PENNSYLVANIA CHIROPRACTIC ASSOCIATION, Mark Barnard, and Barry A. Wahner, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. INDEPENDENCE HOSPITAL INDEMNITY PLAN, INC., formerly known as Independence Blue Cross, Defendant-Appellant.
Nos. 14-2322, 14-3174, 15-1274.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Decided Oct. 1, 2015.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Oct. 30, 2015.
802 F.3d 926
Lastly, Boutros challenges the denial of his
For all the foregoing reasons, this appeal is frivolous. Accordingly, we invoke
AFFIRMED; ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE ISSUED.
Argued Sept. 9, 2015.
Jason S. Cowart, Attorney, Zuckerman Spaeder LLP, New York, N.Y., Conor Brendan O‘Croinin, Attorney, Zuckerman Spaeder LLP, Baltimore, MD, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
Anthony F. Shelley, Attorney, Miller & Chevalier, Washington, DC, for Defendant-Appellant.
Before EASTERBROOK, KANNE, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
Two chiropractors and an association of chiropractors filed this suit against an insurance company. They contend that, when determining how much to pay for services rendered to patients, the insurer failed to use the procedures required by
The insurer operates a preferred-provider system that offers patients better benefits, or lower co-payments, when they patronize medical providers who have agreed with the insurer to accept lower reimbursements (per procedure) in exchange for a better flow of business. The two chiropractor plaintiffs have signed such contracts, which the parties call “participating provider” or “network” agreements. Providers bill the insurer directly and do not know (or care) whether a given patient obtained the coverage as part of an ERISA welfare-benefit plan or through some other means, such as an affinity group policy or an insurance exchange under the Affordable Care Act.
The current dispute concerns the amounts providers receive under their participating-provider contracts, not any particular ERISA plan. The insurer believes that its policies and contracts promise to reimburse particular services on a capitation basis (a health maintenance organization receives a fixed payment per patient per year, without regard to the amount of value of services rendered), while the plaintiffs believe that the insurer must use a fee-for-service system. If the insurance policy calls for capitation payment, providers who are outside a HMO cannot receive payment for a particular class of services. After reimbursing some services on a fee-for-service basis, the insurer declared that it had made a mistake and recouped by reducing future payments for other ser-
In siding with the plaintiffs, the district court required the insurer to use procedures that are designed for retail-level disputes between a plan‘s participants and their employer (or plan administrator) rather than procedures designed for wholesale-level disputes between an insurer and providers under network contracts. If that is what ERISA requires, then a mismatch between procedures and the kind of dispute involved is no concern of the judiciary‘s. But the insurer maintains that it is not what ERISA requires, because (in its view) plaintiffs are neither participants in nor beneficiaries of welfare-benefit plans.
Section 1133 requires “every employee benefit plan” to make available to each “participant” and “beneficiary” procedures that the Secretary of Labor may supplement by regulation.
Plaintiffs concede that they are not participants under the definition in
The problem with this contention all but catapults off the page: a “beneficiary” is a person designated “by a participant” or “by the terms of an employee benefit plan,” and plaintiffs are neither. (The parties call these two possibilities “derivative standing” and “direct standing.” We use the statutory language instead.) Plaintiffs do not rely on a valid assignment from any patient. Nor do they rely on a designation in a plan. Instead they rely on their contracts with an insurer. That does not meet the definition in
The defendant, which used to be known as Blue Cross of Greater Philadelphia but changed its name when it expanded its territory and services, is not “established” or “maintained” by any employer. It was established in 1938, long before ERISA, and exists independently of employers and their plans. It now covers more than seven million people, far more than any ERISA plan. That some employers’ plans provide benefits through an insurer does not make the policy “the plan.” And plaintiffs’ contracts are with an insurer in its role as insurer, not any employer or plan sponsor; the network contracts cover all dealings with the insurer rather than the administration of a particular plan. The insurer is the sole defendant; no participant, employer, plan sponsor, or plan administrator is a litigant. The district court‘s injunctions regulate the dealings between medical providers and a particular insurer, not between plaintiffs and plan sponsors. Plaintiffs’ view that any document related to a plan is itself a plan was rejected by the Supreme Court in CIGNA Corp. v. Amara, 563 U.S. 421, 131 S.Ct. 1866, 1877-78, 179 L.Ed.2d 843 (2011).
The Second Circuit recently held that a network contract between a medical provider and an insurer does not make that provider a “beneficiary” under ERISA. See Rojas v. Cigna Health & Life Insurance Co., 793 F.3d 253 (2d Cir. 2015). Plaintiffs insist that Rojas contradicts this circuit‘s approach, established in Kennedy, but we have explained why Kennedy and similar opinions do not support plaintiffs’ position. Rojas concludes that every circuit that has addressed the subject has distinguished between providers’ status as assignees of particular claims to benefits and providers’ status as voluntary members of a network established by an insurer. See 793 F.3d at 258, discussing Spinedex Physical Therapy USA Inc. v. United Healthcare of Arizona, Inc., 770 F.3d 1282, 1289 (9th Cir. 2014); Hobbs v. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama, 276 F.3d 1236, 1241 (11th Cir. 2001); and Ward v. Alternative Health Delivery Systems, Inc., 261 F.3d 624, 627 (6th Cir. 2001). The language of those other decisions is not as clean as the Second Circuit‘s—and the Second Circuit‘s use of “standing” as a synonym for statutory coverage itself leaves something to be desired—but our review of the decisions in other circuits leads us to agree with Rojas that the distinction between assignment of particular claims and status as an in-network provider is supported by the case law. And, more to the point, it is supported by the language of ERISA.
Plaintiffs express concern that ERISA‘s preemption clause,
Plaintiffs are not “beneficiaries” as ERISA uses that term, so they are not entitled to the procedures established by
REVERSED
