Plaintiff, Pine View Gardens Inc., appeals from the District Court’s dismissal, presumably on the ground that it fails to state a cause of action, of a complaint against defendant, the Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company.
The abbreviated complaint, without so much as indicating the assumed basis of the District Court’s jurisdiction, tells us merely that the parties are, respectively, corporations of Maryland and the District of Columbia, and the amount in controversy exceeds $10,000; that plaintiff qualified with the Social Security Administration “as an extended care fa
Defendant’s response to the complaint was a motion to dismiss or for summary judgment. The District Court, by order, but without opinion, granted the motion and that is the order now here for review.
We note that the complaint makes no reference to a written contract between the parties. It may be, as plaintiff’s brief in this court appears to assume, that the complaint is founded either on an oral contract or on quantum, valebat and quantum, meruit claims in quasi contract; and that on such an approach, plaintiff relied on the District Court’s diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Possibly, plaintiff, because its claims relate to services which it, as an extended-care facility, gave to beneficiaries protected by Title XVIII of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1395 et seq., and who were insured by defendant as a carrier and fiscal intermediary under that Act, also relies on the District Court’s jurisdiction under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 701 et seq.
We are spared a full, precise recital of the statutory and administrative background of this controversy because it has already been splendidly and accurately done by Circuit Judge Feinberg in a case, which though plainly distinguishable on its merits, is set, in legislative, in executive, and, above all, in relevant time span, in a context fully congruent to that here relevant. Aequavella v. Richardson,
In the case at bar, plaintiff, as a provider of services, is seeking from defendant, as the Government's fiscal intermediary, further reimbursement for extended-care services plaintiff alleges that in 1967 and 1968 it rendered to beneficiaries of the Medicare program.
The question initially presented is whether, there being diversity of citizenship between the parties, plaintiff may sue in contract or in quasi contract the defendant insurer. Inasmuch as it is plain from the statutory set-up, and is at least implied in the complaint, that the defendant insurer was a disclosed agent and fiscal intermediary for the Government, and it being incontrovertible that the Government itself has not consented to be sued in this manner, the defendant insurer is immune from this action premised on alleged underpayments. What plaintiff is seeking, indirectly to be sure, is payment by the
A secondary question is whether, though not so pleaded, this complaint may be viewed as an action brought against defendant as a governmental “agency” suable under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 701. It suffices to say that the case was not brought on this theory: that plaintiff has in effect asserted a breach of contract, and not, c. g., an official abuse of discretion or action unsupported by substantial evidence, and hence has not asserted the kind of wrong made cognizable by the Administrative Procedure Act; that there is at least a question whether Mutual is an “agency” within 5 U.S.C. § 701(b)(1); and that we do not think our judicial function requires us to pose and answer questions that would arise from a sweeping reconstitution of the nature of plaintiff’s claim.
