KEY MEDICAL SUPPLY, INC., a Minnesota corporation v. Sylvia Matthews BURWELL, Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, in her official capacity; Marilyn Tavenner, Acting Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, in her official capacity
No. 13-2084
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
Submitted: May 14, 2014. Filed: Aug. 25, 2014.
763 F.3d 955
Midwest Association of Medical Equipment Suppliers, Inc., Amicus on Behalf of Appellant(s).
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Samuel Orbovich, argued (Lousene M. Hoppe, on the brief), Minneapolis, MN, for appellant.
Natalie Ingraham Wyatt-Brown, Ryan W. Wahlund, Jonathan W. Lips, Minneapolis, MN, on the brief, for amicus.
Before WOLLMAN, MELLOY, and BENTON, Circuit Judges.
MELLOY, Circuit Judge.
Key Medical Supply, Inc. (“Key Medical“), a medical equipment provider in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, alleges that the Department of Health and Human Services’ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS” or “the Agency“) exceeded its statutory authority when implement-
I. Background
A. General Background: 42 U.S.C. § 1395w-3 Medicare Competitive Bidding System for Certain Items and Services
In 2003, Congress amended Medicare to control costs for durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies, based in part on a conclusion that Medicare and beneficiaries were overpaying substantially for such items. H.R.Rep. No. 108-178, pt. II, at 144 (2003) (“The Office of Inspector General has documented that taxpayers and Medicare beneficiaries are paying millions more for durable medical equipment than other programs, such as the Federal Employees Health Benefit Program (FEHBP).“). The amendments required the Agency to phase in a competitive bidding system to replace an existing government-defined price schedule. Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act, Pub.L. No. 108-173, title III, § 302(b)(1) (2003) (codified in part at
Because Key Medical primarily advances an ultra vires argument, it is important to note the plain text and overall structure of the amendments which show the extent and nature of authority granted to the agency. Congress tasked the Agency with a broad and general mandate to “establish and implement programs under which competitive acquisition areas are established throughout the United States for ... the furnishing under this part of competitively priced items and services.”
For example,
Several sub-parts of the statute illustrate that Congress made timely implementation a priority. For example, Congress gave the Secretary discretion to waive more generally applicable acquisition regulations and provided that implementation was to move forward even if various quality-standard regulations were not complete.
(b)(11) There shall be no administrative or judicial review under section 1395ff of this title, section 1395oo of this title, or otherwise, of—
(A) the establishment of payment amounts under paragraph (5);
(B) the awarding of contracts under this section;
(C) the designation of competitive acquisition areas under subsection (a)(1)(A) of this section and the identification of areas under subsection (a)(1)(D)(iii) of this section;
(D) the phased-in implementation ... of this section ...;
(E) the selection of items and services for competitive acquisition under subsection (a)(2) of this section;
(F) the bidding structure and number of contractors selected under this section; or
(G) the implementation of the special rule [concerning diabetic supplies].
B. Implementation of the Competitive Bidding System and Its Impact on Key Medical
Because the district court dismissed this case pursuant to
Key Medical described differences and relationships between these two programs and explained how its own business coordinated with these programs prior to implementation of competitive bidding. First, Medicare would reimburse providers for low-profile tubes at a scheduled rate of approximately $40 per tube and would allow replacement of a patient‘s tube once every 3 months. Medicaid, on the other hand would reimburse providers at a rate from $140–$530 per tube (depending on the particular tube) and allow replacements up to twice per month. For dually eligible patients, Key Medical would provide a first tube, billed to Medicare for approximately $40 (at a substantial loss—Key Medical alleges the wholesale acquisition cost of such tubes ranges from $100 to $330). Key Medical would then sell additional tubes, Medicare would deny pay-
Key Medical‘s primary grievance in this matter and the primary source of Key Medical‘s asserted financial harm stems from its de facto exclusion from Minnesota‘s Medicaid system. To understand this potential consequence of the Medicare competitive bidding system, we now turn to the competitive bidding system and its implementation process.
Key Medical explains that the Medicare competitive bidding process required entities to submit information demonstrating their financial health, explaining the quantity of product they could provide, and identifying a bid price at which the entity could provide products. See
Key Medical‘s arguments in this case focus on the fact that the Agency did not allow providers free reign in constructing their own bids. Rather, in implementing the competitive bidding system, the Agency borrowed the pre-existing government-schedule prices as maximum bids that it would accept from bidders. In addition, the Agency required that parties’ bids be sufficient to cover the providers’ acquisition (wholesale) cost for the item plus some amounts for overhead and a reasonable profit. The parties refer to these requirements as the requirement that bids be “bona fide bids.” The statute does not employ the term “bona fide bids.” Agency regulations employ the term with reference to the requirements of applicable requests for bids. See
According to Key Medical, the pre-existing government-scheduled price for general feeding tubes is below Key Medical‘s acquisition cost for custom-fit, low-profile feeding tubes. Also according to Key Medical, the Agency established a website for vendors to use when submitting bids, but the site would not allow users to differentiate between types of feeding tubes or allow feedback to address such issues. Key Medical alleges this system prevented Key Medical from submitting a bona fide bid because Key Medical‘s acquisition cost for custom-fitted, low-profile tubes (more than $100 per tube) exceeded by far the permissible bid cap for general feeding tubes (approximately $40), even without adding amounts for profit and overhead.
Key Medical also describes how the failure to submit a bona fide bid for an item or category carries severe consequences. Namely, the failure to submit a bid for a category of products (or the submission of a bid too low to cover the bidder‘s acquisition costs, some profits, and some overhead) results in that vendor‘s exclusion from receiving a contract for the entire associated category of products. Key Medical also asserts that, due to the interplay between the Medicare and Medicaid
Implementation of the competitive bidding system resulted in a single competitive-bid price for feeding tubes in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area of less than $40 and resulted in an award of contracts to 8 providers who listed local addresses and 14 mail-order or out-of-area providers to supply such tubes for Medicare (22 providers or vendors overall). Notwithstanding the awarding of contracts to 8 local bidders and 22 bidders overall, Key Medical argues that implementation has impermissibly reduced patient choice of provider. Key Medical also argues that many high-need patients may not have adequate access to low-profile feeding tubes.
C. Procedural History
Key Medical brought the present action in the District of Minnesota, asserting a claim under the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) and also asserting constitutional violations. The APA claim alleged arbitrary and capricious agency action related to the use of the old price-schedule amounts as bid caps, the grouping together of regular and low-profile feeding tubes, and the bona fide bid requirement and its impact on vendors’ ability to continuing participating in the separate Medicaid system. As relief, Key Medical sought to enjoin the Agency from: (1) implementing competitive bidding for “all Enteral Nutrients, Equipment, and Supplies,” (2) utilizing a web-based bidding system “which rejects submissions of the actual and truthful acquisition costs,” and (3) including in the competitive bidding program the provision of supplies to dually eligible patients.
The district court expressed substantial concern at the impact the Agency‘s competitive bidding regime would have upon dually eligible patients with developmental disabilities who use custom-fitted low-profile feeding tubes. The court, however, applied the bar on review and dismissed the APA claim for lack of jurisdiction. The court also held the constitutional claims were substantively insufficient to create jurisdiction under a constitutional-question exception to the statutory bar on review. Key Medical appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
A. General Applicability of the Bar on Review
We review a
B. Ultra Vires Agency Action
Turning, then, to the possibility of review under an ultra vires theory, we reject Key Medical‘s characterization of the agency actions at issue as ultra vires. Although an ultra vires action may be reviewed even in the face of statutory bar on review, our court has expressed a clear disinclination to accept plaintiffs’ characterization of agency actions as ultra vires where is it possible to characterize a dispute merely as one of statutory interpretation concerning the scope of agency authority. See, e.g., Neb. State Legis. Bd., United Transp. Union v. Slater, 245 F.3d 656, 659-60 (8th Cir. 2001). Rather, in order for an agency action to be ultra vires, there must be a “plain violation of an unambiguous and mandatory provision of the statute.” Id. at 659 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). There is no such plain violation here.
In Nebraska State Legislative Board, our court rejected an ultra vires type argument in the face of a jurisdictional statute-of-limitations bar, stating:
As a general rule, courts “have interpreted [the ultra vires exception] as sanctioning [review] in a very narrow situation in which there is a ‘plain’ violation of an unambiguous and mandatory provision of the statute.” American Airlines, Inc. v. Herman, 176 F.3d 283, 293 (5th Cir. 1999). Thus ... “review of an ‘agency action allegedly in excess of authority must not simply involve a dispute over statutory interpretation.‘” Id. (quoting Kirby Corp. v. Pena, 109 F.3d 258, 269 (5th Cir. 1997)). Nor will a mere allegation of ultra vires action suffice. West v. Bergland, 611 F.2d 710, 717, 720 (8th Cir. 1979) (”Bergland“), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 821 (1980). In Bergland, although an appellant had characterized his challenge to a regulation as an ultra vires one, we disagreed, holding it was merely one of statutory construction. Id. at 717. Such is also the case here. FRA‘s decision to exempt certain employees from certification “is by no
means a clear departure from [the] statutory mandate or an abridgment of [UTU‘s] statutory right.” Id. at 718 (internal quotations omitted).
Id. at 659-60; see also Am. Soc‘y of Cataract & Refractive Surgery v. Thompson, 279 F.3d 447, 456 (7th Cir. 2002) (rejecting an ultra vires argument in the context of a different Medicare provision and stating, “petitioners argue ... the Secretary violated a clear statutory mandate and exceeded the scope of her delegated authority [but] we.... find the ... regulation to be a reasonable interpretation of an unclear statutory mandate....“) (internal citations omitted).
While Nebraska State Legislative Board involved a slightly different context than the present case, its discussion of what it means for an action to be ultra vires still applies. There, rather than a bar on judicial or administrative review, the issue was whether a request for review under the Hobbs Act could be entertained even though the request for review was filed after a 60-day jurisdictional limitations period had passed. 245 F.3d at 658. Even though the context was different, the impact was the same: a broad and general bar on jurisdiction cannot be avoided by characterizing mere fights over statutory interpretation as ultra vires claims.
In contrast, an example of a clearly ultra vires action and the violation of an unambiguous statutory mandate can be found in Leedom v. Kyne, 358 U.S. 184 (1958). There, the Supreme Court held that the National Labor Relations Board had taken an ultra vires action when, without the consent of professional workers, it approved a collective bargaining unit that included both professional and non-professional workers. 358 U.S. at 188-89. The action was deemed ultra vires because the authorizing statute, section 9(b)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act, expressly prohibited the inclusion of professional employees within such units without the consent of the professional employees. Id. Accordingly, the action in that case—agency action in direct contravention of an express and narrowly defined limit on agency authority—was deemed ultra vires. Id.
Some circuits have suggested a greater willingness to accept arguments characterizing agency action as ultra vires where the potentially applicable statutory bar is ambiguous or narrow. For example, the D.C. Circuit noted that review under a theory of ultra vires agency action “is favored ‘if the wording of a preclusion clause is less than absolute.‘” Amgen, 357 F.3d at 112 (quoting Dart v. United States, 848 F.2d 217, 221 (D.C. Cir. 1988)). The court concluded, however, that the language at issue in Amgen—language almost identical to the bar on the present case—was clear and barred review. Id.
Although not articulated as a multi-factored test, these cases, collectively illustrate the need to examine (1) the clarity and specificity of the bar on review; (2) the breadth of the Agency‘s statutory authorization; (3) the scope of any express statutory limits on the Agency‘s authority; and (4) the relationship between the action taken and these other three factors. In the present case, the bar on review is not only broad but lists in detail several aspects of the competitive bidding system using categorical language (“awarding of contracts,” “selection of items,” “the bidding structure“) rather than targeting only small or specific aspects of the system. In addition, the statutory authority for the Agency‘s action is broad and relatively unconstrained: Congress made timely implementation a priority and gave the agency broad license to build a competitive-bidding system free of most judicial oversight.
Key Medical attempts to identify clear violations of statutory authority, but we conclude that, in each instance, Key Medical has identified mere issues of statutory interpretation. For example,
Still focusing on the maximum bid cap, Key Medical argues that such caps are inherently non-competitive, are not bid-based, and, as such, are in conflict with a statutory mandate to establish a system of competitive pricing under which payments “shall be based on bids submitted and accepted....”
Also, it is a matter of statutory interpretation whether the term “bid” must be viewed as inherently limited to unconstrained bids by market participants or whether the Agency may impose limitations on permissible bids. Congress defined the term bid to mean “an offer to furnish an item or services for a particular price and time period that includes, where appropriate, any services that are attendant to the furnishing of the item or service.”
C. Constitutional-Claim Exception
Regarding the constitutional claims, Key Medical argues that implementation of the competitive bidding regime amounted to an unconstitutional taking of its business. Key Medical also argues it was deprived of a valuable property interest in its business without due process.7 Key Medical advances these arguments in an effort to obtain review under a constitutional-claim exception to the statutory bar on review. See, e.g., McNary v. Haitian Refugee Ctr., Inc., 498 U.S. 479, 495 (1991) (distinguishing between the application of a statutory bar to simple claims for relief from administrative decisions versus substantial collateral constitutional challenges that might not otherwise be subject to review); see also Hernandez v. Holder, 438 Fed. Appx. 527, 528 (8th Cir. 2011) (complying with the Immigration and Naturalization Act‘s bar on review of certain final orders of removal, but noting that the petitioner had not raised “any substantial constitutional challenge“). Where an asserted basis of federal jurisdiction is “patently meritless” however, a plaintiff cannot avoid application of a bar on review. See Biscanin v. Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., 407 F.3d 905, 907 (8th Cir. 2005).
Here, Key Medical possesses no protected interest that can serve as the basis for a takings claim, nor a property interest that may serve as the basis of a due process violation. In Minnesota Association of Health Care Facilities, Inc. v. Minnesota Department of Public Welfare, 742 F.2d 442, 446 (8th Cir. 1984), the Eighth Circuit rejected a plaintiff‘s attempt to characterize a loss of business associated with a condition on Medicaid participation as a taking. There, the court stated, “[d]espite the strong financial inducement to participate in Medicaid,” the care provider‘s choice to participate in Medicaid was “nonetheless voluntary.” Id. Our court concluded, “[t]his voluntariness forecloses the possibility that the statute could result in an imposed taking of private property which would give rise to the constitutional right of just compensation[.]” Id.; see also Am. Soc‘y of Cataract & Refractive Surgery, 279 F.3d at 455-56 (physicians had no property interest in particular method for establishing new reimbursement payment regime and as such no “substantial constitutional issues” existed that could overcome a Medicare statutory bar on review). Minnesota Association of Health Care Facilities controls in the present case. Because the constitutional claim lacks merit due to the absence
We affirm the judgment of the district court.
