MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before the court is Defendants’ Joint Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings
The plaintiffs originally filed their petition in state court on January 5, 2001, asserting claims under the Texas Insurance Code and for unjust enrichment. The defendants timely removed the case to federal court on the basis of complete preemption under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) and the Medicare Act. At no point during this case have the defendants claimed diversity jurisdiction exists. The plaintiffs filed a motion to remand, which this court denied on September 5, 2001. Following the denial of the plaintiffs’ motion to remand, the defendants filed this motion for judgment on the pleadings.
I. Background
A. Factual Background
According to the plaintiffs’ First Amended Class Petition:
The plaintiffs, Dr. Neal Foley, Dr. Louis Roddy, and Associated Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgeons, L.L.P., along with several other doctors and physician groups used North American Medical Management (NAMM) to negotiate contracts on their behalf with the defendants, various health maintenance organizations (HMOs). After the negotiations had been completed, NAMM acted as a third-party administrator processing medical claims and paying the various doctors and physician groups. In the late 1990s, NAMM began experiencing problems with its computer system that resulted in billing and payment problems. The plaintiffs allege that they have not been paid from either NAMM or the HMOs for work done on patients of the HMOs since January 1, 2000. The plaintiffs filed this suit under a provision of the Texas Insurance Code and for unjust enrichment against the HMOs to recover for services rendered.
B. The Texas Insurance Code Provisions at Issue
The plaintiffs assert that they have provided services to the defendants or their enrollees through NAMM and have not been paid for these services since January 1, 2000. The plaintiffs looked to recoup payment for these services by filing suit in Texas state court against the defendants for violating Texas Insurance Code Article 20A.18B(c)(l), part of Texas’s Health Maintenance Organization Act, which states:
Not later than the 45th day after the date that the health maintenance organization receives a clean claim from a physician or provider, the health maintenance organization shall:
(1) pay the total amount of the claim in accordance with the contract between the physician or provider and the health maintenance organization.
Texas Insurance Code Article 20A.18B(c)(l). The statute defines a “clean claim” as “a completed claim, as determined under Texas Department of Insurance rules, submitted by a physician or provider for medical care or health care services under a health care plan.” Texas Insurance Code Article 20A.18B. The Texas Insurance Code continues:
A health maintenance organization that violates Subsection (c) or (e) of this section is liable to a physician or provider for the full amount of billed charges submitted on the claim or the amount payable under the contracted penalty rate, less any amount previously paid or any charge for service that is not covered by the health care plan.
Texas Insurance Code Article 20A.18B(f). For further ammunition against the defendants, the plaintiffs then ask the court to
If an insurer, plan, or plan sponsor uses the services of an administrator under a written agreement as required by Section 11 of this article, the payment of premiums or contributions to the administrator by or on behalf of an insured or plan participant is considered to have been received by the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor, and payment of return premium, contribution, or claims by the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor to the administrator are not considered payment to the insured, plan participant, or claimant until the payments are received by the insured, plan participant, or claimant.
Texas Insurance Code Article 21.07-6, sec. 12(a). Section 12(b) of this provision states that section 12(a) does not limit the right of an insurer, plan, or plan sponsor to bring a claim against the administrator for the administrator’s failure to make payments to the insured, plan participant, or claimant. Texas Insurance Code Article 21.07-6, sec. 12(b).
C. The September 5, 2001 Opinion
On September 5, 2001, the court denied the plaintiffs’ motion to remand. For that motion, the defendants argued that remand was improper because ERISA and the Medicare Act preempted the plaintiffs’ state law claims. Because the court found ERISA preempted the plaintiffs’ claims, the court did not review Medicare preemption.
In the September 5, 2001 opinion, the court found that the plaintiffs failed to establish the existence of an independent contractual relationship between themselves and the HMOs from whom they sought to recover for'services rendered. The court, thus concluded that the plaintiffs must be attempting to recover from these defendants based on the plaintiffs’ position as assignees of the HMOs’ enroll-ees’ benefits. As some of the enrollees were covered by ERISA-governed plans and as Fifth Circuit precedent established that ERISA preempts state law claims seeking “to recover benefits owed under [a] plan to a plan participant who has assigned her right to benefits to [her health care provider],”
Transitional Hosp. Corp. v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas, Inc.,
Article 20A.18B requires the HMO to pay the total amount of a claim in accordance with the contract between the physician or provider and the HMO within forty-five days of receiving a clean claim from the physician or provider. Because the plaintiffs did not allege the existence of a contract between themselves and the HMOs, the defendants argued that the plaintiffs’ claims were premised on the existence of an assignment and the court agreed. At oral arguments, the attorney for the plaintiffs made clear that the plaintiffs were not seeking payment as assignees of the enrollees’ benefits, but rather he argued that the Texas statutes listed above provided the plaintiffs with an independent cause of action against the HMOs that is separate and distinct from any position they may occupy as assignees of the en-rollees’ benefits.
The issue, therefore, is whether this court still has jurisdiction to hear this case. The defendants rest jurisdiction on complete federal preemption of the plaintiffs’ state law claims. The plaintiffs’ actual ability to recover under the facts of this case as applied to the state law through which they attempt to recover is irrelevant to the issue of preemption. All that really matters is whether this statute creates an independent cause of action against the defendants that for the purposes of ERISA preemption floes not “relate to” an ERISA plan and for Medicare purposes does not “arise under” the Medicare Act.
Because the court’s rationale as expressed in the September 5, 2001'opinion regarding the plaintiffs’ motion to remand,
i.e.,
that the plaintiffs were attempting to recover as assignees of ERISA plan benefits, no longer appears to the court to be a correct view of the plaintiffs’ Article 20A.18B(f) claim, the court needs to reanalyze the preemption issue. This court is mindful that federal courts in our dual system of government have limited, as opposed to general jurisdiction, and “should be zealots to avoid expansion of federal jurisdiction.”
Poindexter v. Board of Sup’rs, Roanoke County,
II. ERISA Preemption Analysis
Because the court originally found that ERISA preemption gave it subject matter jurisdiction over this case, ERISA preemption seems like a logical place to begin a review of whether the court does have such jurisdiction. Over a decade ago, this court wrote that “[m]ueh judicial ink has been painstakingly expended construing the preemption language” of ERISA.
Beauifiont Neurological Hosp. v. Humana, Inc.,
A. ERISA Generally
On Labor Day 1974, President Gerald Ford signed the Employee Retirement In
ERISA’s preemption clause specifies, in pertinent part, that the provisions of ERISA “supersede any and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan.” ERISA § 514(a), 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a);
Christopher v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
According to'the Supreme Court, a law relates to an ERISA plan if it: 1) has a connection with or 2) reference to such a plan.
California Div. of Labor Standards Enforcement v. Dillingham Constr., N.A., Inc.,
The Fifth Circuit has developed a two-prong test to aid courts in their preemption inquiry.
Memorial Hosp. Sys. v. Northbrook Life Ins. Co.,
Before, turning to the analysis of ERISA’s preemption clause’s impact on these Texas Insurance Code provisions, the court notes that a presumption against preemption and the exercise of federal jurisdiction exists. Because of the principles of federalism, the Supreme Court has stated that the presumption is that a cause of action lies outside the limited jurisdiction of federal courts.
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of America,
B. The Texas Insurance Code Claim
The plaintiffs’ creative combination of these two Texas Insurance Code statutes presents this court with a novel approach to recovery in the state of Texas. The plaintiffs’ claim attempts to take two provisions from the Texas Insurance Code, neither of which have ever been interpreted by another court before the filing of this lawsuit, have them read together, and have the court impose a type of vicarious liability on the defendants for a third party’s failure to make payments to the plaintiffs. The court does not completely agree, however, with the plaintiffs’ interpretation of how these statutes interact with each other.
1. The Plaintiffs’ View
The plaintiffs contend that through NAMM they sent clean claims to the defendants and that they have never received payment for these claims. The plaintiffs claim Article 20A.18B requires the defendants to make payments in accordance with the contract between the physician or provider and the defendants within forty-five days of receipt of a clean claim and provides them with a cause of action against the defendants for the failure to do so, regardless of whether they are in contractual privity with the defendants. The plaintiffs further argue that Article 21.07-6, sec. 12(a) makes the defendants liable to the plaintiffs if NAMM failed to make payments to them, even if the defendants made payments to NAMM. As the plaintiffs sum up their claim: “These particular state laws-Texas Insurance Code Arts. 21.07-6 and 20A.18B-impose vicarious liability upon all insurers, plans, and plan sponsors for services rendered by physicians and medical providers through third-party administrators.” Plaintiffs’ Response to Defendants’ Joint Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings at 12.
2. The Court’s View
The court interprets these two provisions of the Texas Insurance Code differ
The court’s view diverges from that of the plaintiffs’ when Article 21.07-6, sec. 12(a) enters the mix. Article 21.07-6, sec. 12(a) sets out a general rule that an insurer, plan, or plan sponsor bears the risk of an administrator’s failure to transfer payments either to or from the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor. The plaintiffs, however, have brought suit under Article 20A.18B, which requires HMOs to make payment in accordance with the contracts between the physicians or providers and .the HMOs. In a cause of action under Article 20A.18B(f), the contract between the physician or provider and the HMO would seem to govern the outcome, and thus the effect of the payment to a third-party administrator would depend upon the contents of this contract.
Furthermore, the court interprets 21.07-6, sec. 12(a) as holding an insurer, plan, or plan sponsor responsible for payments to an insured, plan participant, or claimant until the party the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor was obligated to pay actually receives payment. This provision makes clear that in the end, if the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor owes an insured, plan participant, or claimant money, the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor will be held responsible for making sure the money gets to the proper party. If the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor uses an administrator and pays money earmarked for an insured, plan participant, or claimant to the administrator for the purpose of the administrator making the final payment to the insured, plan participant, or claimant, the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor is liable for the administrator’s failure to transfer the payment to the ultimate payee. This provision, thus, takes away from an insured, plan, or plan sponsor that uses a third-party administrator the defense that it already made a payment when an insured, plan participant, or claimant sues it after the administrator fails to transfer the payment. The question remains then: Did the HMO make payments in accordance with the contract between itself and the physicians or providers (i.e., did the parties the defendants were contractually obligated to pay receive payment)?
C. ERISA Preemption Analysis of Plaintiffs’ Texas Insurance Code Claim
While the defendants do not contend that the plaintiffs’ Article 20A.18B(f) claim makes reference to an ERISA plan, the defendants do argue that it has a connection with an ERISA plan, and as such, relates to an ERISA plan. Because the court finds that the claim does not have an impermissible connection with an ERISA plan and because the court finds that the claim does not fall within the scope of ERISA’s civil enforcement provision, the court holds that the plaintiffs’ Texas Insurance Code claim is not preempted by ERISA.
In
Blue Cross,
the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court’s decision that ERISA did not preempt the plaintiffs claim and that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction when a health care provider sued a health care plan for breach of their provider agreement.
Blue Cross,
Thus, if the plaintiffs were suing to enforce a contract between themselves and the defendants, neither would argue that such a claim is preempted by ERISA. What Article 20A.18B allows the plaintiffs to do is to sue on their own behalf for the defendants’ breach of a contract between the defendants and a third party. The question then becomes does a state law that allows the plaintiffs to sue for a breach of a contract between the defendants and another party have an impermissible connection with an ERISA plan?
This court holds that it does not. Under either scenario-the plaintiffs being in contractual privity or, through the use of 20A.18B, not-the plaintiffs are merely attempting to hold the defendants liable for the obligations they undertook in a contract. These plaintiffs are not attempting to stand in the shoes of their patients to collect benefits promised to the defendants’ enrollees. This court has not been confronted with any reason why a state law allowing another party that lacks an ERISA relationship with the defendants to sue to enforce the contract between an HMO and a third party, like NAMM, should be preempted. Such a provision merely recognizes the practical situation
The Fifth Circuit has stated that health care providers were not a party to the ERISA bargain struck between plans and plan participants by Congress.
Memorial Hosp.,
Thus, it is not surprising that Article 20A.18B(f) does not violate either prong of the Fifth Circuit’s preemption test set out in
Memorial Hospital.
First, such a statute does not address an area of exclusive federal concern, but rather it allows a party that has not received payment to bring suit to make another party pay in accordance with a contract that party has with a third party. The enforcement of contracts can hardly be said to be an exclusive area of federal concern.
See Memorial Hosp.,
A statute that allows both physicians and providers to bring suit against an HMO for the HMO’s failure to make payments in accordance with the contract be
Throwing Article 21.07-6, sec. 12(a) into the mix does not change the outcome. All Article 21.07-6 does is put insurers, plans, and plan sponsors on the hook for an administrators failure to pay a party that the insurer, plan, or plan sponsor already was obligated to pay. Under 21.07-6, sec. 12(a), which third party administrator the defendants’ choose to deal with becomes an important question that could subject it to making a double payment if the defendant chooses to use an administrator that fails to pay the insured, plan participant, or claimant. This would obviously cost the defendants money, but simply raising the cost of doing business in a state does not lead to preemption by ERISA
See DeBuono v. NYSA-ILA Medical and Clinical Services Fund,
The court notes that even if it were to find the plaintiffs’ cause of action under Article 20A.18B(f) related to an ERISA plan, the Savings Clause would still prevent the claim from being preempted. Section 514(b)(2) of ERISA, commonly referred to as the “Savings Clause,” states: “Except as provided in subparagraph (B), nothing in this subchapter shall be construed to exempt or relieve any person from any law of any State which regulates insurance, banking, or securities.” After reviewing prior Supreme Court holdings, the Court has laid out a two part test for determining whether the Savings Clause applies:
1) whether the state law regulates insurance as a common sense matter; and
2) is the common sense view confirmed by an application of the three McCar-ran-Ferguson Act factors:
A) whether the practice has the effect of reallocating the risk between the insured and the insurer;
B) whether it is an integral part of the policy relationship between the insured and the insurer; and
C) whether the practice is limited to entities in the insurance industry.
UNUM Life Ins. Co. of America v. Ward,
The Supreme Court has stated that a “common-sense view of the word ‘regulate’ would lead to the conclusion that in order to regulate insurance, a law must not just have an impact on the insurance industry, but must be specifically directed toward that industry.”
Pilot Life,
The statute under which the plaintiffs have brought their cause of action is found in the Texas Insurance Code, and like the statute in Rush, it is part of the state’s HMO Act. The Texas HMO Act defines a “health maintenance organization” as “any person who arranges for or provides a health care plan, a limited health care service plan, or a single health care service plan to enrollees on a prepaid basis.” Texas Insurance Code Article 20A.02(n). The term “health care plan” as used in the definition of a “health maintenance organization” is defined by the Act as “any plan whereby any person undertakes to provide, arrange for, pay for, or reimburse any part of the cost of any health care services; provided, however, a part of such plan consists of arranging for or the provision of health care services, as distinguished from indemnification against the cost of such service, on a prepaid basis through insurance or otherwise.” Texas Insurance Code Article 20A.02(1). Thus, Texas’s definition of an HMO specifically contemplates providing and paying for the cost of its enrollees’ health care and spreading the risk of such care through the prepayment of fees by its enrollees. This court finds that the Texas HMO Act, like the Illinois HMO Act, provides the state with a mechanism for regulating insurance and does not create a flexible rule that may be applied in several different situations.
The McCarran-Ferguson factors do nothing to dissuade the court from this conclusion. Before moving to these factors, though, the court notes that the Supreme Court has called these factors merely “guideposts” that are “relevant” to a court’s Savings Clause analysis, but not “required” to prevent ERISA prevention of a state law.
UNUM Life Ins. Co. of America v. Ward,
The second factor asks whether the provision is “an integral part of the policy relationship between the insurer and the insured.”
Id.
(quoting
Metropolitan Life,
The third McCarran-Ferguson factor asks whether the state law is “limited to entities within the insurance industry.”
Id.
at 375,
Finally, even if the court were to find that the plaintiffs’ cause of action under Article 20A.18B(f) related to an ERISA plan pursuant -to § 514(a) of ERISA, this would only lead to ordinary preemption, which is not sufficient to support removal jurisdiction.
McClelland v. Gronwaldt,
Complete preemption “‘recharacterizes’ preempted state law claims as ‘arising under’ federal law for purposes of determining federal question jurisdiction, typically making removal available to the defendant.”
Id.; Johnson v. Baylor Univ.,
ERISA § 514(a) provides for the ordinary preemption of “any and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan.” 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). While ERISA § 502(a)(1)(B), ERISA’s civil enforcement provision, states: “A civil action may be brought-by a participant or beneficiary-to recover benefits due to him under
It is well-settled that a medical provider’s “state-law claims for breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, equitable estoppel, breach of contract, and fraud are completely preempted by ERISA when the [provider] seeks to recover benefits owed under the plan to a plan participant who has assigned her right to benefits to the [provider].”
Transitional Hosp.,
The plaintiffs’ Article 20A.18B(f) claim is not based on the existence of an ERISA plan. Furthermore, the plaintiffs do not seek to enforce rights that are protected by ERISA’s civil enforcement provision. Rather, the plaintiffs seek to enforce obligations independent of any of the defendants’ enrollees’ rights. The plaintiffs’ cause of action under the Texas Insurance Code is one where the plain language of the statute would not allow an enrollee to bring a claim and one which bases recovery on agreements outside the plan documents. While ERISA plans may provide factual background for the plaintiffs’ Article 20A.18B(f) claim, the plans are not the source of the obligation the plaintiffs seek to enforce. Such a state law claim cannot be said to fall within ERISA’s civil enforcement provision, and thus, is not completely preempted by ERISA.
Accordingly, the court finds that the plaintiffs’ Article 20A.18B(f) claim is not preempted by ERISA.
D. The Plaintiffs’ Unjust Enrichment Claim
The plaintiffs have also brought an unjust enrichment claim against the defendants. In the complaint, the plaintiffs allege that “as a direct result of the Defendants’ actions a benefit was conferred on the Defendants in that the Defendants-or their enrollees-aecepted benefits conferred by the Class Members providing medical services to them as their en-rollees.” Plaintiffs’ First Amended Class Petition at 8-9. The plaintiffs continue by alleging that the defendants accepted these benefits, but have either refused or failed to pay for them. Id. at 9.
Unjust enrichment is an equitable theory of recovery that is based on an implied agreement to pay for benefits received.
Vortt Exploration Co., Inc. v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc.,
(1) that valuable services were rendered or materials furnished;
(2) for the person sought to be charged;
(3) which services and materials were accepted by the person sought to be charged, used,, and enjoyed by that person; and
(4) under such circumstances as reasonably notified the person sought to be charged that the plaintiff in performing such services was expecting to be paid by the person sought to be charged.
Vortt,
E. ERISA Preemption Analysis of Plaintiffs’ Unjust Enrichment Claim
Without addressing whether this claim relates to an ERISA plan pursuant to § 514(a), this court finds complete preemption does not exist because the claim does not fall within the scope of ERISA’s civil enforcement provision.
See McClelland,
Here, the plaintiffs’ claim does not rely upon the existence of a plan for recovery. The plaintiffs allege that they performed work for the defendants and the defendants, after accepting the work, failed to pay for it. The plaintiffs bring this claim in their own independent capacity, and not as assignees of the beneficiaries’ benefits. The plaintiffs’ claim is not based upon the defendants’ promise to provide health care to its enrollees, but rather on the defendants implied promise to pay the plaintiffs for providing services to their enrollees.
ERISA’s civil enforcement provision states: “A civil action may be brought-by a participant or benefieiary-to recover benefits due to him under the terms of his plan, to enforce his rights under the terms of the plan, or to clarify his rights to future benefits under the terms of the plan.” 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B). This unjust enrichment claim does not fall within the scope of ERISA’s civil enforcement provision.
See, e.g., Weiner v. Texas Health Choice L.C.,
The
Memorial Hospital
factors, discussed above, support this conclusion. First, does the state law claim address areas of exclusive federal concern, such as the right to receive benefits under the terms of an ERISA plan?
Memorial Hosp.,
Second, does the claim directly affect the relationship among traditional ERISA entities-plan administrators/fiduciaries and plan participants/beneficiaries?
Memorial Hosp.,
Accordingly, the court finds the plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment claim is not completely preempted by ERISA.
III. Medicare Analysis
The defendants contend that the Medicare Act (the “Act”) provides this court with an independent means of finding subject matter jurisdiction exists. The defendants argue that because the “plaintiffs’ allegations concern benefits under the federal Medicare program, plaintiffs’ claims must be determined under the federal statutory scheme established for review of Medicare-related claims.” Defendants’ Joint Motion in Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion to Remand at 15.
A Medicare Generally
The Act provides insurance to eligible Medicare beneficiaries for the cost of hospital and related post-hospital expenses, but precludes reimbursement for services that are not “reasonable or necessary.”
Ardary v. Aetna Health Plans of California,
A member enrolled with an eligible organization who is dissatisfied by reason of his failure to receive any health service to which he believes he is entitled and at no greater charge than he believes he is required to pay is entitled to a hearing before the Secretary. 42 U.S.C. § 1395mm(c)(5)(B). Incorporating Section 405(g) of Title 42, the Act provides that judicial review of a claim may only occur after a “final decision” has been rendered on such claims. Again, a final decision is rendered on a Medicare claim only after all the levels of administrative review have been exhausted.
The exclusive administrative appeals process applies to all benefit determinations. 42 U.S.C. §§ 405(b), 1395mm(c)(5)(A); 42 C.F.R. § 417.606. All Medicare claims must first be brought for reconsideration to the organization which made the initial determination and to HCFA. 42 C.F.R. §§ 417.616, 417.620. If the dispute, is not resolved favorably to the beneficiary, and if the amount in controversy exceeds $100, HCFA’s decision may be appealed to an administrative law judge. 42 C.F.R. §§ 417.630, 417.632. The decision may be further appealed to HCFA’s Appeals Council, and if the amount in controversy exceeds $1,000, the beneficiary or dissatisfied party may seek the judicial review of the decision in federal court. 42 C.F.R. §§ 417.634, 417.636.
Further, 42 U.S.C. § 405(h), made applicable to the Act by 42 U.S.C. § 1395ii,
Whether a claim “arises under” the Act is determined by either one of two tests enunciated by the Supreme Court. First, a claim arises under the Act if “both the standing and the substantive basis for the presentation” of the claim is the Act.
Heckler,
In determining whether a claim “arises under” the Act, the term “arises under” is to be interpreted broadly.
Heckler,
A party cannot avoid the Medicare Act’s jurisdictional bar simply by styling its attack as a claim for collateral damages instead of a challenge to the underlying denial of benefits. If litigants who have been denied benefits could routinely obtain judicial review of these decisions by recharacterizing their claims under state and federal causes of action, the Medicare Act’s goal of limited judicial review for a substantial number of claims would be severely undermined.
In
Heckler,
three plaintiffs were Medicare beneficiaries who were denied reimbursement for bilateral carotid body resection surgery (“BCBR”) that they had already undergone, because a formal ruling of the Secretary had concluded that BCBR was not a reimbursable medical procedure.
In reversing the Court of Appeals, the Supreme Court construed the plaintiffs’ claims as nothing “more than, at bottom, a claim that they should be paid for their BCBR surgery.”
Id.
at 614,
B. Medicare Analysis of the Plaintiffs’ Unjust Enrichment Claim
The plaintiffs have brought a claim for unjust enrichment against the defendants. The plaintiffs allege that they conferred a benefit on the defendants “in that the Defendants-or their enrollees-accepted benefits conferred by the Class Members providing medical services to them as their enrollees.” Plaintiffs’ First Amended Class Petition at 8-9. The plaintiffs further allege that the defendants have not paid for the services and that the defendants “will be unjustly enriched if allowed to retain these benefits conferred without payment for the reasonable value of the services rendered by the Class Members.” Id. Finally, the plaintiffs contend that because of the defendants’ actions, they “are entitled to recover the reasonable value of the benefits conferred upon the Defendants.” Id. at 9.
The court finds that the plaintiffs’ cause of action is inextricably intertwined with a claim for Medicare benefits. The plaintiffs contend that they are “entitled to recover the reasonable value of the benefits conferred upon the Defendants”-! e., the work they did for the defendants’ enrollees.
Id.
Thus, under the plaintiffs’ claim, if they did $500 worth of tests on one of the defendants’ enrollees, they claim the defendants owe them $500. In such a situation, where the plaintiffs seek to recover for work done on enrollees covered by Medicare, this claim is “at bottom” a claim for Medicare benefits.
Heckler,
C. Medicare Analysis of Plaintiffs’ Texas Insurance Code Claim
The plaintiffs have also brought a claim under the Texas Insurance Code against the defendants claiming they did work for the defendants and have not been paid for this work. Plaintiffs’ First Amended Class Petition at 5-6. The plaintiffs seek to recover for their work pursuant to Article 20A.18B. Id. at 8. The court finds this claim as it relates to recovery for work performed for enrollees covered by Medicare to be inextricably intertwined with the Act.
As stated above, the plaintiffs’ Texas Insurance Code claim is basically a breach of contract claim where the plaintiffs seek
In Lifecare Hospitals, the plaintiff, Life-care Hospitals, attempted to collect $210,362 from the defendant-HMO for services rendered to three patients. Id. at 769. Medicare covered all three patients. Id. at 770. The defendant, a fiscal intermediary under the Act, did not pay the plaintiff for all the services rendered to these three enrollees, so the plaintiff filed suit in state court seeking payment for the services rendered. Id. The defendant removed the case to federal court, and then the court dismissed it for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Id. After reviewing the Act’s “arising under” language, the court stated:
In this case, Lifecare alleges that it provided medical services to three enrollees in [the defendant’s] Medicare plan, and that under its contract with [the defendant’s] agent, it is entitled to payment from [the defendant] for the cost of those treatments. Thus, there is no doubt that Lifecare’s claims are, at bottom, claims for reimbursement for benefits provided to enrollees in [the defendant’s] plan.
Id. at 771-72. Because the court found the plaintiffs claim inextricably intertwined with a claim for Medicare benefits, the court held that the claim arose under the Act, and the plaintiff was thus required to exhaust its administrative remedies before seeking judicial review of its claim. Id. at 772.
Similarly, the plaintiffs in the case presently before this court seek to recover under a type of breach of contract action for services rendered to the defendants’ enrollees. The court agrees with the conclusion reached by Judge Stagg last year, and holds likewise, that the plaintiffs’ claim arises under the Act and that the plaintiffs must exhaust their administrative remedies before seeking judicial review. For purposes of the Act, it does not matter how the plaintiffs characterize their claim because a cause of action may arise under the Act, while at the same time arising under another law.
Midland Psychiatric,
Because the plaintiffs do not allege that they have exhausted their administrative remedies, the Act bars this suit from proceeding in either federal or state court. Accordingly, the court holds that the plaintiffs’ claims as they relate to an attempt to recover for services rendered to the defen
IV. Conclusion
After reviewing the briefing on file and having heard oral arguments, this court has reconsidered its September 5th decision and has determined that the plaintiffs’ state law claims are not completely preempted by ERISA. Further, the court has found that the Medicare Act bars the plaintiffs’ claims as they relate to an attempt to recover for services rendered to the defendants’ enrollees’ covered by Medicare, and thus dismisses the claims, but only with respect to their attempt to recover for services provided to enrollees’ covered by Medicare. As such, the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the remainder of the plaintiffs’ claims, and so remands the casé back to the state court from whence it came to resolve the remainder of the issues raised by the plaintiffs’ claims. It is, therefore,
ORDERED, that the Defendants’ Joint Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings [Dkt. #25] is GRANTED in PART and DENIED in PART. It is further,
ORDERED, that the Plaintiffs’ claims as they related to an attempt to recover for services rendered to the Defendants’ enrollees covered by Medicare are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE with leave to re-file as a claim for Medicare benefits under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) after exhaustion of administrative remedies, but only in federal court as required by the statute. It is further,
ORDERED, that each party is to bear their own costs. It is further,
ORDERED, that this case is remanded to the state court from whence it came to resolve the remainder of the issues raised by the Plaintiffs’ claims.
