Cаrl E. THULIN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SHOPKO STORES OPERATING CO., LLC, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 13-3638.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued April 25, 2014. Decided Nov. 12, 2014.
771 F.3d 994
Ross Begelman, Begelman, Orlow & Melentz, Cherry Hill, NJ, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Matthew J. Splitek, Quarles & Brady LLP, Madison, WI, Thomas S. Crane, Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky & Popeo, Boston, MA, for Defendant-Appellee.
Before KANNE and ROVNER, Circuit Judges, and DOW, District Judge.*
Relator Carl E. Thulin worked as a pharmacist at a Shopko retail store in Idaho from 2006 to 2009. During his tenure, Thulin observed what he believed to be a fraudulent billing scheme in which Shopko submitted inflated claims for prescription drugs to the federal Medicaid program. Thulin filed a qui tam complaint against his former employer in its home state of Wisconsin, alleging that Shopko violated the federal False Claims Act by overbilling Medicaid. Thulin also asserted anаlogous claims under the laws of eight different states in which Shopko does business. Shopko moved to dismiss Thulin‘s federal claim under
I.
Because this appeal comes to us from the grant of a motion to dismiss, we accept all facts alleged in Thulin‘s complaint as true and draw all reasоnable inferences in his favor. Shopko is a multi-regional retail pharmacy corporation headquartered in Green Bay, Wisconsin, that operates nearly 300 stores in 24 states. Thulin is a licensed pharmacist who at all relevant times worked as a full-time pharmacist at a Shopko retail store in Idaho.
Some of Shopko‘s pharmacy customers have prescription coverage through both private insurance and Medicaid, a federal program administered by the states that provides the poor, disabled, and elderly with medical and pharmaceutical insurance coverage. We follow the parties’ convention of referring to these individuals as “dual-eligibles.” For dual-eligibles, Medicaid acts as a “payer of last resort,” which means that it picks up any tab remaining after the dual-eligible‘s private insurer hаs paid the amount that it has contracted to pay Shopko for a particular prescription.
According to Thulin, an excess tab almost always exists. Both Medicaid and private insurers strive to negotiate pharmaceutical discounts and purchasing agreements for their members, but Thulin asserts that private insurers are much better at playing ball than are the government agencies administering Medicaid. The private insurers’ negotiating prowess “results in better pricing of prescriptions for the [privately] insured patients.” Thulin alleges that this disparity exists in all of the states in which Shopko does business. Thus, when Shopko enters into provider contracts with private insurers, it typically agrees to accept payment in full lesser amounts than it agrees to accept from Medicaid for any given drug. The amount that Shopko agrees to accept is composed of some payment by the insurance company and a co-pay or deductible paid by the patient at the point of sale. The size of the patient‘s co-pay depends on his or her contract with the private insurance company, to which Shopko is not a party. Privately insured patients, including dual-eligibles, are not parties to the contracts that Shopko signs with their рrivate insurers.
Thulin alleges that when dual-eligibles apply for Medicaid, they are required by
According to Thulin, this reliance was misplaced. Shopko programmed its computer system, PDX Adjudication Software System, to systematically exploit the disparity between the pharmaceutical prices negotiated by private insurers and those negotiated by Medicaid. The PDX system (and the apparently identical system, Condor, used by Shopko‘s subsidiary Pamida) submits claims to a dual-eligible‘s private insurer first, at the low negotiated rate. PDX subsequently but virtually simultaneously adjusts the initial price upward to the higher one negotiated by Medicaid and bills Medicaid for any unpaid differential, not just the co-pay that the dual-eligible owes under his or her private insurance contract.
An example similar to that provided by Thulin during oral argument helps illustrate the scheme. Assume for instance that a dual-eligible has a prescription for Drug A, which has a list price of $50. Her private insurer has an agreement with Shopko pursuant to which Shopko has agreed to accept $25 as payment in full for Drug A: $20 from the private insurer and a $5 co-pay from the dual-eligible. Under Medicaid‘s less favorable agreement with Shopko, Medicaid has agreed to pay $30 for Drug A. The dual-eligible submits her prescription to Shopko and pays nothing at the point of sale. Shopko fills the prescription and then bills the private insurer $25 using PDX. The рrivate insurer remits payment of $20; the agreed amount of its payment less the dual eligible‘s unpaid co-pay. Shopko then bills Medicaid, the “payer of last resort,” but not only for the $5 that remains unpaid under its contract with the dual-eligible‘s private insurer. Instead, Shopko bills Medicaid $10, the difference between the $20 that the private insurer already has paid and the $30 that Medicaid has agreed to pay for the drug.
Thulin alleges that this “internal program of the two systems bills more for dual eligible patients than was allowed under the assignment of rights and benefits provisions of federal law and contract provisions of private insurance companies.” That is, Shopko committed fraud by billing Medicaid an amount in excess of the co-pay that the dual-eligibles owed under their private insurance contracts. Shopko compounded this alleged fraud by omitting from its invoices to Medicaid the amount of dual-eligibles’ co-pays. By omitting this information, Thulin alleges, “Shopko failed to report truthfully to Medicaid the nature and extent of [its] obligation.”
Thulin discovered the alleged fraud by observing “that there is potential for fraudulent billing involving dual eligible patients” and “that the PDX pharmacy system used by Shopko does not present the billing and payment amount information on the patient bag recеipts and it does not make it available to the pharmacist or technician processing prescriptions.” Thulin nonetheless managed to obtain and attach to his complaint 31 printouts from the PDX system that allegedly demonstrate the two-pronged fraud. All 31 exhibits concern transactions performed in Idaho.
Yet Thulin filed his suit not in Idaho but in the Western District of Wisconsin, and did not bring any claims under Idaho law. Instead, he filed one claim under the federal False Claims Act (“FCA“),
The district court granted Shopko‘s motion to dismiss Thulin‘s federal claim with prejudice. The district court first concluded that Thulin failed to allege the requisite fаlsity to state a claim under the False Claims Act because neither
The district court also concluded that Thulin‘s allegations pertaining to the knowledge element of the claim failed to meet the requirements of
The district court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Thulin‘s state law claims and dismissed them without prejudice. Thulin timely appealed.
II.
We review de novo the district court‘s grant of a motion to dismiss. Camasta v. Jos. A. Bank Clothiers, Inc., 761 F.3d 732, 736 (7th Cir. 2014). To survive a motion to dismiss under
In a footnote midway through his opening brief, Thulin requests that we confine our review to the allegations in his complaint and ignore the numerous exhibits that Shopko attached to its motion to dismiss. This is of course how both we and the district court genеrally analyze motions to dismiss. See
Thulin correctly concedes that he must satisfy the heightened pleading standard imposed by
Thulin brought his claims under the FCA, a statute that permits private citizens, called relators, to prosecute qui tam suits “against alleged fraudsters on behalf of the United States government.” United States ex rel. Watson v. King-Vassel, 728 F.3d 707, 711 (7th Cir. 2013);
The version of the FCA that was in effect at the time of Shopko‘s alleged conduct imposed civil liability on “any person who knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, to an officer оr employee of the United States Government or a member of the Armed Forces of the United States a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval.”
Here, there is no dispute that Thulin adequately pleaded the first element by alleging with particularity that Shopko submitted claims to the federal government via the Medicaid program. King-Vassel, 728 F.3d at 711. The next element is that the claims were false. A claim may be false for purposes of the FCA if it is made in contravention of a statute, regulation, or contract. Sеe United States ex rel. Crews v. NCS Healthcare of Ill., Inc., 460 F.3d 853, 858 (7th Cir. 2006). Thulin‘s theory of falsity is predicated upon
For the purpose of assisting in the collection of medical support payments and
other payments for medical care owed to recipients of medical assistance under the State plan approved under this subchapter, a State plan for medical assistance shall—provide that, as a condition of eligibility for mediсal assistance under the State plan to an individual who has the legal capacity to execute an assignment for himself, the individual is required—to assign the State any rights, of the individual or of any other person who is eligible for medical assistance under this subchapter and whose behalf the individual has the legal authority to execute an assignment of such rights, to support (specified as support for the purpose of mеdical care by a court or administrative order) and to payment for medical care from any third party.
Thulin interprets this provision, along with a similarly worded regulation codified at
Thulin‘s strained interpretation has little if any support in the plain language of the provision, which by its terms applies only to a beneficiary‘s right to actually receive payments. And Thulin has not pointed to—and we could not find—any case law that interprets
We further note that the extra-pleading evidence submitted by the parties—considered by the district court, and briefed and argued here—also suggests that Shopko was not obligated to inform Medicaid of dual-eligibles’ co-pays and was permitted to bill in the fashion that it did. The parties discuss at length the electronic system that pharmacies were rеquired to use to submit claims to Medicaid agencies during the relevant time period, version 5.1 of the National Council for Prescription Drug Programs (“NCPDP 5.1“). See
Thulin‘s proffered excerpt from the “Q & A” portion of the NCPDP only lends further credence to this conclusion, as it demonstrates that providers were “looking for clarification” on this important billing issue rather than simply concluding that they needed to inform Medicaid of dual-eligibles’ co-pays. Additionally, the State Medicaid Manual promulgated by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services directs state Medicaid agencies to withhold payment “[w]henever you are billed for the difference between the pаyment received from the third party based on [a preferred provider agreement that it has with the pharmacy].” Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, STATE MEDICAID MANUAL § 3904.7 (1990). Thulin is correct that this provision supports his contention that Medicaid is only liable to the extent that a dual-eligible‘s private insurer has not paid, but he overlooks the language quoted above, which expressly contemplates that Medicaid will get billed fоr amounts beyond what it technically owes and bears responsibility for not paying when that happens. Shopko‘s alleged actions may “frustrate and derail the ‘cost avoidance’ mandate,” and result in additional bureaucratic hassle on both Medicaid‘s and Shopko‘s end, but they are not false or fraudulent under the State Medicaid Manual or any other regulation or law to which Thulin points.
Because Thulin‘s FCA claim laсks a legal basis as pleaded, it is inherently implausible and properly was dismissed. For the sake of completeness, we briefly address Thulin‘s argument concerning the adequacy of his allegations that Shopko “knew” it was submitting false claims. To be liable under the FCA, Shopko must have acted with “actual knowledge,” or with “deliberate ignorance” or “reckless disregard” to the possibility that the claims it submitted were false. King-Vassel, 728 F.3d at 712;
III.
For all of the reasons stated above, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
ROBERT M. DOW, JR.
DISTRICT JUDGE
