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Class Certified in N.J. Doctors' Suit Over HMO's
Claim-Payment Foibles
Click
here to read the full article as reported in the New Jersey Law Journal on
August 2, 2004.
An Essex County judge last Tuesday certified a class of more
than 40,000 doctors seeking to recover tens
of millions of dollars from an HMO that allegedly delayed paying claims.
Superior Court Judge James Rothschild said he could "envision
no effective judicial mechanism other than a class action" to adjudicate the
issues.
But Rothschild denied class status for the portion of the
case seeking damages for underpayment and denial of doctors' claims - via
downcoding, bundling and other practices - due to failings in all four R. 4:32
class-action prerequisites: commonalty, typicality, predominance of common
issues and manageability.
He did grant class status on the nonpayment and underpayment claims for a
subclass of 1,884 pediatricians, even though, as he acknowledged, neither party
had asked for a pediatrician-only class.
The suit, Sutter v. Horizon, L-3685-02, alleges Horizon Blue Cross/Blue
Shield of New Jersey engaged in abusive claims-processing practices that
violated New Jersey law and breached its contracts with the doctors.
Counsel for both sides agreed at oral argument that class certification on the
late payments boiled down to a single question: whether individual examination
was needed to determine if each physician was owed money.
Rothschild held it did not. He rejected Horizon's argument that class status was
not warranted because some doctors who treated Horizon subscribers might claim
little or no loss. Based on evidence showing reimbursement claims were common -
averaging as many as 2,500 per doctor, and were mostly paid late - "the
possibility that any but a handful of the 40,000 physicians are owed nothing is
obviously statistically close to zero and not nearly high enough to preclude
class certification," he wrote.
The relatively small amounts of money to which each doctor might be entitled
made individual suits unlikely, so that denial of class status would render
state prompt payment laws "virtually meaningless," he added.
Rothschild's ruling followed the lead of Judge Ronald Freeman in Camden County,
who in 2003 certified a physician class asserting late payment claims in
Zakheim v. Amerihealth HMO, L-6235-00.
The claims for decreased or denied payments, on the other hand, were complicated
by the 55 medical practice specialties involved, doctors' disparate billing
practices and other factors.
Daly Temchine, of Epstein Becker & Green, who represents Horizon, says his
client has not yet decided whether to appeal but declines further comment.
David Mazie and Eric Katz represent the
plaintiff class.
Contact New Jersey Class Action attorney David A. Mazie.
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