ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS THE CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT IN PART
THIS CAUSE is before the Court upon Defendant National Specialty Insurance Company’s Motion to Dismiss the First Amended Class Action Complaint [DE 43]. The Court has considered the Motion, Plaintiffs Opposition [DE 44], Defendant’s Reply [DE 45], and the record, and is otherwise fully advised in the premises.
I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff Shenandoah Chiropractic brought this amended class action complaint against Defendant National Specialty Insurance Company, alleging that Defendant breached its insurance contract by using a computer program that caps reimbursement amounts at an undisclosed, predetermined percentile of the charge submitted to exclude a portion of otherwise covered claims. Plaintiff also seeks a declaratory judgment that this method of evaluating the reasonableness of submitted charges is in violation of the standard insurance contract that Defendant enters into with its insureds. Defendant filed the instant Motion to Dismiss, challenging Count II of the Complaint as well as the class allegations in Count I of the Complaint
II. LEGAL STANDARD FOR MOTION TO DISMISS
Until the recent Supreme Court decision in
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550
U.S.-,
III. ANALYSIS
Defendant addresses each claim in the Complaint separately in its Motion to Dismiss. First, Defendant argues that Count 2 of the Complaint, the declaratory judgment claim, should be dismissed in its entirety. Second, Defendant argues that the class allegations, as applied to Count I of the Complaint, the breach of contract claim, should be dismissed or stricken. The Court considers each argument in turn.
A. Declaratory Relief Claim
In Count II of the Complaint, Plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment against the Defendant declaring essentially two things: 1) that the relevant policy language regarding medical payments or personal injury protection is ambiguous and should be construed in favor of coverage, and 2) that the policy did not reserve to the Defendant the right to cap auto medical payments by application of undisclosed re-pricing percentiles, cost-containment fee schedules, or other “silent HMO” or “managed-care” type health cost controls without disclosure. Essentially, to use the phrasing of Plaintiffs Response to the instant Motion, “Plaintiff alleges that the common method used by Defendant to cap reimbursement of all reasonable charges, for all of its insureds (i.e. the ‘Code 01’ reduction), is an improper breach of Defendant’s standardized insurance contract.” (Response, p. 13-14 [DE 44].)
However, contrary to Plaintiffs arguments, the Florida Second District Court of Appeals in
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Sestile
addressed the precise question of whether this type of declaratory relief could be given, and concluded that it could not.
As the Plaintiff in the instant case articulates, it Is seeking a declaratory judgment as to whether or not the insurer’s method of determining reasonableness violates the language in the contract. This is exactly the sort of determination that the
Sestile
court held was inappropriate for across-the-board declaratory relief, be
B. Class Action Allegations
Defendant also argues, for the first time in its Reply, 1 that the demand letter sent by Plaintiff pursuant to the PIP statute requirements, is insufficient to satisfy the demand letter requirement for each member of the putative class. 2 Plaintiff makes two arguments in response in its Surreply: first, that the demand letter requirement is procedural, not substantive, and should not be applied in federal court, and second, that even if the requirement is applied in federal court, the demand letter sent by the lead plaintiff satisfies the requirement for the entire class. Because both arguments appear to present issues of first Impression in this Circuit, the Court first considers the legislative history behind the PIP statute’s pre-suit notice requirement, then considers each of the Plaintiffs arguments in turn.
1) Background and Legislative History
The pre-suit demand letter requirement was added to the Florida PIP statute in 2001, following a Statewide Grand Jury Report on Insurance Fraud Related to Personal injury Protection. In this Report, the Fifteenth Statewide Grand Jury examined the issue of PIP fraud, and concluded that fraud and abuse in the area of PIP coverage was widespread and undermining the purposes of the PIP statute. (Statewide Grand Jury Report on Insurance Fraud Related to Personal Injury Protection, Florida Supreme Court Case No. 95,746.) 3 The Grand Jury was concerned about the practice of patient solicitation and brokering by professional solicitors, known as “runners,” working alongside lawyers and medical professionals, resulting in “phony or inflated billing, unnecessary or inappropriate diagnostic testing, and trumped up lawsuits.” (Id.)
Based on the findings and recommendations of the statewide grand jury, the Florida Legislature made a number of amendments and additions to the PIP statute during the 2001 session in Senate Bill # 1092, among them the addition of a pre-suit notice requirement. The Senate Staff Analysts and Economic Impact Statement for CS/SB 1092,
4
in explaining the need for the amendments, noted the Grand Jury’s finding that “doctors and chiropractors
However, the Legislature remained concerned about fraud and abuse in the PIP insurance area, assembling a Select Committee on Automobile Insurance/PIP Reform in December 2002. The report and recommendations of that committee 5 were submitted to the Legislature in March 2003, and included various suggestions for further amendments to the PIP statute. The Committee concluded that the 2001 reforms, including the pre-suit demand letter requirement, “did not go far enough in attacking the problems of fraud and abuse occurring within the PIP system.” (Id. at p. 2.) The Committee recommended, among other things, expanding the provisions of the pre-suit demand letter requirement, making them applicable to all PIP disputes and increasing the time for insurers to respond to the letter. (Id. at p. 9.) The Legislature acted on these recommendations, considering and passing Senate Bill # 32 during the 2003 session. This bill, in accordance with the Committee’s recommendations, expanded the pre-suit demand letter provision by making it applicable to all actions under the PIP statute and increasing the time to fifteen calendar days within which an insurer may respond to the demand letter. The Senate Staff Analysis and Economic Impact Statement for CS/SB 32-A 6 noted, in evaluating the private sector impact, that “litigation costs could be reduced due to the provisions in the bill which broaden the application of the presuit demand letter ... Parties could settle many PIP disputes rather than file lawsuits, thus reducing the amount of court costs and attorney’s fees.” (p. 20.)
The legislative history makes clear the motivations behind the Florida Legislature’s addition of a pre-suit notice requirement to the PIP statute. Although the Legislature appears to have considered the beneficial effect of promoting settlement, and thus reducing litigation costs, this Court concludes that the primary purpose behind the amendments that added, and subsequently strengthened, the pre-suit demand letter requirement was preventing fraud.
2) Procedural vs. Substantive
The question of whether the PIP statute’s demand letter requirement is procedural or substantive appears to be a matter of first Impression in this Circuit. Plaintiff cites to precedent from the Seventh Circuit in support of its argument that the requirement is procedural, and thus, should not be applied in federal court. In
Mace v. Van Ru Credit Corporation,
the Seventh Circuit held that the notice provision of the Wisconsin Consumer Act, which requires thirty days’ notice prior to commencement of an action, was inapplicable.
But, more fundamentally, the notice provision of the WCA does not grant or deny a substantive right (the right to sue under the WCA), as the district court found. Rather, it affects the period within which that right can be exercised. If the purpose of the WCA’s notice requirement is, as argued by the defendants, to prevent a suit from ever being filed (by encouraging the parties to reach an agreement extra-judicially), such a notice requirement is not substantive ... Whether the start of Mace’s lawsuit was delayed by thirty days (under the WCA) or not at all (under Rule 23) is a matter of procedure, not süb-stance. The application of Rule 23 does not abridge, enlarge or modify any substantive right.
3) Adequacy of the Lead Plaintiff’s Demand Letter
Plaintiff next argues that the demand letter sent by the lead plaintiff in this matter, Shenandoah Chiropractic, is adequate to satisfy the demand letter requirement for all members of the putative class. This question of law also appears to be a matter of first impression in this Circuit. Plaintiff argues that notice by the lead plaintiff is sufficient, and points to the Florida Third District Court of Appeal’s opinion in
Latman v. Costa Cruise Lines
in support of its position.
See
In support of the contrary position, Defendant cites to a state trial court order, in which the circuit judge concluded that the lead plaintiff in a class action had not satisfied the PIP demand letter requirement on behalf of the entire class because
The Court finds most instructive the approach of the Fifth Circuit in a case involving a state statute with a similar notice requirement.
See Chevron USA, Inc. v. Vermilion Parish Sch. Bd.,
In reaching its conclusion, the Fifth Circuit considered the various practical questions that would be raised by allowing class-wide notice, and concluded that they were not answered in the statute. Id. at 464. For example, the court questioned whether the putative class representatives have any legal authority to make demands under the Mineral Code on behalf of lessors who do not know that demand is being made on their behalf. Id. It also questioned to whom the lessees should respond when confronted with a class notice' — would timely response to the class representative protect the lessee from owing statutory penalties to the individual class members who do not receive a response? Id. And if the lessee should elect to pay the royalties due, to whom should the payments be made? Id. The court described these unanswered questions that would arise out of allowing class notification as “a significant consideration” leading it to conclude that class notice would not satisfy the requirements of the statute.
Like the Louisiana Mineral Code, the Florida PIP statute’s notice requirement provides a statutorily prescribed proce
This Court concludes that allowing class notice would, in effect, eliminate the carefully crafted and detailed notice requirement set out in the Florida PIP statute. The legislative history behind this statutory provision clearly indicates that the Florida Legislature was confronting the difficult problem of fraud in the PIP insurance system and made a reasoned choice to add the pre-suit notice requirement. Furthermore, when considering the requirement two years later, the Legislature chose not only to retain the requirement, but to strengthen it. This Court simply may not ignore this provision and the underlying legislative intent. Accordingly, the Court concludes that, as a matter of law, no notice letter sent on behalf of the putative class in this case could be legally sufficient, and the class allegations of the Amended Complaint shall be stricken.
IV. CONCLUSION
In accordance with the foregoing, It is ORDERED AND ADJUDGED as follows:
1. Defendant National Specialty Insurance Company’s Motion to Dismiss the First Amended Class Action Complaint [DE 43] is GRANTED.
2. Count II of the Amended Complaint, the claim for declaratory relief, is DISMISSED with prejudice.
3. The class action allegations pertaining to Count I of the Amended Complaint, the claim for breach of contract, are STRICKEN.
4. Plaintiff Shenandoah Chiropractic’s individual claim for Breach of Contract, as set out in Count I of the Amended Complaint, remains.
DONE AND ORDERED.
Notes
. Arguments may not normally be made for the first time In a Reply brief. However, to alleviate any potential prejudice to the Plaintiff, the Court granted leave for Plaintiff to file a Surreply, and so has had the benefit of briefing from each party on this issue.
. Defendant also argues in its Motion to Dismiss that the breach of contract claim is not suitable for relief on a class-wide basis and that Plaintiff lacks standing to represent a class that includes med-pay claimants as well as PIP claimants. Because the demand letter issue is dispositive as to the class allegations, the Court need not consider these additional arguments.
. Available at: http: /myfloridale-gal.com/85256CC50
06DFCC3 ,nsP0/9AB243 3 05 303A0E0 85256CCA005B8E2E?Open & Highlight=0, statewide, grandjury, report, pip, fraud.
. Available at: http: //www.flsenate.gov/ session/index.cfm?BI_Mode=ViewBilllnfo & Mode=Bills & SubMenu=l & Year=2001 & billnum=1092.
. Available at: http: //www.flsenate.gov/data/ committees/senate/bi/PIP — FinalReport.pdf.
. Available at: http: //www.flsenate.gov/ session/mdex.cfin?BI_Mode=ViewBilllnfo & Mode=Bills & SubMenu=l & Year=2003A & billnum=32.
. The demand letter sent in the instant case was sent on behalf of Shenandoah Chiropractic only, with no mention of a class-wide demand for relief. However, Plaintiff requests that if the Court finds this demand letter to be inadequate, that the case be stayed and the Plaintiff given the opportunity to send a class-wide demand letter to the Defendant Thus, the Court must consider whether even a class-wide demand letter could satisfy the requirements of the statute in order to evaluate whether such a remedy would be appropriate.
