State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v. Pointe Physicial Therapy, LLC et al
Filing
108
OPINION AND ORDER denying 25 Motion to Dismiss; denying 26 Motion to Dismiss; denying 27 Motion to Dismiss; denying 32 Motion to Dismiss; denying 20 Motion to Dismiss; denying 21 Motion to Dismiss; denying 22 Motion to Strike; denying 23 Motion to Dismiss; denying 46 Motion to Dismiss. Signed by District Judge Paul D. Borman. (DTof)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE COMPANY,
Plaintiff,
Case No. 14-cv-11700
Paul D. Borman
United States District Judge
v.
POINTE PHYSICAL THERAPY, LLC,
et al.,
Defendants.
_______________________________________/
OPINION AND ORDER DENYING DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO DISMISS
(ECF NOS. 20, 21, 23, 25, 32, and 46) and DENYING DEFENDANTS’
MOTION TO STRIKE (ECF NO. 22)
This matter is before the Court on Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss (ECF Nos. 20, 21, 23,
25, 32, 46) and Defendants’ Motion to Strike (ECF No. 22). Plaintiff State Farm Mutual
Automobile Company (“State Farm”) filed responses and Defendants filed, in most instances,
replies. The Court held hearings on April 17 and April 23, 2015. For the reasons that follow, the
Court DENIES the motions to dismiss and DENIES the motion to strike.
INTRODUCTION
In this action, State Farm seeks to recover money it alleges was fraudulently obtained
through the coordinated efforts of the Defendants in submitting hundreds of bills and false
documentation to obtain payment of benefits under Michigan’s No-Fault Act for treatments and
services that were either never performed or not medically necessary. In these motions, Defendants
1
move to dismiss Plaintiff’s Complaint on a number of theories and move to strike certain allegations
of the Complaint.
I.
BACKGROUND
State Farm’s Complaint describes a multi-faceted scheme involving rehabilitation facilities,
prescribing clinics and physicians, and a diagnostic testing facility, all of whom are alleged to have
conspired to provide medically unnecessary treatment and to submit false and fraudulent
documentation to State Farm for the payment of No-Fault benefits for patients who were involved
in motor vehicle accidents and were thus eligible to obtain Personal Insurance Protection (“PIP”)
Benefits under Michigan’s No-Fault Act. See Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 500.3105, 3107(1)(a). State
Farm alleges that the scheme began as early as December, 2007, and claims to have paid over
$775,000 for various allegedly fraudulent treatments and tests and has refused to pay additional bills
that have been submitted by certain of the Defendants. Plaintiffs’ Complaint asserts causes of action
for common law fraud, unjust enrichment and violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c) and (d) against all Defendants and seeks
declaratory relief against the Treatment Facilities (defined infra) and Defendant Bio-Magnetic
Resonance, Inc.
A.
The Defendants and Their Alleged Role in the Scheme
1.
The Management Group
The Complaint alleges that a “Management Group,” comprised of Defendants Dr. Ram
Gunabalan, Sherif El-Sayed, and Amale Bazzi secretly owned and/or controlled each of the other
Defendants and maintained referral relationships with patients’ personal injury attorneys, directed
patients’ treatments, coordinated patients’ transportation to and from treatments through a
2
commonly owned transportation service, referred patients to a commonly owned diagnostic testing
facility and profited from all aspects of the scheme. The Management Group is alleged to have had
quid pro quo cross-referral relationships with personal injury attorneys who were motivated to send
client-patients to facilities controlled by the Management Group because Defendants referred
patients to them, and their facilities could be counted on to treat patients in a manner that inflated
the value of their potential tort claims. Compl. ¶¶ 8, 10, 47-48, 52-54, 67-80, 164-66. Additionally,
the Complaint alleges, the Management Group directed the Prescribing Clinics and Prescribing
Physicians to steer patients for medically unnecessary diagnostic tests to facilities owned and/or
controlled by Gunabalan which were then billed to and paid for by State Farm. Id. ¶ 7, 28.
2.
The Treatment Facilities
Three Treatment Facilities are alleged to have participated in the scheme: (1) Pointe Physical
Therapy, LLC (“Pointe”), a Michigan LLC located in Eastpointe, Michigan, which is alleged to have
submitted fraudulent bills and documentation from 2009 to November, 2013; (2) New Era Physical
Therapy, P.C. (“New Era I”), a Michigan corporation with its principal place of business in Flint,
Michigan, which is alleged to have submitted fraudulent bills and documentation from December,
2007 through October, 2009; New Era PT Services, Inc. (“New Era II”), a Michigan corporation
with its principal place of business in Flint, Michigan, which is alleged to have submitted fraudulent
bills and documentation from 2010 through October, 2013. Compl. ¶¶ 158-60. New Era I and New
Era II are alleged to be alter egos of one another based upon unity of interest and ownership. Id. ¶
159.
The Treatment Facilities are alleged to be the center of the scheme. State Farm alleges that
the bills and supporting documentation submitted by the Treatment Facilities were fraudulent
because the services either were not performed or were performed pursuant to a fraudulent
3
predetermined protocol that did not address the unique needs of individual patients. Id. ¶¶ 2, 66.
The Treatment Facilities are alleged to have provided the same physical therapy modalities to
virtually every patient on almost every visit for as long as possible, regardless of the patient’s unique
conditions, needs and progress or lack of progress. Id. ¶ 3. State Farm alleges that in October or
November, 2010, Pointe and New Era began to employ an occupational therapist in addition to their
physical therapists. The addition of the occupational therapist, according to the Complaint, resulted
in additional fraudulent and double billings. Id. ¶ 3-4. Patients are alleged to have arrived at the
Treatment Facilities “by the van-load,” some of whom had been in minor automobile accidents. Id.
¶ 18. Patients are alleged to have been referred to the Treatment Facilities by a cadre of personal
injury attorneys and “investigators” who solicited patients who had been involved in automobile
accidents and encouraged them to obtain treatment at the Treatment Facilities. Id. ¶¶ 69-71.
3.
The Prescribing Clinics
Three Prescribing Clinics, Michigan Visiting Physicians, P.C. d/b/a Choice House Call
(“Choice”), Mundy Pain Clinic, P.C. (“Mundy”) and Medical Evaluations, P.C. (“Medical
Evaluations”), are alleged to have employed physicians who evaluated patients and provided
prescriptions for the medically unnecessary physical and occupational therapy that was ultimately
provided by the Treatment Facilities. The Complaint alleges that the Management Group set up,
owned and controlled the Prescribing Clinics, and hired the Defendant physicians and others to write
prescriptions for medically unnecessary therapy that was to be provided at the Treatment Facilities.
Id. ¶¶ 5-6.
4.
The Prescribing Physicians
Five Prescribing Physicians, Ram Gunabalan, M.D. (“Gunabalan”), Martin Quiroga, D.O.
4
(“Quiroga”), Andrew Ruden, M.D. (“Ruden”), James Beale, Jr., M.D. (“Beale”) and Sean John
Hoban, M.D. (“Hoban”), are alleged to have evaluated patients and written prescriptions for the
medically unnecessary therapy provided by the Treatment Facilities. Id. ¶ 5. The Complaint alleges
that because Michigan law requires a prescription from a physician for physical therapy treatment,
the Management Group set up the Prescribing Clinics and hired the Prescribing Physicians, who are
alleged to have written prescriptions according to a predetermined protocol that had no relation to
the individual patient’s needs or diagnoses. Id. ¶¶ 5, 81-82, 110-30. The Complaint alleges that the
Prescribing Physicians examine patients and prescribe physical and/or occupational therapy to be
obtained at the Treatment Facilities, and the Treatment Facilities continue to provide the same
modalities on almost every visit for as long as possible to maximize the amounts that can be billed
to State Farm and to increase the value of the patients’ personal injury claims for the benefit of a
small group of personal injury attorneys with whom Defendants have substantial quid pro quo
referral relationships. Id. ¶¶ 9, 79, 82. The Prescribing Physicians are also alleged to have written
prescriptions for medically unnecessary Magnetic Resonance Imaging (“MRI”) studies and directed
patients to have the studies performed at an MRI facility owned by Gunabalan. Id. ¶ 7.
5.
The Diagnostic Testing Facility
One MRI facility, Bio-Magnetic Resonance, Inc. (“Bio-Magnetic”), which is alleged in the
Complaint to be owned and controlled by Gunabalan, performed unnecessary MRIs on patients who
were referred by the Prescribing Clinics and Prescribing Physicians. Id. ¶¶ 5, 131-32. The
Complaint alleges that the MRIs were medically unnecessary and were part of the predetermined
protocol applied to patients by the Prescribing Physicians and Prescribing Clinics. Id. ¶ 133-39.
The performance of MRIs is alleged to have been very lucrative, the testing facility charging over
5
$5,000 to perform an MRI on regions of the spine. Id. ¶ 140.
B.
Harm to State Farm
State Farm alleges that it justifiably relied on the bills, medical records and supporting
documentation submitted by the Defendants, which represented that the Defendants were providing
services that were actually and lawfully rendered and reimbursable when in fact the services were
either not performed or performed pursuant to a generic predetermined protocol to enrich
Defendants by maximizing their collection of the patients’ No-Fault benefits. ECF No. 1, Complaint
¶ 149. State Farm claims that it was statutorily and contractually obligated to promptly pay for
medically services that were lawfully rendered. Id. ¶ 150. In the case of Defendants’ allegedly
fraudulent charges, State Farm claims it has paid claims in excess of $775,000, and has been
presented with additional fraudulent bills that it has refused to pay. Id. at 151-52.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) provides for the dismissal of a case where the
complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. When reviewing a motion to
dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), a court must “construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the
plaintiff, accept its allegations as true, and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.”
Directv Inc. v. Treesh, 487 F.3d 471, 476 (6th Cir. 2007). But the court “need not accept as true
legal conclusions or unwarranted factual inferences.” Id. (quoting Gregory v. Shelby County, 220
F.3d 433, 446 (6th Cir. 2000)). “[L]egal conclusions masquerading as factual allegations will not
suffice.” Eidson v. State of Tenn. Dep’t of Children’s Servs., 510 F.3d 631, 634 (6th Cir. 2007).
In Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (2007), the Supreme Court explained that
“a plaintiff’s obligation to provide the ‘grounds’ of his ‘entitle[ment] to relief’ requires more than
6
labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do.
Factual allegations must be enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level . . . .” Id. at
555 (internal citations omitted). Dismissal is appropriate if the plaintiff has failed to offer sufficient
factual allegations that make the asserted claim plausible on its face. Id. at 570. The Supreme Court
clarified the concept of “plausibilty” in Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 129 S.Ct. 1937 (2009):
To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter,
accepted as true, to “state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” [Bell Atlantic
Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 556, 570 (2007)]. A claim has facial plausibility
when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable
inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged. Id. at 556. The
plausibility standard is not akin to a “probability requirement,” but it asks for more
than a sheer possibility that a defendant has acted unlawfully. Ibid. Where a
complaint pleads facts that are “merely consistent with” a defendant's liability, it
“stops short of the line between possibility and plausibility of ‘entitlement to relief.’”
Id., at 557 (brackets omitted).
Id. at 1948-50. A plaintiff’s factual allegations, while “assumed to be true, must do more than create
speculation or suspicion of a legally cognizable cause of action; they must show entitlement to
relief.” LULAC v. Bredesen, 500 F.3d 523, 527 (6th Cir. 2007) (emphasis in original) (citing
Twombly, 127 S.Ct. at 1965). Thus, “[t]o state a valid claim, a complaint must contain either direct
or inferential allegations respecting all the material elements to sustain recovery under some viable
legal theory.” Bredesen, 500 F.3d at 527 (citing Twombly, 127 S.Ct. at 1969).
In ruling on a motion to dismiss, the Court may consider the complaint as well as (1)
documents that are referenced in the plaintiff’s complaint or that are central to plaintiff’s claims (2)
matters of which a court may take judicial notice (3) documents that are a matter of public record
and (4) letters that constitute decisions of a government agency. Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues &
Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. 308, 322 (2007). See also Greenberg v. Life Ins. Co. Of Virginia, 177 F.3d
507, 514 (6th Cir. 1999) (finding that documents attached to a motion to dismiss that are referred
7
to in the complaint and central to the claim are deemed to form a part of the pleadings). Where the
claims rely on the existence of a written agreement, and plaintiff fails to attach the written
instrument, “the defendant may introduce the pertinent exhibit,” which is then considered part of the
pleadings. QQC, Inc. v. Hewlett-Packard Co., 258 F. Supp. 2d 718, 721 (E.D. Mich. 2003).
“Otherwise, a plaintiff with a legally deficient claims could survive a motion to dismiss simply by
failing to attach a dispositive document.” Weiner v. Klais and Co., Inc., 108 F.3d 86, 89 (6th Cir.
1997).
III.
ANALYSIS
A.
Motion to Dismiss RICO Claims for Failure to State a Claim Under Fed. R. Civ.
P. 12(b)(6) and 9(b) by Gunabalan, Michigan Visiting Physicians, Mundy and
Bio-Magnetic (ECF No. 20)
In this action, in addition to claims of common law fraud, unjust enrichment and claims for
declaratory relief, State Farm alleges claims under RICO, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c) and (d). Those
sections provide:
(c) It shall be unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise
engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to
conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s
affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.
(d) It shall be unlawful for any person to conspire to violate any of the provisions of
subsection (a), (b), or (c) of this section.
18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), (d). To establish a violation of this section of the RICO statute, plaintiff must
establish “(1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity.”
Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co., 473 U.S. 479, 496 (1985). “Racketeering activity consists of acts
which are indictable under a number of federal statutes listed in 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1)(B).” Heinrich
v. Waiting Angels Adoption Servs., 668 F.3d 393, 404 (6th Cir. 2012). Included among the
8
indictable offenses that satisfy the “predicate act” requirement is mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341,
1343, which Plaintiff relies on in this case to establish the alleged racketeering activity. To prove
mail fraud, Plaintiff must demonstrate (1) “a scheme to defraud,” (2) “use of the mails in furtherance
of the scheme,” and (3) “scienter . . . which is satisfied by showing the defendant acted either with
a specific intent to defraud or with recklessness . . . .” Heinrich, 668 F.3d at 404. State Farm alleges
that the Defendants, using the mails to submit hundreds of fraudulent claims and documentation
pursuant to a coordinated scheme to defraud State Farm, committed the predicate acts of mail fraud
knowing their submissions were false and/or fraudulent.
Gunabalan, Michigan Visiting Physicians, Mundy and Bio Magnetic move to dismiss State
Farm’s § 1962(c) RICO claim (Count II) for failure to state a claim arguing that: (1) the Sixth
Circuit’s decision in Jackson v. Sedgwick Claims Mgt. Servs., Inc., 731 F.3d 556 (6th Cir. 2013) (en
banc), cert. denied, 134 S.Ct. 2133 (2014), bars recovery under RICO in this action; (2) State Farm
fails to plausibly plead an enterprise; (3) State Farm fails to plausibly plead the distinct conduct of
the Defendants; (4) State Farm fails to plead mail fraud with particularity; and (5) State Farm’s §
1962(d) conspiracy claim (Count III) fails for these same reason.1
1.
Jackson does not bar recovery under RICO in this action.
Defendants argue that State Farm’s RICO claims are barred by the Sixth Circuit’s decision
in Jackson because State Farm fails to allege an “injury to business or property.” Jackson involved
the claims of a purported class of former employees of Coca Cola who were denied workers’
1
Also joining in this motion are: Pointe Physical Therapy (ECF No. 26); New Era Physical
Therapy, New Era PT Services, El-Sayed, Bazzi, Medical Evaluations, Beale and Hoban (ECF No.
28); Quiroga (ECF No. 32); Ruden (ECF No. 46). The Court’s disposition of the principal motion
also resolves all parties’ joinders in this motion.
9
compensation benefits for injuries suffered while employed by Coca Cola. Plaintiffs in Jackson
alleged that Sedgwick (Coca Cola’s third-party benefits claims administrator) retained certain “cutoff” doctors who examined Plaintiffs and, pursuant to a fraudulent scheme orchestrated by Coca
Cola and Sedgwick that utilized the mails, falsely reported to Sedgwick that Plaintiffs did not suffer
from a work related disability so that Sedgwick could deny or cease the payment of workers’
compensation benefit. 731 F.3d at 561. The Sixth Circuit, concluding that Plaintiffs’ claims, which
sought payment of benefits related to their injuries, were plainly derivative of the personal injuries
they suffered, held that Plaintiffs failed to allege “injury to business or property” as that phrase is
understood for purposes of RICO:
Courts interpreting RICO have remained faithful to this distinction by excluding
damages “arising directly out of” a personal injury, even though personal injuries
often lead to monetary damages that would be sufficient to establish standing if the
plaintiff alleged a non-personal injury. The reason why these expenses do not
constitute an injury to property is because a personal injury does not lead to “a
proprietary type of damage.” Although courts have used various terms to describe
the distinction between non-redressable personal injury and redressable injury to
property, the concept is clear: both personal injuries and pecuniary losses flowing
from those personal injuries fail to confer relief under § 1964(c).
731 F.3d at 565-66 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Finding that “the losses
[Plaintiffs] allege are simply a shortcoming in the compensation they believed they were entitled to
receive for a personal injury,” the Sixth Circuit concluded that such losses “do[] not constitute an
injury to ‘business or property’ under RICO.” Id. at 567.
By contrast, State Farm’s alleged injury derives not from personal injury but from business
transactions that resulted in a proprietary loss, i.e. the submission to it, and its payment of, allegedly
fraudulent claims. The Supreme Court has recognized that in general “[w]hen a commercial
enterprise suffers a loss of money it suffers an injury to both its ‘business’ and its ‘property.’”
10
Reiter v. Sonotone Corp., 442 U.S. 330, 339 (1979). As recognized by several courts around the
country and in this district, resolving this same challenge on indistinguishable facts, the type of
injury alleged by State Farm satisfies the RICO “business or property” injury requirement. See State
Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co. v. Universal Health Grp., Inc., No. 14-10266, 2014 WL 5427170, at *8
(E.D. Mich. Oct. 24, 2014) (“Jackson does not bar a corporation that sells insurance covering
personal injury claims from bringing a RICO suit, because the injuries alleged in relation to an
enterprise seeking fraudulent reimbursements for services performed are to the business or property
of the corporation.”); Allstate Ins. Co. v. Medical Evaluations, P.C., No. 13-14682, 2014 WL
2559230, at *1 (E.D. Mich. June 6, 2014) (“Unlike the employee-plaintiffs in Jackson, Allstate is
not seeking to recover for personal injuries in this action. . . . Allstate is seeking to recover for
alleged injuries to both its property and its business—injuries that arose when the Defendants
allegedly fraudulently induced Allstate to pay large volumes of dishonest claims.”); State Farm
Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Physiomatrix, Inc., No. 12-11500, 2014 WL 555199, at *2 (E.D. Mich. Feb.
12, 2014) (distinguishing Jackson and finding that “State Farm’s injuries arise from the payment of
allegedly fraudulent claims submitted by the Clinics . . . an injury [that] is clearly not “personal” and
is an injury to State Farm's “business or property.”) (citing Reiter, 442 U.S. at 339) (alteration
added); State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Kugler, No. 11-80051, 2011 WL 4389915, at * 10 (S.D.
Fla. Sept. 21, 2011) (“Because State Farm alleges it was the direct target and recipient of fraudulent
bills and related medical documentation submitted by defendants in connection with unnecessary
diagnostic tests and medical procedures allegedly performed by defendants throughout [the] course
of the fraudulent scheme alleged in the complaint, and that it was injured in its business or property
when it paid first and third party insurance claims on behalf of its insureds in reliance on those bills
11
and reports, the court finds the allegation of a cognizable economic injury which supports its
standing to sue under RICO.”) (alteration added).
2.
State Farm plausibly pleads an association-in-fact enterprise.
RICO makes it “unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise
engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or
participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of
racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). “The statute does not
specifically define the outer boundaries of the “enterprise” concept but states that the term ‘includes
any individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other legal entity, and any union or group
of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity.’ § 1961(4). This enumeration of
included enterprises is obviously broad, encompassing ‘any . . . group of individuals associated in
fact.’ Ibid.” Boyle v. United States, 556 U.S. 938, 944 (2009) (footnote omitted). “[A]n associationin-fact enterprise must have at least three structural features: a purpose, relationships among those
associated with the enterprise, and longevity sufficient to permit these associates to pursue the
enterprise’s purpose.” Id. at 946 (alteration added).
In attacking the Complaint for failure to adequately plead the purpose of the enterprise,
Defendants ignore several allegations of the Complaint, which of course the Court must accept as
true at this pleading stage. The Complaint alleges that the association-in-fact enterprise shared the
common purpose of submitting false claims to State Farm (Compl. ¶ 181) and further alleges facts
supporting the claim that the Defendants worked together, through referrals and utilization of
common billing services and forms, (Compl. ¶¶ 13-43, 72-79) to achieve that purpose. Defendants
insist that such coordination of effort would have been against each of the Defendants’ self-interest,
12
but of course this introduces facts outside those pleaded in the Complaint, matters that are not
properly considered at this pleading stage. The Complaint alleges in some detail the roles of each
of the Defendants in the RICO scheme to defraud: the Management Group controlled the other
Defendants, directing the Prescribing Clinics and Prescribing Physicians to steer patients to facilities
owned or controlled by them for unnecessary diagnostic tests; the Prescribing Clinics and
Prescribing Physicians evaluated patients and provided prescriptions for the medically unnecessary
physical therapy that was ultimately provided by the Treatment Facilities, and the Treatment
Facilities, central to the scheme, provided the unnecessary therapy and submitted the fraudulent bills
and documentation to State Farm for payment. The interrelationship of the entities is adequately
alleged and their respective roles in making the enterprise function adequately described.
As other Judges in this district have recognized when analyzing substantially similar
pleadings, such allegations are sufficient to plead an association-in-fact enterprise:
State Farm has sufficiently alleged the existence of an enterprise and that Dr. Abu
Farha participated in it. State Farm alleged (1) the purpose of the enterprise (the
submission of fraudulent claims); (2) the relationships between those associated with
the enterprise (the doctors, physical therapy clinics, and the personal injury attorneys
with whom they had quid pro quo cross-referral relationships); and (3) sufficient
longevity to permit the enterprise's purpose (from October 2007 to the present).
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Physiomatrix, Inc., No. 12-1150, 2013 WL 509284, at *5 (E.D.
Mich. Feb. 12, 2013). In accord Universal Health, 2014 WL 5427170, at * 4 (finding that State
Farm successfully pled an association-in-fact enterprise through allegations delineating the “specific
roles and relationships of the defendants,” alleging “an ongoing enterprise since at least 2007,” and
alleging “that it functioned for the common purpose of submitting fraudulent bills for
reimbursement”). See also Kugler, 2011 WL 4389915, at *6 (finding that State Farm’s complaint
plausibly alleged an association-in-fact enterprise where it described the “interrelationships between
13
each set of defendants and their respective roles in the scheme,” and also demonstrated how the
enterprise functioned with “sufficient longevity to permit its members to pursue the illicit purpose
of the enterprise”); Empire Title Servs., Inc. v. Fifth Third Mortg. Co., No. 10-2208, 2013 WL
1337629, at *6 (N.D. Ohio March 29, 2013) (noting that an association-in-fact can exist even though
the membership of the enterprise may fluctuate and the participants may vary). The Court concludes
that the Complaint adequately alleges an association-in-fact enterprise.
3.
The Complaint plausibly alleges that the Defendants conducted the affairs of the
enterprise.
RICO requires Plaintiffs to prove that the Defendants “conducted the affairs of the
enterprise” through the pattern of racketeering activity. The Supreme Court defined the contours
of this requirement in Reves v. Ernst & Young, 507 U.S. 170, 179 (1993), holding that “[i]n order
to ‘participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs,’ one must have some
part in directing those affairs.” The Sixth Circuit made clear in United States v. Fowler, 535 F.3d
408, 418 (6th Cir. 2008), that Reves does not require proof that the defendant had a “managing” role
in the enterprise. It is sufficient under Reves to allege that a defendant had some part in directing
the affairs of the enterprise “either by making decisions on behalf of the enterprise or by knowingly
carrying them out.” 535 F.3d at 418.
At this pleading stage, State Farm is required only to plausibly allege that each Defendant
“knowingly carried out” their part in the alleged scheme. It is clearly alleged in the Complaint how
each Defendant’s role is integral to the operation of the fraudulent payment submission scheme as
a whole. The common control by Gunabalan and the Management Group of the Prescribing Clinics
and Treatment Facilities is clearly alleged, as are the details of each entity’s role in conducting
illegitimate examinations, filling out fraudulent disability certificates, ordering and carrying out
14
medically unnecessary diagnostic tests. Without the Management Group directing the Defendants
through common ownership and control and providing important referrals on which the other
Defendants relied, and without the Prescribing Clinics engaging the Prescribing Physicians to write
the orders for the medically unnecessary services, ultimately provided by the Treatment Facilities
who could not provide the services without orders from the Prescribing Clinics and Physicians, and
without the role of the Treatment Facilities in finally submitting the false documentation and bills,
the goals of the enterprise could not be achieved. As stated in the Complaint:
¶ 180. Pointe, New Era I, New Era II, Choice, Mundy, Medical Evaluations,
Gunabalan, Quiroga, Ruden, Beale, Hoban, El-Sayed, Bazzi, and Bio-Magnetic
formed an association-in-fact “enterprise” (the “Treatment Enterprise”) as that term
is defined in 18 U.S.C. § 1961(4), that engages in, and the activities of which affect,
interstate commerce.
¶ 181. The members of the Treatment Enterprise are and have been joined in a
common purpose, have relationships with and among each other, and have associated
through time sufficient to permit those associated to pursue the enterprise’s purpose.
Pointe, New Era I, New Era II, Choice, Mundy, Medical Evaluations, Gunabalan,
Quiroga, Ruden, Beale, Hoban, El-Sayed, Bazzi, and Bio-Magnetic forged symbiotic
relationships and needed and depended upon the participation of the others to
accomplish their common purpose of defrauding State Farm through fraudulent
personal injury claims. Specifically, the Treatment Facilities, Pointe, New Era I and
New Era II, profited by billing State Farm for the physical therapy and occupational
therapy but depend on prescriptions issued by the Prescribing Clinics and the
Prescribing Physicians. The Prescribing Clinics and Prescribing Physicians profit by
fraudulently billing State Farm directly for each instance in which they purportedly
examine patients who they treat and benefit when the Treatment Facilities refer the
patients back to them for continuing treatment and re-diagnosis. The Management
Group participates in each of these activities, own and/or control the Treatment
Facilities and the Prescribing Clinics, profit from the treatment provided at the
Treatment Facilities and the Prescribing Clinics, and funnel patients into treatment
at the Treatment Facilities. Additionally, Gunabalan himself purports to treat
patients, prescribe therapy and other medical services. The MRI Facility profited by
billing State Farm for medically unnecessary MRI tests performed on patients of the
Treatment Facilities and depend on prescriptions issued by the Prescribing Clinics
and the Prescribing Physicians. The participation and role of each of the Defendants
was necessary to the success of the scheme. Neither Pointe, New Era I, New Era II,
Choice, Mundy, Medical Evaluations, Gunabalan, Quiroga, Ruden, Beale, Hoban,
15
El-Sayed, Bazzi, nor Bio-Magnetic was capable of carrying out the scheme without
the participation of the others.
This is not “group pleading” as Defendants suggest. Discreet paragraphs of the Complaint
further delineate exactly the offending conduct of each individual Defendant. See, e.g. ¶¶ 6-7, 1327, 49-55, 67-80, 74-79, 81-142, 161-66, 167-71. Each of the Defendants is on fair notice of what
it is they are alleged to have done for their part in carrying out the alleged fraudulent scheme to
obtain payment for medically unnecessary services and tests. Their claims that they were just
carrying on their normal business routines, independent of one another, of course are of no moment
at this pleading stage. See, e.g., Universal Health, 2014 WL 5427170, at *5 (finding that State Farm
plausibly alleged the participation of each of the defendants in the conduct of the affairs of the
enterprise where the complaint alleged “the course of conduct each defendant engaged in with
regard to the enterprise”); Kugler, 2011 WL 4389915, at *6 (finding that allegations that individual
doctors knowingly rendered unnecessary testing and procedures and submitted fraudulent bills
through their employers, and that other defendants participated through their ownership interests in
these defendants sufficiently explained “how each individual defendant participated in either the
operation or management of the enterprise for purpose of satisfying Reves); State Farm Mut. Auto.
Ins. Co. v. Valery Kalika, No. 04-4631, 2006 WL 6176152, at *17 (E.D.N.Y. March 16, 2006)
(allegation that defendant physician “was a vital component in the scheme to treat insureds with
unnecessary tests and then providing false documentation to support the tests” sufficient to satisfy
Reves). The Court concludes that the Complaint plausibly alleges that each of the Defendants
participated in the conduct of the affairs of the enterprise.
4.
State Farm’s Complaint pleads mail fraud with sufficient particularity.
State Farm’s Complaint alleges that the racketeering activity in this case consists of predicate
16
acts of mail fraud, i.e. the submission through the mail of fraudulent bills and documentation. To
prove mail fraud, Plaintiff must demonstrate (1) “a scheme to defraud,” (2) “use of the mails in
furtherance of the scheme,” and (3) “scienter . . . which is satisfied by showing the defendant acted
either with a specific intent to defraud or with recklessness . . . .” Heinrich, 668 F.3d at 404. State
Farm alleges that the Defendants, using the mails to submit hundreds of fraudulent claims and
documentation pursuant to a coordinated scheme to defraud State Farm, committed the predicate acts
of mail fraud knowing their submissions were false and/or fraudulent.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b)’s heightened pleading standard applies to Plaintiffs’
mail fraud claims, and requires that “[i]n alleging fraud or mistake, a party must state with
particularity the circumstances constituting the fraud or mistake. Malice, intent, knowledge, and
other conditions of a person’s mind may be alleged generally.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b).
“When
pleading predicate acts of mail and wire fraud, in order to satisfy the heightened pleading
requirements of Rule 9(b), a plaintiff must ‘(1) specify the statements that the plaintiff contends
were fraudulent, (2) identify the speaker, (3) state where and when the statements were made, and
(4) explain why the statements were fraudulent.’” Heinrich, 668 F.3d at 404 (quoting Frank v. Dana
Corp., 547 F.3d 564, 570 (6th Cir. 2008)). “Rule 9(b) requires not only specifying the false
statements and by whom they were made but also identifying the basis for inferring scienter.” Id.
at 406 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Although Rule 9(b) heightens the pleading
standard, it always must be read “against the backdrop” of Fed. R. Civ. P. 8, which aims simply to
put a defendant “on notice” of the claims against him so that he may reasonably respond the
allegations of the complaint:
Nonetheless, “[w]hen faced with a motion to dismiss for failure to plead fraud ‘with
particularity’ as required by Rule 9(b) . . ., ‘a court must factor in the policy of
17
simplicity in pleading which the drafters of the Federal Rules codified in Rule 8.’ ”
Whalen v. Stryker, Corp., 783 F. Supp. 2d 977, 982 (E.D. Ky. 2011) (quoting
Michaels Building Co. v. Ameritrust Co., N.A., 848 F.2d 674, 679 (6th Cir. 1988)).
“Rule 9(b) is not to be read in isolation, but is to be interpreted in conjunction with
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8.” United States ex rel. Bledsoe v. Community
Health Systems, Inc., 501 F.3d 493, 503 (6th Cir. 2007) (quoting Michaels, 848 F.2d
at 679). “When read against the backdrop of Rule 8, it is clear that the purpose of
Rule 9 is not to reintroduce formalities to pleading, but is instead to provide
defendants with a more specific form of notice as to the particulars of their alleged
misconduct.” Ibid. “The threshold test is whether the complaint places the defendant
on sufficient notice of the misrepresentation allowing the defendants to answer,
addressing in an informed way plaintiff[']s claim of fraud.” Coffey v. Foamex L.P.,
2 F.3d 157, 162 (6th Cir. 1993) (quotation marks omitted). “So long as [the plaintiff]
pleads sufficient detail—in terms of time, place and content, the nature of a
defendant's fraudulent scheme, and the injury resulting from the fraud—to allow the
defendant to prepare a responsive pleading, the requirements of Rule 9(b) will
generally be met.” United States ex rel. SNAPP, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co., 532 F.3d
496, 504 (6th Cir. 2008).
JAC Holding Enterprises, Inc. v. Atrium Capital Partners, LLC, 997 F. Supp. 2d 710, 726 (E.D.
Mich. 2014). In a complex case, involving multiple actors and spanning a significant period of time,
where there has been no opportunity for discovery, “the specificity requirements of Rule 9(b)
[should] be applied less stringently.” Id. at 727 (quotation marks and citation omitted) (alteration
in original). “‘It is a principle of basic fairness that a plaintiff should have an opportunity to flesh
out her claim through evidence unturned in discovery. Rule 9(b) does not require omniscience;
rather the Rule requires that the circumstances of the fraud be pled with enough specificity to put
defendants on notice as to the nature of the claim.’” Id. (quoting Williams v. Duke Energy Int’l,
Inc., 681 F.3d 788, 803 (6th Cir. 2012)).
Defendants argue that State Farm has failed to plausibly plead a pattern of racketeering
activity because it has not pled acts of mail fraud with the particularity required by Rule 9(b). The
Court rejects this argument. As Judge O’Meara observed in Physiomatrix, analyzing similar
allegations of mail fraud with a substantially similar quantum of particularity as State Farm has
18
offered here:
In the context of a RICO action, State Farm has alleged fraud with sufficient
particularity. “In complex civil RICO actions involving multiple defendants, Rule
9(b) does not [] require that the ‘temporal or geographic particulars of each mailing
made in furtherance of the fraudulent scheme be stated with particularity, but only
that the plaintiff delineate, with adequate particularity in the body of the complaint,
the specific circumstances constituting the overall fraudulent scheme.’”
Physiomatrix, 2013 WL 509284, at *5 (quoting Aiu Ins. Co. v. Olmecs Medical Supply, Inc., No. 042034, 2005 WL 3710370 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 22 2005) (omitting internal citation) (alteration added).
Judge Levy adopted this same reasoning when rejecting defendants’ challenge to the similarly pled
mail fraud allegations in Universal Health:
Plaintiff has provided a nearly ninety-page description of how the defendants’
alleged mail fraud worked, coupled with charts demonstrating the types of claims
submitted as a part of this purportedly fraudulent enterprise. Each defendant has
received sufficient notice of the misrepresentations it is alleged to have made. A
party that causes a fraudulent bill to be submitted to an insurer may be as liable for
fraud as the person whose name was on the fraudulent submission.
As it did in [Physiomatrix], plaintiff has provided a listing of several hundred claims
which each defendant is alleged to have contributed to or orchestrated. Each of these
actions ultimately contributes to the fraudulent submission to plaintiff, in which each
member has contributed in whole or in part to one of the hundreds of false
representations specifically referenced in the complaint. Accordingly, plaintiff has
adequately pled that all defendants either executed or caused the execution of the
mail fraud scheme at issue here.
Universal Health, 2014 WL 5427170, at *4-5 (citations omitted) (alteration added).
Here, as in Physiomatrix and Universal Health, Plaintiff has sufficiently put each Defendant
on notice of the misrepresentations allegedly made so that each can reasonably know where to begin
the task of responding to the allegations. The following allegations in the Complaint flesh out the
details of the alleged scheme to defraud, the use of the mails in furtherance of that scheme and the
facts from which scienter can be inferred:
19
¶ 173. Defendants intentionally and knowingly made false and fraudulent statements
of material fact to State Farm by submitting, and causing to be submitted, hundreds
of fraudulent bills and related documentation that contained false representations of
material fact.
¶ 174. The false representations of material fact include that (a) the Prescribing
Physicians and physicians employed by and associated with the Prescribing Clinics
legitimately examined and prescribed physical therapy and occupational therapy that
was medically necessary and tailored to the unique needs of each patient, when in
fact they did not do so; (b) the Prescribing Physicians and physicians employed by
and associated with the Prescribing Clinics legitimately determined that patients
were disabled; (c) the Treatment Facilities provided treatments that were medically
necessary and tailored to the unique needs of each patient, when in fact they were
not, if they were provided at all; (d) both physical therapy and occupational therapy
services were necessary and performed when in fact they were not; (e) MRI tests
were ordered that were medically necessary and tailored to the unique needs of each
patient, when in fact they were not; and (f) the services were lawfully rendered and
were reimbursable, when in fact they violated Michigan’s prohibition on
self-referrals. The fraudulent bills and dates of first mailings are described in Exs.
1, 2 and 27. Representative samples of these bills and supporting documentation are
attached as Exs. 13, 28 and 29.
¶ 175. Defendants knew that the above-described misrepresentations made to State
Farm relating to the purported examination, evaluation, diagnoses, and treatment of
patients were false and fraudulent when they were made.
¶ 182. Pointe, New Era I, New Era II, Choice, Mundy, Medical Evaluations,
Gunabalan, Quiroga, Ruden, Beale, Hoban, El-Sayed, Bazzi, and Bio-Magnetic are
or have been employed by and associated with the Treatment Enterprise.
¶ 183. Pointe, New Era I, New Era II, Choice, Mundy, Medical Evaluations,
Gunabalan, Quiroga, Ruden, Beale, Hoban, El-Sayed, Bazzi, and Bio-Magnetic have
knowingly conducted and/or participated, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of the
Treatment Enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity consisting
of repeated violations of the federal mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, based upon
the use of United States mails to submit to State Farm hundreds of fraudulent claims,
consisting of bills and supporting documentation that were fraudulent in that they
were for examinations, diagnoses, MRIs, and treatments, which were not performed,
were performed pursuant to a Predetermined Protocol that was designed and carried
out to enrich Defendants by maximizing collection of the patients’ No-Fault
Benefits, and not to benefit the patients. The false representations of material fact
include that (a) the Prescribing Physicians and physicians employed by and
associated with the Prescribing Clinics legitimately examined and prescribed
physical therapy and occupational therapy that was medically necessary and tailored
20
to the unique needs of each patient, when in fact they did not do so; (b) the
Prescribing Physicians and physicians employed by and associated with the
Prescribing Clinics legitimately determined that patients were disabled; (c) the
Treatment Facilities provided treatments that were medically necessary and tailored
to the unique needs of each patient, when in fact they were not, if they were provided
at all; (d) both physical therapy and occupational therapy services were necessary
and performed when in fact they were not; (e) MRI tests were ordered that were
medically necessary and tailored to the unique needs of each patient, when in fact
they were not; and (f) the services were lawfully rendered and were reimbursable,
when in fact they violated Michigan’s prohibition on self-referrals.
¶ 184. The fraudulent bills and corresponding mailings which comprise the pattern
of racketeering activity identified through the date of this Complaint are described,
in part, in Exs. 1, 2 and 27. Representative samples of these bills and supporting
documentation are attached as Exs. 13, 28 and 29.
Paragraphs 85 and 112 of the Complaint allege particular patient testimony in support of the
allegation that some services were billed for but never in fact provided.
The Charts attached as Exhibits to the Complaint, referenced in these paragraphs of the
Complaint, identify the Defendant involved in a particular course of treatment and submission to
State Farm and reveal when the false services were rendered with respect to the identified patients.
The Charts identify a representative fraudulent mailing by date for each RICO event. These Charts
also reveal the dates of service that are alleged to have involved fraudulent conduct, i.e. they identify
the first and last dates of service and the total number of visits involved, which State Farm alleges
identifies the entire range of services, each one of which they claim to have been a part of the
fraudulent scheme. Defendants question how Plaintiff intends to establish that each and every visit
in the treating time frame involved a fraudulent service provided pursuant to the alleged
predetermined protocol. But that is what has been alleged and this is a factual matter of proof that
is not appropriately addressed at this pleading stage. What is important here is that the allegations
of the Complaint, read in conjunction with the detail provided in the Exhibits, contain sufficient
21
factual content to put Defendants on notice of the fraud that they are alleged to have committed or
of which they are alleged to have been a part.
The fact that Defendants may have to read the allegations of the Complaint in conjunction
with the detail provided in the Exhibits does not render the pleading insufficient to put them on
notice of the fraud that they are alleged to have committed or of which they are alleged to have been
a part. “Each of these actions ultimately contributes to the fraudulent submission to plaintiff, in
which each member has contributed in whole or in part to one of the hundreds of false
representations specifically referenced in the complaint.” Universal Health, 2014 WL 5427170, at
* 3. See also Physiomatrix, 2013 WL 509284, at *5 (“In addition to the list of allegedly fraudulent
claims, State Farm has specified the overall fraudulent scheme in the complaint, thereby satisfying
the pleading requirements.”); Allstate Ins. Co. v. Linea Latina De Accidentes, Inc., 781 F. Supp. 2d
837, 847 (D. Minn. 2011) (“Where a plaintiff alleges a systematic practice of the submission of
fraudulent claims over an extended period of time, the plaintiff need not allege the specific details
of every fraudulent claim. Instead, the plaintiff must allege some representative examples of the
fraudulent conduct with particularity.”) (citing United States ex rel. Joshi v. St. Luke's Hosp., Inc.,
441 F.3d 552, 557 (8th Cir. 2006)); Allstate Ins. Co. v. Lyons, 843 F. Supp. 2d 358, 372-73
(E.D.N.Y. 2012) (finding that in the RICO context, a pleading that explains the details of the
allegedly fraudulent scheme and provides several representative examples of the claims at issue
satisfies the pleading requirement of Rule 9(b)). State Farm’s Complaint provides a level of detail
that is sufficient at the pleading stage to satisfy the particularity requirement of Rule 9(b).
5.
State Farm has adequately pled a RICO conspiracy.
Defendants only argument for dismissal of State Farm’s RICO conspiracy claim is that
22
because State Farm has failed to plausibly plead one or more elements of its § 1962(c) claim, its §
1962(d) claim must also be dismissed. Because the Court concludes, as discussed supra, that State
Farm has plausibly pled a § 1962(c) claim, it likewise concludes that it has adequately pled a RICO
conspiracy. See Lyons, 843 F. Supp. 2d at 374 (finding that because substantive RICO allegations
are legally sufficient to state a claim, conspiracy claim likewise survives motion to dismiss).
B.
Motion to Dismiss Time-Barred Claims by Gunabalan, Michigan Visiting
Physicians, Mundy and Bio-Magnetic (ECF No. 21)2
Defendants argue that some portion of State Farm’s RICO, common law fraud, unjust
enrichment and declaratory relief claims are barred by the applicable statutes of limitation.
1.
The Court cannot conclude, at this pleading stage, that the RICO claims are
time-barred as a matter of law.
“RICO does not provide an express statute of limitations for actions brought under its civil
enforcement provision.” Agency Holding Corp. v. Mally-Duff & Associates, Inc., 483 U.S. 143, 146
(1987). A four-year statute of limitations has been judicially adopted as “the most appropriate
limitations period for RICO actions.” Id. at 156. The issue raised by Defendants in this motion to
dismiss relates to the proper accrual rule to be applied to the 4-year RICO limitations period.
Defendants urge the Court to apply an injury occurrence accrual rule, and argue that State Farm’s
claims accrued when it paid the allegedly fraudulent claims and that, therefore, any claims for
payments made before April 29, 2010 (4 years before the Complaint was filed on April 29, 2014)
are time-barred. The Defendants concede that the only cases in the Sixth Circuit that have addressed
2
Joining in: Pointe Physical Therapy (ECF No. 26); New Era Physical Therapy, New Era PT
Services, El-Sayed, Bazzi, Medical Evaluations, Beale and Hoban (ECF No. 28); Quiroga (ECF No.
32); Ruden (ECF No. 46). The Court’s disposition of the principal motion also resolves all parties’
joinders in this motion.
23
this issue have applied a discovery accrual rule to RICO claims, finding that “[t]he limitations period
for RICO claims accrues when a plaintiff knew or should have known of an injury.” Taylor Group
v. ANR Storage Co.., 24 F. App’x 319, 325 (6th Cir. 2001). See also Sims v. Ohio Cas. Ins. Co., 151
F. App’x 433, (6th Cir. 2005) (“The limitations period for RICO claims accrues when a plaintiff
knew or should have known of an injury.”) (citing Rotella v. Wood, 528 U.S. 549, 554-55 (2000)).
Defendants argue, however, that these cases are unpublished and Defendants suggest that when the
Supreme Court faces this issue head on, it will likely adopt an injury occurrence rule, and therefore
urge this Court to do so now. In Fremont Reorganizing Corp. v. Duke, 811 F. Supp. 2d 1323 (E.D.
Mich. 2011), Judge Lawson faced this same argument from defendants there and concluded that he
was bound to follow the rule as presently articulated by the Sixth Circuit:
The defendant further argues that the injury occurrence rule for when a cause of
action accrues applies to civil RICO claims, as, according to the defendants, the
Supreme Court will likely adopt this rule when it considers the issue. However, the
rule in the Sixth Circuit, at least for the present, is that the statute of limitations does
not begin to run until “a party knew, or through exercise of reasonable diligence
should have discovered, that the party was injured by a RICO violation.” Sims v.
Ohio Cas. Ins. Co., 151 Fed. Appx. 433, 435 (6th Cir. 2005) (citing Rotella v. Wood,
528 U.S. 549, 553–55, 120 S.Ct. 1075, 145 L.Ed.2d 1047 (2000)); see also Taylor
Group v. ANR Storage Co., 24 Fed. Appx. 319, 325 (6th Cir. 2001) (“The limitations
period for RICO claims accrues when a plaintiff knew or should have known of an
injury.”) ( citing Rotella, 528 U.S. at 554–55, 120 S.Ct. 1075). The plaintiff alleges
that it did not discover the fraudulent scheme until 2007. That allegation is sufficient
to preclude dismissal at this stage of the proceedings on statute of limitations
grounds.
811 F. Supp. 2d at 1340.
So too here. Even were the Court persuaded by Defendants’ “passionate” appeal for
application of the injury occurrence rule, the Court is persuaded, if not compelled, by the decisions
of the Sixth Circuit also to apply the injury discovery rule.
24
Judge Levy applied this same accrual rule in Universal Health, holding that under the “knew
or should have known” accrual rule, Plaintiffs’ RICO claims survived the challenge at the pleading
stage where their claim that they learned of the fraud only shortly before filing suit could not be
defeated at the pleading stage by defendants’ argument that they “should” have known. 2014 WL
5427170, at *7. Defendants similarly argue here that even under the injury discovery rule, RICO
claims preceding April 29, 2010 are time-barred because State Farm was required under the NoFault act to require “reasonable proof” of a claim before payment of that claim, and therefore
“should” have discovered each alleged fraudulent submission at the time each claim was submitted
for payment. The Court rejects such an argument, at least at this pleading stage, where the very
proof of reasonableness is itself alleged to have been fraudulent. See, e.g., Complaint ¶ 152, alleging
that based upon Defendants’ material misrepresentations, State Farm did not discover and could not
have discovered the fraud scheme until it reviewed hundreds of bills and documents which, taken
together, revealed the fraudulent scheme.
2.
State Farm plausibly pleads fraudulent concealment and therefore the common
law fraud and unjust enrichment claims survive Defendants’ motion to dismiss
on statute of limitations grounds.
The “statute of limitations is tolled where the defendants engaged in conduct masking the
existence of claims.” State of Mich. ex rel. Kelley v. McDonald Dairy Co., 905 F. Supp. 447, 450
(W.D. Mich. 1995). This rule is codified in Michigan law at Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.5855 which
provides:
If a person who is or may be liable for any claim fraudulently conceals the existence
of the claim or the identity of any person who is liable for the claim from the
knowledge of the person entitled to sue on the claim, the action may be commenced
at any time within 2 years after the person who is entitled to bring the action
discovers, or should have discovered, the existence of the claim or the identity of the
person who is liable for the claim, although the action would otherwise be barred by
25
the period of limitations.
“Plaintiffs must allege three elements to establish fraudulent concealment []: 1) wrongful
concealment by the defendants of their actions; 2) failure of the plaintiffs to discover the operative
facts that are the basis of the cause of action within the statute of limitations; and 3) plaintiffs’
exercise of due diligence until discovery of the facts.” Kelley, 905 F. Supp. at 451 (alteration
added). State Farm has plausibly alleged fraudulent concealment. First, State Farm alleges that the
fraudulent bills and documentation appeared legitimate on their face but that Defendants knew the
bills and documentation were false, thus adequately pleading wrongful concealment. State Farm
alleges that the manner in which the bills were submitted also concealed the fraud, i.e. they appeared
facially legitimate, they were submitted over time and from multiple entities whose
interconnectedness had been disguised. “The second and third elements of fraudulent concealment
are best addressed together.” Id. at 453. State Farm alleges that it reasonably assumed that the
Defendants were complying with their ethical obligation to act honestly and with integrity and
therefore could not have discovered the fraudulent scheme until it was able to review hundreds of
bills and documentation together, “revealing the predetermined protocol.” Compl. ¶ 150, 152.
Without expressing any opinion as to the merit of these allegations, the Court finds them sufficient,
at this pleading stage, to plausibly allege a claim of fraudulent concealment. See Universal Health,
2014 WL 5427170, at *7 (“It is premature at this stage of the litigation to dismiss a claim on statute
of limitations grounds where plaintiff has plausibly pled that its claim arose within the statute of
limitations.”) Because fraudulent concealment operates to toll the statute of limitations on both
Plaintiffs’ common law fraud and unjust enrichment claims, giving State Farm two years from the
time that it reasonably could have discovered the alleged fraud to file its claims, the Court denies
26
the motion, at this stage, to dismiss these claims as time-barred.
3.
State Farm’s declaratory judgment claim also survives the pleading challenge.
Defendants’ argue that the declaratory judgment claims fail because the underlying claims
for substantive relief must fail. Because the Court concludes that the underlying claims do not fail
substantively at this pleading stage, it denies the motion to dismiss the declaratory judgment claims.
C.
Defendant Pointe Physical Therapy, LLC’s Motion to Dismiss the Complaint
Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. (9)(b) and 12(b)(6) (ECF No. 23)3
Pointe files this motion: (1) repeating the arguments made by the Gunabalan Defendants
regarding the pleading sufficiency of the fraud allegations of the Complaint, (2) arguing that the
punitive damages claim must be dismissed because punitive damages are not allowed under
Michigan law, (3) seeking dismissal of the declaratory judgment claim because it is vague, (4)
arguing that Plaintiff lacks standing to assert claims based on alleged violations of the Michigan
self-referral law, and (5) seeking dismissal of Plaintiff’s unjust enrichment claim because it arises
from an express contract. For the reasons that follow, the Court DENIES this motion.
1.
State Farm’s fraud claims are alleged with sufficient particularity.
As the Court discussed supra in section IIIA4, State Farm has pled its fraud claims with
sufficient particularity to put each of the Defendants on notice as to the claims that are made against
them and to enable them to prepare their defense to those claims. More particularly responding to
the alleged pleading deficiencies raised in the Pointe motion, the Defendants have again failed to
demonstrate that the allegations fail to apprise them of the claims against them.
3
Also joining in this motion are: Gunabalan, Bio-Magnetic, Michigan Visiting Physicians, Mundy
(ECF No. 27); New Era Physical Therapy, New Era PT Services, El-Sayed, Bazzi, Medical
Evaluations, Beale and Hoban (ECF No. 28); Quiroga (ECF No. 32); Ruden (ECF No. 46). The
Court’s disposition of the principal motion also resolves all parties’ joinders in this motion.
27
Charts 1 and 2 attached as Exhibits to the Complaint identify 209 “RICO Events” which
include, as to each “RICO Event,” the claim number, the Prescribing Clinic and/or Prescribing
Physician, the first and last dates of service at the Treatment Facilities, the duration of the treatment,
the date on which a bill for services was mailed. Additional Exhibits to the Complaint reference the
same “RICO Event” numbers, giving the Defendants all of the information needed to discern which
claims are involved, which Defendants are allegedly involved as to each RICO Event, which
treatments are in question, and which bills are claimed to fraudulent. State Farm does not have to
prove its claims in the Complaint and supporting documentation. It only has to put the Defendants
on notice of the claims with sufficient particularity that the Defendants can identify the claims and
begin to prepare their defense.
The Court concludes that the allegations of the Complaint, along with the supporting
Exhibits and Charts (and in some instances proposed witness testimony, see, e.g. ¶¶ 85, 112, 174,
183), sufficiently apprise the Defendants of the claims involved (Claim Numbers are provided) and
the nature of the services allegedly either not provided or not medically necessary that were
provided. Specifically addressing Pointe’s challenges, the Complaint (¶¶ 5, 65, 83-86) alleges that
after Pointe hired an occupational therapist in 2010, the Prescribing Physicians began falsely
diagnosing head injuries so that they could order, and Pointe could administer, additional and
unnecessary occupational therapy. In support, Exhibit 3 to the Complaint lists 28 “RICO Events”
by number, which can be further identified by reference to Exhibits 1 and 2, which State Farm
claims involve false diagnoses of head injuries for the purpose of ultimately billing State Farm for
unnecessary therapy. Defendants may dispute the substance of these allegations, but the Complaint
and the Exhibits make it clear what claims are involved, which Defendants are involved and give
28
the Defendants sufficient notice of those claims so that they can prepare their defense. This is all
that is required at this pleading stage. Similarly, with regard to the allegations that after Pointe hired
an occupational therapist in 2010, the Prescribing Physicians and Prescribing Clinics began
prescribing unnecessary occupational therapy in addition to physical therapy (Complaint ¶¶ 4, 83-86,
116), these claims are readily identifiable by reference to Exhibit 1 to the Complaint.
Defendants argue that State Farm has not provided the type of detail found sufficiently
particularized by Judge Lawson in State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Qadir, No. 11-11442 (E.D.
Mich. 2010) (ECF No. 64, Defs.’ Reply 5, .) In fact, however, the very detail that Defendants claim
is lacking is present in State Farm’s Complaint: each fraudulent claim (by number), the first and last
dates of service (in this case, unlike in Qadir, State Farm alleges that all services provided in the
relevant time frame, and all bills submitted for those services, were fraudulent), the services
allegedly provided, the date of a representative billing, and the details of the allegedly illegitimate
practice (i.e. that the duration and types of treatments billed for were not provided or unnecessary).
State Farm does not have to establish at this point that in fact the services were not provided, or that
they were unnecessary. These allegations the Court must accept as true at this pleading stage. What
is significant at this stage, and for purposes of this motion, is that the Defendants are sufficiently
apprised of the claims that are alleged to have been fraudulent, the dates of service and the nature
of services rendered that State Farm claims were either excessive or not provided. Defendants of
course can attempt to demonstrate, as the case proceeds, that prescribing the same treatment and the
same modalities for each patient, and for the durations described, was a legitimate form of treatment
in each instance, i.e. that the alleged “predetermined protocol” was in fact a perfectly legitimate
treatment plan. It is sufficient for our present purposes that State Farm identifies 209 RICO Events
29
with sufficient particularity and alleges with specificity the reasons why they were false, i.e. ¶¶ 44,
174, 183. Defendants can determine from this the nature of the claims against them and where to
begin to prepare their defense that each of the identified claims was not false or fraudulent.4
2.
Michigan law does allow for recovery of exemplary damages.
State Farm’s counsel acknowledged at the hearing that it had improperly labeled these
damages as punitive when in fact, under Michigan law, they are considered exemplary. Michigan
courts distinguish between “punitive” and “exemplary” damages:
The terms “punitive” and “exemplary” damages have frequently been confused or
used interchangeably. However, the focus of the two damages is different. Punitive
damages are awarded solely to punish or to make an example of a defendant because
of the malice or recklessness with which he acted. Wronski v. Sun Oil Co., 89 Mich.
App. 11, 27, 279 N.W.2d 564 (1979), lv. den. 407 Mich. 863 (1979), Ray v. Detroit,
67 Mich. App. 702, 704, 242 N.W.2d 494 (1976), lv. den. 397 Mich. 828 (1976).
Exemplary damages are awarded for injury to feelings and for the sense of indignity
and humiliation suffered by a plaintiff because of injury maliciously and wantonly
inflicted. Ray, supra. In short, the former focuses on “punishing” the defendant and
the latter focuses on “compensating” the plaintiff.
American Central Corp. v. Stevens Van Lines, 103 Mich. App. 507, 514-15 (Mich. Ct. App. 1981).
Similarly, the Michigan Court of Appeals, in Jackovich v. Gen’l Adjustment Bureau, Inc., 119 Mich.
App. 221 (1982) reiterated this maxim of Michigan law:
“The terms ‘exemplary’ damages, ‘punitive’ damages and ‘vindictive’ damages
have frequently been confused or used interchangeably. However, in Michigan only
exemplary damages which are compensatory in nature are allowable. They are
recoverable for injury to feelings and for the sense of indignity and humiliation
resulting from injury maliciously and wantonly inflicted. Recovery is restricted to
the party who has received the physical injury. They are never allowed, however, for
the purpose of punishing or making an example of a defendant. Smith v Jones, 382
Mich 176; 169 NW2d 308 (1969) (concurring opinion of Justice Adams), Ross v
Leggett, 61 Mich 445; 28 NW 695 (1886), McFadden v Tate, 350 Mich 84; 85
4
Defendants argue that the charts attached as Exhibits to Plaintiff’s Complaint violate HIPPA. This
is a red herring and is irrelevant to the issues before the Court.
30
NW2d 181 (1957), Detroit Daily Post Co v McArthur, 16 Mich 447 (1868), Hyatt
v Adams, 16 Mich 180 (1867).”
119 Mich. App. at 235-36 (quoting Ray v. Detroit, 67 Mich. App. 702, 704, 242 N.W.2d 494
(1976)).
State Farm urges the Court to consider the allegations of the Complaint, specifically
paragraph 178, which complains of Defendants’ “wilful, reckless, and/or wanton conduct,” rather
than the label that State Farm improperly placed on its pleading. These are adjectives that Michigan
courts have invoked when defining conduct that can serve as the basis for a claim for exemplary
damages. Defendants do not dispute that “exemplary” damages are allowed. The Court concludes
that although labeled as “punitive,” the nature of the special damages State Farm seeks fits
comfortably within the definition of exemplary damages under Michigan law and therefore are
properly pled in the Complaint.
3.
State Farm’s Declaratory Judgment claim is not impermissibly vague.
Defendants argue that State Farm’s declaratory judgment claim is impermissibly vague and
should be dismissed because State Farm does not identify the claims that are at issue in this Count.
The Defendants argue that the declaratory judgment Counts could be read as precluding the
Defendants from submitting any bills to State Farm in the future. State Farm responds that
Defendants are not precluded from submitting bills for payment. State Farm argues in response that
it seeks a declaratory ruling that it need not pay any bills for the claims identified on the Exhibits
to the Complaint or any bills on claims submitted during the pendency of this case that State Farm
is able to prove at trial are false and fraudulent.
This Court already addressed this argument to a degree in its prior Opinion and Order, noting
that a substantial controversy of sufficient immediacy has been alleged in this Count. State Farm
31
has clarified that it “is seeking declaratory relief only with respect to ‘State Farm’s obligation as to
pending bills and does not seek a declaration that Bio-Magnetic and the Treatment Facilities cannot
submit future bills.’” (ECF No. 70 at 16) (quoting ECF No. 49, State Farm’s Resp. 22 n. 13.). In
fact, Defendants do not address this argument in their Reply.
4.
State Farm does not attempt to assert a claim under the Michigan self-referral
laws.
Defendants argue that State Farm does not have standing to assert a claim under Michigan
self-referral law. True but irrelevant. The parties are in agreement that State Farm cannot assert a
private cause of action against the Defendants under Michigan’s self-referral laws. State Farm never
attempted to assert such a claim. State Farm argues that one category of fraudulent statements made
by Defendants is comprised of alleged misrepresentations that the services for which they sought
reimbursement were lawfully rendered and reimbursable when in fact, so State Farm alleges, the
services actually were provided in violation Michigan’s self-referral laws. State Farm argues that
when Defendants submitted documentation and bills for payment that represented that the charges
and documentation complied with the law, these statements were false representations of fact and
were therefore predicate acts of mail fraud.
Defendants argue that State Farm cannot rely on these mailings as RICO predicate acts
because violation of the Michigan self-referral laws is not among the statutes listed in RICO.
Defendants argue that allegations that a defendant violated a statute not enumerated among those
listed in the RICO statute cannot form the basis for a RICO claim. But Defendants argument misses
the mark. State Farm alleges predicate acts of mail fraud based on the false and fraudulent
documents and bills submitted by the Defendants which sought payment for services that they
represented had been lawfully rendered when in fact providing such services in some instances
32
violated Michigan’s self-referral laws. State Farm is not attempting to assert a claim for relief under
the Michigan statute prohibiting self-referrals; it is pointing to alleged violations of that statute,
which are necessarily misrepresented when Defendants assert that their services have been lawfully
rendered, as part of its premise for its fraud and racketeering claims.
Defendants argue that the Michigan Supreme Court’s decision in Miller v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
481 Mich. 601 (2008) precludes State Farm’s reliance on a violation of Michigan’s self-referral laws
as a basis to deny a claim and therefore precludes reliance on such violations as a basis for a
predicate act under RICO or for a common law fraud claim. In Miller the Michigan Supreme Court
held that because the Michigan Business Corporations Act (“BCA”) contained an irrebuttable
presumption that “the mere filing of articles of incorporation constitutes ‘conclusive evidence’ of
the corporation’s legality,” Allstate did not have standing to challenge plaintiffs’ claims for payment
on the basis that they provided services in violation of the BCA.
Id. at 611-12 (emphasis in
original). The court interpreted this “irrebuttable presumption of legality” as an express directive
from the Legislature that only the Attorney General could bring a challenge to corporate status and
thus Allstate lacked statutory standing to assert a claim under the BCA and therefore was precluded
from using a violation of the BCA as an affirmative defense to deny payment of a claim. Id. at 612.
Michigan courts, however, have distinguished Miller and have held that violations of the Michigan
Public Health Code, of which the self-referral laws are a part, do not contain such an irrebuttable
presumption against the insurer’s statutory standing and therefore can be a basis for an insurer to
challenge the lawfulness of services rendered to deny a claim. See, e.g., Zigmond Chiropractic, P.C.
v. AAA Michigan, No. 304756, 2013 WL 3836238, lv denied, 495 Mich. 992 (2014) (distinguishing
Miller and finding nothing in the Public Health Code that contained an irrebuttable presumption of
33
lawfulness that would preclude AAA from litigating the Public Health Code-related claims and
finding that a no-fault insurer may contest the lawfulness of services allegedly provided by health
care professionals as beyond the scope of their licensing under the Public Health Code) (citing
Psychosocial Serv. Assoc's, PC v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 279 Mich. App. 334, 337–345,
761 N.W.2d 716 (2008); Cherry v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 195 Mich. App. 316, 318–320,
489 N.W.2d 788 (1992)). State Farm’s common law fraud and RICO claims are not premised on
State Farm’s ability to challenge Defendants’ corporate status under the BCA. Accordingly, Miller
is unpersuasive.
Because Defendants cannot support their claim that State Farm would be precluded from
challenging claims for payment based on services provided by the Defendants that were rendered
in violation of Michigan’s self-referral laws, the Court concludes that nothing precludes State Farm
from relying on these alleged violations as a basis for their assertion that the Defendants’ bills and
documentation were false and fraudulent when Defendants represented that the services were
rendered in compliance with all applicable laws. In accord Physiomatrix, 2013 WL 509284, at *2
(finding defendants’ argument that State Farm did not have standing to bring a private right of action
under the Michigan Insurance Code to be a “red herring” because State Farm was not seeking relief
under the Michigan Insurance Code but brought common law fraud and unjust enrichment claims).
5.
State Farm’s unjust enrichment claim will go forward.
As Judge Levy noted in Universal Health, because State Farm denies the existence of an
express contract between itself and Defendants, State Farm is permitted to plead unjust enrichment.
“‘[U]nless it is undisputed that there is an express contract between the same parties covering the
same subject matter, State Farm is entitled to plead unjust enrichment as an alternative claim of
34
relief.’” Universal Health, 2014 WL 5427170, at *11 (quoting Physiomatrix, 2013 WL 509284, at
*5) (alteration in original).
D.
New Era Physical Therapy, PC, New Era PT Services Inc., Sherif El-Sayed,
Amale Bazzi, Medical Evaluations, PC, James Beale, Jr., and Sean Hoban
(collectively “the New Era Defendants” move to dismiss pursuant to 12(b)(6)
and 9(b). (ECF No. 25.)5
The New Era Defendants file this motion arguing (1) that State Farm’s Complaint is
precluded by provisions of the Michigan Insurance Code, (2) that State Farm’s Complaint must be
dismissed because the legal theories underlying the Complaint are based on statutes that do not
create a private cause of action, and (3) that the Complaint fails to plead fraud with sufficient
particularity.
1.
Nothing in the Michigan Insurance Code precludes State Farm’s claims.
Defendants premise this argument by characterizing State Farm’s Complaint as an
“intimidation suit” against health care providers who specialize in treating automobile accident
victims. (ECF No. 25, 3-5.) Defendants allege that “the insurance industry has targeted providers
who specialize in providing services to auto accident victims and has made self-serving
determinations of fraud and abuse on the part of such providers as a mechanism of waging economic
warfare against them.” Id. at 6. Of course none of these allegations are found on the face of
Plaintiff’s Complaint and cannot be considered by the Court on this motion to dismiss.
Defendants cite three cases which they assert support the contention that courts have
“recognized the nature of these suits and have not countenanced them.” Id. at 5. None of these
5
Joining in: Pointe Physical Therapy (ECF No. 26); Gunabalan, Bio-Magnetic, Michigan Visiting
Physicians, Mundy (ECF No. 27); Quiroga (ECF No. 32); Ruden (ECF No. 46). The Court’s
disposition of the principal motion also resolves all parties’ joinders in this motion.
35
cases stands for the proposition that the Michigan Insurance Code precludes an insurer from
maintaining a fraud suit against a health care provider. In Allstate Ins. Co. v. A&A Medical
Transport Servs., Inc., No. 260766, 2007 WL 162477 (Mich. Ct. App. Jan. 23, 2007), the court of
appeals addressed the question presented in Miller, supra, and concluded that a health care
provider’s failure to properly incorporate did not relieve an insurer of the obligation to make no-fault
payments. As discussed supra, State Farm does allege such a claim here and Medical Transport,
like Miller, is inapt. In Allstate Ins. Co. v. Lewerenz, No. 260766, 2006 WL 2986611 (Mich. Ct.
App. Oct. 19, 2006), the court of appeals reviewed the trial court’s grant of the health care
providers’ motion for summary disposition. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s
determination that plaintiff failed to present sufficient documentary evidence to establish a genuine
issue of material fact as to plaintiff’s claims that defendants fraudulently billed the plaintiff for
services not rendered or for unnecessary services. Id. at *8-9. Nothing in this case stands for the
proposition that such a fraud claim is precluded under the Michigan Insurance Code. Finally, in
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Global Medical Billing, Inc., No. 09-14975, 2011 WL 721299 (E.D. Mich. Feb.
23, 2011), Judge Zatkoff found that Allstate, whose fraud allegations were based on claims for
which they had received reimbursement from the Assigned Claims Facility (“ACF”), lacked
constitutional standing because it failed to allege injury. Id. at *3. Judge Zatkoff also noted that
Allstate did not have standing to bring a claim under Mich. Comp. Laws § 500.4511, which sets
forth the criminal sanctions for a fraudulent insurance act. Id. On appeal, the Sixth Circuit affirmed
the trial court’s ruling that plaintiff lacked constitutional standing as to claims for which they had
received reimbursement (a point which plaintiff in fact conceded) and refused to reverse Judge
Zatkoff’s denial of plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration, in which plaintiff attempted to assert, for
36
the first time, fraud claims based on non-reimbursed claims. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Global Medical
Billing, Inc., 520 F. App’x 409, 412-13 (6th Cir. 2013). The Sixth Circuit found that plaintiff’s
failure to assert this “potentially winning argument” at the proper time, or to move to amend to add
such a claim in the trial court, precluded plaintiff from “receiving a second bite at the apple” by
raising it on appeal. Id. at 409-10. Global Medical in no way supports Defendants’ argument that
the Michigan Insurance Code precludes State Farm’s claims in this action, which allege common
law fraud, RICO violations and unjust enrichment and do not proceed under any provision of the
Michigan Insurance Code.
The Court is also persuaded to reject this argument based on the numerous substantially
similar fraud actions that are pending in this district, several of which are discussed supra, none of
which has found such actions to be barred by provisions of the Michigan Insurance Code. See, e.g.,
Physiomatrix, Universal Health, Medical Evaluations, supra and State Farm Mut. Ins. Co. v. Qadir,
No. 11-11442 (E.D. Mich. 2011).
2.
The absence of a private cause of action under the Michigan Insurance Code,
Michigan’s Anti-Solicitation Statute and the federal Stark Law does not
preclude State Farm from bringing its common law fraud, RICO and unjust
enrichment claims.
As discussed supra, the fact that no private cause of action is available under the statutes
which State Farm alleges in the Complaint that Defendants have violated is irrelevant. State Farm
is not attempting to assert claims under any of these of statutes. See, e.g. Physiomatrix, 2013 WL
509284, at *2 (acknowledging that the Michigan Insurance Code does not provide a private right
of action for State Farm’s claim of insurance fraud but finding this argument “a bit of a red herring”
because State Farm did not seek relief under M.C .L. 500.4511 but rather brought common law fraud
and unjust enrichment claims).
37
3.
State Farm’s Complaint pleads fraud with sufficient particularity.
The Court has already discussed this issue supra (see sections IIIA4 and IIIC1) in some
detail. The New Era Defendants present nothing new that would persuade the Court to reach a
different result. The Defendants’ argument that disputes regarding “medical necessity” are matters
of opinion and therefore cannot be the basis for a fraud claim has necessarily been rejected by
implication by every one of the multiple courts, discussed supra, that have permitted such claims
to proceed. See also, e.g., Allstate Ins. Co. v. Palterovich, 653 F. Supp. 2d 1306, 1323 (S.D. Fla.
2009) (finding allegations of false and misleading statements concerning third parties’ medical
conditions alleged misstatements concerning material facts). The New Era Defendants have not
cited one case in which a RICO claim or a common law fraud claim by an insurer against a health
care provider has been dismissed based upon a finding that “medical necessity” is a matter of
opinion and therefore statements regarding medical necessity cannot form the basis for a fraud
claim. Accordingly, and in view of the number of cases that have proceeded on such theories, the
Court rejects this argument.
E.
Gunabalan, Michigan Visiting Physicians, Mundy and Bio Magnetic’s Motion
to Strike from the Complaint, Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(f), Allegations
Pertaining to Non-Parties Michigan Bio-Tech, Maple Millennium and Michigan
Orthopedic Surgeons pursuant to 12(f) (ECF No. 22).6
Defendants claim in this motion that State Farm has “gratuitously” inserted material into the
Complaint regarding non-parties Michigan Bio-Tech Partners, LLC (“Biotech”), Maple Millennium
Medical Center, LLC (“Millennium”) and Michigan Orthopedic Surgeons, P.C. (“Orthopedic
6
Joining in: Pointe Physical Therapy (ECF No. 26); New Era Physical Therapy, New Era PT
Services, El-Sayed, Bazzi, Medical Evaluations, Beale and Hoban (ECF No. 28). The Court’s
disposition of the principal motion also resolves all parties’ joinders in this motion.
38
Surgeons”), who are not defendants in this case and are not alleged to have participated in the
alleged fraudulent scheme. Defendants move, under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(f), to strike allegations
relating to these parties. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(f) states that “[t]he court may strike
from a pleading an insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous
matter.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(f).
“While this Court has wide discretion to strike ‘redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or
scandalous’ material from a pleading, courts tend to disfavor motions to strike and they are
infrequently granted, because a motion to strike ‘proposes a drastic remedy.’” L and L Gold Assoc.,
Inc. v. American Cash for Gold, LLC, No. 09-10801, 2009 WL 1658108, at *1 (E.D. Mich. June 10,
2009) (quoting Stanbury Law Firm v. IRS, 221 F.3d 1059, 1063 (8th Cir. 2000)). “An allegation is
‘impertinent’ or ‘immaterial’ when it is not relevant to the issues involved in the action.
‘Scandalous’ generally refers to any allegation that unnecessarily reflects on the moral character of
an individual or states anything in repulsive language that ‘detracts from the dignity of the court.’”
Id. (quoting Cobell v. Norton, 225 F.R.D. 1, 5 (D.D.C. 2003)).
Here State Farm alleges, and Defendants do not deny, that Defendant Gunabalan has an
ownership interest in Biotech, Millennium and Orthopedic Surgeons. The allegations of the
Complaint relating to Biotech are as follows:
132. Gunabalan and physicians acting under his direction at the Prescribing Clinics
referred patients of the Prescribing Clinics to the MRI Facility in which Gunabalan
has an ownership interest, namely Bio-Magnetic. In addition, Gunabalan and the
Prescribing Physicians and Clinics also sent patients to another MRI Facility that
Gunabalan owns and/or controls, Michigan Biotech Partners LLC (“Michigan
Biotech”). Michigan Biotech operates under an assumed name, The Imaging Center,
though it submits bills under the name Michigan Biotech and from Bio-Magnetic’s
address at 30781 Stephenson Highway, Madison Heights, Michigan. See Ex. 24.
Michigan Biotech d/b/a The Imaging Center and Bio-Magnetic are part of a single
group of MRI Facilities referenced on a common webpage and on reports of MRI
39
results, with the webpage and National Plan and Provider Enumeration System
identifying Gunabalan as President of the group. See Ex. 25.
164. Defendant Ram Gunabalan resides in and is a citizen of Michigan. Gunabalan
has been a licensed medical doctor in Michigan since 1973. At all relevant times, he
owned and/or controlled the Treatment Facilities and Prescribing Clinics, and thus,
directed their activities and the activities of those who were employed by and
associated with them. In addition, Gunabalan owns Bio-Magnetic, the MRI Facility
where many of the patients who purported to treat at the Prescribing Clinics and
Treatment Facilities were sent for MRIs. Gunabalan also owns Michigan Biotech,
another MRI facility which submits bills from Bio-Magnetic’s address and to which
Gunabalan and the Prescribing Physicians and Clinics also sent patients.
Additionally, Gunabalan also has a financial interest in Orthopedic Surgeons P.C.
and Maple Millennium Medical Center, LLC, which purported to provide spinal
injections to patients who treated at the Prescribing Clinics and Treatment Facilities.
See Ex. 26.
The additional allegations of the Complaint relating to Millennium and Orthopedic Surgeons
are as follows:
141. In addition to the provision of unnecessary MRIs, patients who treated at the
Treatment Facilities and received pain management injections received these
injections through entities owned or affiliated with Gunabalan, namely Orthopedic
Surgeons P.C. and Maple Millennium Medical Center, LLC.
142. Thus, Gunabalan profited not only from the patients’ physical and occupational
therapy at the Treatment Facilities and medical examinations performed at the
Prescribing Clinics, but also from spinal injections performed at Orthopedic
Surgeons and Maple Millennium.
Certainly there is nothing “scandalous” about these allegations, nor can the Court conclude
at this point that they are completely irrelevant to the issues in this case. Biotech, while not named
as a Defendant, is alleged to have a been a referral facility for allegedly unnecessary MRI tests
ordered by the Prescribing Physicians and Clinics. The Complaint also alleges that Biotech sends
bills from the same mailing address as Bio-Magnetic, the Defendant MRI facility owned by
Gunabalan. With regard to Millennium and Orthopedic Surgeons, the Complaint alleges that
40
patients who treated at the Prescribing Clinics and Treatment Facilities received pain injections at
theses facilities, in which Gunabalan has an ownership interest. State Farm need not establish at this
stage of the litigation how it intends to utilize such non-party evidence at trial but the Court
concludes that the allegations are of sufficient potential relevance that it will exercise its discretion
to deny the motion to strike. See, e.g., SKS Constructors, Inc. v. Drinkwine, 458 F. Supp. 2d 68, 80
(E.D.N.Y. 2006) (finding “that allegations of essentially the same scheme perpetrated on unnamed
parties may be alleged to support a claim of closed-ended continuity”).
F.
Defendants Ruden and Quiroga’s Motions to Dismiss (ECF Nos. 32, 46)
On April 23, 2015, the Court held a continuation of the motion hearing on the motions to
dismiss to permit Defendants Ruden and Quiroga an opportunity to argue their individual motions.
Defendant Ruden proceeds in this matter pro se and Defendant Quiroga is represented by counsel
different from counsel representing the other moving Defendants. Thus, both were given an
opportunity to speak in support of their motions. Both Ruden and Quiroga steadfastly deny the
allegations of the Complaint as directed at them and their arguments focused on what they perceived
as the paucity of allegations against them. They deny that they prescribed treatments pursuant to
predetermined protocol. They maintain that their diagnoses were independently arrived at with
respect to each individual patient based on that patient’s unique presentation and that their
prescriptions were in all instances consistent with the standard of care.
There will be a time and a place for these Defendants to present evidence on these issues but
unfortunately at this stage of the proceedings these factual defenses cannot be considered by the
Court. For purposes of addressing these motions to dismiss, the Court must accept as true the
allegations of the Complaint. The Court finds that, for the same reasons discussed supra with
41
respect to the other individual moving Defendants, Ruden and Quiroga are not entitled to dismissal
of this action against them at this stage of the proceedings.
The allegations against Ruden are contained in paragraphs 1, 29, 37, 41, 42, 99-101, 161,
162, 163 and 168 of the Complaint and against Quiroga in paragraphs 1, 70, 84, 96-98, 161, 162 and
167. Individual RICO events involving Ruden are found in Exhibit 2 to the Complaint and
individual RICO events involving Quiroga are found in both Exhibits 1 and 2 to the Complaint. The
Complaint alleges a connection between these Defendants and the Management Group and
Treatment Facilities. The Complaint alleges that the Management Group steers patients to them and
alleges that these Defendants participate in the alleged fraudulent scheme by treating and ordering
therapy and/or tests pursuant to the alleged predetermined protocol. See, e.g. ¶¶ 42, 70, 84, 96-98,
99-101. Specifically, the Complaint alleges that these Defendants facilitated the submission of false
and fraudulent documentation that resulted in Pointe and New Era’s submission of fraudulent bills
as set forth on Exhibits 1 and 2 to the Complaint.
The law does not require that the individual Defendants were the masterminds of the alleged
scheme, only that their conduct contributed to the overall fraudulent scheme. Fowler, 535 F.3d at
418 (finding that it is sufficient to allege that a defendant had some part in directing the affairs of
the enterprise “either by making decisions on behalf of the enterprise or by knowingly carrying them
out.”). Nor is there any requirement that the Defendants have been affiliated with the scheme from
its inception or that they have been involved for any specific length of time. See Universal Health,
2014 WL 5427170, at *5 (“There is no requirement under RICO that an enterprise remain static
from the moment of its inception; members may come and go, and those who joined even years after
the enterprise began are just as liable for their unlawful acts under RICO as founding members.”)
42
(citing Boyle, 556 U.S. at 952).
To reiterate the Court’s reasoning supra, the Charts attached as Exhibits to Plaintiff’s
Complaint, that are further referenced in the paragraphs of the Complaint, identify Ruden and
Quiroga as individuals who submitted the fraudulent bills and documentation submitted to State
Farm and reveal when the alleged fraudulent statements were made with respect to the identified
patients. As the Court noted supra, Defendants question how Plaintiff intends to establish that each
and every visit in the treating time frame involved a fraudulent service provided pursuant to the
alleged predetermined protocol. But that is what has been alleged and this is a factual matter not
appropriately addressed at this pleading stage. What is important here is that the allegations of the
Complaint, read in conjunction with the detail provided in the Exhibits, contains sufficient factual
content to put Defendants on notice of the fraud that they are alleged to have committed or of which
they are alleged to have been a part. “Each of these actions ultimately contributes to the fraudulent
submission to plaintiff, in which each member has contributed in whole or in part to one of the
hundreds of false representations specifically referenced in the complaint.” Universal Health, 2014
WL 5427170, at * 3. See also Physiomatrix, 2013 WL 509284, at *5 (“In addition to the list of
allegedly fraudulent claims, State Farm has specified the overall fraudulent scheme in the complaint,
thereby satisfying the pleading requirements.”); Allstate Ins. Co. v. Linea Latina De Accidentes, Inc.,
781 F. Supp. 2d 837, 847 (D. Minn. 2011) (“Where a plaintiff alleges a systematic practice of the
submission of fraudulent claims over an extended period of time, the plaintiff need not allege the
specific details of every fraudulent claim. Instead, the plaintiff must allege some representative
examples of the fraudulent conduct with particularity.”) (citing United States ex rel. Joshi v. St.
Luke's Hosp., Inc., 441 F.3d 552, 557 (8th Cir. 2006)); Allstate Ins. Co. v. Lyons, 843 F. Supp. 2d
43
358, 372-73 (E.D.N.Y. 2012) (finding that in the RICO context, a pleading that explains the details
of the allegedly fraudulent scheme and provides several representative examples of the claims at
issue satisfies the pleading requirement of Rule 9(b)). State Farm’s Complaint provides a level of
detail as to Defendants Ruden and Quiroga that is sufficient at the pleading stage to satisfy the
particularity requirement of Rule 9(b). Taken together, these allegations are sufficient, as discussed
at great length supra, to state plausible claims for relief against Ruden and Quiroga.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court DENIES Defendants’ motions to dismiss (ECF Nos. 20,
21, 23, 25, 32, 46) and DENIES Defendants’ motion to strike (ECF No. 22).
s/Paul D. Borman
PAUL D. BORMAN
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Dated: May 27, 2015
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
The undersigned certifies that a copy of the foregoing order was served upon each attorney or party
of record herein by electronic means or first class U.S. mail on May 27, 2015.
s/Deborah Tofil
Case Manager
44
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?