In Re Avandia Marketing, Sales Practices & Products Liability Litigation , 685 F.3d 353 ( 2012 )


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  •                                      PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 11-2664
    _____________
    IN RE: AVANDIA MARKETING, SALES PRACTICES and
    PRODUCTS LIABILITY LITIGATION
    GLAXOSMITHKLINE, LLC & GLAXOSMITHKLINE,
    PLC
    HUMANA MEDICAL PLAN, INC. and HUMANA
    INSURANCE COMPANY, individually and on behalf of all
    others similarly situated,
    Appellants
    ______________
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    COURT
    FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    (D.C. Civ. No. 10-6733 and MDL 1871)
    District Judge: Honorable Cynthia M. Rufe
    ______________
    Argued on January 24, 2012
    ______________
    Before: McKEE, Chief Judge, FISHER, and GREENAWAY,
    JR., Circuit Judges.
    (Opinion Filed: June 28, 2012)
    Richard W. Cohen, Esq. (argued)
    Peter D. St. Phillip, Jr., Esq.
    Gerald Lawrence, Esq.
    LOWEY, DANNENBERG, COHEN & HART
    One North Broadway
    Suite 509
    White Plains, NY 10601-0000
    Counsel for Appellants
    Thomas E. Zemaitis, Esq. (argued)
    George A. Lehner, Esq.
    Kenneth H. Zucker, Esq.
    Pepper Hamilton
    18th & Arch Streets
    3000 Two Logan Square
    Philadelphia, PA 19103-0000
    Counsel for Appellees
    Arthur N. Lerner, Esq.
    Crowell & Moring
    1001 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20004-2505
    Counsel for Amicus- Appellants
    ______________
    OPINION
    ______________
    2
    GREENAWAY, JR., Circuit Judge.
    Plaintiff Humana Medical Plan, Inc. and Humana
    Insurance Company (collectively, “Humana”) brought suit
    against GlaxoSmithKline, L.L.C. and GlaxoSmithKline plc
    (collectively, “Glaxo”) alleging that Glaxo was obligated to
    reimburse Humana for expenses Humana had incurred
    treating its insureds’ injuries resulting from Glaxo’s drug,
    Avandia. Humana runs a Medicare Advantage plan. Its
    complaint asserts that, pursuant to the Medicare Act, Glaxo is
    in this instance a “primary payer” obligated to reimburse
    Humana as a “secondary payer.”            The District Court
    dismissed the action, agreeing with Glaxo that the Medicare
    Act did not provide Medicare Advantage organizations
    (“MAOs”) with a private cause of action to seek such
    reimbursement. Humana filed a timely appeal.
    The Medicare Secondary Payer Act, in 42 U.S.C. §
    1395y(b)(3)(A), provides Humana with a private cause of
    action against Glaxo. Even if we were to find, as Appellees
    suggest, that this provision is ambiguous, we would
    nonetheless be required to defer to regulations issued by the
    Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”). The
    regulations make clear that the provision extends the private
    cause of action to MAOs. Accordingly, we will reverse the
    judgment of the District Court and remand for further
    proceedings.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    3
    Glaxo manufactures and distributes Avandia, a Type 2
    diabetes drug that has been linked to substantially increased
    risk of heart attack and stroke. Thousands of Avandia
    patients have alleged various injuries resulting from their use
    of the drug and Glaxo has begun entering into agreements to
    settle these claims. 1 As part of the settlement process, where
    the claimant is insured by Medicare, Glaxo sets aside reserves
    to reimburse the Medicare Trust Fund for payments it made
    to cover the costs of treatment for the claimants’ Avandia-
    related injuries.
    While most Medicare-eligible individuals receive
    Medicare benefits directly from the government, individuals
    can elect instead to receive their benefits through private
    insurance companies that contract with the government to
    provide “Medicare Advantage” (“MA”) plans. 42 U.S.C. §
    1395w-21(a)(1).      Glaxo has not, to date, included
    reimbursement of MA plans in the settlement agreements that
    it has reached with Avandia claimants enrolled in MA plans,
    although MAOs have paid the costs of treatment of Avandia-
    related injuries for these claimants. 2 Humana’s MA plan
    provides benefits to approximately one million people, and
    1
    By August 2011, when Appellants filed their brief, Glaxo
    had paid more than $460 million to settle these claims.
    2
    An MA plan assumes full responsibility for paying the
    medical costs of its plan participants in exchange for a fixed
    annual per-participant payment from the government.
    § 1395w-23. This fixed, or “capitated,” amount is calculated
    annually using a formula based on the cost of providing the
    required benefits that would otherwise be covered by
    traditional Medicare. Id.
    4
    Humana filed this lawsuit to seek reimbursement from Glaxo
    for the costs of treating its enrollees’ Avandia-related injuries.
    On November 17, 2010, Humana filed its class action
    complaint in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. 3 Humana
    sought, on behalf of itself and a class of similarly-situated
    MAOs: (1) damages under the Medicare Secondary Payer Act
    (“MSP Act”), which provides a private cause of action, 42
    U.S.C. § 1395y(b)(3)(A), allowing double damages for failure
    to reimburse a secondary payer; and (2) equitable relief in the
    form of an order compelling Glaxo to identify settling
    Avandia claimants to the MAOs that cover them.
    On December 23, 2010, Glaxo filed a motion to
    dismiss. The District Court heard oral argument on the
    motion and, on June 13, 2011, granted it. In dismissing the
    action, the District Court noted that Part C of the Medicare
    Act (the “Medicare Advantage” or “MA” statute) contains its
    own secondary payer provision, 42 U.S.C. § 1395w-22(a)(4).
    In re Avandia Mktg., Sales Practices, and Prods. Liability
    Litig., 
    2011 WL 2413488
    , at *3 (E.D. Pa. June 13, 2011).
    The District Court observed that this provision references the
    MSP Act without fully adopting or incorporating it and that
    its language is permissive, whereas the language of the MSP
    Act is mandatory. 
    Id.
     Given the existence of the MA
    statute’s provision, specifically relevant to MAOs, the District
    Court held that the private cause of action within the MSP
    3
    Many suits alleging Avandia-related injuries have been filed
    in federal court and almost all are being coordinated for
    pretrial purposes in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. In
    re Avandia Marketing, Sales Practices and Products Liability
    Litigation, MDL Dkt. No. 1871. This case is among them.
    5
    Act did not apply to MAOs, nor did the secondary payer
    provision in the MA statute create a private right of action for
    MAOs. Id. at *4. Next, the District Court analyzed whether
    an implied private right of action for Humana existed
    according to the four-part test laid out by the Supreme Court
    in Cort v. Ash, 
    422 U.S. 66
     (1975). In re Avandia, 
    2011 WL 2413488
    , at *4. Although the District Court found that
    Humana met the first prong of the test, as it was a member of
    the class the statute was enacted to benefit, it found that
    Humana failed on the other three prongs: there was no clear
    legislative intent to create a remedy for Humana, it was not
    consistent with the legislative scheme to imply a remedy, and
    the cause of action was one traditionally litigated under state
    law. 
    Id.
     The District Court therefore found that no implied
    private right of action existed.
    Additionally, the District Court found that the statute’s
    silence on the existence of a private right of action for MAOs
    “does not create ambiguity, but rather indicates [Congress’s]
    intent not to create a private right of action for MAOs.” Id. at
    *5. With no ambiguity in the plain text of the statute, the
    District Court held that the judicial deference to duly-enacted
    regulations required by Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
    Resources Defense Council, Inc, 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842-43
    (1984), did not come into play. Accordingly, the Court did
    not defer to the CMS regulation that granted MAOs parity
    with Medicare vis-à-vis recovery from primary payers, see 
    42 C.F.R. § 422.108
    (f). In re Avandia, 
    2011 WL 2413488
    , at *5.
    Finally, Humana sought an order from the District
    Court ordering Glaxo to disclose information about
    settlements that Humana’s enrollees entered into with Glaxo.
    The District Court declined to grant Humana the equitable
    relief it sought. It found that Humana, and not Glaxo, had
    6
    access to information about which Avandia claimants were
    enrolled in Humana’s MA plan and that Humana could use
    this information to remind claimants of their obligation to
    disclose any settlement they might reach with Glaxo. 4, 5 
    Id.
    Humana filed a timely Notice of Appeal. Humana
    asks this Court to determine whether the District Court erred
    in holding that the private cause of action in the MSP Act, 42
    U.S.C. § 1395y(b)(3)(A), did not provide Humana with a
    cause of action here. America’s Health Insurance Plans,
    representing the health insurance industry, filed an amicus
    brief in support of Humana.
    II.   JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The District Court had subject matter jurisdiction,
    pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    , because interpretation of the
    federal Medicare Act presents a federal question. This Court
    has appellate jurisdiction, pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . We
    review de novo the decision of a district court granting a
    motion to dismiss, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). McTernan v.
    City of York, 
    577 F.3d 521
    , 526 (3d Cir. 2009). In ruling
    upon a motion to dismiss, “all well-pleaded allegations of the
    4
    The District Court also noted that a pending amendment to
    the MSP Act might arguably shift the reporting burden to
    Glaxo, but declined to address that question because it was
    not yet ripe. In re Avandia Mktg., Sales Practices, and Prods.
    Liability Litig., 
    2011 WL 2413488
    , at *6 (E.D. Pa. June 13,
    2011).
    5
    Humana did not appeal the District Court’s dismissal of its
    claim for equitable relief.
    7
    complaint must be taken as true and interpreted in the light
    most favorable to the plaintiffs, and all inferences must be
    drawn in favor of them.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Schrob v. Catterson,
    
    948 F.2d 1402
    , 1408 (3d Cir.1991)).
    III.   ANALYSIS
    Humana asks this Court to determine whether the
    private cause of action for double damages created by the
    Medicare Secondary Payer Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(b)(3)(A),
    provides it and other MAOs with the right to bring suit. 6 We
    find that the plain text of the provision sweeps broadly
    enough to include MAOs and that, even if we determined the
    statute to be ambiguous on this point, deference to CMS
    regulations 7 would require us to find that MAOs have the
    same right to recover as the Medicare Trust Fund does. We
    will therefore reverse the decision of the District Court.
    A.     The Medicare Statute
    Subchapter XVIII of Chapter 7 of Title 42 of the
    United States Code is entitled “Health Insurance for Aged and
    Disabled,” and is more commonly known as the Medicare
    6
    Humana repeatedly states that an MAO has “standing” to
    bring suit under the provision at issue. In order to avoid
    confusion with the doctrine of constitutional standing, see
    Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560-61 (1992),
    this opinion avoids that term.
    7
    CMS is an operating division within the Department of
    Health & Human Services which issues Medicare-related
    regulations on behalf of the Secretary of Health & Human
    Services.
    8
    Statute. 
    42 U.S.C. §§ 1395
     to 1395kkk-1. The Medicare
    Statute divides benefits into four parts. Part A, “Hospital
    Insurance Benefits for Aged and Disabled,” and Part B,
    “Supplementary Medical Benefits for Aged and Disabled,”
    create, describe, and regulate traditional fee-for-service,
    government-administered Medicare. §§ 1395c to 1395i-5; §§
    1395-j to 1395w-5. Part C, inserted with the passage of the
    Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Pub. L. 105-33, creates the
    program now known as Medicare Advantage, which allows
    for the creation of MA plans and is described in detail below.
    § 1395w-21 to -29. Finally, Part D provides for prescription
    drug coverage for Medicare enrollees. § 1395w-101 to -154.
    Part C allows Medicare enrollees to obtain their
    Medicare benefits through private insurers (MAOs) instead of
    receiving direct benefits from the government under Parts A
    and B. § 1395w-21(a). CMS pays an MAO a fixed amount
    for each enrollee, per capita (a “capitation”). The MAO then
    administers Medicare benefits for those enrollees and
    assumes the risk associated with insuring them. MAOs like
    Humana are thus responsible for paying covered medical
    expenses for their enrollees. Part C allows MAOs some
    flexibility as to the design of their MA plans. The MAO is
    required to provide the benefits covered under Parts A and B
    to enrollees, but it may also provide additional benefits to its
    enrollees. § 1395w-22(a)(1)-(3).
    Part C also includes one of the two provisions that lie
    at the heart of this case. Entitled “Organization as secondary
    payer,” this provision states:
    9
    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, [an
    MAO] 8 may (in the case of the provision of
    items and services to an individual under [an
    MA] plan under circumstances in which
    payment under this title is made secondary
    pursuant to section 1395y(b)(2)) of this title
    charge or authorize the provider of such
    services to charge, in accordance with the
    charges allowed under a law, plan, or policy
    described in such section--
    (A) the insurance carrier, employer, or other
    entity which under such law, plan, or policy is
    to pay for the provision of such services, or
    (B) such individual to the extent that the
    individual has been paid under such law, plan,
    or policy for such services.
    § 1395w-22(a)(4) (the “MAO secondary payer provision”).
    8
    The statutory text refers to MAOs as “Medicare+Choice”
    organizations. For simplicity’s sake, this opinion substitutes
    the contemporary terminology wherever that phrase appears.
    See Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
    Modernization Act of 2003, Pub. L. 108-173, 
    117 Stat. 2176
    ,
    42 U.S.C. §1395w-21 note (“[T]he Secretary shall provide
    for an appropriate transition in the use of the terms
    ‘Medicare+Choice’ and ‘Medicare Advantage’ (or ‘MA’) in
    reference to the program under part C of title XVIII of the
    Social Security Act.”).
    10
    This provision (the “Part C secondary payer
    provision”) cross-references § 1395y(b)(2) for its definitions
    of primary payers and its positioning of Medicare as a
    secondary payer. That cross-referenced provision is located
    within § 1395y(b), the Medicare Secondary Payer Act,
    enacted in 1980. It provides that Medicare cannot pay
    medical expenses where “payment has been made or can
    reasonably be expected to be made under a workmen’s
    compensation law or plan of the United States or a State or
    under an automobile or liability insurance policy or plan
    (including a self-insured plan) or under no fault insurance.” §
    1395y(b)(2)(A)(ii). Further, a business “shall be deemed to
    have a self-insured plan if it carries its own risk (whether by a
    failure to obtain insurance, or otherwise) in whole or in part.”
    Id. Glaxo, which pays out of its own pocket to settle the
    Avandia-related claims, is self-insured and therefore a
    primary payer in this instance.
    The MSP Act also gives the Secretary the authority to
    make “conditional payments” in circumstances where a
    primary payer is actually responsible for the cost of medical
    treatment but “has not made or cannot reasonably be expected
    to make payment with respect to such item or service
    promptly.” § 1395y(b)(2)(B)(i). In such a circumstance, the
    primary plan must subsequently reimburse the Medicare Trust
    Fund. § 1395y(b)(2)(B)(ii). If the primary plan fails to
    reimburse the Fund, “the United States may bring an action
    against any or all entities that are or were required or
    responsible . . . to make payment . . . under a primary plan.”
    § 1395y(b)(2)(B)(iii). The government may then collect
    double damages, “in accordance with paragraph (3)(A).” Id.
    11
    Paragraph (3)(A) (the “MSP private cause of action
    provision”) is the other provision central to this case. It
    states:
    There is established a private cause of action for
    damages (which shall be in an amount double
    the amount otherwise provided) in the case of a
    primary plan which fails to provide for primary
    payment (or appropriate reimbursement) in
    accordance with [the requirements of the MSP
    Act].
    § 1395y(b)(3)(A).
    The Medicare Statute thus creates two separate causes
    of action allowing for recovery of double damages where a
    primary payer fails to cover the costs of medical treatment.
    When the Medicare Trust Fund makes a conditional payment
    and the primary payer does not reimburse it, the United States
    may bring suit pursuant to § 1395y(b)(2)(B)(iii).
    Additionally, a private cause of action with no particular
    plaintiff specified exists pursuant to § 1395y(b)(3)(A)
    anytime a primary payer fails to make required payments. 9
    9
    Although the MSP private cause of action provision sweeps
    broadly, it is not so broad that it can function as a qui tam
    statute, allowing a private party to bring suit as an agent of
    the government to collect moneys owed to the government.
    Each of our sister circuits to have considered the question has
    rejected this interpretation. Woods v. Empire Health, 
    574 F.3d 92
    , 101 (2d Cir. 2009); Stalley ex rel. United States v.
    Orland Reg. Healthcare System, Inc., 
    524 F.3d 1229
    , 1234
    (11th Cir. 2008); Stalley v. Methodist Healthcare, 
    517 F.3d 911
    , 919 (6th Cir. 2008); Stalley v. Catholic Health
    12
    Exactly how broadly this latter provision sweeps will
    determine the outcome of this appeal.
    B.    Textual Arguments
    1.    MSP Private Cause of Action Provision
    The plain text of the MSP private cause of action lends
    itself to Humana’s position that any private party may bring
    an action under that provision. It establishes “a private cause
    of action for damages” and places no additional limitations on
    which private parties may bring suit. § 1395y(b)(3)(A).
    Accordingly, we find that the provision is broad and
    unambiguous, placing no limitations upon which private (i.e.,
    non-governmental) actors can bring suit for double damages
    when a primary plan fails to appropriately reimburse any
    secondary payer.
    Glaxo presents no argument that undermines this
    facially clear reading. The MSP private cause of action
    provision allows for damages where the primary plan has
    failed to pay “in accordance with paragraphs (1) and (2)(A).”
    Id. Paragraph (2)(A), in turn, consistently refers to payments
    “under this subchapter.” 10 § 1395y(b)(2)(A). Glaxo contends
    that “payments under this subchapter” refers to payments
    Initiatives, 
    509 F.3d 517
    , 527 (8th Cir. 2007); United Seniors
    Ass’n v. Philip Morris USA, 
    500 F.3d 19
    , 26 (1st Cir. 2007).
    10
    The United States Code Service uses the word “title” in
    place of “subchapter,” favored by the United States Code
    Annotated. This opinion utilizes the statutory text from the
    latter compilation.
    13
    made by the Medicare Trust Fund and excludes payments
    from the MAO to private entities, which are instead “made
    pursuant to private contracts of insurance between the MAO
    and the participant.” (Id. at 25.)
    In contrast, Humana argues that because “subchapter”
    refers to the Medicare Act as a whole, and not in particular to
    Parts A or B under which the government provides benefits
    directly to enrollees, payments made by private providers
    under Parts C or D are also covered. Humana supports this
    assertion by highlighting other places in the Medicare Act
    where Congress intentionally limited the applicability of a
    provision to payments made under particular Parts of the
    Medicare Act. (Appellants’ Br. 23.) These provisions refer
    specifically to “payment made under part A or part B of this
    subchapter,” § 1395y(a), or payment made “under Part B of
    this subchapter,” § 1395y(c). See also § 1395y(f) (requiring
    Secretary to establish guidelines as to whether payment may
    be made for certain expenses “under part A or part B of this
    subchapter”).
    This language makes clear that “subchapter” refers to
    the Medicare Act as a whole. Since the MSP Act and its
    private cause of action provision do not attach any narrowing
    language to “payments made under this subchapter,” that
    phrase applies to payments made under Part C as well as
    those made under Parts A and B. Accordingly, that language
    cannot be read to exclude MAOs from the ambit of the
    private cause of action provision.
    It is worth noting that, although the MSP Act was
    enacted before Part C, which created MAOs, private
    Medicare risk plans were authorized under 42 U.S.C. §
    1395mm in 1972, before the passage of the MSP Act. Act of
    14
    Oct. 30, 1972, sec. 226(a), Pub. L. 92-603, 
    86 Stat. 1396
    .
    Thus, at the time it enacted the MSP Act, Congress was aware
    that private Medicare providers existed. Had it intended to
    prevent them from suing under the private cause of action
    provision, Congress could have done so explicitly.
    2.    MAO Secondary Payer Provision
    Glaxo raises a number of arguments stemming from its
    contention that the MSP private cause of action provision
    cannot be read in a vacuum. Glaxo urges this Court to
    analyze the relationship between MAOs and the MSP Act by
    beginning with the MAO secondary payer provision. The
    plain text of the MAO secondary payer provision, Glaxo
    avers, makes clear that MAOs do not have a federal cause of
    action anywhere under the Medicare Act. Further, because
    this provision specifically defines the relationship of MAOs
    to secondary payer status and the MSP Act, it controls those
    relationships, and the MSP private cause of action does not
    apply to MAOs. 11
    In Glaxo’s argument, the MAO secondary payer
    provision, by stating that an MAO “may . . . charge or
    authorize the provider of [ ] services to charge” the primary
    payer, gives MAOs the right to include in their policy
    11
    Humana has not raised on appeal the question of whether
    there is some private right of action for MAOs implied in the
    Medicare Act, although the District Court found that no such
    implied right of action exists. 
    2011 WL 2413488
    , at *4.
    Accordingly, we are asked to determine whether the text of §
    1395y(b)(3)(A) provides Humana with a cause of action and
    nothing further.
    15
    contracts provisions making them secondary payers in
    situations in which a primary payer would be liable under the
    MSP Act. § 1395w-22(a)(4). It does not, however, provide a
    federal remedy for the enforcement of that right. See
    Alexander v. Sandoval, 
    532 U.S. 275
    , 286 (2001) (stating that
    statute does not create private cause of action unless Congress
    intended “to create not just a private right but also a private
    remedy”). At oral argument, Glaxo asserted that this
    provision was intended to preempt state law that could
    preclude an MAO from positioning itself as a secondary
    payer, as certain personal injury laws might.
    Under the interpretation urged by Glaxo, no rights to
    reimbursement are granted to an MAO by the Medicare Act.
    Instead, such rights can be secured by the MAO’s contract
    with an individual insured; that is, the insurance policy. This
    policy may define an MAO as a secondary payer, according
    to the definition contained in the MSP Act, and it may also
    contain rights of reimbursement and subrogation. 12 Then, if a
    primary payer were to fail to reimburse the MAO, the MAO
    could sue to enforce its contractual rights in state court. It
    could be made whole either by recovering from the primary
    payer through subrogation or, if the insured has received
    payment from the primary payer, from the insured directly.
    The District Court accepted this interpretation of the
    MAO secondary payer provision. 
    2011 WL 2413488
    , at *4;
    12
    As the District Court noted, the policy might also create an
    obligation for the insured to inform the MAO of any primary
    insurance coverage, including tort settlements where the
    tortfeasor qualifies as a primary payer. In re Avandia, 
    2011 WL 2413488
    , at *4 n.40.
    16
    see also Parra v. PacifiCare of Arizona, Inc., Civ. No. 10-
    008, 
    2011 WL 1119736
     (D. Ariz. Mar. 28, 2011) (finding
    Congress did no more than provide MAOs with “right to
    charge and/or bill a beneficiary for reimbursement,
    notwithstanding and [sic] state law or regulation to the
    contrary” ). It is important to remember, though, that
    Humana does not contend that § 1395w-22(a)(4) endows it
    with a private right of action. Instead, it hangs its hat entirely
    on the MSP Act provision. Thus, § 1395w-22(a)(4) is
    relevant only inasmuch as it assists us in interpreting the MSP
    private cause of action provision, and we are not persuaded
    that it undermines the meaning of the plain text of that
    provision.
    Glaxo further contends that the reference to §
    1395y(b)(2) in the MAO secondary payer provision, far from
    incorporating the entirety of the MSP Act into Part C, in fact
    makes clear that only the definition of a primary payer from
    the MSP Act is incorporated there. (Appellees’ Br. 21-22.)
    This argument is unavailing for the same reason—Humana is
    not arguing that the MAO secondary payer provision provides
    a cause of action through its reference to the MSP Act, but
    that the language of the MSP private cause of action is itself
    broad enough to encompass an MAO such as Humana,
    regardless of the existence of § 1395w-22(a)(4). In order to
    find these arguments persuasive, we would need to determine
    that, although private insurers providing Medicaid services
    could have brought suit under the MSP private cause of
    action provision before the enactment of the MA secondary
    payer provision, once that text became law, the MSP private
    cause of action was closed to them. We will not reach this
    conclusion.
    17
    Glaxo’s final argument based on the text of the MAO
    secondary payer provision is that the permissive nature of the
    language there (an MAO “may” charge a primary plan), in
    contrast to the mandatory nature of the language in the MSP
    Act (“Payment under this subchapter may not be made. . .”)
    means that MAOs cannot be authorized to bring suit under
    the MSP private cause of action. § 1395w-22(a)(4); §
    1395y(b)(2)(A).       Glaxo reads far too much into this
    distinction. No MAO, acting rationally, would decline to
    position itself as a secondary payer in order to charge primary
    payers where appropriate.        Accordingly, the fact that
    Congress employs permissive language when establishing
    rules for private, market-driven entities and mandatory
    language when creating rules for the Secretary, a federal
    official over whom Congress exercises control, has no effect
    on the proper interpretation of MSP private cause of action.
    In short, there is nothing in the text or legislative
    history of the MA secondary payer provision that
    demonstrates a congressional intent to deny MAOs access to
    the MSP private cause of action.
    3.    Court Decisions
    None of the decisions cited by Glaxo or the District
    Court provide us with sufficient reason to conclude that, in
    contravention of the plain text of the MSP private cause of
    action provision, an MAO may not bring suit under it. The
    District Court found that no federal private cause of action
    exists under the MSP Act by relying on two cases, neither of
    which had plaintiffs who made an argument based on the
    MSP Act provision at issue here.
    18
    In Care Choices HMO v. Engstrom, 
    330 F.3d 786
     (6th
    Cir. 2003), the Sixth Circuit considered the argument of Care
    Choices, a Medicare-substitute HMO, that it had an implied
    federal private right of action allowing it to recover the cost
    of an insured’s medical expenses, where the participant had
    collected damages from the tortfeasor who had injured her.
    That court declined to find an implied private right of action
    in the provision allowing Care Choices to occupy secondary-
    payer status. In so doing, it compared the language of the
    MSP Act private cause of action provision with §
    1395mm(e)(4), 13 finding the contrast to support its holding
    that § 1395mm(e)(4) was not intended to create any private
    right of action. Id. at 790. Whether Care Choices could have
    brought suit as a private actor under the MSP Act was neither
    raised nor addressed and thus the decision of the United
    States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit cannot guide us
    here.
    Similarly, in Nott v. Aetna U.S. Healthcare Inc., 
    303 F. Supp. 2d 565
     (E.D. Pa. 2004), the court considered whether §
    1395mm(e)(4) or § 1395w-22(a)(4) created a federal scheme
    for enforcement of a Medicare-substitute HMO’s subrogation
    rights that would completely preempt conflicting state laws.
    The Nott court noted explicitly that § 1395y(b)(2)(B)(ii), the
    government’s cause of action for reimbursement, was not
    implicated in the case, id. at 570, and it nowhere mentioned
    13
    Because Care Choices was a Medicare-substitute HMO and
    not an MAO, the relevant, private-insurer-specific secondary
    payer provision was not § 1395w-22(a)(4), but rather §
    1395mm(e)(4), which contains nearly identical language.
    The two provisions are logically subject to the same
    interpretation.
    19
    the § 1395y(b)(3)(A) private cause of action. Relying
    substantially on Care Choices, it held that “[t]here is no
    federal cause of action created by either subsection” and thus
    no preemption. Id. at 571.
    Once again, because the decision does not discuss
    whether a private insurer providing Medicare services can
    bring suit under the MSP private cause of action, it is of
    limited relevance here. 14
    In contrast, the decision of the Court of Appeals for the
    Sixth Circuit in Bio-Medical Applications of Tenn., Inc. v.
    Central States Health and Welfare Fund, 
    656 F.3d 277
     (6th
    Cir. 2011), does specifically consider the MSP private cause
    of action provision.        There, the court held that the
    “demonstrated responsibility” provision of the MSP 15 applied
    14
    For the same reasons, Parra v. PacifiCare of Arizona, Inc.,
    cited by Glaxo and the District Court, is also inapposite.
    
    2011 WL 1119736
     (D. Ariz. Mar. 28, 2011). This unreported
    decision adopts a magistrate’s report and recommendation
    finding no implied private right of action in the MAO
    secondary payer provision. The report and recommendation
    relied heavily on Care Choices, and neither that decision nor
    the decision of the district court addressed the argument that
    an MAO could bring suit under the MSP private cause of
    action provision.
    15
    “A primary plan . . . shall reimburse [the Trust Fund] for
    any payment made by [Medicare] . . . with respect to an item
    or service if it is demonstrated that such primary plan has or
    had a responsibility to make payment with respect to such
    item or service.” § 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(b)(2)(B)(ii)
    20
    only to situations in which the primary payer was a tortfeasor
    and not to the case before it, in which the primary plan was
    actually a primary insurer. Id. at 290-91. In explicating this
    point, it noted that a tortfeasor could be held liable as a
    primary payer under the MSP Act only when Medicare sues
    for reimbursement from a primary plan and not when the
    plaintiff is a private party. Id. at 292-93. It buttressed this
    distinction between Medicare and private parties with a
    number of arguments from the statute’s text and legislative
    history. 16 Id. at 292. However, the private party bringing
    suit in Bio-Medical was neither an MAO nor a Medicare-
    substitute HMO, and the court there did not consider how
    such an entity would fit into the dichotomy it described. As
    the remainder of this opinion will demonstrate, we believe
    that denying an MAO the rights to recovery provided to
    Medicare would undermine the very purpose of the MA
    program and that Congress did not intend this result.
    C.     Legislative History and Policy
    Although we find the text of the statute to be
    unambiguous, we nonetheless include here a discussion of the
    16
    These reasons include, inter alia, that the demonstrated
    responsibility provision’s “text places a condition only on
    when primary plans must reimburse Medicare; it does not
    mention when plans must pay private parties,” that “the
    structure of the Act suggests that the provision is limited to
    the reimbursement of Medicare,” and that “the predominant
    legislative backdrop was Medicare’s (not private parties’)
    failed attempts to bring lawsuits against tortfeasors.” Bio-
    Medical Applications of Tenn., Inc. v. Central States Health
    and Welfare Fund, 
    656 F.3d 277
    , 292 (6th Cir. 2011).
    21
    legislative history and policy rationales that support our
    conclusion.
    Congress’s goal in creating the Medicare Advantage
    program was to harness the power of private sector
    competition to stimulate experimentation and innovation that
    would ultimately create a more efficient and less expensive
    Medicare system. See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 105-217, at 585
    (1997) (Conf. Rep.) (stating that MA program was intended
    to “enable the Medicare program to utilize innovations that
    have helped the private market contain costs and expand
    health care delivery options”). It was the belief of Congress
    that the MA program would “continue to grow and eventually
    eclipse original fee-for-service Medicare as the predominant
    form of enrollment under the Medicare program.” Id. at 638.
    The MA program was thus, like the MSP statute, “designed to
    curb skyrocketing health costs and preserve the fiscal
    integrity of the Medicare system.” Fanning v. United States,
    
    346 F.3d 386
    , 388 (3d Cir. 2003).
    It would be impossible for MAOs to stimulate
    innovation through competition if they began at a competitive
    disadvantage, and, as CMS has noted, MAOs compete best
    when they recover consistently from primary payers. Policy
    and Technical Changes to the Medicare Advantage and the
    Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Programs, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 19678
    , 19797 (Apr. 15, 2010). When they “faithfully pursue
    and recover from liable third parties,” MAOs will have lower
    medical expenses and will therefore be able to provide
    22
    additional benefits to their enrollees. 17 
    Id.
     If Medicare could
    threaten recalcitrant primary payers with double damages and
    MAOs could not, MAOs would be at a competitive
    17
    CMS explains this mechanism more fully elsewhere:
    We note that MAOs claim expenses related to MSP
    recoveries as part of their administrative overhead.
    MA organizations that faithfully pursue and recover
    from liable third parties will have lower medical
    expenses. Lower medical expenses make such plans
    more attractive to enrollees. The lower the medical
    expenses in an MA plan, the higher the potential
    rebate. The rebate is calculated as the difference
    between the cost of Medicare benefits and the
    benchmark for that plan. The benchmark is a fixed
    amount. Therefore, as the cost of Medicare benefits go
    down (with the benchmark remaining constant), the
    larger the rebate. Therefore, as more MSP dollars are
    collected or avoided, medical expense go down and
    rebates go up, allowing the sponsoring MA
    organization to offer potential enrollees additional
    non-Medicare benefits funded by rebate dollars. Such
    non-Medicare benefits include reductions in cost
    sharing. Since cost sharing is generally expressed as a
    percentage of medical costs, such cost sharing will also
    be proportionally lower as overall medical costs go
    down—providing MA organizations offering such
    plans with an additional competitive edge.
    Policy and Technical Changes to the Medicare Advantage
    and the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Programs, 
    74 Fed. Reg. 54634
    , 54711 (proposed Oct. 22, 2009).
    23
    disadvantage, unable to exert the same pressure and thus
    forced to expend more resources collecting from such payers.
    It is difficult to believe that it would have been the intent of
    Congress to hamstring MAOs in this manner.
    Although the legislative history is nowhere explicit
    that MAOs may bring suit for double damages under the MSP
    private cause of action or using any other provision, it does
    make clear that MAOs were intended to enjoy a status
    parallel to that of traditional Medicare:
    Under original fee-for-service, the Federal
    government alone set legislative requirements
    regarding reimbursement, covered providers,
    covered benefits and services, and mechanisms
    for resolving coverage disputes. Therefore, the
    Conferees intend that this legislation provide a
    clear statement extending the same treatment to
    private [MA] plans providing Medicare benefits
    to Medicare beneficiaries.
    H.R. Rep. No. 105-217, at 638. 18
    Our sister circuits have determined that the MSP Act
    provides traditional Medicare with a cause of action for
    double damages “[i]n order ‘to facilitate recovery of
    conditional payments.’” Stalley v. Methodist Healthcare, 517
    18
    Because Congress clearly intended there to be parity
    between MAOs and traditional Medicare, we find additional
    support for our decision in § 1395y(b)(2)(B)(iii), the
    government’s cause of action for recovery from primary
    payers, which also provides for double damages.
    
    24 F.3d 911
    , 915 (6th Cir. 2008) (quoting Glover v. Liggett
    Group, Inc., 
    459 F.3d 1304
    , 1307 (11th Cir. 2006)). We see
    nothing in the text or legislative history of the statute to imply
    that Congress did not intend to facilitate recovery for MAOs
    in the same fashion.
    The District Court determined that providing MAOs
    with a right of action would not advance the program’s cost-
    savings aim because “payments to the MA from the Medicare
    trust fund are capitated annually, shifting the economic risk of
    excessive medical expenses from the government to the MA
    organization.” 
    2011 WL 2413488
    , at *4. As we have
    explained elsewhere, “[t]he Government pays MA plan
    participants a set amount of money based on the plans’
    enrollees’ risk factors and other characteristics rather than
    paying them a fee for specific services performed.” U.S. ex
    rel. Wilkins v. United Health Grp., Inc., 
    659 F.3d 295
    , 300
    n.4 (3d Cir. 2011). This capitation rate is based in part on the
    “adjusted average per capita cost” to the Medicare Trust Fund
    of covering a traditional Medicare participant in that year. 42
    U.S.C. § 1395w-23(c)(1)(D); § 1395mm(a)(4) (defining
    “adjusted average per capita cost” as “average per capita
    amount that the Secretary estimates in advance . . .would be
    payable in any contract year for services covered under parts
    A and B of this subchapter. . . if services were to be furnished
    by other than an eligible organization”).
    The District Court’s logic on this point is flawed for
    several reasons. If an MA plan provides CMS with a bid to
    cover Medicare-eligible individuals for an amount less than
    the benchmark amount calculated by CMS, it must use
    seventy-five percent of that savings to provide additional
    benefits to its enrollees. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395w-24 (b)(1)(C)(i),
    25
    (b)(3)(C), (b)(4)(C). 19 The remaining twenty-five percent of
    the savings is retained by the Medicare Trust Fund.
    Accordingly, when MAOs spend less on providing coverage
    for their enrollees, as they will if they recover efficiently from
    primary payers, the Medicare Trust Fund does achieve cost
    savings. 20
    19
    The “Beneficiary Rebate Rule” provides in full:
    The MA plan shall provide to the enrollee a
    monthly rebate equal to 75 percent (or the
    applicable rebate percentage specified in clause
    (iii) in the case of plan years beginning on or
    after January 1, 2012) of the average per capita
    savings (if any) described in paragraph (3)(C)
    or (4)(C), as applicable to the plan and year
    involved.
    42 U.S.C. § 1395w-24(b)(1)(C)(i). In 2012, the federal
    government began to retain a larger portion of the savings and
    the rebate proportion became tied to assessments of MAO
    quality. § 1395w-24(b)(1)(C)(i).
    20
    Our decision here unquestionably results in cost savings for
    the Medicare Trust Fund because our holding on the meaning
    of the private cause of action will apply equally to private
    entities that provide prescription drug benefits pursuant to
    Medicare Part D. See 42 U.S.C. § 1395w-151(b) (requiring
    that provisions relating to the MA program and MAOs be
    read to include part D plans). Because Part D prescription
    drug plans explicitly share gains and losses with the federal
    government, 42 U.S.C. § 1395w-115(e), the Medicare Trust
    26
    Further, cost savings for the Medicare Trust Fund was
    not Congress’s only goal when it created the MA program.
    Congress structured the program so that MAOs would
    compete for enrollees based on how efficiently they could
    provide care to Medicare-eligible individuals. When, by
    recovering from primary payers, MAOs save money, that
    savings results in additional benefits to enrollees not covered
    by traditional Medicare. Thus, ensuring that MAOs can
    recover from primary payers efficiently with a private cause
    of action for double damages does indeed advance the goals
    of the MA program.
    We recognize that only Congress can create private
    rights of action and that “[t]he judicial task is to interpret the
    statute Congress has passed to determine whether it displays
    an intent to create not just a private right but also a private
    remedy.” Sandoval, 
    532 U.S. at 286
     (2001) (citation
    omitted). The analysis here of text and legislative history lies
    strictly within the bounds of that task. Our understanding of
    the policy goals of the MA program merely buttresses what
    we have already found in the text of the Medicare Act: MAOs
    are not excluded from bringing suit under the MSP private
    cause of action.
    D.     Chevron Deference
    Although we hold the text of § 1395y(b)(3)(A) to
    unambiguously provide Humana with a private cause of
    action, we recognize that a declaration that the language of
    the Medicare Act is clear may be counterintuitive. After all,
    Fund unquestionably loses money if these private entities
    recover less from primary payers.
    27
    the Medicare Act has been described as among “the most
    completely impenetrable texts within human experience.”
    Cooper Univ. Hosp. v. Sebelius, 
    636 F.3d 44
     (3d Cir. 2010)
    (quoting Rehab. Ass'n of Va., Inc. v. Kozlowski, 
    42 F.3d 1444
    ,
    1450 (4th Cir. 1994)). We therefore find that, even if the
    statute’s text were deemed to be ambiguous, we would apply
    Chevron deference and would reach the same conclusion.
    The Supreme Court in Chevron established a two-part
    test for determining when a federal court ought to defer to the
    interpretation of a statute embodied in a regulation formally
    enacted by the federal agency charged with implementing that
    statute. 
    467 U.S. at 842-43
    . First, the court must determine
    whether Congress’s intent on the issue is clear — if so, it
    must abide by that intention, regardless of any regulations. If
    the statute is unclear, that is, “silent or ambiguous with
    respect to the specific issue, the question for the court is
    whether the agency’s answer is based on a permissible
    construction of the statute.” 
    Id. at 843
    . We defer to the
    agency’s regulations “unless they are arbitrary, capricious, or
    manifestly contrary to the statute.” 
    Id. at 844
    .
    CMS “has the congressional authority to promulgate
    rules and regulations interpreting and implementing
    Medicare-related statutes.” Torretti v. Main Line Hosps.,
    Inc., 
    580 F.3d 168
    , 174 (3d Cir. 2009); see also 42 U.S.C.
    §1395hh(a)(1) (“The Secretary shall prescribe such
    regulations as may be necessary to carry out the
    administration of the insurance programs under this
    subchapter.”); 42 U.S.C. § 1395w-26(b)(1) (“The Secretary
    shall establish by regulation [ ] standards . . . for [MA]
    organizations and plans consistent with, and to carry out, this
    part.”). Thus, we must accord Chevron deference to
    regulations promulgated by CMS.
    28
    CMS regulations state that an “MA organization will
    exercise the same rights to recover from a primary plan,
    entity, or individual that the Secretary exercises under the
    MSP regulations in subparts B through D of part 411 of this
    chapter.” 
    42 C.F.R. § 422.108
    . The plain language of this
    regulation suggests that the Medicare Act treats MAOs the
    same way it treats the Medicare Trust Fund for purposes of
    recovery from any primary payer. In this circumstance, we
    are bound to defer to the duly-promulgated regulation of
    CMS.
    Later CMS statements lend further support to this
    understanding of the rule. In attempting to predict the savings
    generated for MAOs as a result of their secondary payer
    status, CMS “assume[d] a similar MSP rate for MA enrollees
    as obtains in original Medicare.” Policy and Techinical
    Changes to the Medicare Advantage and the Medicare
    Prescription Drug Benefit Programs, 
    74 Fed. Reg. 54634
    ,
    54711 (proposed Oct. 22, 2009). If MAOs lacked the
    recovery mechanism available to “original” Medicare, this
    assumption would be facially invalid.
    Additionally, a recent memorandum from CMS
    specifically responded to decisions of the federal courts
    holding that MAOs were not “able to take private action to
    collection for [MSP] services under Federal law because they
    have been limited to seeking remedy in State court.” Ctrs. for
    Medicare & Medicaid Svcs., Dep’t of Health and Human
    Svcs.        Memorandum: Medicare Secondary Payment
    Subrogation Rights (Dec. 5, 2011). This memorandum
    clarified that CMS itself understood § 422.108 to assign
    MAOs “the right (and responsibility) to collect” from primary
    29
    payers using the same procedures available to traditional
    Medicare. 21 Id.
    Glaxo argues that this regulation does not directly
    interpret the MSP private cause of action because the
    Secretary exercises the right to recover pursuant to §
    1395y(b)(2)(B)(iii), which allows the United States to “bring
    an action against any or all entities that are or were required
    or responsible . . . to make payment . . . under a primary
    plan.” The government may then collect double damages, “in
    accordance with paragraph (3)(A),” the MSP private cause of
    action. Id. Glaxo’s logic suggests that the regulation would
    allow MAOs to exercise rights to recovery under the
    government’s cause of action, contrary to the plain language
    of the statute. However, given the cross-reference within §
    1395y(b)(2)(B)(iii), the statute itself equates the United
    States’ right to recover with a private party’s right to recover.
    Thus, the regulation refers, ultimately, to the private cause of
    action in § 1395y(b)(3)(A) and deference to it supports
    Humana’s right to bring suit under that provision.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    The language of the MSP private cause of action is
    broad and unrestricted and therefore allows any private
    plaintiff with standing to bring an action. 22 Since private
    21
    The memorandum also noted that these same rights,
    responsibilities, and procedures apply to Part D prescription
    drug plan sponsors via 
    42 C.F.R. § 423.462
    .
    22
    Because we find that Humana had the right to sue in federal
    court pursuant to § 1395y(b)(3)(A), we need not address its
    30
    health plans delivered Medicare services prior to the 1980
    passage of the MSP Act, Congress was certainly aware that
    private health plans might be interested private parties when it
    drafted the cause of action, and it did not exclude them from
    that provision’s ambit. That decision is logically consistent
    because affording MAOs access to the private cause of action
    for double damages comports with the broader policy goals of
    the MA program. Further, even if we were to find the
    statutory text to be ambiguous on the issue, Chevron
    deference to CMS regulations, which grant MAOs parity with
    traditional Medicare, would require us to find in favor of
    Humana here.
    For all these reasons, we will reverse the District
    Court’s dismissal of the complaint, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6),
    and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    argument that the District Court also had jurisdiction pursuant
    to the Class Action Fairness Act, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (d).
    31
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-2664

Citation Numbers: 685 F.3d 353

Judges: Fisher, Greenaway, McKEE

Filed Date: 6/28/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/5/2023

Authorities (19)

United Seniors Ass'n, Inc. v. Philip Morris USA , 500 F.3d 19 ( 2007 )

Stalley Ex Rel. United States v. Orlando Regional ... , 524 F.3d 1229 ( 2008 )

McTernan v. City of York, Penn. , 577 F.3d 521 ( 2009 )

Torretti v. Main Line Hospitals, Inc. , 580 F.3d 168 ( 2009 )

Woods v. Empire Health Choice, Inc. , 574 F.3d 92 ( 2009 )

Geneba Glover v. Philip Morris , 459 F.3d 1304 ( 2006 )

Bio-Medical Applications of Tennessee, Inc. v. Central ... , 656 F.3d 277 ( 2011 )

Stalley Ex Rel. United States v. Catholic Health Initiatives , 509 F.3d 517 ( 2007 )

Care Choices Hmo, Plaintiff-Appellant/cross-Appellee v. ... , 330 F.3d 786 ( 2003 )

Stalley v. Methodist Healthcare , 517 F.3d 911 ( 2008 )

Cooper University Hospital v. Sebelius , 636 F.3d 44 ( 2010 )

United States Ex Rel. Wilkins v. United Health Group, Inc. , 659 F.3d 295 ( 2011 )

46-socsecrepser-267-medicare-medicaid-guide-p-42942-rehabilitation , 42 F.3d 1444 ( 1994 )

daniel-c-fanning-individually-and-as-representative-of-a-class-of , 346 F.3d 386 ( 2003 )

Nott v. Aetna US Healthcare, Inc. , 303 F. Supp. 2d 565 ( 2004 )

Cort v. Ash , 95 S. Ct. 2080 ( 1975 )

Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife , 112 S. Ct. 2130 ( 1992 )

Alexander v. Sandoval , 121 S. Ct. 1511 ( 2001 )

Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, ... , 104 S. Ct. 2778 ( 1984 )

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