MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
A. Introduction
On November 6, 2009, Plaintiff, Walsh Chiropractic, Ltd. (“Walsh”), filed this putative class action in the Third Judicial Circuit Court in Madison County, Illinois, alleging various breach of contract theories and a violation of the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (ICFA), 815 ILCS 505/1 et seq., (Doc. 9-1). On December 17, 2009, Walsh filed its First Amended Class Action Complaint, adding two additional counts: one for unjust enrichment and the other alleging violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c), 1964(c) (Doc. 9-2). Defendant, StrataCare, Inc. (“StrataCare”) removed this action on December 28, 2009, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441, alleging this Court has federal question, supplemental, and diversity jurisdiction over the subject matter in dispute. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1367(a) and 1332(a)(1), respectively (Doc. 9). StrataCare then filed a Motion to Dismiss all seven of Walsh’s counts pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) (Doc. 20). The motion has been fully briefed by the parties, and the Court now rules as follows.
B. Jurisdictional Analysis
As an initial matter, the Court notes the basis for its subject matter jurisdiction in this case.
See Foster v. Hill,
However, although Walsh’s state-law claims are within the Court’s supplemental jurisdiction, it is unnecessary for the Court to exercise such jurisdiction because StrataCare asserts an additional basis for federal jurisdiction; in this case, diversity of citizenship pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332, as amended by the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (“CAFA”), Pub.L. No. 109-2, 119 Stat. 4 (codified in scattered sections of 28 U.S.C.). Under the CAFA, federal courts have jurisdiction, with specified exceptions,
see
28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(3), (d)(4), (d)(5), (d)(9), with respect to: (1) a class action, including a putative class action; (2) that is commenced on or after February 18, 2005; (3) in which claims are asserted on behalf of one hundred or more class members; (4) at least one class member is a citizen of a state different from at least one defendant or, alternatively, at
Turning then to the matter of whether the prerequisites for the exercise of federal jurisdiction under the CAFA are satisfied in this case, the Court notes that this is a putative class action and that it was commenced, that is to say, filed, after the effective date of the statute.
See Buller Trucking Co. v. Owner Operator Indep. Driver Risk Retention Group, Inc.,
With respect to diversity of citizenship as between the parties to this case, according to StrataCare’s notice of removal, StrataCare is a corporation organized under Delaware law with its principal place of business in California; thus, StrataCare is a citizen of Delaware and California for purposes of federal diversity jurisdiction.
See Nuclear Eng’g Co. v. Scott,
Under the circumstances of this case, however, the Court does not believe it is necessary to require StrataCare to amend its notice of removal. The parties do not dispute that Walsh is an Illinois citizen. Additionally, the Court has checked Walsh’s submissions to the Court against the records of corporations maintained online by the Illinois Secretary of State and accessible at http://www.ilsos. gov/corporatellc, which the Court can judicially notice.
See Holmes v. Back Doctors, Ltd.,
Civil No. 09-540-GPM,
Also, even a more conservative valuation of Walsh’s claim shows that the threshold amount is satisfied. The actual loss Walsh claims is $4,383.43. It is well settled that, in appropriate cases, punitive damages can be reckoned into the jurisdictional amount for diversity purposes. “[W]here both actual and punitive damages are recoverable under a complaint each must be considered to the extent claimed in determining the jurisdictional amount.”
Sharp Elecs. Corp. v. Copy Plus, Inc.,
Walsh asserts a claim under the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (“ICFA”), 815
In light of the foregoing, the Court concludes that it has jurisdiction in this case pursuant to both 28 U.S.C. § 1331, by virtue of Walsh’s RICO claim, and 28 U.S.C. § 1332, as amended by the CAFA.
C. Background
At issue in this action is an alleged scheme known as a “silent PPO,” a term of art for a specific kind of Preferred Provider Organization (PPO) abuse. 2 A PPO is a managed care technique encompassing numerous contracts between health care providers (such as Walsh), payors (such as insurance carriers and employer), various third parties, and the PPO network administrator. The PPO at issue here is administered by First Health Group Corporation (“First Health”), who is not a party to this suit.
The first specific contract at issue here is the Provider Agreement that Walsh entered into with First Health on March 13, 2002 (Doc. 9-2, Ex. A). Under this contract, Walsh agreed to participate in the First Health PPO, and provide services to “participating patients” — as defined by the contract — at discounted rates. The second contract at issue is between StrataCare and First Health. It is entitled, “Workers’ Compensation Managed Care Serves Network Agreement” (“Network Access Agreement”), and it was signed on January 1, 2005 (Doc. 20, Ex. 1). According to StrataCare, this contract gave its “software licensees access to the First Health PPO Network” (Doc. 20, p. 1). Walsh alleges that these two contracts are incorporated by reference into one agreement, the terms of which StrataCare breached by allegedly failing “to steer patients to First Health ‘preferred’ providers” (Doc. 9-2, Ex. A, ¶ 45). According to Walsh, “steerage” or “channeling” of patients is mandated by the contracts, and by Illinois law, but never occurred because Strata-Care failed to financially incentivize its sub-clients to use Walsh’s services. In the alternative, Walsh alleges that StrataCare lacked a valid “payor agreement” and, as a result, acted fraudulently when it claimed PPO discounts to which it was not entitled.
Here, however, there is one more contract and party involved, adding another wrench into this already convoluted scheme. In a typical silent PPO action, the defendant is a “payor” (e.g. a company) who has a valid “payor agreement” with the PPO network administrator (here, First Health); allowing it to pay discounted rates for medical services. By contrast, here, StrataCare alleges that it “is not a PPO Administrator, Third Party Administrator, Insurance Company or ‘Payor’ ” (Doc. 20, p. 2). Instead, allegedly, “[i]t is a software company that facilitates electronic processing of transactions between the Provider, the ‘Payor’ and First Health, the PPO Administrator” (Id.). In other words, StrataCare claims it merely acts as a bill reviewer and claims processor for its “sub-clients” — companies with workers’ compensation insurance plans, also known as “payors”- — and First Health, the PPO network administrator. As a result, the contractual relationship between these entities, as a whole, is far from clear. Yet, after thoroughly parsing the record, enough is clear for the Court to determine which of Walsh’s claims, if any, survive StrataCare’s Motion to Dismiss.
D. Analysis
It is a plaintiffs burden to plead sufficient factual matter to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.
See Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S. —,
First, a plaintiff must provide notice to defendants of [its] claims. Second, courts must accept a plaintiffs factual allegations as true, but some factual allegations will be so sketchy or implausible that they fail to provide sufficient notice to defendants of the plaintiffs claim. Third, ... courts should not accept as adequate abstract recitations of the elements of a cause of action or conclusory legal statements.
Brooks v. Ross,
Walsh’s claims, stated as seven separate counts, can be grouped into two broad categories: contractual claims and fraud-based statutory claims. Walsh’s contractual claims can be further sub-categorized as alleging either an express contract, or a contract implied-in-fact or in law (quasi-contract). Most of Walsh’s contractual claims, however, may not coexist with the fraud-based claims. As a result, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(d), Walsh has pleaded these two broad categories in the alternative.
1. Breach of Contract Theories
In its response in opposition to Strata-Care’s motion, Walsh puts the proverbial cart before the horse by arguing that the First Health PPO mandates financial incentives. Indeed, Walsh dedicates almost eight pages to this argument; an argument — regarding specific terms of the alleged unified contract — that is moot if there was no valid contract between StrataCare and Walsh in the first place. 3
a. Incorporation by Reference
Walsh argues that its Provider Agreement with First Health was incorporated by reference into StrataCare’s Network Access Agreement. An identical argument in a nearly identical context previously has been rejected by this Court, and many others, on numerous occasions.
See e.g., Roche v. Zenith Ins. Co.,
Civ. No. 07-875-MJR,
Under Illinois law, a contract incorporates another document only if it “show[s] an intent to incorporate the other document and make it part of the contract itself.”
4
Rosenblum v. Travelbyus.com
Here, it is undisputed that Walsh and StrataCare are not parties to a single written agreement. Instead, they each entered into separate, though related, agreements with First Health — approximately three years a part. Moreover, the Network Access Agreement between Strata-Care and First Health at issue does not even purport to be a typical PPO payor agreement. Rather, it merely establishes a structure by which StrataCare finds “sub-clients” (or “payors”), and facilitates their claims with First Health PPO providers. As a result, the Network Access Agreement, on its face, expresses no intent to incorporate the Provider Agreement between Walsh and First Health.
Any intent to incorporate is further weakened by the fact that both the Provider Agreement and the Network Access Agreement contain merger clauses explicitly prohibiting the inclusion of additional terms or prior agreements into the contracts (Doc. 9-2, Ex. A, § 5.6; Doc. 20, Ex. 1, p. 11, ¶ 10.8). “[T]he presence of a merger clause is strong evidence that the parties intended the writing to be the complete and exclusive agreement between them.”
L.S. Heath & Son, Inc. v. AT & T Info. Sys., Inc.,
In sum, this Court rejects Walsh’s argument that the two agreements, executed three years apart, constitute a single unified contract.
See Roche v. Zenith Ins. Co.,
b. Third Party Beneficiary Claim
Next, Walsh claims that it was an intended third party beneficiary of the Network Access Agreement between Strata-Care and First Health. The parties agree that California law — as provided for in the Network Access agreement, the validity of which is uncontested — governs this portion of their dispute. Under California law, “[a] contract, made expressly for the benefit of a third person, may be enforced by him at any time before the parties thereto rescind it.” Cal. Civ. Code § 1559. “The intent to benefit a third party must appear ‘on the terms of the contract.’ ”
Landale-Cameron Court, Inc. v. Ahonen,
Paragraph 10.2 of the Network Access Agreement attempts to expressly disclaim any third party beneficiary status. However, “the presence of such a clause in a contract is not dispositive of whether a third party is entitled to enforce an agreement.”
Zenith,
Walsh asserts that the Network Access Agreement “provides that the PPO ‘shall be’ an ‘Exclusive Directed Network’ ” (Doc. 25, p. 13), and that this implies a direct benefit to Walsh. This language, however, is quoted sorely out of context. The full sentence reads: “Upon countersignature of an Appendix II by First Health, that particular customer will become a Sub-Client under this Agreement, and The First Health Network shall be the Sub-Client’s Exclusive Directed Network in the geographic areas indicated on the Sub-Client’s Appendix II” (Doc. 20, Ex. 1, p. 15, ¶ 2.1) (emphasis added). Appendix II is the Agreement between StrataCare, First Health and StrataCare’s customer, referred to here as a “Sub-client.” 5 Walsh argues that this additional contract somehow implies that the Network Access Agreement is intended to benefit Walsh. In actuality, all this additional contract demonstrates is that “The First Health Network shall be the Sub-Client’s Exclusive Directed Network.” In other words, the Sub-Client, or “payor,” must use the First Health PPO in a certain geographic area. Arguing that this language shows that the Network Access Agreement is intended to directly benefit Walsh proves too much.
Walsh further argues that the First Health PPO “expressly requires ‘channeling to network providers’ ” (Doc. 25, p. 13), and then cites to a paragraph that doesn’t exist (the Court found the cited language in Appendix II, section “C,” paragraph five (Doc. 20, Ex. 1, p. 18)). Once again, Walsh attempts to use language out of context. This paragraph deals with the disclosure of confidential information, and states that the “Client,” here, StrataCare, “may disclose applicable confidential information, including, but not limited to, participating provider and negotiated rate information, to its Sub-Clients who utilize Client’s services for repricing and channeling to network providers” (Doc. 20, Ex. 1, p. 15, ¶ C5) (emphasis added). Once again, this language — implicating only the relationship between StrataCare and its Sub-Clients — demonstrates absolutely no intent to directly benefit Walsh.
This case is distinguishable from
Roche v. Zenith Insurance,
where this Court held that providers, such as Walsh, may be third party beneficiaries to a First HealthPayor Agreement.
Zenith,
At bottom, Walsh has not provided this Court with any terms in the Network Access Agreement demonstrating actual intent on the part of StrataCare to directly benefit Walsh. Rather, this Court finds that, in actuality, the intended beneficiary of the Network Access Agreement was StrataCare’s “Sub-Client’s” and First Health. Any purported benefit to Walsh was ancillary at most. In light of the foregoing, it is not plausible to infer that Walsh was directly intended to be a third party beneficiary of the Network Access Agreement. As a result, Walsh’s claims predicated on this theory must be dismissed.
c. Implied Contract Claims — In Fact and In Law (Unjust Enrichment)
“A contract implied-in-fact is one whereby a contractual duty is imposed by reason of a promissory expression which may be inferred from the facts and circumstances and the expressions on the part of the promissor which show an intention to be bound.”
Estate of Milborn,
122 Ill.App.8d 688,
Here, while the issue is very close, Walsh has not pleaded sufficient facts to make its implied contract claim plausible on its face. At first glance, Walsh’s own pleadings appear to be deficient. In its First Amended Complaint, Walsh alleges that,
“[ujnder the provider agreements
between Plaintiff and the Class and First Health, Defendant assumed the obligation to Plaintiff and the Class to steer patients to First Health ‘preferred’ providers ...” (Doc. 9-2, ¶ 58) (emphasis added). Walsh thus alleges that an implied contract arose “under the provider agreements” — an impossibility because the Provider Agreement was an express contract on the same subject.
See Maness,
Walsh further argues that an implied contract between StrataCare and Walsh may be inferred because StrataCare was to include in its explanation of payments, “that reimbursement is being made pursuant to the Provider Agreement” (Doc. 20, Ex. 1, p. 18, ¶ C8). Unfortunately, Walsh takes yet another clause out of context. Here, the quoted language does not directly implicate StrataCare, but rather Strata-Care’s “Client.” Finally, Walsh makes a generalized argument directing the Court to consider “the commercial context and [the] parties’ course of dealing” (Doc. 25, p. 14). While this is not much, it is true that missing terms of implied-in-fact contracts “can be supplied by custom and usage.”
See Overseas Dev. Disc Corp. v. Sangamo Const. Co., Inc.,
At bottom, Walsh has alleged a dearth of facts from which this Court may reasonably infer that there was an actual “meet
A contract implied in law, by contrast, is equitable in nature and arises “wholly apart from the usual rules relating to contracts and does not depend on an agreement or consent of the parties.”
Estate of Milborn,
In light of the foregoing, and because all of Walsh’s contract-based claims have been dismissed, the viability of Walsh’s unjust enrichment theory is wholly dependent upon the sufficiency of Walsh’s fraud-based claims. At this stage, however, it appears that Walsh adequately has pleaded that StrataCare, by claiming the PPO discount, potentially “retained a benefit to [Walsh’s] detriment.”
Siegel,
d. Joint Venture
Before turning to Walsh’s fraud-based claims, the Court must deal with Walsh’s last contractual claim — that StrataCare allegedly breached the Provider Agreement as “First Health’s joint venturer” (Doc. 9-2, ¶ 69). “A joint venture is an association of two or more persons to carry out a single enterprise for profit.”
(1) an express or implied agreement to carry on some enterprise; (2) a manifestation of intent by the parties to be associated as a joint venture; (3) a joint interest as shown by the contribution of property, financial resources, effort, skill, or knowledge; (4) a degree of joint proprietorship or mutual right to the exercise of control over the enterprise; and (5) a provision for joint sharing of profits and losses.
Autotech Tech. Ltd. P’ship v. Automationdirect.com,
Clearly there was no express agreement by StrataCare and First Health to establish a joint venture because the Network Access Agreement explicitly states that: “[t]he relationship between the parties is that of independent contractors. Nothing herein is intended or will be construed to establish any agency, employment, partnership,
or joint venture relationship
between the parties” (Doc. 20, Ex. 1, p. 11, ¶ 10.1). The Court must give effect to these clear and unambiguous contractual terms.
See e.g., BKCAP, LLC v. CAPTEC Franchise Trust 2000-1,
Ultimately, however, this claim must fail because Walsh has neither sufficiently pleaded a “mutual right to the exercise of control over the enterprise; [nor any] provision for joint sharing of profits and losses.”
Autotech Tech.,
As such, the existence of a joint venture relationship is implausible. First, for obvious reasons, the fact that parties to a contract are required to carry liability insurance does not mean that the parties have agreed to jointly share profits and losses related to the alleged enterprise. Second, Appendix II — the tripartite agreement between First Health, StrataCare and it’s sub-client — does not contain any terms suggesting a “mutual right to the exercise of control” between StrataCare and First Health. To the contrary, many of the express terms of Appendix II reinforce the notion that First Health, as the PPO administrator, ultimately controls most (if not all) of the terms and information related to the PPO arrangement
(see e.g.,
Doc. 20, Ex. 1, p. 18, ¶ 5, “Client cannot control the use of this information beyond enforcing the terms of any confidentiality agreement between Client and such Sub-client.”). Further, the terms of this agreement relate almost exclusively to the relationship between First Health and StrataCare’s “Client” (a “payor” in a typical PPO), and not StrataCare itself. As
2. Fraud-Based Theories
a. Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) Claim
“[I]n the RICO context, allegations of fraudulent conduct must specify, with particularity, the circumstances of the alleged fraud.”
Wankel v. S. Ill. Bancorp, Inc.,
Civ. No. 06-619-MJR,
Walsh alleges: (1) that First Health, StrataCare, and StrataCare’s third-party payor clients, formed an “association in fact” (the “enterprise”); (2) that fraudulently allowed StrataCare — and other “third party payor clients,” who lacked valid payor agreements with First Health — to claim First Health PPO discounts; (3) thereby defrauding Walsh from receiving full payments for medical services by issuing deceptive bills (referred to as “EORs,” a term which is not defined anywhere in the Record) via mail and/or wire (Doc. 9-2, ¶¶ 80-88). As a result, on their face, Walsh’s RICO claims are alleged with sufficient particularity to satisfy Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). Other than the requirement of particularity, in its Motion to Dismiss, StrataCare only challenges whether Walsh pleaded a “pattern of racketeering conduct” (Doc. 20, p. 16).
By statute, a “pattern of activity” is two or more predicate acts committed within a ten-year period. 18 U.S.C. § 1961(5). Over the years, however, courts have further defined this nebulous concept “to prevent RICO from becoming a surrogate for garden-variety fraud actions properly brought under state law.”
Midwest Grinding,
Because StrataCare only challenges the latter, the Court will limit its analysis to the continuity prong. “ ‘Continuity’ is both a closed- and open-ended concept, referring either to a closed period of repeated conduct, or to past conduct that by its nature projects into the future with a threat of repetition.”
H.J. Inc. v. Northwestern Bell Tel. Co.,
“An open-ended period of racketeering ... is a course of criminal activity which lacks the duration and repetition to establish continuity.”
Midwest Grinding,
Here, the third factor above is in no way implicated by any of Walsh’s pleadings. Further, all of Walsh’s RICO allegations were pleaded in the past tense and as such, they fail to identify any “specific threat” of future repetition. However, Walsh does allege: (1) that the “Enterprise had a legitimate business purpose” administering workers’ compensation claims for its third-party payor clients (Doc. 9-2, ¶ 83); (2) that StrataCare was a part of a “deceptive scheme to reprice medical claims with First Health PPO discounts which StrataCare and it’s third-party payor clients had no right to take” (Id. at ¶ 84); and (3) that StrataCare routinely and repeatedly delivered deceptive bills through the U.S. mail or private carriers (Id. at ¶ 86). As a result, when drawing all reasonable inferences in Walsh’s favor, it has adequately pled that “the predicate acts” (mail fraud) are a part of the “First Health/StrataCare PPO Enterprise’s” regular way of doing business. Further, it is reasonable to assume that this “regular business conduct” may be repeated. In light of the foregoing, Walsh has shown that this alleged RICO enterprise plausibly may have engaged in an “open-ended” pattern of racketeering. 6 At this stage, that is sufficient.
StrataCare next argues that Walsh does not have standing to sue for violation of the ICFA “because [Walsh] is not a consumer and cannot satisfy the ‘consumer nexus’ test” (Doc. 20, P. 14). An ICFA plaintiff who is not a consumer may still have standing “provided the claim satisfies the ‘consumer nexus’ test, that is it involves trade practices addressed to the market generally or otherwise implicates consumer protection concerns.”
Morrison v. YTB Int'l, Inc.,
Here, Walsh alleges that StrataCare’s “practices were addressed to the market generally and/or otherwise implicate consumer protection concerns ... [and that StrataCare’s] employment of the silent PPO scheme damages the integrity and viability of
PPO networks
and damages the
businesses of all healthcare providers
by unlawfully reducing the reimbursement of medical services below their reasonable value” (Doc. 9-2, ¶ 75) (emphasis added). Once again, this is far from a model pleading. Other than its conclusory allegation that StrataCare’s practices “implicate consumer protection concerns,” Walsh fails to provide any factual support for how this alleged scheme affected actual non-business
consumers.
It should have been apparent to Walsh that “PPO Networks” and “healthcare providers” are not the consumers at-large that may “implicate consumer protection concerns.”
Brody,
Nevertheless, in its Response to StrataCare’s motion, Walsh argues that, “StrataCare’s quiet, yet fraudulent scheme to reduce payments to medical service providers exposes medical consumers — their patients — to increased costs of medical treatment” (Doc. 25, p. 18). Normally, a Complaint may not be amended via briefs submitted along with dispositive motions.
See e.g., Shanahan v. City of Chicago,
Normally, resolving the issue of standing alone would not end the Court’s
Because Walsh has pleaded sufficient facts to make its ICFA claim plausible on its face it follows that Walsh also may proceed with its unjust enrichment theory. There are a variety of theories that could support an unjust enrichment claim under Illinois law.
See e.g., HPI Health Care Servs. v. Mt. Vernon Hosp.,
E. Conclusion
For the reasons outlined above, the Court hereby GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART Defendant Strata-Care, Inc.’s Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 19). The motion is GRANTED to the extent that the Court dismisses Counts I through IV. The motion is DENIED in all other respects and as such, this action may proceed on Plaintiff Walsh Chiropractic, LTD’s claims under RICO, the ICFA and, those based on a theory of unjust enrichment (Counts V through VII).
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court notes in passing that, according to a recent filing by StrataCare, shortly after
. For an excellent overview of PPOs and silent PPOs see
Roche v. Travelers Property Casualty Ins. Co.,
Civ. No. 07-302-JPG,
. In Walsh’s extended efforts to convince this Court that entities such as StrataCare are required to provide financial incentives to "steer” its clients to a preferred provider, Walsh references statements in its Complaint, allegedly made by First Health (and in quotes), that lack any citation (Doc. 25, p. 3). Further, Walsh cites Illinois statutes and regulations, including the Workers’ Compensation Act, taking a number of these entirely out of context, failing to demonstrate their relevance, or presenting questionable arguments of statutory interpretation. For example, one of the potentially relevant statutes expressly states "may,” and Walsh argues extensively that everything following “may” is nevertheless required (Doc. 25, pp. 4-5). See 215 ILCS 5/370i(b). Further, the contracts at issue make no mention of financial incentives
. Walsh briefly argues that, because the Network Access Agreement purports to invoke California law, the question of incorporation by reference should be analyzed under California law. However, the Provider Agreement is governed by Illinois law, and Walsh cites to Illinois law for a good portion of its argument for incorporation. Even if California law on incorporation by reference were to
. In a more typical PPO scenario, this agreement would be made directly between First Health and a "payor” and thus, it would be known as a "Payor Agreement.”
. Some panels of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals have not distinguished between closed and open-ended periods of racketeering, and focus on the same factors in either case, including: "(1) the number and variety of the predicate acts and the length of time over which they were committed; (2) the number of victims; (3) the presence of separate schemes; and (4) the occurrence of distinct injuries.”
Gagan v. American Cablevision, Inc., 77
F.3d 951, 962-63 (7th Cir.1996) (citation omitted). However, these factors are most commonly associated with a so-called "closed scheme.”
See Midwest Grinding,
. The elements of a successful claim under ICFA are: "(1) a deceptive or unfair act or practice by the defendant; (2) the defendant’s intent that the plaintiff rely on the deceptive or unfair practice; and (3) the unfair or deceptive practice occurred during a course of conduct involving trade or commerce.”
Siegel v. Shell Oil Co.,
. This Court has noted on other occasions, in the context of an alleged silent PPO scheme, that taking PPO discounts in the absence of a valid agreement with the PPO network could properly state a claim for consumer fraud.
Roche v. Liberty Mut. Mngd. Care, Inc.,
Civ. No. 07-331-JPG,
