MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
The government’s complaint asserts that predecessor corporations of the three named defendants, Gambro Healthcare, Inc., Dialysis Holdings, Inc., and Transitional Hospitals Corporation, Inc., engineered a scheme to defraud Medicare by performing unnecessary and wasteful blood tests at a medical testing laboratory in Smyrna, Georgia. 1 Three of the seven counts arise under the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729(a)(1), (2), and (3);' the other four assert common law claims for fraud, payment by mistake of fact, unjust enrichment, and disgorgement of illegal profits.
Two motions to dismiss are pending, one filed by Gambro, and the other filed jointly by Dialysis Holdings and Transitional Hospitals.
1. The following is a brief summary of the complaint’s allegations. Without a kidney transplant, a person suffering from End-Stage Renal Disease (“ESRD”) requires kidney dialysis several times a week as well as regular testing and monitoring of her blood. Many elderly ESRD patients rely-on Medicare to cover the cost of regular dialysis and necessary blood tests.
Different types of ESRD blood tests are reimbursed by Medicare in different ways. For example, there are “routine tests” which are performed on an ESRD patient’s blood every time she undergoes dialysis. Reimbursement for these tests is rolled into the lump-sum “composite payment” that the Medicare beneficiary’s dialysis provider receives from Medicare for regular dialysis services. Hence, routine tests cannot be billed separately to Medicare. Other tests, classified in the Medicare system as “allowable tests” and “non-routine tests” and referred to hereafter as “nonroutine tests” for the sake of simplicity, are performed at less predictable intervals depending on the patient’s particular needs. These tests, unlike routine tests,
Certain blood tests may be performed simultaneously as a group, or “panel,” on a given blood sample. Lab equipment developed during the- 1980s allowed many routine and nonroutine tests to be performed together as a single panel. Thus, the marginal cost of performing additional nonroutine tests on a blood sample already slated for routine testing was greatly diminished. Questions arose as to whether a panel which included both routine and non-routine tests could, either wholly or in part, be billed to Medicare.
In 1987, Health and Human Services published, in its “Medicare Carriers Manual,” the so-called “50/50 Rule.” Under the rule, direct reimbursement for any given panel would depend on the panel’s ratio of routine to nonroutine tests. If half or more of the tests were routine, there would be no direct reimbursement; if less than half, the entire panel would be reimbursed. Furthermore, any request for reimbursement for nonroutine tests — which, per the 6%o Rule, could only be made for panels that were predominantly nonrou-tine — was required to have an “ICD-9 Code” assuring that the tests were medically necessary.
Around that time in 1987, Community Psychiatric Centers Laboratories, Inc. (“CPC Labs”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of a major dialysis services provider, Community Psychiatric Centers, Inc. (“CPC”), struck a five-year partnership agreement with Clinical Laboratory Services, Inc. (“Damon CLS”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Damon Clinical Laboratories, Inc. (“Damon”). They agreed to create and run a clinical testing laboratory operating under the name Damon Clinical Laboratories in Smyrna, Georgia (the “Smyrna Lab”). Damon and CPC, through their subsidiaries, split the Smyrna Lab profits evenly. In exchange for the Smyrna Lab’s performance of routine tests for CPC for a below-cost fee of $1 per test, CPC agreed to refer its nonroutine tests also to the Smyrna Lab, which then separately billed Medicare for those tests on a fee-for-service basis.
Damon and CPC initially planned to perform a monthly panel for each dialysis patient called the “Chem 19,” consisting of roughly nineteen tests, seven of which were nonroutine and, prior to the announcement of the 50/50 Rule, would have been separately billable. The 50/50 Rule was announced while Damon and CPC were hammering out their agreement. It posed an immediate threat to the venture’s ability to turn a profit. Damon and CPC decided, therefore, to split the Chem 19 panel in two. One new panel would be composed solely of routine tests (the “Chem 12”), the other solely of nonroutine tests (the “Chem 7”). The panels would be performed on separate days, and would require separate blood samples drawn from each patient. All of the tests in the split panels could have been, but were not, performed as a single panel. Indeed, for a different dialysis provider serviced by the Smyrna Lab during the same period of time, all the relevant tests were performed in single Chem 19 panels.
According to the government, running separate Chem 7 and Chem 12 panels on different days required extra blood samples drawn for each patient. 2 To assuage doubts and secure the needed ICD-9 codes, doctors were assured that the additional blood draws and split-panel procedures were necessary. They were not told that all of the tests could have been accomplished in a single panel, or that CPC’s stake in the joint venture gave it an interest in maintaining the level of billable non-routine Medicare tests. Nor was the Smyrna Lab’s Medicare carrier informed, at that time or in later years, of the partnership agreement between Damon and CPC.
In 1989, CPC spun off its dialysis division to Vivra, Inc. (“Vivra”). Thereafter, CPC played a diminished role in the joint venture, taking a share of the profits from the Smyrna Lab until 1991. Through its Community Dialysis Centers, Inc. (“Vivra CDC”) subsidiary, like CPC before it, Viv-ra agreed to refer most of its nonroutine tests to the Smyrna Lab in exchange for below-cost routine testing and a share of the Smyrna Lab’s profits. Vivra also continued to support the split-panel procedure and the encouragement of unnecessary weekly and monthly nonroutine tests. Vivra referred tests to the Smyrna Lab under the terms of the agreement until the partnership was terminated in 1996.
None of the named defendants was directly involved in these events. Dialysis Holdings is a successor in interest to Viv-ra’s dialysis units, an unincorporated division (Vivra Renal Care), and Vivra CDC. Gambro is Dialysis Holdings’ parent corporation. Transitional Hospitals is successor in interest to CPC’s dialysis business and CPC Labs.
These allegations must be accepted provisionally as true, and the government is entitled to any favorable inferences that may be drawn from them.
2. The amended complaint hardly mentions Gambro at all; the only link between Gambro and the alleged wrongdoers is through Gambro’s wholly-owned subsidiary, Dialysis Holdings. Arguing that this link is too slender to state a claim, Gambro has moved under Rule 12(b)(6) to dismiss the claims against it.
Ordinarily, the corporate form exists to limit liability. Ownership — even total ownership — of a corporation does not by itself impart the corporation’s liabilities to the owner, and that rule is not abated simply because the owner happens to be another corporation.
See American Bell, Inc. v. Federation of Tel. Workers,
The Medicare program and the False Claims Act provide the basis for the government’s claims; federal law, therefore, controls the veil-piercing question.
See United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc.,
Under any reasonable reading of the standard laid down in
Pleasant Street,
the government’s pleadings with respect to Gambro do not suffice. The only fact alleged is Gambro’s sole ownership of Dialysis Holdings. That alone is plainly not enough. The pleadings also state the conclusion — without divulging any factual basis — that Gambro is liable as a successor in interest, but this is the sort of “bald assertion,” Corr
ea-Martinez v. Arrillaga-Belendez, 90
The government opposes Gambro’s dismissal, noting that federal courts disregard the corporate form in the interests of “public convenience, fairness and equity,” and that the corporate form garners less respect in matters involving the enforcement of federal statutes.
See Town of Brookline v. Gorsuch,
The government makes a more plausible argument that Gambro, a privately-held corporation whose affairs are not open to scrutiny, must be kept in the case because the information concerning its relationship with Dialysis Holdings and Vivra is within its control, unavailable to the government for pleading purposes, and may only be unearthed through discovery. Even so, the government must still allege, if only on information and belief, the facts it asserts would provide the basis for Gam-bro’s liability. And allegations which sound in fraud — which, under
Pleasant Street,
would include the requisite allegations of fraudulent intent — must provide, if pled on information and belief, “the source of the information and the reasons for the belief.”
Romani v. Shearson Lehman Hutton,
The government also argues that veil-piercing analysis may not apply here at all because Gambro may be liable as a successor in interest to Vivra’s dialysis business.
See Golden State Bottling Co. v. NLRB,
Finally, the government argues that the pleadings, bare though they may be, are sufficient to put Gambro on notice of the claims that might conceivably evolve against it. Even under the liberal norms of notice pleading, overlooking the stricter requirements of Rule 9(b), a pleader may not require a defendant to guess at what the contours of the claims against it may be when they take shape at some uncertain future time.
Gambro’s motion to dismiss is GRANTED.
3. Services billed to Medicare must be reasonable and medically necessary, 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(a)(l)(A) and they must be “provided economically,” § 1320c-5(a)(l). The government alleges that the Chem 7 panel tests and many of the nonroutine tests added to routine panels after 1988 were performed in violation of these statutes, and that claims submitted for those tests were fraudulent. Also, the Anti-Kickback Law prohibits the offer or solicitation of remuneration (including kickbacks and rebates) in exchange for referrals of Medicare-payable services. § 1320a-7b(b)(l)(A). The government contends that the Smyrna Lab partnership agreement, providing for below-cost routine testing and profit sharing in exchange for nonroutine test referrals, violated the Anti-Kickback Law, and that claims submitted for payment for tests run pursuant to this agreement necessarily were false or fraudulent.
In their papers, Transitional Hospitals and Dialysis Holdings argue that splitting the Chem 19 panel into two separate Chem 12 and Chem 7 panels was legitimate, that the government’s allegations of unnecessary testing are barred by estoppel and not pled with the particularity that Rule 9(b) requires, that even if the partnership agreement concerning the Smyrna Lab violated the Medicare Anti-Kickback Law, 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(b), it did not violate the False Claims Act, and that the government’s common law claims, in addition to being inadequately pled, are barred by the applicable statute of limitations.
With regard to-panel splitting, the defendants point out that no statute or regulation specifically prohibits the practice. 3 According to the parties, the Chem 7 claims submitted by the Smyrna Lab stated that the “services [provided] were medically indicated and necessary for the health of the patient....” The government has not pled that all, or any, of the tests reflected in these claims were themselves medically unnecessary. It instead argues that the Chem 7 panels, which required the drawing of an additional blood sample from each patient every month, were unnecessary since all of the needed blood tests, as the Smyrna Lab’s partners knew, could have been performed at one time for no additional cost using a single blood .sample for a Chem 19 panel.
The defendants labor to disconnect the presumed medical necessity of the tests performed in each Chem 7 panel from the dubious necessity of the additional blood draw which the Chem 7 panels allegedly required. The argument is unconvincing. When a provider certifies that a test is
The defendants argue that these allegations will prove false, but their truth or falsity cannot be tested at this time. For now, they are sufficient. To certify the medical necessity of such tests (or cause such tests to be certified), knowing that the tests necessarily entailed procedures which were deleterious, inferior, and pursued solely for profit, is to submit a false or fraudulent claim. That is what the complaint alleges, and it is sufficient under the standard of Rule 12(b)(6).
The government also argues that each claim submitted for Chem 7 tests ran afoul of 42 U.S.C. § 1320e-5(a)(l), which requires, among other things, that Medicare-reimbursable health care services not only be medically necessary but also “economically” provided. The defendants contend that § 1320c-5 could not possibly apply to ESRD facilities such as the Smyrna Lab, although the statute’s plain language (“any ... health care facility ... [that] provides health care services” payable under the Social Security Act, which includes Medicare) suggests otherwise.
More troubling, however, is the fact that the Chem 7 claims contain no express certification that the tests were economically provided. The government’s theory depends, therefore, on the proposition that every Chem 7 claim the Smyrna Lab partners submitted contained an implied representation that the tests had been conducted in compliance with § 1320e-5’s economical care requirement, that the tests were not economically conducted, and that, had the government known this, it would have refused to pay those claims. In
Ab-Tech. Constr., Inc. v. United States,
Apparently, no case has yet extended this principle to claims that supposedly violate § 1320c-5’s economical care requirement.
United States ex rel. Aranda v. Community Psychiatric Ctrs.,
The facts alleged in the complaint place this case in decidedly different terrain than cases such as Mikes, or, for example,
Luckey v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
183
For this reason, the tax avoidance cases cited by the defendants are inapposite. They simply reinforce the axiom that the government cannot make a person pay a tax she does not owe, regardless of whether she purposefully avoided the behavior that would have produced the tax liability in question. Indeed, the tax codes are filled with examples of taxes intended precisely to get people to avoid them, thus discouraging certain unwanted activities (such as excessive smoking or the early withdrawal of retirement savings). Claims made upon the government for payment are different. The government can refuse to pay a claim to which the claimant is not entitled. Submitting a claim under the false pretense of entitlement is fraudulent. Here, the entitlement to Medicare reimbursement depends upon fulfilling an obligation to perform services economically, see 1320c-5(a)(l), and the Smyrna Lab partners are accused of surreptitiously performing those services in an intentionally wasteful manner. The government may proceed on this theory.
For essentially the same reasons, I conclude that the alleged violations of the Anti-Kickback Law related to the Smyrna Lab partnership agreement — particularly, the allegation that below-cost routine testing, i.e. a rebate on services, was offered and accepted in exchange for nonroutine test referrals — are also sufficient to state a claim under the False Claims Act.
See United States ex rel. Pogue v. American Healthcorp. Inc.,
The government also alleges that some of the nonroutine test claims submitted under the Added Test Plan regime were false. The defendants’ response is
The cases cited by the defendants make plain that the government may be estopped in a limited vein of circumstances. In the archetypal case, an agent of the government renders specific advice which is reasonably relied upon and which encourages the very conduct that later lands the unwitting defendant in the dock. Even then, estoppel is only applied against the government to ayoid manifest injustice.
See, e.g., United States v. Lazy FC Ranch,
Such is not the case here. Both sides appear to agree that the NIH advisory board’s recommendation carried no regulatory weight. Although the recommendation may later prove to be competent evidence of the medical necessity of these tests, the defendants have not alleged that they were specifically instructed by anyone to run their tests according to the recommendation’s prescriptions; they have not even alleged that the recommendation was something upon which they relied. And, if they did so rely, for the reasons explained above, such reliance would not appear to have been reasonable.
Still, the defendants insist, it is “unjust” for the government to call the regimen “optimal” yet punish those who implement it. Yet one might imagine government advisory boards of various stripes floating “optimal” policy recommendations that, say, call for the decriminalization of marijuana or the lowering of various marginal tax rates or the deregulation of certain aspects of hazardous waste disposal. If such statements were later construed to bind the government, a mere trial balloon could undo statutes and regulations in force. Worse still, the public discussion of embryonic policy adjustments by government entities, an obviously salutary phenomenon, would be severely discouraged. The government, therefore, shall not be estopped.
The defendants also assert that the government’s allegations concerning the Added Test Plan are insufficiently pled under Rule 9(b).
5
On this subject, the defendants have a point. In the complaint, the government did not identify specifically which claims for nonroutine tests were unnecessary. As of its last filing, the government represented that it would provide the defendants with a refined computerized list specifically identifying every claim alleged to contain unnecessary testing. The provision of such a list would satisfy the Rule, to the extent .that it provides the necessary details of the time, place, and content of each allegedly false claim.
See Greebel v. FTP Software, Inc.,
194 F.3d
Because the conspiracy count under § 3729(a)(3) appears to rely upon the fraudulence vel non of the panel-splitting and unnecessary testing allegations, it also survives the dismissal stage.
Finally, the defendants argue that the allegations do not support the common law counts, and that the applicable statute of limitations would bar them anyway. I reject these arguments largely for the reasons put forward in the government’s brief, and observe that the facts alleged in the complaint are sufficient to toll the statute of limitations. See 28 U.S.C. § 2416.
Accordingly, the motion of Transitional Hospitals Corporation, Inc. and Dialysis Holdings, Inc. to dismiss is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The relator, Gareld J. Kneepkins, was a manager at the Smyrna Laboratory.
. The defendants flatly deny that additional blood was ever drawn; for now, the govern-mentis allegations get the benefit of the doubt.
. Though the defendants argue that it is an improperly promulgated substantive rule, plainly the 50/50 Rule is an interpretive rule that clarifies the preexisting regulatory conditions for reimbursement of panel tests.
See Warder v. Shalala,
. The NIH is a component of the Department of Health and Human Services, which administers the Medicare program.
. Roughly the same argument is made concerning the previously-discussed panel-splitting allegations. Since, under the govemment's theory, every Chem 7 claim submitted was inherently fraudulent, and since the government has represented that it has provided the defendants with a computerized list of all of the Chem 7 claims, the objection is not persuasive as to the Chem 7 claims.
