     Case: 09-20188 Document: 00511331965 Page: 1 Date Filed: 12/23/2010




           IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
                                                    Fifth Circuit

                                                 FILED
                                                                          December 23, 2010
                                        No. 09-20188
                                                                             Lyle W. Cayce
                                                                                  Clerk
QUALITY INFUSION CARE, INC.,

                                             Plaintiff–Appellant

v.

HEALTH CARE SERVICE CORPORATION, doing business as Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Texas,

                                             Defendant–Appellee




                    Appeal from the United States District Court
                         for the Southern District of Texas




Before JONES, Chief Judge, PRADO, Circuit Judge, and OZERDEN, District
Judge.*

EDWARD C. PRADO, Circuit Judge:
      This case presents a narrow legal dispute between a healthcare provider,
Quality Infusion Care, Inc. (“QIC”), and an insurance company, Healthcare
Service Corp., d/b/a Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas (“BCBS”). BCBS
overpaid QIC for certain patient claims and then set off the overpayments by
underpaying subsequent patient claims, without regard to whether the
subsequent claim was from the same patient or under the same insurance plan.


      *
          District Judge of the Southern District of Mississippi, sitting by designation.
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QIC argues that BCBS’s setoffs were improper because BCBS did not have a
contractual or statutory right to set off overpayments against different patients’
claims and because the debts that were offset were not mutual and in the same
capacity. BCBS responds that the setoffs comport with all relevant precedent,
and that the setoffs satisfy its rights under the insurance contracts and Texas
Insurance Code. The district court granted summary judgment to BCBS, finding
that the setoffs comported with the language of the Plans and the Insurance
Code.
        We AFFIRM the district court’s take-nothing judgment because BCBS had
a contractual right under all three plans to privately deduct overpayments it had
previously made to QIC from subsequent claims it was obligated to pay QIC.
            I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
        QIC is a non-contracted healthcare provider to BCBS health insurance
policyholders. In the usual health insurance reimbursement scenario, a patient
pays the healthcare service provider for the care, submits a claim to her
insurance company, and the insurance company reimburses the patient.
However, as is typical of many healthcare transactions, the patients here did not
pay QIC directly; rather, as a condition of treatment, the patients assigned to
QIC their right to reimbursement from BCBS. The patients remained liable to
QIC in the event that BCBS did not reimburse the amount due for the medical
services or the reimbursement did not cover the entire amount owed. The
assignment contract states that “I understand that I am financially responsible
for all charges regardless of any applicable or benefit payments.”
        Following treatment and assignment, QIC made a payment demand on
BCBS. QIC disclosed the assignment of reimbursement from the patients in its
demand on BCBS.       BCBS thereafter submitted payments to QIC.           BCBS



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overpaid QIC for a number of claims. BCBS requested refunds from QIC.1 QIC,
however, did not provide a refund for any of the requests by BCBS. BCBS then
set off, or deducted, the overpaid amounts from subsequent payments to QIC.
       QIC sued BCBS, claiming that it was entitled to the amounts that BCBS
set off from its payments. The parties stipulated that those setoffs “did not
necessarily contain payments related to the same [patients] or same healthcare
plan as those at issue in the requested refund.” The parties also stipulated that
six claims (out of 284 disputed overpayments) would represent the dispute: three
Employee Retirement System (“ERS”) claims, one Texas Health Insurance Risk
Pool (“THIRP”) claim, and one claim in which BCBS served as the insurer (the
“Insured claim”).2 Each class of claims carries its own plan policy, with slightly
different language and coverage.3


       1
         The rationale for the refund request and the reasons for the overpaid amounts are not
at issue here.
       2
           BCBS refunded the setoff for the sixth claim, mooting it.
       3
           In pertinent part, the ERS Plan provides:

       Refund of Benefit Payments: If and when the Plan determines that benefit
       payments under the Plan have been made erroneously but in good faith, the
       Plan reserves the right to seek recovery of such benefit payments from the
       Participant, or Provider of services to whom such payments were made. The
       Plan reserves the right to offset subsequent benefit payments otherwise
       available by the amount of any such overpayments.

“The Plan” refers to BCBS’s capacity as the administrator of the plan. The THIRP Plan
language provides:

       Right to Recover Overpayment: If We make any overpayment, We can recover
       what We did not owe from the person to whom We made the payment or from
       any other appropriate person. We have this right even if the mistake was Our
       fault. If the overpayment was made to You, We have the right to deduct it when
       We pay Your claims. By “overpayment,” We mean any payment or part of any
       payment that is not authorized by the terms of this Policy.


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      The parties both filed motions for summary judgment and the district
court granted summary judgment in favor of BCBS and entered a take-nothing
final judgment against QIC. Although the district court found that BCBS offset
certain debts from later-acquired ones involving different patients and different
benefit plans, it held that after patients assigned their right to payment to QIC,
BCBS and QIC were mutually indebted and these setoffs were allowed by the
Texas Insurance Code and the language of the Plans. QIC timely appealed.
            II. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
      This Court has jurisdiction over the final judgment of the district court
under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and reviews the district court’s grant of summary
judgment in favor of BCBS de novo. Trinity Universal Ins. Co. v. Emp’rs Mut.
Cas. Co., 592 F.3d 687, 691 (5th Cir. 2010). Summary judgment is proper when
“there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled
to judgment as a matter of law.” F ED. R. C IV. P. 56(a). “A genuine issue of
material fact exists when the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could
return a verdict for the non-moving party.” Gates v. Tex. Dep’t of Protective &
Regulatory Servs., 537 F.3d 404, 417 (5th Cir. 2008) (citing Anderson v. Liberty
Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986)).
                                 III. DISCUSSION
      QIC argues that BCBS is not entitled to the setoffs that it has taken
because the debts here are not mutual. QIC argues that the debts cannot be


And, finally, the Insured Plan provides:

       Refund Of Benefit Payments. If [BCBS] pays benefits for Eligible Expenses
       incurred by you or your Dependents and it is found that the payment was more
       than it should have been, or was made in error, [BCBS] has the right to a
       refund from the person to or for whom such benefits were paid, any other
       insurance company, or any other organization. If no refund is received, [BCBS]
       may deduct any refund due it from any future benefit payment.

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mutual because for each patient claim, it could only act with the capacity
granted by that particular patient’s assignment of the claim to reimbursement.
BCBS contends that there is merely a payor–payee relationship and the setoffs
were appropriate. BCBS argues on appeal that mutuality does exist and the
parties acted in the same capacity. Further, it argues that it has a statutory and
contractual right to set off its payment obligations to QIC by the amount it
overpaid previous claims. Because BCBS had a contractual right under all three
plans to deduct overpayments it had previously made to QIC from subsequent
claims it was obligated to pay QIC, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
       When the parties cross-moved for summary judgment, they disputed
whether BCBS had a right to execute a setoff. BCBS, in its motion for summary
judgment, argued that the Texas Insurance Code and the language of each of the
plans allowed for a privately executable setoff; in other words, BCBS argued that
it had a statutory and contractual right to deduct the amount it overpaid QIC for
one claim against benefit payments owed to QIC for the claim of another patient
under potentially a different plan. The district court agreed with BCBS that it
had a right to execute a setoff, and thus granted summary judgment to BCBS
and awarded a take-nothing final judgment against QIC.
       Given that the contractual provisions of each of the three plans allow
BCBS to privately deduct an overpayment amount paid on one patient’s claim
against the subsequent benefit payment owed on another patient’s claim, BCBS
is entitled to a take-nothing summary judgment as a matter of law.4
A.     Assignments



       4
          The defendants point to Texas Insurance Code sections 843.50 and 1301.132 as
providing a statutory right to privately execute setoffs. Because we find there is a contractual
right to privately execute these deductions, we do not address whether there is a statutory or
common law right to privately execute a setoff in this industry context.

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      The transactions at issue in this case each involve claims that
patient–beneficiaries have assigned to QIC. An assignment is “‘a manifestation
to another person by the owner of a right indicating his intention to transfer,
without further action or manifestation of intention, his right to such other
person or third person.’” Harris Methodist Fort Worth v. Sales Support Servs.
Inc. Emp. Health Care Plan, 426 F.3d 330, 334 (5th Cir. 2005) (quoting Wolters
Village Mgmt. Co. v. Merch. & Planters Nat’l Bank of Sherman, 223 F.2d 793,
798 (5th Cir. 1955)). After an assignment, “the assignor’s right to performance
by the obligor is extinguished in whole or in part and the assignee acquires a
right to such performance.” R ESTATEMENT (S ECOND) OF C ONTRACTS § 317(1). We
have recognized that “‘an assignee takes all of the rights of the assignor, no
greater and no less.’” FDIC v. McFarland, 243 F.3d 876, 887 n.42 (5th Cir. 2001)
(quoting In re New Haven Projects Ltd. Liab. Co. v. City of New Haven, 225 F.3d
283, 290 n.4 (2d Cir. 2000)). In other words, “an assignee . . . stands in the same
position as its assignor stood.” Houk v. Comm’r, 173 F.2d 821, 825 (5th Cir.
1949) (citations omitted).
      The positive aspects of assigned rights are accompanied by their corollary
negatives. “An assignee is also subject to any defenses, limitations, or setoffs
that could be asserted against the assignor’s rights.” Adams v. Petrade Int’l,
Inc., 754 S.W.2d 696, 721 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1988) (emphasis
added) (citations omitted). Thus, under the applicable laws of assignment, an
assignee may be subject to a setoff if the assignor could be subject to the same
setoff under the assigned contract.
      BCBS argues that because QIC accepted a policyholders’ assignment of
their healthcare plans, QIC became subject to BCBS’s setoff rights contained in
those plans.   BCBS further maintains that none of the plans in question



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disallows this setoff. QIC disagrees. It argues that under all three plans, the
right to set off is confined to subsequent benefit payments under the same plan
and for the same patient. Because Patient A and B can assign only the rights
they possess, QIC claims that each transaction is different and BCBS should not
be allowed to, in effect, bundle and consolidate all of the discrete overpayments
with the discrete later-acquired debts.
B.    Contractual Provisions
      We agree that the assignments and the overpayment provisions in each
of the plans are crucial to the determination of this case. Given that QIC and
BCBS do not have a separate contractual relationship, BCBS’s right to setoff
must stem from the assigned contracts. Patient A and Patient B can only assign
the benefits and attendant setoff obligations that are contained within their
separate plans. Here, there are three policies at issue—each with differing
language on how, when, and from whom BCBS may recover the overpayment or
deduct the overpayment amount from future benefits. It is apparent upon closer
examination, however, that each of the plans allow BCBS to deduct overpayment
amounts previously paid to QIC from subsequent claims filed by QIC.
      The ERS and Insured Plans both allow for offsets from the Provider
regardless of whether the overpayment is being offset against the same patient’s
subsequent claim. The ERS plan provides:
      If and when the Plan determines that benefit payments under the
      Plan have been made erroneously but in good faith, the Plan
      reserves the right to seek recovery of such benefit payments from
      the Participant, or Provider of services to whom such payments
      were made. The plan reserves the right to offset subsequent benefit
      payments otherwise available by the amount of any such
      overpayments.
The last sentence of the provision does not specify that the overpayment must
be offset against the same patient’s future claim, but rather states that BCBS

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reserves the right to offset subsequent benefit payment made to Participant or
Provider. The Insured Plan’s Refund of Benefit Payment provision states:
      If BCBSTX pays benefits for Eligible Expenses incurred by you or
      your Dependents and it is found that the payment was more than
      it should have been, or was made in error, BCBSTX has the right to
      a refund from the person to or for whom such benefits were paid,
      any other insurance company or any other organization. If no
      refund is received, BCBSTX may deduct any refund due it from any
      future benefit payment.
Like the ERS plan, this provision does not state that it will deduct from the
same patient’s future benefit payment, instead stating that it will deduct any
refund due to it from any future benefit payment.
      The language in the THIRP Plan differs from the language of the ERS and
Insured Plans, but it too gives BCBS the right to deduct overpayments from
subsequent claims.   The THIRP Plan’s Right to Recover an Overpayment
provision states:
      If We make any overpayment, We can recover what We did not owe
      from the person to whom We made the payment or from any other
      appropriate person. We have this right even if the mistake was Our
      fault. If the overpayment was made to You, We have the right to
      deduct it when We pay Your claims. By “overpayment,” We mean
      any payment or part of any payment that is not authorized by the
      terms of this Policy. We do not have the right to recover from You
      any overpayment that was fraudulently obtained by another person
      without Your knowledge.
The first sentence clearly states that BCBS may recover any overpayment it
makes from the “person to whom [BCBS] made the payment or any other
appropriate person.” Here, BCBS made an overpayment to QIC, and BCBS
sought to recover the overpayment amount from QIC. The third sentence seems
to restrict BCBS’s deduction of overpayments to only when that particular
patient makes the subsequent claim. However, QIC has stepped into the shoes


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of the patient–beneficiary by virtue of the assignments. When reading this
sentence with this patient assignment in mind, we must reasonably interpret
this sentence as creating a right to privately deduct the amount it previously
overpaid QIC from QIC’s subsequent claims.
      No language in any of the three plans require BCBS to confine its
contractual setoff rights to deductions from subsequent benefit payments to the
same patient or under the same plan. Additionally, QIC does not point to any
statutory or common law prohibition against such contractually created setoff
rights, nor can we find one.     Thus, BCBS had the right to deduct from
subsequent benefit claims to QIC the amounts it had previously overpaid QIC.
      The parties stipulated that the factual information contained within the
Claims Spreadsheet was correct, and thus that overpayments had occurred.
When QIC did not submit a refund in response to refund requests from BCBS,
the latter was within its rights to recover the amount it overpaid QIC by
deducting previous overpayment amounts from future payments due. Because
we find that BCBS had a contractual right to deduct overpayment amounts
under each of the three plans, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
      AFFIRMED.




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