ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT MERCY HOSPITAL’S MOTION TO DISMISS PLAINTIFF’S SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT
THIS MATTER is before the Court on Defendant Mercy Hospital, Inc’s (“Mercy’s”) Motion to Dismiss the Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) [DE-55]. 1 In an earlier, partial ruling on this Motion, the Court dismissed Counts Three and. Four alleging unjust enrichment and a violation of the duty of good faith and fair dealing. See DE-90. The Court also partially dismissed Count Two alleging a violation of Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act, Fla. Stat. § 501.201, et seq. (“FDUTPA”) insofar as that claim involved allegations of deceptiveness on Mercy’s part. See id. The Court reserved ruling on Count One (breach of contract) and Count Two (FDUTPA-un-fairness), however, and requested supplemental briefing on the question of what legal standard governs Plaintiffs allegations of unreasonable pricing, which forms the basis for Plaintiffs breach of contract and FDUTPA claims.
Having now considered the additional briefing, and reviewed the SAC in a light most favorable to Plaintiff and drawn all reasonable inferences therefrom in Plaintiffs favor, the Court finds that the allegations of unreasonable pricing in the SAC meet Plaintiffs burden of pleading claims for breach of contract ■ and violation of FDUTPA. Therefore, Mercy’s Motion to Dismiss is denied.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
This is a putative class action filed on behalf of uninsured patients at Mercy Hospital. Plaintiff was a patient at Mercy between March 5-6, 2003. SAC [DE-47] ¶¶ 5, 41-42. At the time of her admission to Mercy, Plaintiff was uninsured and did not qualify for Medicaid or other assistance programs. SAC ¶¶ 5, 41. Plaintiff came to Mercy due to shortness of breath. *1268 Id., ¶¶ 5, 42. She had a chest x-ray, ventilation/perfusion lung scan and an EKG. Id. She was treated with steroids, oxygen and given respiratory therapy. Id. Her entire stay lasted approximately 26 hours. Id. Plaintiff does not allege any deficiency in the care she received from Mercy. Rather, her complaint targets Mercy’s billing policies and practices.
Prior to receiving any treatment or services from Mercy, Plaintiff signed an “Authorization and Guarantee” form (the “contract”) in which she agreed to pay all bills not otherwise covered by insurance or other means. SAC ¶ 66. However, the services she would need and the prices she would pay were unspecified in the contract. Id. ¶ 65. After Plaintiff was discharged from the hospital, she received a bill from Mercy totaling $12,863.00. SAC ¶ 43. As of the filing of the SAC, Plaintiff had made payment on the bill in the amount of $1,750.00. SAC ¶ 45. The balance was sent to collections. Id.
In her First Amended Complaint (“FAC”), Plaintiff alleged that the bill she received from Mercy was inflated and unfair when compared to the rates charged to, and accepted,from, patients with insurance or patients covered by Medicaid or Medicare.
See
FAC ¶ 45. She argued that Mercy’s differential pricing alone was sufficient to constitute a breach of contract because Florida law requires the amount of an open pricing contract to be reasonable.
See Payne v. Humana Hosp.,
Thereafter, Plaintiff filed her SAC, adding the following factual allegations regarding the reasonableness of Mercy’s prices:
(1) Plaintiff was charged nearly $12,863 for medical services, while the actual costs of the services were only $2,098;
(2) CHE hospitals (of which Mercy belongs) generally charge uninsured patients rates at 370% of Medicare reimbursement rates;
(3) Mercy in particular charges uninsured patients rates at 450% of Medicare reimbursement rates;
(4) CHE hospitals, rank among the top 13% of all hospitals nationwide in charges (including both for-profit and non-profit hospitals);
(5) CHE’s cost-to-charge ratio is 394%, meaning that on average CHE hospitals charge almost four times their costs to uninsured patients;
(6) CHE hospitals rank in the top 10% of hospitals nationwide in terms of cost-to-charge ratio.
See Second Amended Complaint [DE-47] ¶¶ 30-32, 43-45. Mercy responded with the instant Motion to Dismiss, contending that these new allegations do not cure Plaintiffs complaint.
*1269 II. Motion to Dismiss Standard
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) provides that a party may move the Court to dismiss a claim for “failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” Rule 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of a party’s claim for relief. Such a motion does not decide whether the plaintiff will ultimately prevail on the merits, but instead whether she has properly stated a claim and should therefore be permitted to offer evidence to support it.
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
III. Analysis
A. Unreasonable Pricing Claims
A thorough review of the case law from Florida and elsewhere leads to the conclusion that no single factor can be used to determine the reasonableness of Mercy’s hospital charges. Rather, several non-exclusive factors are relevant to the inquiry. As discussed in more detail below, those factors include but are not necessarily limited to: (1) an analysis of the relevant market for hospital services (including the rates charged by other similarly situated hospitals for similar services); (2) the usual and customary rate Mercy charges and receives for its hospital services; and (3) Mercy’s internal cost structure. Consideration of the SAC in light of these factors establishes that Plaintiff has stated a claim for breach of contract and violation of FDUTPA based on unreasonable pricing.
1. Market Analysis
Mercy argues that even with the new allegations, Plaintiffs SAC still fails to state a claim and that, in fact, the new allegations affirmatively establish that Plaintiff can plead no facts that would entitle her to relief. The thrust of Mercy’s argument is that Plaintiff can only establish an unreasonable pricing claim by pleading and proving that Mercy’s charges grossly exceed the range of prices other hospitals in the same market charge. Mercy maintains that Plaintiff concedes in ¶ 30 of the SAC that CHE’s and Mercy’s prices are within the range of what other hospitals charge, and therefore Plaintiff has pled herself out of court. Paragraph 30 states in full that:
According to statistics derived from the figures that all hospitals are required to provide to the government, in 2004, CHE’s Chargemaster prices — and, accordingly, the prices charged to uninsured patients — were, on average, 370% higher than Medicare reimbursement rates for non-outlier reimbursements, compared with the national average of 292%. Based upon these figures, on average, CHE’s prices, and, therefore, charges to uninsured patients, fall in the top thirteen percent of all hospitals (including both for profit and not-for-profit) across the country.
*1270 Mercy’s argument based on ¶ 30 fails both as a matter of fact and law. First, Plaintiffs SAC contains sufficient allegations that Mercy’s charges are not “within the range” of the market. Second, and more importantly, a market analysis is not the sole measure of evaluating reasonableness.
(a) Plaintiff’s Market Allegations Are Sufficient
Even accepting Mercy’s narrow view of proving an unreasonable pricing claim, here Plaintiff has alleged that Mercy’s charges are in the top 13% of what all hospitals charge, and that Mercy’s eost-tocharge ratio (a measurement of how much its charges exceed costs) is among the top 10% of all hospitals. These allegations are sufficient to show, at the pleading stage, that Mercy’s charges are not “within the range” of what other hospitals charge but rather at the extreme end of the range. Although neither party has fully explained how the Court should interpret the raw statistics provided in the SAC, Plaintiff claims that they offer an apples-to-apples comparison of hospital charges throughout the county. Mercy does not take issue with this representation and, at this stage of pleading especially, the Court is willing to accept this comparison as accurate. From this, the Court can infer that Mercy charges patients like Plaintiff at the high end of what hospitals charge in general. Thus, while Mercy’s charges are technically “within the range” of what all hospitals charge (because the particular statistics include all hospitals), they are, on average, so far to the high end of the range that dismissal would be inappropriate. In more concrete terms, if the allegations had shown that Mercy’s charges were within the 25th-75th percentile of what all hospitals charge, then the Court might be able to conclude as a matter of law that Mercy was “within the range” of the overall market. But being in the nation’s top 13% is too far above the average to so conclude. Accordingly, even if the only way to state a claim in this case would be to show that Mercy’s charges were outside the range the market charges for similar services, the allegations in the SAC, viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, meet this standard.
(b) A Market Analysis is Only One Means of Evaluating Reasonableness
Furthermore, Mercy’s premise, that unreasonable pricing claims can only be established by showing that prices grossly exceed the market, is far too restrictive a test of reasonableness. There is little doubt that what the market charges for similar services is one relevant measure of reasonableness.
See Bennett v. Behring,
To support its narrow view, Mercy relies exclusively on
Bennett v. Behring,
Properly read,
Bennett
stands for the proposition that without
some
evidence of the market value of the services in question, one cannot conclude from the absolute price alone that it is unreasonable. But the
Bennett
court never held, as Mercy suggests, that the
only
way to prove unreasonableness is by reference to the prices others charge. While evidence of what others in the market charge for similar services is a necessary factor in the analysis, it is not a sufficient one in and of itself. Accordingly, the
Bennett
case stands in a similar position as
Hillsborough Co. Hosp. Auth. v. Fernandez,
B. Differential Pricing
In addition to a market analysis, the case law reveals that the price charged for the same services to other patients within the same hospital is also relevant to the question of reasonableness.
Payne v. Humana Hosp.,
Here, Plaintiff alleges that patients with insurance and government benefits receive significant discounts in the price they pay for Mercy’s services. See SAC, ¶ 28. This suggests that the value of the services charged to Plaintiff may be significantly less than what Mercy asked her to pay. This allegation, if borne out during discovery, would be evidence in support of the conclusion that the charges imposed on Plaintiff are unreasonable.
C. Internal Cost Structure
In addition to what a hospital charges others for the same services, and what the market charges in general, another relevant factor that emerges from the pertinent case law is the particular hospital’s internal cost structure.
See Doe,
This analysis of internal costs does not necessarily penalize efficient hospitals with lower costs, as Mercy suggests. This is so because the appropriate analysis of reasonableness is multifaceted and does not look only at internal costs relative to price in isolation. So, for instance, a hospital with a high profit margin compared to another hospital with the same charges does not necessarily have unreasonable costs, if the increased profits derive from cost efficiencies. On the other hand, rate increases untethered to any appreciable increase in costs would raise questions about the reasonableness of the rate increases and the overall reasonableness of the charges.
Here, there are no detailed allegations regarding Mercy’s internal cost structure. These are facts largely, if not entirely, within Mercy’s possession and control. However, Plaintiff has alleged that the costs of her services total approximately *1273 $2,100 and that she was charged almost $13,000 for those services. This means that Mercy, as alleged, charged Plaintiff six times what it cost Mercy to treat her. The Court can only speculate about how Mercy determined its charges based on these costs, but accepting these allegation as true, as the legal standard under Rule 12(b)(6) requires, the Court cannot conclude as a matter of law that charging 600% above costs is reasonable.
B. Damages
As an additional basis for dismissal, Mercy contends that Plaintiff has not incurred damages because she has paid less than the cost of the services she has received. Plaintiff alleges that she paid $1,750 to Mercy. 2 She also alleges that the cost for those services is only $2,098, rather than the $12,863 charged to her. Thus, Mercy asserts that Plaintiff has suffered no damages and therefore cannot bring a breach of contract claim.
This argument is unconvincing, as it overlooks the fact that Mercy actually billed Plaintiff for the $12,863 and sent the bill to collections. Plaintiff is certainly aggrieved by the collections process and the threat and uncertainty of legal action to recover the full amount billed. The fact that she has not paid the full amount yet does not alter the fact that Mercy has demanded it from her. As such, the dispute as to the lawful amount owed needs to be resolved, either as a damages suit to recover any excess paid by Plaintiff, or as a declaratory judgment action to determine the lawful amount owed.
See
Fla Stat. § 86.031 (declaratory judgment action can proceed “before or after there has been a breach”). In
Payne,
for example, the Court allowed plaintiff to proceed with a declaratory judgment action because he was in doubt about his rights under a medical service contract similar to the one here.
Similarly, in
Allstate Insur. Co. v. Kaklamanos,
If Plaintiff has not yet paid any more than she alleges the services cost, then this will likely have a bearing on what damages, if any, she can ultimately recover. Unlike Payne, where plaintiff apparently alleged that he had paid more than the reasonable amount, Plaintiff here may only be entitled to a declaration that the charges are unreasonable. If that is the *1274 case, then Plaintiff will be required only to pay whatever amount is deemed reasonable.
IV. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, the Court concludes that several factors are relevant in the analysis of whether Mercy’s charges are reasonable, including but not limited to Mercy’s internal cost structure, the usual and customary rates charged and payments receives for these services, and what other hospitals in the relevant market charge for similar services. Based on an analysis of these factors and a close review of the SAC in a light favorable to Plaintiff, the Court concludes that Plaintiff has stated a claim of breach of contract for unreasonable pricing of an open pricing term in her contract with Mercy. In addition, the Court is satisfied that these allegations also meet the threshold for stating a claim under the unfairness prong of the FDUTPA. Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED that Mercy Hospital, Inc.’s Motion to Dismiss [DE-55] is DENIED.
Notes
. On November 8, 2006, the Court granted co-Defendant Catholic Health East's Motion for Summary Judgment [DE-122], thereby mooting CHE’s Motion to Dismiss [DE-53],
. At the hearing on the Motion to Dismiss, Plaintiffs counsel stated than since the filing of the SAC Plaintiff has in fact made incremental payments on Mercy's bill and that in sum she has now paid more than the amount the services allegedly cost. On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court will not consider statements outside the pleadings, however.
