Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Health and Welfare Fund v. Health Special Risk Inc et al
Filing
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MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER granting in part and denying in part 42 Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim filed by Federal Insurance Company, Health Special Risk Inc, Ace American Insurance Company, Markel Insurance Company. Th e court directs plaintiff to submit within 21 days a letter brief that states its position regarding whether the remaining subrogation claim should be dismissed without prejudice to refiling in state court. (Ordered by Chief Judge Sidney A Fitzwater on 10/18/2012) (Chief Judge Sidney A Fitzwater)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
DALLAS DIVISION
CENTRAL STATES, SOUTHEAST
AND SOUTHWEST AREAS HEALTH
AND WELFARE FUND, an Employee
Welfare Benefit Plan, by Howard
McDougall, a Trustee thereof,
in his representative capacity,
Plaintiff,
VS.
HEALTH SPECIAL RISK, INC., et al.,
Defendants.
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Civil Action No. 3:11-CV-2910-D
MEMORANDUM OPINION
AND ORDER
In this action by an ERISA1-regulated employee welfare benefit plan, the court must
again decide whether plaintiff is seeking relief that is unavailable under § 502(a)(3) of
ERISA, 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). Concluding that plaintiff is seeking relief that is unavailable
for all but its subrogation claim, the court grants in part and denies in part defendants’ motion
to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
I
Because this case is the subject of a prior opinion, Central States, Southeast &
Southwest Areas Health & Welfare Fund v. Health Special Risk, Inc., 2012 WL 1570981
(N.D. Tex. May 4, 2012) (Fitzwater, C.J.) (“Central States I”), the court need not recount the
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Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq.
background facts at length. The court will instead state the background facts and procedural
history that are necessary to understand the present decision.
Plaintiff Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Health and Welfare Fund
(“Central States”) is an ERISA-regulated employee welfare benefit plan that provides health
and welfare benefits, including medical and hospital benefits, to participants in the Teamsters
Union and their dependents.2 Cent. States I, 2012 WL 1570981, at *1. Three of the four
defendants—Markel Insurance Company, Federal Insurance Company, and Ace American
Insurance Company (collectively, the “Insurer Defendants”)—are insurance companies that
provided accident medical insurance to various institutions and organizations. Id.
Central States alleges that, under the terms of its Health and Welfare Fund Plan
Document (“Plan”), the Insurer Defendants were required to pay the medical expenses of 11
individuals (“Insureds”) who were insured by both Central States and the Insurer Defendants
for accidental injuries. Id. When the Insurer Defendants refused to pay the medical expenses
of the Insureds, maintaining that the policies they had issued provided excess coverage only,
Central States paid the Insureds’ covered expenses and then sought reimbursement from the
Insurer Defendants through defendant Health Special Risk, Inc. (“HSR”), a third-party claims
administrator for the Insurer Defendants. HSR denied Central States’s demands for
reimbursement. Id.
2
In deciding defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the court construes the amended
complaint in the light most favorable to Central States, accepts as true all well-pleaded
factual allegations, and draws all reasonable inferences in its favor. See, e.g., Lovick v.
Ritemoney Ltd., 378 F.3d 433, 437 (5th Cir. 2004).
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Central States then filed the instant lawsuit, seeking a declaratory judgment, an
injunction prohibiting HSR and the Insurer Defendants from violating the Plan’s choice of
benefits (“COB”) provisions, restitution, and an equitable lien and imposition of a
constructive trust. Id. The court granted the Insurer Defendants’ motion to dismiss all of
Central States’s claims. Id. at *4. Under the authority of Great-West Life & Annuity
Insurance Co. v. Knudson, 534 U.S. 204 (2002), the court held that Central States could not
recover monetary relief under ERISA § 502(a)(3), and because Central States requested legal
rather than equitable relief, Central States was not entitled to recover under § 502(a)(3). Id.
at *3-4. Although the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss, it permitted Central
States to replead. Id. at *4.
In its amended complaint, Central States adds the allegation that, for each Insured, it
filed a notice of lien on HSR to assert a lien to the extent of benefits Central States paid or
will pay for the Insured, “thereby establishing identifiable funds, measured by Central
States’s lien and thus traceable to the Defendants.” Am. Compl. ¶ 48. Central States also
asserts six claims. Count I (declaratory judgment) is largely identical to the declaratory
judgment claim asserted in its complaint, except that Central States seeks a declaration that
the Insurer Defendants are liable to pay the Insureds’ “unpaid and future covered medical
expenses.” Id. ¶ 54. Counts II (declaratory judgment), III (seeking restitution of payments
made), and IV (seeking an equitable lien and constructive trust) are nearly identical to the
declaratory judgment, restitution, and equitable lien and constructive trust claims asserted
in the complaint. Central States includes in the amended complaint a new subrogation claim,
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by which it seeks to recover medical benefits that it paid for its insureds, “which they have
a right to collect from the Defendants, under policies of insurance issued by the Defendants,
providing coverage to them for accidental injuries,” id. ¶ 74, and a new claim for unjust
enrichment under federal common law.
Defendants again move to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), arguing as before that Central
States has failed to state claims on which relief can be granted under ERISA. The court
applies the standards for deciding this motion that are set out in Central States I. See Cent.
States I, 2012 WL 1570981, at *2.
II
A
Defendants maintain that, because counts I-IV of the amended complaint are the same
claims as alleged in the complaint, the court should dismiss counts I-IV of the amended
complaint for the same reasons as stated in Central States I. Central States responds that,
because in count I it seeks a declaration only regarding unpaid and future bills, the court
should follow the approach taken in Auto Owners Insurance Co. v. Thorn Apple Valley, Inc.,
31 F.3d 371 (6th Cir. 1994), and Winstead v. Indiana Insurance Co., 855 F.2d 430 (7th Cir.
1988). As to counts II, III, and IV, Central States contends that its new allegation that it filed
notices of liens on HSR establishes that the Insurer Defendants are in possession of
identifiable funds. It maintains that defendants are “analogous to trustees” and have been
unjustly enriched by their refusal to pay the Insureds’ medical bills. P. Br. 9.
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B
The court addresses first defendants’ motion to dismiss count I. In Central States I
the court explained why the holdings of Thorn Apple Valley and Winstead do not inform the
court’s decision in this case. See Cent. States I, 2012 WL 1570981, at *4 n.7 The allegations
of the amended complaint do not change the court’s conclusion that these cases are
inapposite.
To the extent Central States argues that, by limiting count I to a declaratory judgment
action that seeks only “unpaid and future covered medical expenses,” Am. Compl. ¶ 54, it
has somehow converted its request for “‘an injunction to compel the payment of money’”
into an equitable claim, the court disagrees. See Cent. States I, 2012 WL 1570981, at *3
(quoting Knudson, 534 U.S. at 210). In Knudson the Court noted that “an injunction to
compel the payment of money past due under a contract, or specific performance of a past
due monetary obligation, was not typically available in equity.” Knudson, 534 U.S. at 21011 (emphasis added). As to requests for an injunction to compel specific performance, the
Court stated that
[t]hose rare cases in which a court of equity would decree
specific performance of a contract to transfer funds were suits
that, unlike the present case, sought to prevent future losses that
either were incalculable or would be greater than the sum
awarded. For example, specific performance might be available
to enforce an agreement to lend money when the unavailability
of alternative financing would leave the plaintiff with injuries
that are difficult to value; or to enforce an obligor’s duty to
make future monthly payments, after the obligor had
consistently refused to make past payments concededly due, and
thus threatened the obligee with the burden of bringing multiple
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damages actions. Typically, however, specific performance of
a contract to pay money was not available in equity.
Id. at 211 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Central States does not allege that
it requires specific performance to prevent future losses that are either incalculable or would
be greater than the sum awarded. Id. Accordingly, as before, the court holds that “Central
States’s request for declaratory judgment relief is essentially indistinguishable from a
demand for payment and does not constitute the type of equitable relief § 502(a)(3) requires.”
Cent. States I, 2012 WL 1570981, at *3 (citing Knudson, 534 U.S. at 210-11; Amschwand
v. Spherion Corp., 505 F.2d 342, 348 n.7 (5th Cir. 2007)).
C
The court next turns to Central States’s arguments regarding counts II, III, and IV of
the amended complaint. Central States has added the allegation that it filed notices of liens
on HSR to the extent of benefits it paid or will pay on behalf of the Insureds. Citing CIGNA
Corp. v. Amara, ___ U.S. ___, 131 S. Ct. 1866 (2011), Central States argues that defendants
are “analogous to trustees” and that Central States is thus entitled to seek a monetary remedy
against defendants “based on their misconduct of refusing to pay bills they were required to
pay.” P. Br. 9. Central States posits that, by refusing to make payments they were obligated
to pay, defendants “came into constructive possession of funds which belong to Central
States and which were established by Central States’s Notices of Liens.” Id. at 11-12.
In CIGNA plan beneficiaries sued CIGNA when it changed the nature of its basic
pension plan to provide beneficiaries with less generous benefits and failed to provide
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beneficiaries with proper notice of the changes. CIGNA, 131 S.Ct. at 1870. The Supreme
Court held that because the case concerned a suit by a beneficiary “against a plan fiduciary
(whom ERISA typically treats as a trustee) about the terms of a plan (which ERISA typically
treats as a trust),” it was the type of lawsuit that “before the merger of law and equity, [the
beneficiaries] could have brought only in a court of equity, not a court of law.” Id. at 1879.
It accordingly held that various equitable remedies were available to the district court under
§ 502(a)(3), including ordering the plan administrator to pay to already-retired beneficiaries
money owed to them under the plan as reformed by the court. Id. at 1880. The Court
explained that
the fact that this relief takes the form of a money payment does
not remove it from the category of traditionally equitable relief.
Equity courts possessed the power to provide relief in the form
of monetary “compensation” for loss resulting from a trustee’s
breach of duty, or to prevent the trustee’s unjust enrichment.
Id. (citation omitted).
Unlike the plaintiffs in CIGNA, who were plan beneficiaries suing their own plan,
Central States has failed to plausibly allege a fiduciary relationship between itself and any
of the defendants. The filing of notices of liens on HSR does not convert HSR or the Insurer
Defendants into trustees such that HSR or the Insurer Defendants would have owed a
fiduciary duty to Central States. The holding of CIGNA is therefore inapposite. Because
Central States has alleged no other new facts relevant to counts II, III, or IV of the amended
complaint, the court dismisses these counts.
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III
The court next addresses count VI of the amended complaint, in which Central States
asserts a claim for unjust enrichment. In support of this claim, Central States again argues
that the defendants are “trustees,” and it urges the court to expand the statutory remedy to
include unjust enrichment under the rationale of CIGNA. P. Br. 18. Apparently in the
alternative, Central States requests that the court fashion a common law remedy to “fill the
gap” in ERISA coverage “to address unjust enrichment by private insurance companies” and
to prevent defendants from receiving a “windfall and escap[ing] any liability based upon their
improper actions.” Id. at 19.
For the reasons explained above, see supra § II(C), Central States has not plausibly
alleged that defendants are “trustees” such that a claim alleging unjust enrichment might be
considered to seek an equitable remedy under the Supreme Court’s holding in CIGNA, 131
S.Ct. at 1879. Nor has Central States alleged a claim for equitable relief by seeking an
“identifiable fund in the possession of the defendants . . . created by their refusal to pay the
Insured’s medical bills.” P. Br. 19. As the court explained in Central States I,
Central States paid the Insureds’ covered medical expenses
directly to the Insureds’ physicians, hospitals, or other providers.
Central States argues that because the Plan’s COB provisions
placed primary responsibility for providing benefits on the
Insurer Defendants, the money Central States paid on behalf of
the Insureds should have been paid by defendants. But the
funds Central States seeks to recover are not . . . funds that have
been paid to the defendants that, in good conscience, belong to
Central States. Rather, the money at issue here has been paid by
Central States to the third party health care providers. As
defendants point out, “no Defendant received any money or
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property from the Fund, and no Defendant received the specific
sums of money that are at issue in th[e] Complaint.” Ds. Br. 8.
Central States’s claims against defendants are essentially claims
for money damages. Central States is not trying to make a claim
to a specific fund or to property that is in defendants’
possession; instead, it is seeking to impose personal liability on
defendants for their failure to honor the Plan’s COB provisions.
Cent. States I, 2012 WL 1570981, at *4 (emphasis in original). For the reasons explained
in Central States I, Central States’s claim for unjust enrichment is a legal claim for which
Central States cannot recover under ERISA § 502(a)(3). Id. at *4.
Nor is this court permitted, under Cooperative Benefit Administrators, Inc. v. Ogden,
367 F.3d 323 (5th Cir. 2004), to fashion a common law remedy that would permit Central
States to recover on its unjust enrichment theory. In Ogden an ERISA plan sued its
beneficiary after she received a lump sum award of social security benefits but refused to
reimburse the plan for benefit “overpayments.” Id. at 326. The plan sought equitable relief
under § 502(a)(3) and asserted a federal common law claim of unjust enrichment. Id. at 328.
In considering whether the plan could recover on its federal common law claim of unjust
enrichment, the Ogden court explained “that federal common law may be applied to fill
‘minor gaps’ in ERISA’s text, as long as the federal common law rule created is ‘compatible
with ERISA’s policies.’” Id. at 329 (citations omitted). It noted, however, that “federal
courts do not have authority under ERISA to create federal common law when that statute
‘specifically and clearly addresses the issue before the court.’” Id. at 330 (brackets and
citations omitted). As to the ERISA plan’s attempt to recover on its unjust enrichment claim,
the court held:
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Congress, in drafting § 502(a)(3)(B) to allow only “equitable
relief,” specifically contemplated the possibility of extending to
plan fiduciaries a right to sue a participant for money damages
and chose instead to limit fiduciaries’ remedies to those
typically available in equity. As ERISA’s text “specifically and
clearly addresses” the issue whether . . . a plan fiduciary . . . has
a right to pursue a claim for legal relief against [its beneficiary],
there is no “gap” in ERISA on this question and thus no basis
for granting [the fiduciary] a federal common law remedy.
Id. at 332.
Central States argues that Ogden should not bar its claim because “[i]f there is no
statutory claim to allow a welfare benefit plan to address unjust enrichment by private
insurance companies, then a common law claim is appropriate to fill the gap because, without
the creation of the common law remedy, the Plan would be left with no remedy.” P. Br. 19.
This argument—that the court should permit Central States to recover on its claim pursuant
to court-created “federal common law” because the statute and cases interpreting the statute
expressly foreclose this type of relief—is unconvincing. As explained in Ogden, because
ERISA specifically limits the remedies available to plan fiduciaries to equitable relief, there
is simply “no ‘gap’ in ERISA on this question and thus no basis for granting [Central States]
a federal common law remedy.” Ogden, 367 F.3d at 332. Accordingly, the court grants
defendants’ motion to dismiss count VI of the amended complaint.
IV
Finally, the court addresses count V—Central States’s claim for subrogation, in which
it “asserts . . . the Insured[s’] rights against the Insurer Defendants based upon [the Insureds’]
rights to coverage under insurance policies issued by the Insurer Defendants.” P. Br. 15.
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Central States argues that its subrogation rights “allow[] Central States to recover, in an
identifiable amount, medical benefits[] Central States paid for its Covered Individuals, which
they have a right to collect from the Defendants, under policies of insurance issued by the
Defendants, providing coverage to them for accidental injuries.” Am. Compl. ¶ 74.
Defendants move to dismiss this claim, arguing that Central States has not stated a claim for
equitable relief because it has no equitable lien by agreement with any defendant and because
no defendant is in possession and control of specifically identifiable funds belonging in good
conscience to Central States.
ERISA § 503(a)(3) limits the relief available to a fiduciary seeking to enforce the
terms of the plan. See ERISA § 503(a)(3). But an ERISA plan suing a third party as
subrogee of its insureds is not similarly limited by § 503(a)(3), and, in its capacity as
subrogee, may bring legal claims for damages against the third party. This is because, as
subrogee, the ERISA plan is not suing as an ERISA plan fiduciary, but instead is stepping
into the shoes of its insureds. See, e.g., Atteberry v. Memorial-Hermann Healthcare Sys.,
405 F.3d 344, 349 (5th Cir. 2005) (in connection with payment of death benefits pursuant to
ERISA plan, estate of decedent contractually subrogated its claim against third-party
tortfeasor to ERISA plan such that ERISA plan was legally entitled to stand in the shoes of
the estate and could prosecute and settle the estate’s claims against third-party tortfeasor);
see also, e.g., Reinhart Cos. Emp. Benefit Plan v. Vial, 2011 WL 976505, at *3 n.4 (W.D.
Mich. Mar. 17, 2011) (recognizing that ERISA plans could have pursued their subrogation
rights in state court action by stepping into beneficiaries’ shoes in their medical malpractice
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claim against third party medical providers). Thus an ERISA plan as subrogee is entitled to
assert any claim against a third party that its insureds could have asserted. Defendants’ sole
basis for moving to dismiss Central States’s subrogation claim is that this claim does not seek
equitable relief. Because Central States is not limited to seeking equitable relief in asserting
the claims of its Insureds as subrogee, defendants are not entitled to a dismissal of Central
States’s subrogation claim on this basis.
V
The court raises sua sponte the question whether it should exercise jurisdiction over
this case now that the ERISA claims have been dismissed.
Although in its amended complaint Central States seems to allege that the court has
federal question jurisdiction over the subrogation claim, see Am. Compl. ¶ 25, it appears to
the court that this claim is governed by state subrogation law. Central States does not plead
diversity jurisdiction. See id. ¶¶ 22-26.3 If the federal-question claims have been dismissed,
the court in its discretion can decline to consider the state-law claim. Under 28 U.S.C. §
1367(c)(3) the court can “decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction . . . if— . . . the
district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction[.]” Accordingly,
the court directs Central States to submit a letter brief that states its position regarding
whether the remaining subrogation claim should be dismissed without prejudice to refiling
3
Of course, if the parties are diverse citizens, Central States can continue the case in
this court (the court would likely require that it file an amended complaint establishing
diversity of citizenship).
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in state court. The letter brief must be filed within 21 days of the date this memorandum
opinion and order is filed. No response will be permitted unless the court invites a response
or grants a party’s request to respond.
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For the foregoing reasons, the court grants defendants’ motion to dismiss counts I, II,
III, IV, and VI of the amended complaint, but it denies their motion to dismiss count V. The
court therefore grants in part and denies in part defendants’ June 28, 2012 motion to dismiss.
The court directs Central States to submit within 21 days a letter brief that states its position
regarding whether the remaining subrogation claim should be dismissed without prejudice
to refiling in state court.
SO ORDERED.
October 18, 2012.
_________________________________
SIDNEY A. FITZWATER
CHIEF JUDGE
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