JUSTIN NOLTE et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. CEDARS-SINAI MEDICAL CENTER, Defendant and Respondent.
No. B252606
Second Dist., Div. One.
May 21, 2015.
236 Cal. App. 4th 1401
Glancy Binkow & Goldberg, Lionel Z. Glancy, Marc L. Godino, Casey E. Sadler; Complex Litigation Group and Jeffrey A. Leon for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
OPINION
JOHNSON, J.---Justin Nolte appeals the trial court‘s judgment sustaining the demurrer of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (Cedars). We affirm.
BACKGROUND
On January 17, 2013, Nolte filed a class action complaint in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleging that he and others similarly situated who received treatment from a physician in a Cedars medical building were charged fees by Cedars although “[t]hey did not agree to pay Cedars or to in any way enter into a contract with Cedars.”
After Cedars filed a demurrer to the complaint, Nolte filed a first amended class action complaint (hereafter, the complaint) on July 18, 2013. Nolte alleged that on September 8, 2010, he visited a doctor at the Beverly Hills Spine Center, bringing in his own X-rays for a second opinion. The doctor‘s office was in a facility owned by Cedars, which is prohibited by California law from employing doctors directly. “Cedars has a contract with Beverly Hills Spine and every other medical provider in its network by which it agrees to maintain computerized records for the medical provider‘s patients,” a function “often provided by the medical providers themselves.” Nolte acknowledged that at the doctor‘s office, he “signed a general form document promising to pay Cedars for any services Cedars provides to Plaintiff,” but he was never told by the doctor or by Cedars that after his doctor‘s visit “he would be charged a fee for setting him up as a new patient account on a computer system, let alone that Beverly Hills Spine had contracted with Cedars to perform that overhead task, and that Cedars would issue Plaintiff a bill for that ‘service.‘”
Attached as an exhibit was a three-page form bearing Nolte‘s signature and entitled “Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Conditions of Admissions” (the COA). The COA stated that Nolte “is admitted to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (‘Hospital‘) for . . . outpatient . . . treatment subject to the following terms and conditions.” Nolte initialed paragraph 3, which stated that all physicians were independent contractors who “may bill separately for their services.” The COA also provided in paragraph 7 that “in consideration of the services to be rendered to the Patient, [Nolte] individually obligates himself . . . to pay the account of the Hospital in accordance with the regular rates and terms of the Hospital.”
Cedars filed a demurrer arguing that the fee was part of the ” ‘regular rates and terms of the Hospital‘” which Nolte agreed to pay by signing the COA. In opposition, Nolte argued that he did not seek treatment from Cedars, Cedars provided the computer billing service to his doctor, not to Nolte, and he did not authorize, have notice of, or consent to the fee. In reply, Cedars asserted that Nolte had admitted that the charging of a facility fee was not illegal, and was attempting to rewrite the COA.
The court held a hearing on September 10, 2013, saying, “I think [Nolte] swallowed the fish when he signed the Conditions of Admission.” Nolte argued that the COA‘s “utter opacity” was the focus of the complaint. Cedars responded that when he signed the COA Nolte obligated himself to pay the charge, and the doctor and Cedars were “two separate providers charging two separate charges for services.”
In an order filed October 2, 2013, the trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend for the reasons stated in its written ruling issued on the day of the hearing. The court ruled that Nolte obligated himself to pay the fee when he signed the COA (“an agreement to pay was reached between Mr. Nolte and defendant before he saw his doctor in a ‘Cedars facility’ and that the charge submitted thereafter by Cedars had been authorized in advance by the same Mr. Nolte“). “As a matter of law, Mr. Nolte consented to pay the facility fee to defendant and his pleading does not show that the contract was unconscionable or otherwise unenforceable.” Nolte filed a timely appeal.
DISCUSSION
We review the trial court‘s sustaining of the general demurrer independently, and “[o]ur task in reviewing a judgment of dismissal following the
“The trial court exercises its discretion in declining to grant leave to amend. [Citation.] If it is reasonably possible the pleading can be cured by amendment, the trial court abuses its discretion by not granting leave to amend. [Citation.] The plaintiff has the burden of proving the possibility of cure by amendment.” (Grinzi v. San Diego Hospice Corp. (2004) 120 Cal.App.4th 72, 78.) “A plaintiff may not avoid a demurrer by pleading facts or positions in an amended complaint that contradict the facts pleaded in the original complaint or by suppressing facts which prove the pleaded facts false.” (Cantu v. Resolution Trust Corp. (1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 857, 877.)
On its face, Nolte‘s complaint alleges that he visited a physician whose practice was located in a Cedars facility. Like all the doctors in the Cedars network, Nolte‘s physician‘s practice had contracted with Cedars for Cedars to maintain computerized records for its patients. At the physician‘s office, Nolte signed the COA, agreeing that he was admitted to Cedars for outpatient treatment subject to terms and conditions, one of which was that the physician was an independent contractor who may bill separately for services. Nolte agreed in the COA to pay Cedars for patient services in accordance with its regular rates and terms. Nolte‘s complaint also alleges he was not specifically advised, and Cedars did not obtain his informed consent, that Cedars would charge him for a facility fee for setting up his new patient account in its computer system, and that any service was not to Nolte, but to Nolte‘s physician.
“The California unfair competition law (UCL) (
Nolte admits that the complaint does not allege that charging a facilities fee to a patient is specifically prohibited by law, or that it violates any law not to explicitly and individually disclose the facilities fee. As Cedars points out,
Nolte‘s complaint analogizes Cedars‘s conduct to “cramming,” in which a third party crams charges onto the bill of a business transaction between unaffiliated third parties. California law prohibits cramming in telephone bills, and allegations of cramming can state a cause of action for a statutory violation and hence a violation of the unlawful prong of the unfair competition law (UCL). (Elder v. Pacific Bell Telephone Co. (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 841, 845, 856.) Cedars, however, is not an unaffiliated third party, but the hospital in whose facility Nolte‘s physician is located and with whom Nolte contracted for services, and Nolte agreed to separate billing for those services. And as we stated above, Nolte alleges no statutory violation to serve as a basis for a cause of action for unlawful business practices under the UCL.
Nolte argues that the practice was unfair and fraudulent. We have held that “[a] business practice is unfair within the meaning of the UCL if it violates established public policy or if it is immoral, unethical, oppressive or unscrupulous and causes injury to consumers which outweighs its benefits. [Citations.] The determination whether a business practice is unfair ‘involves an examination of [that practice‘s] impact on its alleged victim, balanced against the reasons, justifications and motives of the alleged wrongdoer. In brief, the court must weigh the utility of the defendant‘s conduct
The complaint‘s UCL cause of action does not allege that the practice of separately billing first-time patients in a Cedars facility for setting up a patient account violates public policy. Nor does the complaint allege that setting up the account had no value, or that the amount Cedars charged for it was unscrupulous. The complaint alleges that it is “unlawful, unfair and/or fraudulent” for Cedars to charge the fee “without prior notice that this charge would be incurred and without obtaining Plaintiff‘s and the other Class members’ informed consent,” and that the injury to Nolte “could have readily been avoided if Defendant had not misled Plaintiff and other Class members and concealed the existence of this facility fee from them.” The injury alleged is not that the fee itself or its amount is unfair, but that Cedars did not specifically, separately, and individually disclose to Nolte that it would charge a facilities fee. Nolte also alleges that the fee was a service only to the practice group (thus avoiding, without mentioning the COA, his agreement in the COA to pay for patient services).
This does not state a claim for unfair business practices under the UCL. As noted above, hospitals are required by law to make available a schedule of charges online or at the hospital, and to provide notice to consumers (here, patients) that they have done so in a prescribed fashion, and there is no allegation that Cedars did not do so. Cedars‘s agreement with Nolte‘s physician was that it would set up the computerized billing service for the patients. Nolte signed the COA stating that he would pay Cedars‘s charges, and that he may be billed separately by his physician and by Cedars (which was prohibited by law from employing his physician). Cedars then issued a separate bill to Nolte for creating his patient account (a function which the complaint alleges is often provided by the medical providers themselves, who would then presumably pass on the administrative cost to the patient). Here, Nolte agreed in the COA to separate billing. “‘In general the “unfairness” prong “has been used to enjoin deceptive or sharp practices. . . .” [Citation.] However, the “unfairness” prong of
On appeal, Nolte argues that the separate bill was unfair because to him it was ” ‘new and different.‘” This was not alleged in his complaint but rather was a comment by the trial court (“It may have been something new and different which he had not encountered before in seeking medical care, but that does not make it unenforceable.“). We agree that something that is “new and different” is not thereby unfair under the UCL.
Nolte also alleged that the practice of charging a facilities fee was fraudulent because the fee was not disclosed, and Cedars “misled Plaintiff and other Class members and concealed the existence of this facility fee from them.” The test for fraud under
The trial court properly sustained the demurrer as to the UCL cause of action.
Nolte has forfeited his other claims and has not shown he can amend.
Nolte also alleged that Cedars violated the Consumers Legal Remedies Act,
Nolte does not explain how he could amend his complaint to avoid demurrer, and he did not propose any proper amendments in opposition to the demurrer. As it is his burden to show how he could save his complaint by amendment, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the demurrer without leave to amend.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Costs are awarded to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
Rothschild, P. J., and Bendix, J.,* concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 9, 2015, S227484. Werdegar, J., did not participate therein.
