Opinion
INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff Corey Hambrick (Hambrick) brought this class action alleging causes of action for violation of the unfair competition law (UCL; Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.), common law fraudulent concealment, and violation of the false advertising law (FAL; id.., § 17500) against defendants Healthcare Partners Medical Group, Inc. (MGI), Healthcare Partners, LLC (HCP-LLC), and DaVita Healthcare Partners, Inc. (DVHCP) (collectively HCP or the HCP defendants). 1 The premise underlying all of Hambrick’s claims is that although HCP does not fall within the literal definition of a “health care service plan” 2 as defined in Health and Safety Code section 1345, subdivision (f)(1), 3 due to the level of risk it assumed, HCP operated as a health care service plan without obtaining the license required by the Knox-Keene Health Care Service Plan Act of 1975 4 (Knox-Keene Act; § 1340 et seq.), and without meeting the regulatory mandates required of health care service plans.
Hambrick argues on appeal that HCP was required to have a license under the Knox-Keene Act because it accepted a level of “global risk” that transforms it from a medical “risk-bearing organization” under section 1375.4 to a “health care service plan” under section 1345. However, neither the Knox-Keene Act nor the regulations adopted by the Department of Managed Health Care (DMHC) defines the level of risk that would cause a medical entity like HCP to become a de facto health care service plan. We find that this determination of an acceptable risk level is a regulatory decision involving complex economic policy considerations that should be made by DMHC, the regulatory agency tasked with interpreting and enforcing the Knox-Keene Act.
We therefore conclude that the trial court acted within its discretion in invoking the abstention doctrine as to the statutory causes of action but not as to the common law cause of action for fraudulent concealment. However, we find that Hambrick failed to plead a claim for fraudulent concealment, and that she has failed to demonstrate how she could amend the operative complaint to cure the defect. We affirm the judgment of dismissal, including the order awarding costs.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 5
A. The First Amended Complaint
On January 25, 2013, Hambrick, on behalf of herself and others similarly situated, filed a first amended class action complaint for damages and equitable relief against the HCP defendants.
6
Hambrick alleges that MGI is a professional medical corporation and HCP-LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary
As alleged, HCP operated as a health care service plan for nearly a decade without obtaining the license required by the Knox-Keene Act. Hambrick paid her medical premiums to a health care service plan other than HCP. However, HCP assumed the financial risk and responsibility for Hambrick’s “institutional care” (hospital care) 7 and other health care services (e.g., physicians), and it paid for her care through contracts with health care service plans and other third parties. By assuming the financial risk for Hambrick’s hospital care without a license, HCP purported to relieve Hambrick’s health care service plan, which is legally responsible for her care, of any financial responsibility for her care.
HCP directed Hambrick’s hospital care, limiting her access to hospital care to only those hospitals with which HCP contracted, and prohibiting her from accessing “better” hospitals that contracted with her health care service plan. In addition, HCP directed Hambrick’s specialty care “to physicians who practice at the hospitals with which HCP contracts” and “away from better physicians who practice at hospitals with which HCP does not contract in order to avoid paying for high quality care.” Hambrick alleges that she was entitled to use the better hospitals and physicians who contracted with the health care service plan to which she paid her premiums.
Hambrick further alleges that HCP purposefully limited her access to care for the purpose of maximizing profits as a result of its “assumption of institutional financial risk without the required State license.” By doing this, HCP “avoided a near decade of regulatory scrutiny of its operations, avoided paying the regulatory fees assessed by DMHC to all licensees, and avoided the numerous specific, consumer-protection mandates in the Knox-Keene Act such as the requirement to provide timely access to medically necessary care.” In addition, HCP “reaped extraordinary profits in the billions of dollars by delaying and denying access to medically necessary care to its members.”
Up until October 2012, Hambrick was an employee of MGI, and she was a patient of MGI from 2011 to 2012. While employed by MGI, Hambrick acquired personal knowledge that HCP “was paying claims for institutional/hospital care for claims for which HCP had assumed the responsibility for payment.” MGI’s physicians served as Hambrick’s primary care
In January, March and July 2012, Hambrick complained to MGI “that she was receiving inferior care from her assigned physicians, and protested both the quality of her care and the delays in accessing primary and specialist care.” Hambrick alleges that HCP “delayed her access to care because [HCP] had assumed risk for hospital charges, even though they did not have the required State license that would allow them to assume the risk for such institutional care.” In addition, she alleges “that the desire to avoid a hospital claim affected the decisions made by HCP which restricted HAMBRICK’S access to high quality specialists who practiced at hospitals with whom HCP did not contract.”
Hambrick alleges further that HCP’s “desire to avoid paying hospital claims it had agreed to become responsible for, caused HCP to deny HAMBRICK[] access to qualified specialists and physicians who could accurately diagnose and treat her, because those physicians might admit HAMBRICK to HCP’s non-preferred hospitals. HAMBRICK ultimately was forced to purchase her own insurance and to seek care outside of [MGI] in order to timely access care.”
Hambrick defines the purported class as “[a]ll patients for whom HCP assumed financial responsibility for the institutional care of, or directed the institutional care of’ and “[a]ll HCP patients treated by HCP while HCP is or was controlled or owned by non-physician shareholders.”
In the first cause of action for violation of the UCL, Hambrick alleges that HCP violated numerous statutory provisions, including those in the Knox-Keene Act, and that HCP’s actions constituted fraudulent and unfair business practices under the UCL. Hambrick alleges that HCP profited by ignoring the requirements of California law, including the requirements for financial reserves applicable to health care service plans. Hambrick also alleges that HCP profited by denying access to care and providing inferior care. Hambrick seeks disgorgement of “ill-gotten gains” and “an injunction prohibiting [HCP] from violating California law.”
The second cause of action for fraud and “concealment” alleges that “Plaintiffs and [the HCP defendants] were in a relationship of trust,” and that the HCP defendants had a duty “to disclose to their patients all material
The complaint further alleges that plaintiffs “reasonably relied upon [the HCP defendants] to seek their fully informed consent, and to treat them consistent with good professional practice and medical standards.” Hambrick alleges that she was injured because she received deficient care from the physicians and hospitals to which she was referred instead of the physicians and hospitals that contracted with the health care service plans to which she paid her premiums. She alleges as damages “physical injuries, emotional injuries, loss of income, future medical expenses, [and] co-pays or coinsurance payments to the hospitals.” Hambrick also seeks punitive damages against HCP pursuant to Civil Code section 3294.
Hambrick’s third cause of action is for violation of the FAL. She alleges that the HCP defendants “advertise, including through their website www.health carepartners.com, that they are committed to the guiding principle of coordinated care,” that the services provided by HCP “are ‘patient centered,’ ” and that HCP “will always strive for the highest quality outcomes.” HCP concealed its unlicensed status, the financial arrangements by which it was obligated to pay for Hambrick’s care, and the fact that “Plaintiffs would not be afforded the other consumer protections provided by the Knox-Keene Act.”
Contrary to its representations, HCP “did not provide to Plaintiffs coordinated care intended to achieve the highest quality outcomes. Instead, [the HCP defendants] managed their patients’ and Plaintiffs’ care in a manner designed to delay or deny physician, specialist and hospital care necessary to properly diagnose and treat Plaintiffs’ conditions.” The HCP defendants’ advertisement and representations were made with knowledge that they “had assumed full financial risk without a Knox-Keene license and without the financial reserves required of licensed health plans.” Hambrick alleges that HCP made the representations with the intent to induce patients and health plan members to use HCP for their services, and that HCP knew it was misleading them. Hambrick alleges as damages the premiums paid to HCP, co-pays, deductibles, and co-insurance payments paid to HCP.
B. Demurrers
On March 20, 2013, MGI filed a demurrer to the first amended complaint and a motion to strike. MGI also sought a protective order staying discovery. MGI demurred on the grounds that Hambrick failed to state facts sufficient to state a cause of action (Code Civ. Proc., §430.10, subd. (e)) and that the court lacked jurisdiction (id., subd. (a)). In its points and authorities, MGI argued that the doctrine of judicial abstention required dismissal of all claims or, in the alternative, the court should invoke the doctrine of primary jurisdiction to allow the DMHC to make a licensing decision.
MGI also argued that each cause of action failed to state a claim. MGI challenged the fraudulent concealment cause of action on the ground Hambrick failed to plead a duty to disclose, justifiable reliance, causation and recoverable damages. Finally, MGI argued that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring a cause of action for false advertising on the basis that they had not alleged that they saw MGI’s advertising or relied on it in selecting MGI’s physicians.
On April 12, 2013, HCP-LLC and DVHCP filed a separate demurrer raising the same issues raised by MGI in its demurrer. In their demurrer, HCP-LLC and DVHCP also argued that the claims against them should be dismissed because Hambrick failed adequately to plead any alleged wrongdoing or secondary liability on their part. HCP-LLC and DVHCP also sought a protective order.
Hambrick opposed both demurrers, as well as MGI’s motion to strike. In her opposition to the demurrers, Hambrick acknowledged that “not ... all capitated medical groups accepting professional risk are health plans,” but argued that HCP’s “direct or indirect acceptance of hospital capitation constitutes unlicensed health plan operation” and is a “per se violation of the Knox-Keene Act.”
On June 21, 2013, the trial court sustained MGI’s demurrer without leave to amend as to all three causes of action, adopting in its entirety its previously issued tentative decision. Addressing MGI’s request that it invoke the doctrine of judicial abstention, the trial court observed:
“Consumer cases involving challenges to the conduct of health care plans, health care insurers and health care providers, commonly brought as class action claims under [the UCL], have presented the judicial abstention issue in many different factual contexts. The trial court rulings and appellate rulings thereon do not present a tidy pattern with an easily ascertainable test for when judicial abstention should or should not be applied. This, in its own way, would appear to demonstrate why there are a range of reasonable rulings which can be made in a given factual and legal context to either abstain or not abstain according to the trial court’s best evaluation of (a) the complexity of the issue(s) presented, (b) its/their overlap with issues committed to the primary jurisdiction of the regulatory authority and (c) the possibility that inconsistent directions will be given to the regulated entity if the [c]ourt acts in tandem with the authorized regulator’s continuing exercise of its power to direct specific conduct.
“The class action case here is pled under Business [and] Professions Code [sections] 17200 and 17500 and as a common law claim for fraud, but common-law fraud claims, as such, hardly ever qualify for class treatment. The real nub of the case, therefore, is the equitable UCL claim and [FAL] claim pled on behalf of a putative class. The [c]ourt finds in the exercise of its discretion after reviewing the argument of all parties that this is a suitable case for the application of judicial abstention. Each cause of action requires the [c]ourt to decide whether or not [MGI] is a health plan that was required to have been licensed under the [Knox-Keene Act]. To determine whether or not [MGI] is or is not in compliance with health maintenance organization licensing laws requires a detailed analysis of complex corporate structures, of risk allocation via service provider ‘cap[it]ation’ contracts of the cost of providing medical care, and many related factual and legal issues.”
After a consideration of applicable case law and authorities cited by plaintiffs, the trial court was “not persuaded that it should allow this case to proceed in this forum.” It therefore sustained MGI’s demurrer without leave to amend. The court did not reach MGI’s argument that plaintiffs failed to state facts sufficient to state their causes of action.
As to the demurrer filed by HCP-LLC and DVHCP, the trial court noted that “[e]ach of the three causes of action as against each of these two
In light of its ruling on the demurrers, the trial court declared MGI’s motion to strike, as well as the motions for a protective order staying discovery, to be moot.
On July 19, 2013, the trial court entered judgment in favor of the HCP defendants, awarded them costs, and dismissed the action with prejudice. Thereafter, the HCP defendants filed a memorandum of costs. Hambrick moved to tax costs, arguing that the HCP defendants were not prevailing parties in light of the trial court’s decision to abstain and that the HCP defendants failed to itemize their costs. The HCP defendants then filed a restated memorandum of costs. The trial court denied the motion to tax costs.
This timely appeal by Hambrick from the judgment of dismissal, including its award of costs, followed.
DISCUSSION
A. Overview of the Knox-Keene Act
1. Provisions of the Act
The Knox-Keene Act “provides the legal framework for the regulation of California’s individual and group health care [service] plans” by the DMHC.
(Rea v. Blue Shield of California
(2014)
The DMHC “has charge of the execution of the laws of this state relating to health care service plans and the health care service plan business including, but not limited to, those laws directing the department to ensure that health care service plans provide enrolleés with access to quality health care services and protect and promote the interests of enrollees.” (§ 1341, subd. (a).) The chief officer of the DMHC is the Director of the DMHC.
(Id.,
subd. (b).) “The director shall be responsible for the performance of all
The Knox-Keene Act defines a “ ‘[h]ealth care service plan’ ” as “[a]ny person who undertakes to arrange for the provision of health care services to subscribers or enrollees, or to pay for or to reimburse any part of the cost for those services, in return for a prepaid or periodic charge paid by or on behalf of the subscribers or enrollees.” (§ 1345, subd. (f)(1).) The term “ ‘[p]erson’ ” includes a medical corporation or association. 10 (§ 1345, subd. (j).) “ ‘Basic health care services’ ” encompass “[p]hysician services, including consultation and referral,” “[h]ospital inpatient services and ambulatory care services,” “[diagnostic laboratory and diagnostic and therapeutic radiologic services,” “[h]ome health services,” “[p]reventative health services,” “[e]mergency health care services,” and “[h]ospice care.” (Id., subd. (b)(l)-(7).)
Health care service plans must be licensed by the DMHC in order to operate in California. (§ 1349;
Viola
v.
Department of Managed Health Care
(2005)
A licensed health care service plan may contract with a “risk-bearing organization” for the provision of health care services. (§ 1375.4; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 28, § 1300.75.4 et seq.) A risk-bearing organization includes “a professional medical corporation, other form of corporation controlled by physicians and surgeons, a medical partnership, ... or another lawfully organized group of physicians that delivers, furnishes, or otherwise arranges
The central issue in this case is whether HCP is a health care service plan under section 1345, subdivision (f)(1), or a risk-bearing organization under section 1375.4, subdivision (g). Only the former requires a Rnox-Keene license. As we discuss below, the question of the proper characterization of HCP can only be determined by making a policy determination as to the acceptable level of risk a medical group may accept before being required to obtain a license as a health care service plan.
2. Characterization of HCP Under the Knox-Keene Act
Hambrick has not asserted in the trial court or on appeal that HCP meets the statutory definition of a health care service plan as one that “undertakes to arrange for the provision of health care services to subscribers or enrollees .. . in return for a prepaid or periodic charge paid by or on behalf of the subscribers or enrollees.” (§ 1345, subd. (f)(1).) Indeed, Hambrick alleges that she made payments for medical care to an organization other than HCP, which in turn made payments to HCP for her medical care.
Instead, in her opening brief, Hambrick argues that “MGI is assuming global healthcare risk and so is acting as a health plan.” When asked at oral argument on what basis a court should determine whether HCP is a health care service plan under section 1345, subdivision (f)(1), or a medical group serving as a risk-bearing organization under section 1375.4, subdivision (g), Hambrick’s counsel responded that this determination can be made by reviewing HCP’s contracts to determine whether it is accepting “global risks.” Counsel argued: “You can have capitation agreements but not to the point that you are accepting global risk without a license.”
When asked where the court would find a definition of unacceptable global risk, Hambrick’s counsel responded that the court should look at the
It is not the case, however, that a risk-bearing organization cannot accept any per-patient payments under capitation agreements without becoming a health care service plan. Rather, as we discuss above, licensed health care service plans may contract with risk-bearing organizations that “[r]eceive[] compensation for those services on any capitated or fixed periodic payment basis.” 13 (§ 1375.4, subd. (g)(1)(B).) Similarly, section 1348.6, subdivision (b), allows a health care service plan to make payments to a physician group, including “general payments, such as capitation payments.” 14
Further, as our colleagues in the Fourth District have held, “the Legislature has specifically approved of various risk-shifting arrangements including capitation payments.”
(California Medical Assn. v. Aetna U.S. Healthcare of California, Inc.
(2001)
Alternatively, Hambrick appears to be requesting that this court consider a prior version of section 1349.3 that was repealed effective January 1, 2002, and thus is not applicable here. The only reference in the record to the former section 1349.3 is the memorandum entitled, “Overview of Risk-Sharing Arrangements,” which was prepared by the Financial Solvency Standards Board (FSSB)15 for a January 29, 2002 meeting of the DMHC (FSSB
We are not aware of any current provision of the Knox-Keene Act or the DMHC regulations that defines “global risk” dr states that a risk-bearing organization taking on global risk thereby is transformed into a health care service plan. Rather, it appears that Hambrick seeks for the court to consider the now-repealed section 1349.3, as interpreted by the FSSB Memo, to find that HCP, by entering into “global capitation” agreements with a health care service plan, is itself a health care service plan.
The challenge for Hambrick, however, is that neither the repealed section of the Knox-Keene Act nor the FSSB Memo is controlling law on the definition of a health care service plan. Moreover, even if the court were to find that a medical group accepting “global risk” must have a license under the Knox-Keene Act as a health care service plan, nowhere does the Knox-Keene Act or DMHC’s regulations define what level of risk would cause a risk-bearing organization to become a health care service plan. Rather, this is a regulatory decision that would need to be made by the DMHC in deciding whether HCP needs a license. Having the court decide the level of acceptable risk that a medical group may bear without becoming a health care service plan would cause the court to wade into the complex economic policy and regulatory framework that are better left to the DMHC.
B. The FSSB Memorandum
In support of her opposition to the demurrers, Hambrick asked the trial court to take judicial notice of the FSSB Memo. It does not appear from the record that the trial court ruled on this request. At oral argument, however, counsel for both sides referred repeatedly to the document. When asked to what an entity would refer when determining whether it needed a license, counsel for the HCP defendants responded in part by referring to the FSSB Memo. Similarly, in the HCP defendants’ brief they cite to the FSSB Memo.
According to the FSSB Memo, its purpose was “to facilitate a more focused discussion regarding some common forms of risk arrangements and certain regulatory policy issues they raise.” Thus, the FSSB Memo was never adopted by either the FSSB or DMHC as a guidance document for when a medical group would be characterized as a health care service plan. The FSSB Memo provides: “Although it is unlawful for any person to engage in the business of a health plan or to undertake to arrange for the provision of health care services in return for prepaid or periodic consideration without first securing a Knox-Keene license, [under section] 1349, health care providers operating within the scope of their license are impliedly exempt from this requirement. Based on this implied exemption, health plans contract with a variety of health care providers on a prepaid or periodic basis who then become responsible for furnishing actual health care services to health plan enrollees. ...(...§ 1375.4[, subd.] (a)(1).) If a plan maintains capitation or risk-sharing contracts, it must ensure that each contracting provider has the administrative and financial capacity to meet its contractual obligations. [California Code of Regulations, title 28, section] 1300.70[, subdivision] (b)(2)(H)(l).” (Fn. & italics omitted.)
The FSSB Memo further explains that “[t]he bulk of health plan delegation involves contracting with risk-bearing organizations” as that term is defined in section 1375.4, subdivision (g)(1). “Risk arrangements usually fall within one of three basic structures: full risk, shared risk or global risk arrangements.” “Full risk (‘dual risk’) contracting is often used to describe the situation where a health plan enters into multiple capitation agreements to shift the majority of the risk for the provisions of health care services to providers. Typically, a health plan will capitate a hospital to provide, arrange
Next, the FSSB Memo states that the term “[s]hared risk contracting is often used to describe the situation where a health plan enters into a capitation agreement with a physician organization to render professional services, but does not enter into a capitation arrangement with a hospital. In these situation^] the health plan ‘retains’ the institutional risk, but requires the provider organizations to participate in . . . one or more risk arrangements relating to the provision of institutional services. . . .”
Finally, the FSSB Memo explains that “[g]lobal risk contracting” occurs “where a health plan enters into a capitation agreement with only one health care provider to shift the entire risk for the provision of both institutional and professional health care services to a single entity. . . . This type of contracting is limited to organizations that have secured a Knox-Keene license or a Knox-Keene license with waivers.” (Italics added, fn. omitted.)
In discussing a possible approach to evaluating the “appropriateness” of current risk arrangements, the FSSB Memo observes that “[consideration of risk sharing arrangements is a complex topic” that “is complicated further by a statutory/regulatory structure that provides limited guidance.” The memorandum continues; “Historically, licensed health care providers were impliedly exempted from the [s]ection 1349 licensure requirements for services falling within the scope of their professional health care license. Unfortunately, little regulatory guidance evolved to define the scope of health care services that appropriately fell within the licensure of each individual health care professional.
“Partially in response to the increasing scope of delegated financial risk for the provisions [sic] of health care services and partially in response to a number of well publicized medical group bankruptcies, the Legislature, as part of the enactment of [Senate Bill No.] 260 enacted . . . [s]ection 1349.3. This provision restated the general proposition, that a health plan may not contract with anyone but a licensed health care plan ‘for the assumption of financial risk with respect to the provision of both institutional and non-institutional health care services and any other form of global capitation.’
“While [s]ection 1349.3 contained a sunset clause automatically repealing this provision on January 1, 2002, the import of this section—that whenever a
The memo then suggests “two threshold questions” as a “starting point” for the FSSB “to study the ‘appropriateness’ of risk arrangements”: “(1) what constitutes institutional services; and (2) when has financial risk for institutional services been contractually assigned to a provider organization.”
With respect to the first question, the FSSB Memo observes that “[cjurrent regulatory interpretation suggests that health plans cannot delegate the assumption of financial risk for ‘institutional’ services to medical groups without effectively engaging in the prohibited practice of ‘global capitation.’ Before determining whether the risk associated with a given category of costs has been ‘passed’ to a provider thereby creating a form of global risk, one must delineate which cost categories constitute institutional care.”
The FSSB Memo then notes that “[ajrguably, the brightest line for institutional risk is direct facility charges for both inpatient and outpatient services. Beyond this bright line appears a large gray area.” It then suggests that “[o]ne possible criterion for determining if a service category should be classified as institutional versus non-institutional would be to look to. the physician organization’s licensure. Specifically, any service for which the physician is licensed to perform would constitute non-institutional risk; all remaining categories would default into the institutional category. . . .”
After suggesting possible resolutions for the question of what constitutes an institutional risk, the FSSB Memo turns to the second threshold question, noting that “[o]nce a determination is made regarding what constitutes institutional services, a determination must be made as to whether or not the financial risk associated with providing those services has been contractually assumed by a provider organization.”
C. The Trial Court Acted Within Its Discretion in Invoking the Judicial Abstention Doctrine as to Hambrick’s UCL and FAL Causes of Action
1. Standard of Review
A
trial court’s decision to dismiss a lawsuit or a cause of action based on the doctrine of judicial abstention is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
(Arce v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc.
(2010)
“It must be remembered, however that ‘[t]he scope of discretion always resides in the particular law being applied, i.e., in the “legal principles governing the subject of [the] action . . . .” Action that transgresses the confines of the applicable principles of law is outside the scope of discretion and we call such action an “abuse” of discretion. [Citation.] If the trial court is mistaken about the scope of its discretion, the mistaken position may be “reasonablef,”] i.e., one as to which reasonable judges could differ. [Citation.] But if the trial court acts in accord with its mistaken view the action is nonetheless error; it is wrong on the law.’ [Citation.]”
(Acosta, supra,
2. The Abstention Doctrine
Under the abstention doctrine, “a trial court may abstain from adjudicating a suit that seeks equitable remedies if ‘granting the requested relief would require a trial court to assume the functions of an administrative agency, or to interfere with the functions of an administrative agency.’ [Citation.]”
(Arce, supra,
Many courts have addressed the question whether abstention is appropriate in the context of UCL or FAL claims for violation of the Knox-Keene Act. In
Arce,
we considered whether the trial court abused its discretion by abstaining from adjudicating a UCL claim that Kaiser violated the Knox-Keene Act and Mental Health Parity Act by categorically denying plan members with autism spectrum disorders coverage for behavioral and speech therapy. In holding that the trial court was well equipped to determine whether Kaiser’s denial violated the Knox-Keene Act, we found that “the Legislature already has made the relevant policy determinations in mandating that health care plans provide coverage for the medically necessary treatment of autism under the same terms and conditions applied to other medical conditions.”
(Arce, supra,
Further, we found that “resolution of the UCL claim would not call upon the court to engage in individualized determinations of medical necessity for each putative class member, but rather to perform the basic judicial functions of contractual and statutory interpretation. To determine whether Kaiser systematically breached its health plan contract by denying coverage for applied behavior analysis therapy and speech therapy for autism spectrum disorders, the trial court would need to interpret the relevant terms of the contract, and decide whether the therapies are or are not covered services.”
(Arce, supra,
We also concluded that the other traditional grounds for invoking the abstention doctrine did not apply. Specifically, we found that “there is no indication that granting injunctive or declaratory relief in this action would be unnecessarily burdensome for the trial court.”
(Arce, supra,
Similarly, in
Blue Cross of California, Inc. v. Superior Court
(2009)
In this case, by contrast, HCP does not fall within the definition of a “health care service plan” under the plain language of the Knox-Keene Act in section 1345, subdivision (f)(1), because Hambrick paid her premiums to an unidentified health care service plan, not to HCP. Hambrick does not argue otherwise, but maintains that HCP nevertheless is required to be licensed under the Knox-Keene Act because it assumed the global risk of institutional or hospital care. The parties appear to agree that a determination of whether HCP operates as a health care service plan depends on whether it has assumed the “global risk” of hospital care under capitation agreements it has with the unidentified health care service plan to which Hambrick paid her premiums.
In contrast to Arce and Blue Cross, this determination has not been made by the Legislature. Nowhere in the Knox-Keene Act is there a definition of what level of risk assumed by a medical group under a capitation agreement would cause it to be characterized as a health care service plan. Neither has the DMHC provided any guidance in its regulations. Rather, Hambrick asks us to make this determination by relying upon the FSSB Memo, which has never been formally adopted by the FSSB or the DMHC.
We find that the determination of the level of financial risk under a capitation agreement that causes a “risk-bearing organization” under section 1375.4, subdivision (g), to become a “health care service plan” under section 1345 is precisely the type of regulatory determination involving complex economic policy that should be made by the DMHC in the first instance. This issue of the transfer of risk under capitation agreements from a health care service plan to a medical group was squarely before the court in
Desert Healthcare, supra,
In
Desert Healthcare,
our colleagues in the Fourth District held: “The instant case is a perfect example of when a court of equity should abstain. Desert Healthcare essentially argues that PacifiCare abused the capitation
Other courts have similarly abstained from adjudicating UCL and FAL claims for violations of the Knox-Keene Act and similar health care laws where determination of the claims would require the court to assume the regulatory powers of the designated administrative agency. (See, e.g.,
Alvarado
v.
Selma Convalescent Hospital
(2007)
In
Samura,
a health care plan member brought UCL claims against Kaiser for third party liability provisions in service agreements that the member alleged violated the Knox-Keene Act. The First District reversed the trial court’s order issuing an injunction, finding that the acts were not specifically made unlawful under the Knox-Keene Act.
(Samura v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc., supra,
Similarly, in
Alvarado,
the plaintiff filed a class action alleging causes of action under the UCL and FAL against skilled nursing and intermediate care facilities to require the facilities to comply with statutory requirements for the minimum number of nursing hours per nursing patient. The statute required the State Department of Health Care Services to adopt regulations setting forth the minimum number of hours per patient required in each type of facility.
(Alvarado, supra,
Our colleagues in Division Three affirmed the trial court’s reliance on the abstention doctrine, finding that “[a]djudicating this class action controversy would require the trial court to assume general regulatory powers over the health care industry through the guise of enforcing the UCL, a task for which the courts are not well equipped. [Citation.]” (Alvarado, supra, 153 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1303-1304.) In reaching this conclusion, the court detailed the complex factors that it would need to analyze to determine whether a particular facility was providing the required number of nursing hours. The court concluded that this was “a task better accomplished by an administrative agency than by trial courts.” (Id. at p. 1306.)
3. Hambrick Has Failed to Show That the Trial Court Abused Its Discretion in Abstaining from Adjudicating Her UCL and FAL Claims.
Hambrick urges us to follow this district’s holding in
Blue Cross
by finding that the trial court would perform solely a judicial function in resolving her UCL and FAL claims. (See
Blue Cross of California, Inc. v. Superior Court, supra,
As we discuss above, while abstention is not appropriate where resolution of the issues involves solely the judicial function of resolving questions of law based on facts before the court (see
Arce, supra,
In this case, the determination of whether HCP was required to be licensed would, as the trial court aptly noted, “requireQ a detailed analysis of complex corporate structures, of risk allocation via service provider ‘cap[it]ation’ contracts of the cost of providing medical care, and many related factual and legal issues.” The court therefore would be required to determine complex economic policy within the context of the managed health care system. This is a task properly left to the Director of the DMHC. Any contrary conclusion would require the trial court to assume the functions of the Director of the DMHC and effectively usurp the director’s powers.
D. Hambrick Has an Alternative Forum to Resolve Her Claims 21
As we note above, “abstention is generally appropriate only if there is an alternative means of resolving the issues raised in the plaintiff’s complaint . . . .”
(Klein, supra,
In reaching our holding, we distinguished four prior cases in which the courts upheld abstention after finding there were adequate alternative remedies. (See
Klein, supra,
As the First District held in
Center for Biological Diversity,
“[t]he courts are available to review the responses of those agencies, but they are not available to supersede their role in the regulatory process.”
(Center for Biological Diversity, Inc. v. FPL Group, Inc., supra,
Contrary to the facts in Klein, as we discuss below, the DMHC both has the power to enforce the Knox-Keene Act, and has repeatedly issued cease and desist orders that require health care service plans to obtain the required licenses, enjoin deceptive and misleading business practices and advertising, and order restitution. We therefore find that this case more closely tracks the facts in Wolfe, Shamsian, Alvarado, and Center for Biological Diversity in ensuring that Hambrick will have a remedy for her claims.
We next turn to the remedies available under the UCL and FAL, and those that can be ordered or sought by the DMHC.
1. Available Remedies Under the UCL and FAL
Section 17200 of the Business and Professions Code prohibits “unfair competition,” which means and includes “any unlawful,, unfair or fraudulent business act or practice and unfair, deceptive, untrue or misleading advertising . .. .” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200; see
Zhang v. Superior Court
(2013)
Business and Professions Code section 17500, part of the FAL, “prohibits the dissemination in any advertising media of any ‘statement’ . . . ‘which is untrue or misleading, and which is known, or which by the exercise of reasonable care should be known, to be untrue or misleading.’ [Citation.]”
(Committee on Children’s Television, Inc. v. General Foods Corp.
(1983)
Our Supreme Court has “made it clear that ‘an action under the UCL “is not an all-purpose substitute for a tort or contract action.” [Citation.] Instead, the act provides an equitable means through which both public prosecutors and private individuals can bring suit to prevent unfair business practices and restore money or property to victims of these practices. As we have said, the “overarching legislative concern [was] to provide a streamlined procedure for the prevention of ongoing or threatened acts of unfair competition.” [Citation.] Because of this objective, the remedies provided are limited.’ [Citation.] Accordingly, while UCL remedies are ‘cumulative ... to the remedies or penalties available under all other laws of this state’ (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17205), they are narrow in scope.”
(Zhang, supra,
Further, the equitable remedies under the UCL and FAL “are subject to the broad discretion of the trial court.”
(Zhang, supra,
a. Injunctive Relief
In her UCL and FAL causes of action, Hambrick seeks injunctive relief prohibiting the HCP defendants from violating the Knox-Keene Act, the UCL and FAL and other statutory provisions. Hambrick specifically seeks to enjoin the HCP defendants from operating without a Knox-Keene license and to “enjoin [the HCP defendants] from their misleading advertising.” It is undisputed that injunctive relief is available under both the UCL and the FAL. (See Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 17203, 17535.)
b. Restitution
Hambrick seeks “restitution and disgorgement of all excess profits and ill-gotten gains.” Specifically, Hambrick seeks to recover “all capitation paid to [the HCP defendants], and all co-pays, deductibles and co-insurance payments” she paid to the HCP defendants.
As noted above, both the UCL and FAL provide for recovery of restitution. However, Hambrick’s request for relief goes beyond the scope of restitution. Our Supreme Court has defined restitution as “the return of money or other property obtained through an improper means to the person from whom the property was taken. [Citations.] ‘The object of restitution is to restore the status quo by
returning to the plaintiff
funds in which he or she has an ownership interest.’ [Citation.]”
(Clark v. Superior Court
(2010)
As the court held in
Zhang,
restitution under the UCL “ ‘is confined to restoration of any interest in “money or property, real or personal, which may have been
acquired
by means of such unfair competition.” ... A restitution order against a defendant thus requires both that money or property have been lost by a plaintiff, on the one hand, and that it have been acquired by a defendant, on the other.’ [Citation.]”
(Zhang, supra,
Co-payments, deductibles, and co-insurance payments made by Hambrick to HCP as a result of its unfair business practices or false advertising are
Similarly, “nonrestitutionary disgorgement of profits”
26
is not recoverable in a UCL action.
(Korea Supply Co. v. Lockheed Martin Corp., supra,
c. Attorneys Fees
Hambrick also seeks to recover attorneys fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5. The courts have consistently held that attorneys fees are not recoverable in a UCL or FAL action.
(Rose v. Bank of America, N.A., supra,
“[A]n award under [Code of Civil Procedure] section 1021.5 requires a showing that (1) the litigation enforced an important right affecting the public interest; (2) it conferred a significant benefit on the general public or a large class of persons; and (3) the necessity and financial burden of private enforcement (or enforcement by one public entity against another)
Thus, while Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5 provides a potential basis for Hambrick to recover her attorneys fees, she would need to meet the three elements necessary to recover attorneys fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5 in addition to prevailing on her UCL or FAL claims.
We next turn to the remedies available to Hambrick through the Director of the DMHC.
2. Powers of the Director of the DMHC
a. Injunctive Relief
Section 1391, subdivision (a)(1), provides that “[t]he director [of the DMHC] may issue an order directing a plan, solicitor firm, or any representative thereof, a solicitor, or any other person to cease and desist from engaging in any act or practice in violation of the provisions of this chapter, any rule adopted pursuant to this chapter, or any order issued by the director pursuant to this chapter.” Further, if a written request for hearing is not filed within 30 days of the date the order is served, “the order shall be deemed a final order of the director and shall not be subject to review by any court or agency, notwithstanding subdivision (b) of Section 1397.” {Id., subd. (a)(2).)
Hambrick argues that the director only has power to regulate a licensed plan under the Knox-Keene Act, and therefore cannot issue injunctive relief against an unlicensed plan. However, a review of the director’s enforcement powers under section 1391 shows that the director’s authority covers both licensed and unlicensed plans. For example, subdivision (c) of section 1391 provides: “If a timely request for a hearing is made by an unlicensed plan, the director may stay the effect of the order to the extent that the order requires the cessation of operation of the plan or prohibits acceptance of new members by the plan . . . .” Section 1391, subdivision (b), sets different rules applicable to a request for a hearing by a licensed plan.
The Director of DMHC specifically has the authority to prevent unfair competition and false advertising. Section 1386, subdivision (b)(7), provides
Indeed, the Director of the DMHC has issued numerous cease and desist orders to entities operating as health care service plans without a Knox-Keene license, enjoining their operation and false advertising practices. (See, e.g., In the Matter of International Association of Benefits, DMHC No. 04-459, Cease and Desist Order (July 29, 2009); In the Matter of Prudent Choice, LLC, DMHC No. 04-460, Cease and Desist Order (July 29, 2009); In the Matter of First Choice Health Care, Inc., DMHC No. 06-124, Cease and Desist Order (Apr. 10, 2006); In the Matter of The Capella Group, Inc., d/b/a Care Entrée, DMHC No. 04-312, Cease and Desist Order (July 15, 2005); In the Matter of United Family Healthcare Group, DMHC No. 04-374, Cease and Desist Order (July 15, 2005).) 27
b. Restitution
The Director of DMHC has consistently ordered restitution as part of the cease and desist orders the director has issued to address false and deceptive business or advertising practices. For example, in In the Matter of First Choice Health Care, Inc., supra, DMHC No. 06-124 in addition to enjoining First Choice’s deceptive advertising practices, the court ordered First Choice to “refund all monies to demanding members without undue delay.” (Cease and Desist Order, at p. 7.) Similarly, in In the Matter of International Association of Benefits, supra, DMHC No. 04-459 the director ordered that respondent “shall make refunds ... to any enrollee who indicates a desire to cancel his or her membership, or to any enrollee who meets the legal standard for rescission.” (Cease and Desist Order, at p. 7; see In the Matter of Prudent Choice, LLC, supra, DMHC No. 04-460 at p. 7 [ordering refunds to “any enrollee who indicates a desire to cancel his or her membership”]; In the Matter of The Capella Group, Inc., supra, DMHC No. 04-312 at p. 8 [“[Respondent shall refund all monies to demanding members without undue delay”].)
The director has cited as authority for its orders its enforcement authority under section 1391, subdivision (a)(1), and the intent and purpose of the
The Knox-Keene Act also authorizes the director to bring an action in superior court or to request the Attorney General to bring an action to obtain injunctive and other “equitable relief.” Specifically, section 1392, subdivision (a)(1), provides, “[wjhenever it appears to the director that any person has engaged, or is about to engage, in any act or practice constituting a violation of any provision of this chapter, any rule adopted pursuant to this chapter, or any order issued pursuant to this chapter, the director may bring an action in superior court, or the director may request the Attorney General to bring an action to enjoin these acts or practices or to enforce compliance with this chapter, any rule or regulation adopted by the director pursuant to this chapter, or any order issued by the director pursuant to this chapter, or to obtain any other equitable relief.” In addition, “[i]f the director determines that it is in the public interest, the director may include in any action authorized by paragraph (1) a claim for any ancillary or equitable relief and the court shall have jurisdiction to award this additional relief.” (Id., subd. (a)(2).)
We interpret section 1392 to allow a court, upon the filing of an action by the director or the Attorney General under section 1392, to issue “equitable relief,” including restitution. Accordingly, Hambrick may recover restitution (in this case, co-payments, deductibles, and co-insurance payments made by Hambrick to HCP) either as part of a cease and desist order issued by the director or in a superior court action filed by the director or the Attorney General, where restitution is in the public interest.
c. Attorneys Fees
The Knox-Keene Act does not provide statutory authority for the Director of the DMHC to award attorneys fees.
3. Hambrick Has an Alternative Means of Resolving the Issues Raised in Her Complaint.
As we discuss above, the director has the authority to issue cease and desist orders or to seek an order from the superior court granting both injunctive relief and restitution. While Hambrick also seeks disgorgement of profits, this is not available under either the UCL or FAL. Likewise, while the director does not have authority to award attorneys fees to Hambrick, attorneys fees are also not available under the UCL or FAL. While Hambrick
E. The Trial Court Abused Its Discretion in Abstaining from Adjudicating Hambrick’s Second Cause of Action for Fraudulent Concealment, But Properly Dismissed the Cause of Action for Failure to State a Claim
1. A Trial Court May Not Abstain Where Damages Are Sought
Hambrick correctly contends that the trial court should not have relied upon the judicial abstention doctrine to dismiss her second cause of action for fraudulent concealment because it included a claim for damages. Only when equitable relief is the sole relief sought may the trial court invoke the doctrine of judicial abstention.
28
(Shuts v. Covenant Holdco LLC
(2012)
In her second cause of action for fraudulent concealment, Hambrick alleges that “Plaintiffs suffered damages caused thereby including but not limited to physical injuries, emotional injuries, loss of income, future medical expenses, co-pays or co-insurance payments to the hospitals.” The prayer in the first amended complaint seeks “[s]pecial and general damages according to proof for JANDRES and each member of the Class,” “[f]or other such relief the court deems just and proper,” and for “[p]unitive damages.” Because Ham-brick seeks legal damages resulting from the HCP defendants’ alleged fraud, we conclude the trial court abused its discretion by invoking the doctrine of judicial abstention with respect to the second cause of action.
29
(See
Shuts v. Covenant Holdco LLC, supra,
Our determination that the abstention doctrine does not apply to Hambrick’s cause of action for fraudulent concealment does not end our inquiry on appeal. An appellate court will “ ‘affirm the judgment if it is correct on any ground stated in the demurrer, regardless of the trial court’s stated reasons. [Citation.]’ [Citation.]”
(Law Offices of Mathew Higbee v. Expungement Assistance Services
(2013)
“In reviewing the sufficiency of a complaint against a demurrer, we ‘treat[] the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded,’ but we do not ‘assume the truth of contentions, deductions or conclusions of law.’ [Citation.] We liberally construe the pleading to achieve substantial justice between the parties, giving the complaint a reasonable interpretation and reading the allegations in context. [Citations.] When a demurrer is sustained, we must determine de novo whether the complaint alleges facts sufficient to state a cause of action under any legal theory. [Citation.]”
(Arce, supra,
181 Cal.App.4th at pp. 481-482; accord,
Lin
v.
Coronado
(2014)
“The required elements for fraudulent concealment are (1) concealment or suppression of a material fact; (2) by a defendant with a duty to disclose the fact to the plaintiff; (3) the defendant intended to defraud the plaintiff by intentionally concealing or suppressing the fact; (4) the plaintiff was unaware of the fact and would not have acted as he or she did if he or she had known of the concealed or suppressed fact; and (5) plaintiff sustained damage as a result of the concealment or suppression of the fact. [Citation.]”
(Graham v. Bank of America, N.A., supra,
In their demurrers, the HCP defendants argued that Hambrick failed to allege adequately the elements of duty to disclose, reliance and causation and, therefore, did not adequately plead a cause of action for common law fraud. We first turn to whether Hambrick adequately pleaded a duty to disclose.
According to Hambrick, HCP arranged for her medical and institutional care pursuant to contracts it had with the health care service plan to which Hambrick paid her periodic premiums, and therefore had a duty to disclose its relationship with the health care service plan to Hambrick. Specifically, Hambrick alleges that the HCP defendants “had illegally, directly or indirectly,
These allegations do not establish a duty to disclose on the part of HCP. Hambrick cites no authority for the proposition that a risk-bearing organization that contracts with a health care service plan has a duty to disclose its financial arrangement with the plan to subscribers for whom it arranges medical and hospital services. Hambrick’s reliance on informed consent cases involving an individual physician’s duty to disclose to a patient information material to the decision whether to undergo treatment is misplaced. (See, e.g.,
Arato
v.
Avedon
(1993)
Because we conclude that Hambrick failed to allege the requisite duty to disclose we need not determine if she adequately pleaded the elements of reliance and causation.
3. The Trial Court Properly Denied Leave to Amend
Hambrick contends that to the extent a pleading defect exists, the trial court should have granted leave to amend. “When a demurrer is sustained without leave to amend, we must also decide whether there is a reasonable possibility that the defect can be cured by amendment. [Citation.] If the complaint can be cured, the trial court has abused its discretion in sustaining without leave to amend. [Citation.]”
(Arce, supra,
Because Hambrick has failed to make a showing that she can cure the defect in her second cause of action by amendment, we conclude that leave to amend was properly denied.
F. The Trial Court Properly Awarded the HCP Defendants Costs
“Except as otherwise expressly provided by statute, a prevailing party is entitled as a matter of right to recover costs in any action or proceeding” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1032, subd. (b); see
Brown v. Desert Christian Center
(2011)
Hambrick challenges the trial court’s award of $4,765 in costs to the HCP defendants. She argues that the HCP defendants were not “prevailing parties” because the trial court’s dismissal of the action was a procedural ruling rather than a determination on the merits. Hambrick does not cite to any California authority, instead relying on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
Elwood v. Drescher
(9th Cir. 2006)
As our colleagues in the Fifth District in
Brown v. Desert Christian Center, supra,
The judgment of dismissal, including the order awarding costs, is affirmed. HCP, HCP-LLC and DYHCP are awarded their costs on appeal.
Perluss, P. J., and Zelon, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 17, 2015, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 30, 2015, S227771.
The Legislature established the FSSB in 1999 in section 1347.15. (Stats. 1999, ch. 529, § 1, p. 3666.) Subdivision (a) of section 1347.15 provides: “There is hereby established in the [DMHC] the [FSSB] composed of eight members. . . The stated purpose of the FSSB is to “(1) Advise the director on matters of financial solvency affecting the delivery of health care services. [¶] (2) Develop and recommend to the director financial solvency requirements and
Notes
Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
The complaint refers to “Health Care Partners Medical Group, Inc.” as HCP and elsewhere refers to all three defendants collectively as HCP. For example, the complaint alleges in different sections that MGI or HCP operated without a license and assumed the financial risk of hospital and specialty care. For simplicity, we will refer to HCP as the entity required to have a license and the entity that assumed the financial risk. Where we can tell that an allegation is directed only at MGI, for example, referring to Hambrick’s employer and medical group network of doctors, we will refer only to MGI.
Health care service plans are commonly referred to as health maintenance organizations or HMOs.
(PacifiCare of California v. Bright Medical Associates, Inc.
(2011)
All further statutory references are to the Health and Safety Code, unless otherwise indicated.
The Knox-Keene Act was amended in 2002. Citations in this opinion are to the amended act.
Because this appeal challenges the trial court’s order sustaining a demurrer, we assume the truth of all facts properly pleaded in the first amended complaint, as well as reasonable inferences derived from those facts.
(Loeffler v. Target Corp.
(2014)
The first amended complaint names Juan Carlos Jandres (Jandres) as a plaintiff. Jandres has not appealed from the adverse judgment and thus is not a party to this appeal. We therefore omit the factual allegations pertaining to Jandres. While Hambrick also brings this action on behalf of similarly situated plaintiffs, in this opinion we will only address Hambrick’s claims.
Section 127575, subdivision (e), defines “ ‘[i]nstitutional provider services’ ” as “services, equipment, and supplies . . . provided by an institution, site, or facility through which [medical] services are provided.” Because the definition excludes “professional health care services,” hospital care is typically referred to in the Knox-Keene context as “institutional care.”
Hambrick did not specify the nature of her injury in the operative complaint.
The term “ ‘capitation’ basis .. . means the [health plan’s] reimbursement rate is calculated on a per capita basis, with a flat rate paid for each individual enrolled in the plan during a particular time period.”
(Solorzano v. Superior Court
(1992)
Section 1345 defines a “ ‘[p]erson’ ” to include “any person, individual, firm, association, organization, partnership, business trust, foundation, labor organization, corporation, limited liability company, public agency, or political subdivision of the state.” (Id., subd. (j).)
In order to obtain a license to operate as a health care service plan, an organization must submit an application in conformity with lengthy requirements of section 1351 and California Code of Regulations, title 28, section 1300.51. Section 1353 provides that “[t]he director shall issue a license to any person filing an application pursuant to this article, if the director, upon due consideration of the application 'and of the information obtained in any investigation, including, if necessary, an onsite inspection, determines that the applicant has satisfied the provisions of this chapter and that, in the judgment of the director, a disciplinary action pursuant to Section 1386 would not be warranted against such applicant. Otherwise, the director shall deny the application.”
Section 1300.75.4, subdivision (d)(2), of title 28 of the California Code of Regulations defines a “ ‘[r]isk-shifting arrangement’ ” as “a contractual arrangement between an organization and a plan under which the plan pays the organization on a fixed, periodic or capitated basis, and the financial risk for the cost of services provided pursuant to the contractual arrangement is assumed by the organization.”
HCP appears to argue that it is more properly characterized as a risk-bearing organization. At oral argument, HCP’s counsel argued: “Not all risk-bearing organizations are health care service plans, and health care service plans are not easily or readily defined by the statute.”
Section 1348.6, subdivision (b), provides that contracts between a health care service plan and a physician group or physician may include “incentive plans that involve general payments, such as capitation payments, or shared-risk arrangements that are not tied to specific medical decisions involving specific enrollees or groups of enrollees with similar medical conditions. . . .”
As we discuss below, we take judicial notice of the FSSB Memo for the limited purpose of providing context to the parties’ arguments, but not as a statement of FSSB’s or DMHC’s interpretation of the law.
<http://www.dmhc.ca.gov/Portals/0/AbouttheDMHC/FSSB/Meetings/a020129_info.pdf> (as of June 1, 2015).
Hambrick contends that the demurrer was based on speculative arguments and matters outside the four corners of the first amended complaint or not subject to judicial notice. However, the trial court’s decision to sustain the HCP defendants’ demurrers without leave to amend was not based on a determination that Hambrick failed to plead her three causes of action, but rather on the factors underlying the abstention doctrine. Hambrick cites no authority for the proposition that in deciding whether to abstain the trial court was limited to the four comers of the first amended complaint.
In
Desert Healthcare,
the owner of a hospital sued PacifiCare, a health care service plan licensed under the Knox-Keene Act. Similar to the arrangement alleged here, PacifiCare contracted with Desert Physicians Association (DPA) to provide medical services to subscribers of PacifiCare. Pursuant to their “capitation agreement,” “PacifiCare paid DPA a flat fee per person to provide physicians and obtain hospital services for PacifiCare’s subscribers.”
(Desert Healthcare, supra,
Hambrick also relies on section 1253, subdivision (a). Section 1253 is not part of the Knox-Keene Act. It is a general licensing statute that requires a person or entity operating a health facility in California to obtain a license enabling it to do so. (See §§ 1250, 1251, 1253, subd. (a).) Because Hambrick at no time alleged that HCP operated a “health facility,” her reliance on section 1253 is misplaced.
Pursuant to our March 6, 2015 request, the parties submitted letter briefs discussing the remedies the Director of the DMHC may order for violations of the licensing provisions of the Knox-Keene Act.
The court in
Alvarado
also noted that if the DHCS failed to act, the plaintiffs were free to pursue a writ of mandate to compel DHCS to comply with its duty to enforce the nursing hours mandate in section 1276.5. (Alvarado,
supra,
Business and Professions Code section 17203 provides: “Any person who engages, has engaged, or proposes to engage in unfair competition may be enjoined in any court of competent jurisdiction. The court may make such orders or judgments, including the appointment of a receiver, as may be necessary to prevent the use or employment by any person of any practice which constitutes unfair competition, as defined in this chapter, or as may be necessary to restore to any person in interest any money or property, real or personal, which may have been acquired by means of such unfair competition. . . .”
Business and Professions Code section 17535 provides: “Any person, corporation, firm, partnership, joint stock company, or any other association or organization which violates or proposes to violate this chapter may be enjoined by any court of competent jurisdiction. The court may make such orders or judgments, including the appointment of a receiver, as may be necessary to prevent the use or employment by any person, corporation, firm, partnership, joint stock company, or any other association or organization of any practices which violate this chapter, or which may be necessary to restore to any person in interest any money or property, real or personal, which may have been acquired by means of any practice in this chapter declared to be unlawful.”
Because the UCL and FAL provide for the same remedies, we will focus on remedies under the UCL, which have been addressed more frequently by the courts.
“Disgorgement as a remedy is broader than restitution or restoration of what the plaintiff lost. [Citations.] There are two types of disgorgement: restitutionary disgorgement, which focuses on the plaintiff’s loss, and nonrestitutionary disgorgement, which focuses on the defendant’s unjust enrichment. [Citation.]”
(American Master Lease LLC v. Idanta Partners, Ltd.
(2014)
On our own motion, we take judicial notice of these cease and desist orders submitted to the court with HCP’s letter brief. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (c), 459;
Taiheiyo Cement U.S.A., Inc.
v.
Franchise Tax Bd.
(2012)
In its written ruling, the trial court stated that “common-law fraud claims . . . hardly ever qualify for class treatment” and that “[t]he real nub of the case ... is the equitable UCL claim and [FAL] claim . . . .” At the hearing on the demurrers, the trial court noted, “Well, in a hyper-technical sense you could get damages for the fraud claim, but because the particularity of the elements of common law fraud, fraud claims in truth really never shape up for class actions . . . .” Whether the fraud claim would qualify for class treatment is not relevant to whether the trial court had discretion to abstain from deciding the merits of the claim.
At oral argument, counsel for the HCP defendants maintained that Hambrick did not seek legal damages in the second cause of action because her name was not specifically included in the prayer. As to the second cause of action, the prayer sought “[s]pecial and general damages according to proof for JANDRES and each member of the Class,” “[f]or other such relief the court deems just and proper,” and “[p]unitive damages.” We consider the absence of Hambrick’s name from the prayer to be an oversight, in that the second cause of action alleges that the HCP defendants’ conduct “was a substantial factor in causing JANDRES, HAMBRICK and Plaintiffs’ damages.”
Younger
v.
Harris
(1971)
