Health Law Alert: U.S. Supreme Court Clarifies Basis
for Liability Under the False Claims Act
June 16, 2016
In a unanimous decision issued on June 16 in Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel.
Escobar, 579 U.S.
___ (2016), the United States Supreme Court held that plaintiffs may rely on the so-called “implied false certification
theory” as a basis for liability under the federal False Claims Act. Under that theory, when a defendant submits a claim to
the government, that defendant impliedly certifies compliance with all conditions of payment, and the failure to disclose
noncompliance with a material statutory, regulatory, or contractual requirement renders the claim false for purpose of
liability under the FCA.
The Escobar Case: Relevant Facts and Procedural Background
Yarushka Rivera, a teenaged beneficiary of Massachusetts’s Medicaid program, received counseling and other mental
health services for five years at Arbor Counseling Services, a facility owned by Universal Health. During that period of
time, Yarushka was treated by five medical professionals at Arbor.
Yarushka had an adverse reaction to medication
prescribed for her by a purported doctor at Arbor for treatment of bipolar disorder. Her condition worsened, she suffered a
seizure requiring hospitalization, and died.
Following Yarushka’s death, a counselor at Arbor told her parents that few of Arbor’s staff were licensed to provide
counseling and that supervision at the facility was poor. The parents also learned that, of the five professionals who had
treated their daughter, only one was properly licensed.
They also found out that the person who had prescribed the
medication, although held out as a psychiatrist, was, in fact, a nurse who was not authorized to prescribe medicine without
supervision.
The parents filed a complaint in federal district court in Massachusetts alleging that Universal had violated the FCA by
submitting claims for Medicaid reimbursement that asserted that certain services had been provided but without disclosing
pervasive violations of regulatory requirements relating to staff qualifications and licensing. The district court dismissed
the complaint on the basis that none of the violations alleged was a condition of payment.
The First Circuit reversed, holding that, in submitting a claim, Universal impliedly represented that it had satisfied all
requirements necessary to be entitled to payment. The First Circuit further found that compliance with a statutory,
regulatory, or contractual requirement can be a condition of payment if expressly designated as such or by implication.
Universal appealed the First Circuit’s decision to the Supreme Court.
Fraudulent Omissions May Be a Basis for FCA Liability
Although the FCA imposes liability on “any person who .
. . knowingly presents, or causes to be presented, a false or
fraudulent claim,” the statute does not define what constitutes a “false” or “fraudulent” claim.
Absent such a definition, the
Supreme Court looked to the common law of fraud, pursuant to which a party may be found to have made a fraudulent
statement as a result of having omitted information that is necessary to prevent the statement from being misleading. The
court noted that, in submitting its claim to Medicaid, Universal had done more than just demand payment, it made certain
representations regarding the services provided. In making those statements, Universal failed to disclose information
regarding noncompliance with material statutory, regulatory, or licensing requirements and that failure made its
representations “misleading half-truths.”
In Order to Give Rise to Liability, Omitted Information Must Be Material
Under the FCA, omitted information will be a basis for liability only to the extent that the information is material.
The court
further found that whether compliance is identified as a condition of payment is relevant, but not dispositive of materiality.
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. According to the court, the relevant inquiry for purposes of determining materiality is the effect on the likely or actual
behavior of the recipient of the allegedly false statement. Thus, a misrepresentation is material if a reasonable person
would be induced to act on the statement or if the party making the statement either knew or had reason to know that the
recipient of the statement attached special importance to the omitted information such that the recipient would be induced
to act.
The court described the materiality requirement as “demanding.” It observed that the requirement would not be satisfied
merely because the government designated compliance as a condition of payment or if the government would have the
option of declining payment if it knew of the noncompliance or if the noncompliance is minor or insubstantial. In this
regard, the court stated the proof of materiality may lie in the actual consequences of noncompliance. If the government
routinely pays a particular claim notwithstanding actual knowledge that the claimant violated certain requirements, this
would be strong evidence that compliance (or the failure to disclose noncompliance) is not material.
If, on the other hand,
the claimant is aware that the government consistently refuses to pay claims based on noncompliance with a particular
regulatory requirement, this would be strong evidence that compliance with the requirement (or the failure to disclose
noncompliance) is material.
What Will the Future Hold?
The Escobar decision harmonizes the law among the circuits with respect to the applicability of the implied false
certification theory under the FCA. The decision expands the scope of what constitutes a false or fraudulent claim under
the FCA to include the failure to disclose noncompliance with statutory, regulatory, or contractual requirements, to the
extent that such noncompliance is material to deciding whether to pay the claim. The decision abandons whether
regulatory compliance is a “condition of payment” as dispositive on the issue of materiality in favor of a potentially much
more factually intensive inquiry.
Because materiality will turn on specific facts, this may make it more difficult for
defendants to get FCA claims dismissed on a dispositive motion, but it also may make it more difficult for plaintiff to prove
that a particular requirement is material.
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.