Cascade Health v. Peacehealth , 515 F.3d 973 ( 2008 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CASCADE HEALTH SOLUTIONS FKA           
    MCKENZIE-WILLAMETTE HOSPITAL,
    an Oregon nonprofit corporation,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    PEACEHEALTH, a Washington State
    nonprofit corporation,
    Defendant-Appellee,           No. 05-35627
    and                           D.C. No.
    PACIFICSOURCE HEALTH PLANS,                CV-02-06032-ALH
    Defendant,
    REGENCE BLUECROSS
    BLUESHIELD OF OREGON;
    PROVIDENCE HEALTH PLAN;
    MCKENZIE-WILLAMETTE REGIONAL
    MEDICAL CENTER ASSOCIATES, LLC,
    Defendant-Intervenors.
    
    1529
    1530           CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH
    MCKENZIE-WILLAMETTE HOSPITAL,           
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    PEACEHEALTH, a Washington State
    nonprofit corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and                          No. 05-35640
    PACIFICSOURCE HEALTH PLANS,                   D.C. No.
    Defendant,        CV-02-06032-HA
    REGENCE BLUECROSS
    BLUESHIELD OF OREGON;
    PROVIDENCE HEALTH PLAN;
    MCKENZIE-WILLAMETTE REGIONAL
    MEDICAL CENTER ASSOCIATES, LLC,
    Defendant-Intervenors.
    
    MCKENZIE-WILLAMETTE HOSPITAL,           
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    No. 05-36153
    v.
          D.C. No.
    PEACEHEALTH, a Washington State             CV-02-06032-HA
    nonprofit corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    
    CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH                    1531
    MCKENZIE-WILLAMETTE HOSPITAL,                    No. 05-36202
    an Oregon nonprofit corporation,                    D.C. No.
    Plaintiff-Appellant,               CV-02-06032-HA
    v.
    PEACEHEALTH,                                        ORDER
    CERTIFYING
    Defendant-Appellee.                 QUESTION TO
    THE SUPREME
    COURT OF
           OREGON
    Filed February 1, 2008
    Before: Ronald M. Gould, Richard A. Paez, and
    Johnnie B. Rawlinson, Circuit Judges.
    ORDER
    GOULD, Circuit Judge:
    McKenzie-Willamette Hospital (“McKenzie”) filed a com-
    plaint in the district court against PeaceHealth asserting seven
    claims for relief, two of which arose under Oregon state law
    for price discrimination and intentional interference with pro-
    spective economic advantage.1 The jury found in McKenzie’s
    favor on both of the Oregon state law claims, and Peace-
    Health appealed. Since the jury’s verdict, an intervening U.S.
    Supreme Court ruling, Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Wil-
    liamson Tobacco Corp., 
    509 U.S. 209
    (1993), has injected
    uncertainty into the status of Oregon’s price discrimination
    1
    The remaining five claims arose under the federal antitrust laws for:
    monopolization, attempted monopolization, conspiracy to monopolize,
    tying, and exclusive dealing.
    1532              CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH
    doctrine. Because McKenzie’s price discrimination claim
    raises an important, dispositive issue of Oregon law, we
    respectfully certify a question for review by the Supreme
    Court of Oregon, pursuant to Or. Rev. Stat. § 28.200, namely
    whether Oregon price discrimination law follows the require-
    ments as the U.S. Supreme Court delineated in Brooke Group.
    We offer the following statement of relevant facts and expla-
    nation of the “nature of the controversy in which the ques-
    tion[ ] arose.” Or. Rev. Stat. § 28.210(2) (2005).
    Background
    McKenzie and PeaceHealth are the only two providers of
    hospital care in Lane County, Oregon. The jury found, and the
    parties do not dispute on appeal, that the relevant market in
    this case is the market for primary and secondary acute care
    hospital services in Lane County. Primary and secondary
    acute care hospital services are common medical services like
    setting a broken bone and performing a tonsillectomy. Some
    hospitals also provide what the parties call “tertiary care,”
    which includes more complex services like invasive cardio-
    vascular surgery and intensive neonatal care.
    In Lane County, PeaceHealth operates three hospitals while
    McKenzie operates one. McKenzie’s sole endeavor is
    McKenzie-Willamette Hospital, a 114-bed hospital that offers
    primary and secondary acute care in Springfield, Oregon.
    McKenzie does not provide tertiary care. In the time period
    leading up to and including this litigation, McKenzie had been
    suffering financial losses, and, as a result, merged with Triad
    Hospitals, Inc.2 so that it could add tertiary services to its
    menu of care.
    The largest of PeaceHealth’s three facilities is Sacred Heart
    2
    As a result of the merger, McKenzie’s name changed to Cascade
    Health Solutions. For the purposes of this order, we, like the parties, con-
    tinue to refer to Cascade Health Solutions as McKenzie.
    CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH                       1533
    Hospital, a 432-bed operation that offers primary, secondary,
    and tertiary care in Eugene, Oregon. PeaceHealth also oper-
    ates Peace Harbor Hospital, a 21-bed hospital in Florence,
    Oregon and Cottage Grove Hospital, an 11-bed hospital in
    Cottage Grove, Oregon. In Lane County, PeaceHealth has a
    90% market share of tertiary neonatal services, a 93% market
    share of tertiary cardiovascular services, and a roughly 75%
    market share of primary and secondary care services.
    An appreciation of the relationship between hospitals and
    insurers is necessary to understand the price discrimination
    issues in this case. In the transaction between a hospital that
    sells care services and an insurer that buys care services, the
    price agreed upon is often referred to as a “reimbursement
    rate.” For example, in a hospital-insurer contract, the agreed
    upon price might be “a 90% reimbursement rate.” A 90%
    reimbursement rate price means that, when the insurer must
    purchase services from the hospital, the insurer gets a 10%
    discount off the hospital’s regular price, also called the charge
    master or list price. It follows that hospitals prefer high reim-
    bursement rates and insurers prefer low reimbursement rates,
    as each group pursues its own economic interest.
    McKenzie asserts that PeaceHealth offered insurers dis-
    counts of 35% to 40% on tertiary services if the insurers made
    PeaceHealth their sole preferred provider for all services—
    primary, secondary, and tertiary. In 2001, for example, Peace-
    Health was the only preferred provider of hospital care under
    the preferred provider plan (“PPP”) of Regence BlueCross
    BlueShield of Oregon (“Regence”).3 At that time, Regence
    was paying PeaceHealth a 76% reimbursement rate for all of
    PeaceHealth’s medical services, including primary, second-
    ary, and tertiary services. Around that time, pursuant to Mc-
    3
    In a preferred provider plan, health care providers contract with an
    insurer to provide health care to the insurer’s customers. The insurer’s cus-
    tomers pay much higher prices if they obtain services from providers other
    than those with whom their insurer has contracted.
    1534              CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH
    Kenzie’s request, Regence considered adding McKenzie to
    the PPP as a preferred provider of primary and secondary ser-
    vices. When Regence’s contract with PeaceHealth came up
    for its annual renewal, Regence solicited two proposals from
    PeaceHealth. Under one proposal, PeaceHealth would remain
    the only preferred provider. Under the other proposal, Mc-
    Kenzie would be added as a preferred provider. PeaceHealth
    offered an 85% reimbursement rate for all services if it
    remained Regence’s sole preferred provider of primary, sec-
    ondary, and tertiary services, and a 90% reimbursement rate
    if McKenzie was added as a preferred provider of primary and
    secondary services. Regence thereafter declined to include
    McKenzie as a preferred provider.
    That same year, McKenzie sought and received admission
    as a preferred provider of primary and secondary services
    under the preferred plan offered by Providence Health Plan
    (“Providence”). Until then, PeaceHealth was the only pre-
    ferred provider of primary, secondary, and tertiary services in
    the Providence preferred plan. Upon McKenzie’s admission
    as a preferred provider, PeaceHealth increased its reimburse-
    ment rate with Providence from 90% to 93%. The evidence
    showed that insurers who made PeaceHealth their exclusive
    preferred provider across all services, thus purchasing from
    PeaceHealth a full complement of primary, secondary, and
    tertiary services, paid lower reimbursement rates than insurers
    who purchased tertiary services from PeaceHealth, but at least
    some primary and secondary services from McKenzie.
    Based on these incidents, McKenzie brought, among other
    antitrust law claims, a claim of primary-line price discrimina-
    tion4 under Oregon state law. McKenzie’s theory was that
    4
    Price discrimination claims can take three forms: primary line, second-
    ary line, or tertiary line. Primary-line price discrimination includes con-
    duct, like predatory pricing, that injures the direct competitors of the
    discriminating seller. See Volvo Trucks N. Am., Inc. v. Reeder-Simco
    GMC, Inc., 
    126 S. Ct. 860
    , 870 (2006).
    CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH                   1535
    PeaceHealth discriminated in price as between Regence and
    Providence. Specifically, PeaceHealth, who was the exclusive
    preferred provider in Regence’s PPP, charged Regence an
    85% reimbursement rate while PeaceHealth charged Provi-
    dence, an insurer with whom PeaceHealth had no exclusive
    arrangement, a 93% reimbursement rate. McKenzie alleged
    that PeaceHealth’s price discrimination injured McKenzie
    because its pricing scheme was the cause of McKenzie’s
    inability to obtain preferred status with Regence.
    To decide whether McKenzie established a claim of
    primary-line price discrimination under Oregon law, the dis-
    trict court instructed the jury as follows:
    [I]n order for the plaintiff to establish a violation of
    the price discrimination statute, it has the burden of
    proving each and every one of the following ele-
    ments by a preponderance of the evidence: (1) That
    there were contemporaneous sales by a defendant to
    other insurers in the relevant market; (2) that defen-
    dant has discriminated in price between insurers in
    the contemporaneous sale of hospital services; and
    (3) that the effect of defendant’s price discrimination
    was to substantially lessen competition or create a
    monopoly in the sale of hospital services in the rele-
    vant market, or to injure, destroy or prevent competi-
    tion between plaintiff and defendant.
    The district court derived its instruction from Oregon’s price
    discrimination law as stated in the Oregon Supreme Court’s
    1978 decision in Redmond Ready-Mix, Inc. v. Coats, 
    582 P.2d 1340
    (Or. 1978). However, in light of what the Oregon
    Supreme Court has previously said, an intervening United
    States Supreme Court opinion, Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown
    & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 
    509 U.S. 209
    (1993), calls into
    question the validity of both Redmond Ready-Mix and the jury
    instruction relying on it.
    1536             CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH
    After the United States Supreme Court clarified the federal
    price discrimination law in Brooke Group, no Oregon court
    has published an opinion interpreting section 646.040, leaving
    Oregon price discrimination law to this degree currently
    unsettled, as we see it. Because resolution of McKenzie’s
    price discrimination claim rests on a question of state law, we
    must decide how the Oregon Supreme Court would decide the
    issue before us. See, e.g., Burlington Ins. Co. v. Oceanic
    Design & Constr., Inc., 
    383 F.3d 940
    , 944 (9th Cir. 2004).
    However, here, after and in light of Brooke Group, it is
    unclear to us how the Oregon Supreme Court would decide
    the primary-line price discrimination issue at play.
    On the one hand, the Oregon Supreme Court might con-
    tinue to follow its precedent in Redmond Ready-Mix. In Red-
    mond Ready-Mix, the plaintiff brought a primary-line price
    discrimination suit under section 646.040 against the husband
    and wife who were the plaintiff’s competitor in the market to
    sell retail pre-mixed 
    concrete. 582 P.2d at 1342
    . The plaintiff
    asserted that the defendants sold concrete for a lower price in
    the geographic areas in which the plaintiff competed with the
    defendants than in the geographic areas in which the plaintiff
    did not compete. See 
    id. at 1342-45.
    The trial court found that
    the defendants did not violate section 646.040. See 
    id. at 1342.
    The trial court reasoned that although the defendants
    sold concrete at lower prices in the competitive geographic
    area than in other areas, the plaintiff did not establish that the
    lower prices lessened competition as required by the section
    646.040 because the “defendants were not selling below their
    average cost.” 
    Id. The Oregon
    Supreme Court affirmed.
    
    Id. at 1352.
    In accordance with the prevailing federal case law at the
    time, the Oregon Supreme Court noted that a claim of
    primary-line price discrimination could be sustained upon a
    showing that the defendant price discriminated with a “preda-
    tory intent.” See 
    id. at 1348.
    The Oregon Supreme Court
    CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH               1537
    pointed out that predatory intent could be implied from
    below-cost selling. 
    Id. at 1350.
    It held, however, that there
    was no evidence the defendants priced below cost. See 
    id. It then
    held that, alternatively, the plaintiffs could establish a
    claim of primary-line price discrimination by showing that the
    defendants’ price discrimination resulted in a substantial
    impairment of competition. 
    Id. The court
    considered several
    factors to determine whether the defendants’ price discrimina-
    tion impaired competition. See 
    id. These factors
    included: (a)
    monopoly or overpowering position of the seller in the mar-
    ket; (b) aggressive objectives towards the seller’s smaller
    rivals; (c) deep, sustained undercutting of rivals’ prices; (d)
    persistent sales below the seller’s cost; and (e) actual or
    impending demise of a seller’s sole rival in a market. 
    Id. In conclusion,
    and in view of these factors, the Oregon Supreme
    Court held that the evidence did not demonstrate any impair-
    ment of competition and affirmed the judgment of the trial
    court. See 
    id. at 1352.
    If the Oregon Supreme Court would still follow Redmond
    Ready-Mix, then the trial court’s jury instruction is valid.
    Under Redmond Ready-Mix, unlike under Brooke Group, dis-
    cussed below, a plaintiff can establish a claim of primary-line
    price discrimination by showing either predatory intent, e.g.,
    by showing “below cost” sales, 
    id. at 1350,
    or a substantial
    impact on competition, shown by demonstrating some of the
    above-mentioned five indicia key to confirming the existence
    of competitive impairment, 
    id. On the
    other hand, in the light of its prior pronouncements,
    we think it likely that the Oregon Supreme Court will decide
    to follow Brooke Group, or at least that is a significant possi-
    bility raising question in our mind whether we can properly
    affirm a judgment of the district court that was based on the
    Redmond Ready-Mix view of the required elements of price
    discrimination under Oregon law. While Oregon is entirely
    free to chart a state law antitrust course that is independent
    from the federal doctrine, we cannot wholly ignore the likeli-
    1538                CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH
    hood that the Oregon Supreme Court now would follow fed-
    eral price discrimination law as set forth in Brooke Group.
    For one thing, the Oregon price discrimination statute,5 Or.
    Rev. Stat. § 646.040, is nearly identical to and indeed is mod-
    eled on the federal price discrimination provisions in § 2 of
    the Robinson-Patman Act,6 15 U.S.C. § 13. Second, and more
    importantly, the Oregon Supreme Court has previously and
    explicitly declared that federal price discrimination law would
    5
    The Oregon statute provides:
    It is unlawful for any person engaged in commerce or food com-
    merce, or both, in the course of such commerce, either directly
    or indirectly, to discriminate in price between different purchas-
    ers of commodities, or services or output of a service trade, of
    like grade and quality or to discriminate in price between differ-
    ent sections, communities or cities or portions thereof or between
    different locations in sections, communities, cities or portions
    thereof in this state, where the effect of such discrimination may
    be substantially to lessen competition or tend to create a monop-
    oly in any line of commerce, or to injure, destroy or prevent com-
    petition with any person who either grants or knowingly receives
    the benefit of such discrimination, or with customers of either of
    them.
    Or. Rev. Stat. § 646.040(1).
    6
    The Robinson-Patman Act provides:
    It shall be unlawful for any person engaged in commerce, in the
    course of such commerce, either directly or indirectly, to discrim-
    inate in price between different purchasers of commodities of like
    grade and quality, where either or any of the purchases involved
    in such discrimination are in commerce, where such commodities
    are sold for use, consumption, or resale within the United States
    or any Territory thereof or the District of Columbia or any insular
    possession or other place under the jurisdiction of the United
    States, and where the effect of such discrimination may be sub-
    stantially to lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in
    any line of commerce, or to injure, destroy, or prevent competi-
    tion with any person who either grants or knowingly receives the
    benefit of such discrimination, or with customers of either of
    them . . . .
    15 U.S.C. § 13(a).
    CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH                      1539
    guide the interpretation of Oregon price discrimination law in
    section 646.040. Yamaha Store of Bend, Or., Inc. v. Yamaha
    Motor Corp., 
    798 P.2d 656
    , 659 n.6 (Or. 1990), modified on
    reconsideration on other grounds, 
    806 P.2d 123
    (Or. 1991);
    Redmond 
    Ready-Mix, 582 P.2d at 1346
    . Also, the Oregon
    Supreme Court stated in Redmond Ready-Mix that it was
    reaching its decision at a time when “[m]uch of the ‘federal
    law’ on [primary-line price discrimination was] in a recog-
    nized state of confusion.” Redmond 
    Ready-Mix, 582 P.2d at 1346
    .
    Brooke Group has now dispelled that confusion in at least
    one area—a plaintiff in a federal primary-line price discrimi-
    nation case must prove that its rival priced below cost. Thus
    Brooke Group’s clarification of federal price discrimination
    law calls into question whether the Oregon Supreme Court
    will continue to interpret Oregon price discrimination law as
    outlined in Redmond Ready-Mix. The Oregon Supreme Court
    might now decide to follow Brooke Group by analogy in
    interpreting the parallel state price discrimination law,7 or
    conversely, it might decide to adhere to its prior decision
    without change. If the former is the case, then the district
    court’s instruction on state law was error, but if the latter is
    the case, then the jury instruction and the jury verdict on Ore-
    gon price discrimination law should stand. Because we are
    uncertain of how the Oregon Supreme Court will now view
    this important question, we certify it to the Oregon Supreme
    Court.
    7
    In Brooke Group, a primary-line price discrimination case brought
    under the Robinson-Patman Act, the Supreme Court held that, in a single
    product predatory pricing case, a plaintiff must prove (1) below-cost pric-
    ing and (2) likelihood of recoupment regardless of “whether the claim
    alleges predatory pricing under § 2 of the Sherman Act or primary-line
    price discrimination under the Robinson-Patman Act.” Brooke Group 
    Ltd., 509 U.S. at 222
    .
    1540             CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH
    Question Certified
    We respectfully certify the following dispositive question
    of law to the Oregon Supreme Court:8
    Under the Oregon price discrimination statute, Or. Rev.
    Stat. § 646.040, is a plaintiff required to show (1) below-cost
    pricing and (2) likelihood of recoupment? In other words,
    does Oregon law now follow the elements of a primary-line
    price discrimination claim as outlined in Brooke Group?
    Conclusion
    We respectfully request the Oregon Supreme Court to exer-
    cise its discretionary authority to accept and decide this ques-
    tion of law. We do not intend our framing of this question to
    restrict the Oregon Supreme Court’s consideration of any
    issues that it determines are relevant. We have previously
    acknowledged both the Oregon Supreme Court’s ability to
    “reformulate the relevant state law questions as it perceives
    them to be in light of the contentions of the parties,” Lom-
    bardo v. Warner, 
    391 F.3d 1008
    , 1010 (9th Cir. 2004) (en
    banc) (citations omitted), and our obligation to abide by that
    court’s determination of the state law questions presented, 
    id. If the
    Oregon Supreme Court resolves this question, we will
    resolve the issue in our case precisely in accord with its
    answer.
    The Clerk of this Court is hereby ordered to transmit forth-
    with to the Oregon Supreme Court, under official seal of the
    United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, a copy
    of this order, signed by the presiding judge, and all relevant
    briefs and excerpts of record pursuant to Or. Rev. Stat.
    § 28.215 (2005) and Or. R. App. Proc. 12.20(1)(b). Pursuant
    8
    Even though this course of action was not suggested by either party,
    we may properly certify this question sua sponte. See Or. Rev. Stat.
    § 28.205 (2005).
    CASCADE HEALTH v. PEACEHEALTH               1541
    to Oregon Rule of Appellate Procedure 12.20(5)(c) the Clerk
    of this Court shall transmit to the Oregon Supreme Court all
    or any portion of the district court record in this case as that
    Court deems necessary or appropriate.
    Further proceedings in our court on the certified question
    are stayed pending the Oregon Supreme Court’s decision
    whether it will accept review, and if so, our receipt of the
    answer to the certified question. The case is withdrawn from
    submission, in pertinent part, until further order from this
    Court. The panel will resume control and jurisdiction on the
    certified question upon receiving an answer to the certified
    question or upon the Oregon Supreme Court’s decision to
    decline to answer the certified question. When the Oregon
    Supreme Court decides whether or not to accept the certified
    question, the parties shall file a joint report informing us of
    the decision. If the Oregon Supreme Court accepts the certi-
    fied question, the parties shall file a joint status report every
    six months after the date of the acceptance, or more fre-
    quently if circumstances warrant.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    _________________________________
    RONALD M. GOULD
    Circuit Judge, United States Court of Appeals
    for the Ninth Circuit
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