OPINION
This case involves cross appeals by the plaintiffs and defendants below. Both hinge on whether an insurance company, when it alleges that a health care provider has overcharged it for prescription drugs dispensed under the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act (the Act), must first exhaust remedies provided in the Act before bringing suit in court.
Appellant and plaintiff below, Texas Mutual Insurance Company (Texas Mutual), appeals the district court’s grant of partial summary judgment in favor of appellees and defendants below, Eckerd Corp., H.E. Butt Grocery Co., Third Party Solutions, Inc., Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., Apollo Enterprises, Inc., and Walgreen Co. (collectively, Defendants). 1 The partial summary judg *263 ment dismissed Texas Mutual’s claims for negligent misrepresentation and for money had and received regarding amounts it alleges Defendants over-billed for prescription drugs dispensed to workers’ compensation claimants. The parties filed a joint motion to dismiss all remaining claims to obtain a final, appealable judgment.
Defendants appeal the district court’s denial of their motion to dismiss Texas Mutual’s claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Defendants argue that the Act grants the Texas Workers’ Compensation Commission (the Commission) exclusive jurisdiction over workers’ compensation medical fee claims. Therefore, Defendants argue, the courts lack jurisdiction over such claims until the aggrieved party exhausts the administrative remedies established by the Commission. For the reasons stated below, we will reverse and render judgment that the trial court lacked jurisdiction. Accordingly, we need not address Texas Mutual’s appeal that its claims should be reinstated.
BACKGROUND
Under the workers’ compensation system, pharmacies fill prescriptions at no charge to the injured worker. 28 Tex. Admin. Code § 134.502(d)(3) (2003). The pharmacies then bill the workers’ compensation insurance carrier, which reimburses the pharmacy according to a Pharmaceutical Fee Guideline promulgated by the Commission. 2
According to the Pharmaceutical Fee Guideline, the maximum allowable reimbursement is generally the provider’s “usual and customary charge for same or similar service.” The parties dispute the meaning of this standard. Texas Mutual interprets “usual and customary charge for same or similar service” to mean that pharmacies may not charge workers’ compensation insurers more for drugs dispensed to injured workers than the amount charged to customers outside the workers’ compensation system. 3 Texas Mutual alleges that Defendants have routinely submitted bills to Texas Mutual that grossly exceed the prices charged to the pharmacies’ retail customers for the same prescription drugs. 4 On November 1, 2001, Texas Mutual brought suit in district court to recover amounts it allegedly overpaid Defendants, plus interest, attorney’s *264 fees, and other damages and penalties allowed by law. 5 Texas Mutual requested declaratory and injunctive relief and asserted two common-law causes of action: money had and received, and negligent misrepresentation. 6
Defendants moved to dismiss on grounds that the Commission has exclusive jurisdiction over all medical fee disputes between workers’ compensation insurers and health care providers and that Texas Mutual must exhaust its administrative remedies before bringing suit. Additionally, Defendants moved for partial summary judgment on Texas Mutual’s negligent misrepresentation and money had and received claims. The district court denied the motion to dismiss but granted Defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment without stating the grounds for its ruling. The parties agreed to dismiss their remaining claims to obtain a final judgment for the purposes of appeal.
DISCUSSION
Because subject matter jurisdiction is a threshold issue affecting the power of this court to reach the merits of Texas Mutual’s appeal, we first address Defendants’ plea to the jurisdiction.
See Texas Ass’n of Bus. v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
Our Court recently held that the Commission has exclusive jurisdiction over medical fee disputes between providers and insurers and that a party to such a dispute must first exhaust its administrative remedies before bringing suit in court.
Howell v. Texas Workers’ Comp. Comm’n,
In
Howell,
we looked at the history, purpose and statutory language of the Workers’ Compensation Act and held that the Act constitutes a “pervasive regulatory scheme” that demonstrates the legislature’s intent to grant the Commission exclusive jurisdiction over provider fee disputes.
Howell,
In addition to arguing that the lack of “clear and express” language does not evince legislative intent to vest sole authority in the Commission over medical fee disputes, Texas Mutual, citing
Cash America,
argues that the legislature did not intend to abrogate its common law claims when it authorized the Commission to develop administrative fee dispute procedures.
See Cash America,
*267
Because the Commission has exclusive jurisdiction over this statutory provision and the claims that arise from it, Texas Mutual must exhaust its administrative remedies before bringing these claims in court.
See Burgess v. Gallery Model Homes, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
Because the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act’s pervasive scheme indicates the legislature’s intent to grant the Commission exclusive jurisdiction over medical fee disputes, we reverse the district court’s judgment denying the Defendant’s motion to dismiss and render judgment dismissing Texas Mutual’s claims for lack of jurisdiction. Having held that the trial court lacked jurisdiction, we need not address Texas Mutual’s claims for money had and received and for negligent misrepresentation.
Notes
. Plaintiff is a workers' compensation insurance carrier. Defendants are four retail chain stores that operate pharmacies throughout Texas and two third-party billing companies that processed and submitted bills to Texas Mutual on behalf of some of the defendant pharmacies.
.In 1989, the Texas legislature enacted a new workers' compensation act, created the Texas Workers’ Compensation Commission and granted it broad powers to implement and enforce the Act.
Texas Workers' Comp. Comm’n v. Patient Advocates of Tex.,
(1) the provider’s usual and customary charge for same or similar service; or
(2) a formula based on the "Average Wholesale Price” for the pharmaceuticals. See 28 Tex. Admin. Code § 134.201 (2003) (adopting the guideline). The Commission has since revised the fee guideline, adding a third factor to the MAR, a "negotiated or contract amount,” that is not at issue here. See id. § 134.503.
. Defendants argue that the phrase "same or similar service” distinguishes the standard from their "usual and customary charge,” because providing drugs to injured workers and then billing the insurance company involves a different service with higher costs than simply filling prescriptions for retail customers.
. Texas Mutual alleges that Defendants billed up to four times the amount they charged retail cash customers.
. Although Texas Mutual claims that it needs discovery to quantify the total overpayments, it believes that the total overpayments exceed $1 million.
. Texas Mutual requested an injunction to prevent Defendants from submitting claims for reimbursement that exceeded the maximum allowed by the Pharmaceutical Fee Guideline and a declaration that the maximum reimbursement amount was the lesser of a pharmacy's “cash price” that a pharmacy charges customers not covered by workers' compensation insurance or the amount derived from the formula established in the TWCC Medical Fee Guideline (1996).
.The trial court did not have the benefit of our ruling in Howell when it denied Defendants' motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
. Texas Mutual argues that the legislature gave the Commission primary, not exclusive, jurisdiction over provider fee disputes. The judicially created primary jurisdiction doctrine allocates power between courts and agencies when both have authority to make initial determinations in a dispute.
Howell v. Texas Workers’ Comp. Comm’n,
. Pharmaceuticals are among the health care services regulated by fee guidelines that calculate payments due health care providers. See Tex. Admin. Code §§ 134.201 (governing medical fee guidelines as applied to pharmaceuticals), 134.500 et seq. (“Guidelines for Medical Services, Charges, and Payments, Subchapter F. Pharmaceutical Benefits”) (2004). The administrative code also repeatedly refers to pharmacists as health care providers and distinguishes them from doctors. See id. §§ 134.501(a) (”[I]f, prior to providing the pharmaceutical services, the health care provider (HCP) obtains ..."), (a)(3) (”[E]ven if the HCP provided pharmaceutical services beyond the first seven days ...,"), (d) ("CTjhe HCP may dispense prescription or nonprescription medications in the amount ordered by the doctor ... ”). A dispute between a health care provider and an insurance carrier regarding proper payment is a medical fee dispute. See id. § 133.307(b) (2004) (Tex. Workers’ Comp. *266 Comm'n, Medical Dispute Resolution of a Medical Fee Dispute).
. In
Cash America,
a pledgor sued a pawnshop alleging common law claims for conversion, negligence, and gross negligence after the property she had pledged was stolen.
Cash Am. Int’l, Inc. v. Bennett,
.
See Bone v. Utica Nat’l Ins. Co. of Tex.,
No. 2-02-209-CV,
.Texas Mutual asked the court to award it money and interest from the Defendants and to provide injunctive and declaratory relief. The Act gives the Commission the power to grant these remedies. It can order providers to refund payments that exceed amounts permitted by the Fee Guideline and pay interest on money refunded, and can enforce sanctions on providers who commit administrative violations, including "a reduction or denial of fees” or “restriction, suspension, or revocation of the right to receive reimbursement.”
See
Tex. Lab.Code Ann. §§ 413.016(a), 413.019, 415.023(b)(1), (4) (West 1996 & Supp.2004). The ability of the Commission to fully compensate an injured party, to sanction parties that violate the Act, and to establish and enforce the Act's provisions further demonstrates the legislature’s intent to grant the Commission exclusive jurisdiction over these claims.
C.f. Cash America,
