incline to the view that because the earlier definition is inscrutable as well as skimpier than the current one, the current one should be deemed authoritative regardless of when a person claiming to be an original source acquired his knowledge. “[C]oncerns about retroactive application are not implicated when an amendment ... is deemed to clarify relevant law rather than effect a substantive change in the law.” Middleton v. City of Chicago, 578 F.3d 655, 663 (7th Cir.2009) (quoting Piamba Cortes v. American Airlines, Inc., 177 F.3d 1272, 1283-84 (11th Cir.1999)). That‘s a good description of the amendment to subsection (B) of section 3730(e)(4).
We are mindful of cases that say that because the 2010 amendment does not state that it is retroactive, the pre-2010 version of the statute governs conduct that occurred in that era while the new version governs only more recent conduct. See e.g., Leveski v. ITT Educational Services, Inc., supra, 719 F.3d at 828; United States ex rel. Goldberg v. Rush University Medical Center, supra, 680 F.3d at 934; United States ex rel. Baltazar v. Warden, 635 F.3d 866, 867 (7th Cir.2011). These cases
But from the context it is apparent that the Court in Graham County was referring to a substantive change (unlike the innocuous change we noted earlier) in subsection (A) made by the 2010 amendment—a change to what constitutes a “public disclosure.”
Our cases, cited above, had not noted that in contrast to the substantive change in subsection (A), subsection (B)—the provision defining “original source“—needed and received clarification in the 2010 amendment; and because that amendment, insofar as it alters subsection (B), is a clarifying rather than a substantive amendment, it is not subject to a retroactivity bar.
Enter now Sean Mason, an employee of Medline who had in 2007, four years before Bogina filed the present suit, filed a very similar suit, charging Medline with having given bribes and kickbacks to purchasers of its medical equipment who provided services reimbursed by Medicare and Medicaid. Without admitting liability Medline had settled with the government (on whose behalf, of course, the suit had been brought) for a whopping $85 million in compensation (and an additional $6 million in attorneys’ fees), out of which the government paid Mason a generous bounty—$23.4 million.
Bogina claims to have learned from his pal in the Tutera Group that the Tutera Group had received kickbacks from Medline. Unsurprisingly his complaint is very similar to Mason‘s, but he argues that there are three critical differences. The first is that the Tutera Group was not mentioned in Mason‘s complaint, which focused on Medline‘s alleged bribery of and kickbacks to its hospital customers; nursing homes (which Mason sometimes called “nursing facilities“) were mentioned only in passing—but they were mentioned. Second, the settlement with Mason released
But these differences between the two suits are unimpressive. It was common knowledge that Medline sold to nursing homes as well as to hospitals, so if it provided kickbacks to the latter, why not to the former as well? Bogina is not allowed to proceed independently if he merely “adds details” to what is already known in outline. United States ex rel. Goldberg v. Rush University Medical Center, supra, 680 F.3d at 934. And why offer bribes and kickbacks for products whose buyers would be reimbursed for the cost (or part of the cost) by Medicare Part A, but not for products covered by other federal programs? The settlement agreement remarks that “unallowed costs” may have been submitted to TRICARE even though TRICARE was not mentioned in the release of liability. The government was thus on notice of the possibility of a broader bribe-kickback scheme before Bogina sued. Had it wanted to broaden the case against Medline beyond the Mason settlement it could have gone after, among other Medline customers, nursing-home companies such as the Tutera Group that received (if Bogina is correct) Medline kickbacks. But having settled its claims against Medline for a large sum the government may have thought the company had learned its lesson and would cease providing bribes or kickbacks to nursing homes or any other of its customers. Moreover, a settlement is a compromise; and it is notable that among the claims that the government released as part of the Mason settlement were some of the very claims alleged in Bogina‘s complaint. Indeed the only significant information that appears in Bogina‘s complaint but not in Mason‘s is the name “Tutera Group” and references to government health care programs besides Medicare Part A and Medicaid. Neither body of information “materially add[ed] to the publicly disclosed allegations” against Medline—the allegations in Mason‘s complaint.
Bogina‘s complaint is not saved by its allegations that the fraud continues to the present day, because those allegations are “on information and belief.” As we explained in another false-claims bounty-hunting case, United States ex rel. Grenadyor v. Ukrainian Village Pharmacy, Inc., 772 F.3d 1102, 1105-08 (7th Cir.2014), it is because a public accusation of fraud can do great damage to a firm before the firm is exonerated in litigation (should the accusation prove baseless) that Rule 9(b) of the
AFFIRMED
