Brandon Graham v. CIOX Health, LLC ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                 United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 18-3467
    ___________________________
    Brandon Graham, individually and also on behalf of all similarly situated persons
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    CIOX Health, LLC
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellee
    ------------------------------
    Lynn Henderson; Espire Concepcion; Tyrone Green-Smith; Antonio Jones
    lllllllllllllllllllllMovants
    ___________________________
    No. 18-3468
    ___________________________
    Brandon Graham, individually and also on behalf of all similarly situated persons
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff
    v.
    CIOX Health, LLC
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellee
    ------------------------------
    Lynn Henderson; Espire Concepcion; Tyrone Green-Smith; Antonio Jones
    lllllllllllllllllllllMovants - Appellants
    ____________
    Appeals from United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Missouri - St. Louis
    ____________
    Submitted: September 23, 2019
    Filed: March 12, 2020
    ____________
    Before KELLY, MELLOY, and STRAS, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    KELLY, Circuit Judge.
    The issue in this case is whether a Missouri statute permits health care providers
    to charge patients who request their medical records a “search” fee when there are no
    responsive medical records to be found. The district court1 decided that the answer
    is yes. We agree and affirm the district court’s judgment.
    I. Background
    Brandon Graham’s attorney sent a written request to St. Mary’s Hospital for
    Graham’s health care records from July 10, 2017, to October 31, 2017. CIOX Health,
    LLC, which fulfills medical-records requests for St. Mary’s Hospital, searched for
    Graham’s health care records from the dates requested, found none, and sent
    Graham’s attorney a letter stating: “We regret to inform you that we were unable to
    1
    The Honorable Rodney W. Sippel, United States District Judge for the Eastern
    District of Missouri.
    -2-
    process your request as the patient did not receive services on the service date(s)
    requested. No dates of treatment 7/10/17 - 10/25-17 at St. Mary’s Hospital - St.
    Louis.” CIOX billed Graham’s attorney a “Basic Fee” of $24.85, a “Retrieval Fee”
    of $0.00, and a “Per Page Copy” fee of $0.00 for this service.
    Graham subsequently filed this proposed class action lawsuit alleging that
    CIOX’s practice of charging a “Basic Fee” for unsuccessful records searches violates
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 191.227 (2017). Under that statute, health care providers “shall,
    upon written request of a patient, or guardian or legally authorized representative of
    a patient, furnish a copy of his or her record of that patient’s health history and
    treatment rendered to the person submitting a written request.” 
    Id. § 191.227.1.
    However, they are not required to provide this service for free. As relevant here,
    Health care providers may condition the furnishing of the patient’s health
    care records . . . upon payment of a fee for:
    (1)(a) Search and retrieval, in an amount not more than twenty-
    four dollars and eighty-five cents plus copying in the amount of
    fifty-seven cents per page for the cost of supplies and labor plus,
    if the health care provider has contracted for off-site records
    storage and management, any additional labor costs of outside
    storage retrieval, not to exceed twenty-three dollars and twenty-
    six cents, as adjusted annually pursuant to subsection 5 of this
    section; or
    (b) The records shall be furnished electronically upon payment of
    the search, retrieval, and copying fees set under this section at
    the time of the request or one hundred eight dollars and eighty-
    eight cents total, whichever is less, if [certain conditions are met]
    ....
    
    Id. § 191.227.2
    (emphasis added).
    -3-
    CIOX filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit. It argued that the statutory
    language permitting health care providers to “condition the furnishing of the patient’s
    health care records . . . upon a payment of a fee for . . . [s]earch and retrieval”
    authorized it to charge a “Basic Fee” for searching for a patient’s health care
    records—even when the search was unsuccessful. The district court agreed,
    concluding that “[t]he plain language of the statute permits the charge of this fee.”
    Graham appeals. He argues that CIOX was not permitted to charge a basic fee
    for searching for his health care records because (1) CIOX did not “furnish” any
    “health care records” and (2) the statute only authorizes health care providers to
    charge a fee for “search and retrieval,” not a standalone fee for a “search.”
    II. Standard of Review
    “We review de novo the district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss.”
    Halbrook v. Mallinckrodt, LLC, 
    888 F.3d 971
    , 975 (8th Cir. 2018). Where, as here,
    we are called upon to interpret state law, “our role is to follow the law as decided by
    that state’s highest court. Absent clear direction from that court, we must conduct our
    analysis as a predictive exercise, interpreting state law in the manner we believe the
    state’s highest court would rule.” 
    Id. (cleaned up).
    III. Analysis
    The statute at issue permits health care providers to “condition the furnishing
    of the patient’s health care records” upon the payment of certain fees. See Mo. Rev.
    Stat. § 191.227.2. Graham argues that CIOX did not “furnish his health care records”
    because no such records existed. Thus, he contends that the statutory prerequisite was
    not satisfied, and CIOX was not authorized to charge him a fee.
    CIOX sent Graham’s attorney a letter stating that Graham “did not receive
    services on the service date(s) requested. No dates of treatment 7/10/17 - 10/25-17
    -4-
    at St. Mary’s Hospital - St. Louis.” This letter is a “record” within the ordinary
    meaning of that term because it “recalls or relates past events”—namely, Graham’s
    non-treatment on the dates requested. Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 1040
    (11th ed. 2012). CIOX “furnished” this record to Graham’s authorized representative
    by giving or supplying it to his attorney. See 
    id. at 508.
    And the record, sent on
    behalf of St. Mary’s Hospital in response to a request for Graham’s medical records,
    relates information about Graham’s health care. We thus conclude that CIOX
    furnished a health care record within the meaning of the statute.2
    Health care providers “may condition” the furnishing of health care records
    “upon payment of a fee for . . . [s]earch and retrieval . . . .” Mo. Rev. Stat.
    § 191.227.2(1)(a). Graham’s next argument is that this only authorizes health care
    providers to charge a single fee for “search and retrieval,” not separate fees for
    “search or retrieval.” He contends that where, as here, a health care provider does not
    “retrieve” anything, it cannot charge a fee solely for the “search.”
    As a preliminary matter, Graham’s framing of the issue as whether “and” bears
    a conjunctive or disjunctive meaning in the phrase “search and retrieval” is misplaced.
    We agree that “and” should be given “its ordinary plain meaning as a conjunctive.”
    Stires v. Dir. of Revenue, 
    477 S.W.3d 611
    , 615 (Mo. banc 2016). But that does not,
    by itself, resolve this issue. Even if “and” is given a conjunctive meaning, we must
    still decide whether the statute requires CIOX to conduct both a “search and retrieval”
    before it may charge a fee, as Graham argues, or whether the statute authorizes a fee
    for both “search and retrieval,” as CIOX argues.
    2
    A subsequent amendment codifies this understanding. The statute now states:
    “For purposes of subsections 1 and 2 of this section, ‘a copy of his or her record of
    that patient’s health history and treatment rendered’ or ‘the patient’s health care
    records’ includes a statement or record that no such health history or treatment record
    responsive to the request exists.” Mo. Rev. Stat. § 191.227.3 (2018).
    -5-
    We think CIOX has the better position. The list in § 191.227.2(1) does not
    describe what a health provider “must” or “shall” do to earn a fee; instead, it lists the
    fees that a health care provider “may” charge for furnishing a record. Cf. 
    Stiers, 477 S.W.3d at 615
    . In some cases, an actor may be required to do two things to earn a
    single fee. But that is more likely to be the case where both activities are within the
    actor’s control. Cf. Finnegan v. Old Republic Title Co. of St. Louis, 
    246 S.W.3d 928
    ,
    930 (Mo. banc. 2008) (concluding that “the failure of the notaries to record their
    notarizations” precluded them from charging a fee for the “notarization of each
    signature and the proper recording thereof”). Here, Graham acknowledges that
    retrieval “is impossible when no records exist.” It would be unusual for the legislature
    to require health care providers to conduct a search whenever a written request for
    medical records is submitted, see Mo. Rev. Stat. § 191.227.1, permit them to charge
    a “search” fee, 
    id. § 191.227.2,
    but condition their ability to charge that fee upon the
    happenstance of whether there are pre-existing records to be found.
    The plain language of the statute does not require this unusual result. The next
    subsection separately lists “search, retrieval, and copying fees.” Mo. Rev. Stat.
    § 191.227.2(1)(b). This is a strong textual indication that the legislature thought of
    “search” fees and “retrieval” fees as distinct and that it did not intend to limit health
    care providers to charging only a single, indivisible fee for a “search and retrieval.”3
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of this action. The
    movants’ appeal of the denial of their motion to intervene is dismissed as moot.
    3
    The dissent would read this list of three fees as a list of two: a “search and
    retrieval” fee and a “copying” fee. The dissent justifies this interpretation by noting
    that subsection (1)(b) cross-references subsection (1)(a) and declaring that “the only
    reasonable reading” of subsection (1)(a) is that it authorizes only a single fee for
    “search and retrieval.” However, we believe it is reasonable to interpret subsection
    (1)(a) as authorizing distinct fees for “search” and “retrieval.” The three-fee list in
    subsection (1)(b) supports this interpretation.
    -6-
    STRAS, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    This case requires us to answer two questions. The first is whether a prior
    version of Missouri’s medical-records statute authorizes a single fee for “[s]earch
    and retrieval” or one fee for a “[s]earch” and a separate one for “retrieval.” If a
    single fee covers both actions, then the second question is whether CIOX may
    charge a customer when it searches but does not retrieve anything. I respectfully
    dissent because, in my view, the statute sets a single fee that requires the
    completion of both actions.
    I.
    Under Missouri law, the “primary rule of statutory interpretation is to give
    effect to legislative intent as reflected in the plain language of the statute at issue.”
    Parktown Imps., Inc. v. Audi of Am., Inc., 
    278 S.W.3d 670
    , 672 (Mo. banc 2009).
    This includes giving words and phrases their common and ordinary meaning,
    Abrams v. Ohio Pac. Express, 
    819 S.W.2d 338
    , 340 (Mo. banc 1991); interpreting
    statutes, including related provisions, as a whole, Gott v. Dir. of Revenue, 
    5 S.W.3d 155
    , 159–60 (Mo. banc 1999); and applying the rules of grammar when they are
    helpful, see Caplinger v. Rahman, 
    529 S.W.3d 326
    , 332 (Mo. Ct. App. 2017).
    A.
    Applying these principles, the statute authorizes only a single fee for
    “[s]earch and retrieval,” not separate fees for each of these acts. As relevant here,
    subsection 2 states:
    Health care providers may condition the furnishing of the
    patient’s health care records to the patient, the patient’s authorized
    representative or any other person or entity authorized by law to
    obtain or reproduce such records upon payment of a fee for:
    -7-
    (1)(a) Search and retrieval, in an amount not more than
    twenty-four dollars and eighty-five cents plus copying in the
    amount of fifty-seven cents per page for the cost of supplies and
    labor plus, if the health care provider has contracted for off-site
    records storage and management, any additional labor costs of
    outside storage retrieval, not to exceed twenty-three dollars and
    twenty-six cents, as adjusted annually pursuant to subsection 5
    of this section; . . .
    (2) Postage, to include packaging and delivery cost; and
    (3) Notary fee, not to exceed two dollars, if requested.
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 191.227.2 (Supp. 2017) (emphasis added). Focusing on the
    critical language, the provider “may condition the furnishing of the patient’s health
    care records . . . upon payment of a fee for: (1) . . . [s]earch and retrieval . . . ;
    (2) [p]ostage . . . ; and (3) [n]otary fee . . . .”
    If this sounds like a list of three fees, it is. Lists with four nouns and two
    conjunctions cannot contain four separate items.4 They necessarily include one
    compound item—here, search and retrieval—made up of more than one noun. See
    Rodney Huddleston & Geoffrey K. Pullum, The Cambridge Grammar of the
    English Language 1279 (2002) (referring to this type of construction as
    “layering”). The structure of the statute makes clear that there are three fees, each
    of which is discussed in a separate paragraph of subsection 2: one for “[s]earch and
    retrieval,” one for “[p]ostage,” and one for a “[n]otary.” The key takeaway is that
    only one fee covers the compound item, “[s]earch and retrieval.”
    4
    If the goal was to create a list with four items, not just three, the Missouri
    General Assembly could have picked one of the following structures: “search,
    retrieval, postage, and notary fee” or “search and retrieval and postage and notary
    fee.” See Rodney Huddleston & Geoffrey K. Pullum, The Cambridge Grammar of
    the English Language 1276 (2002).
    -8-
    B.
    If the statute creates a single search-and-retrieval fee, then the focus shifts to
    whether a health-care provider must complete both actions before it can charge the
    fee. In the statute, the word “and” separates the two nouns, “search” and
    “retrieval.” In Missouri, there is a strong presumption that “and” is conjunctive,
    not disjunctive, meaning that it is read as an “and,” not as an “or.” See Stiers v.
    Dir. of Revenue, 
    477 S.W.3d 611
    , 615 (Mo. banc 2016). This presumption
    “strong[ly]” suggests that both acts—search and retrieval—must be completed
    before CIOX can charge the fee. 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    Indeed, the Missouri Supreme Court has considered a statute like this one
    before. In Finnegan v. Old Republic Title Co. of St. Louis, the statute authorized
    notaries to charge a fee of two dollars “for notarization of each signature and the
    proper recording thereof in the journal of notarial acts.” 
    246 S.W.3d 928
    , 929
    (Mo. banc. 2008) (quoting Mo. Rev. Stat. § 486.350 (emphasis added)). The
    plaintiffs sued, arguing that the title company should not have charged them a fee
    because the notaries did not record anything in their journals. 
    Id. The court
    agreed
    and concluded that the fee could only be collected if notaries completed both acts:
    “notarization” and “proper recording.” 
    Id. at 930.
    The reason, the court said, was
    that the “use of the word ‘and’ indicate[d] a legislative intent that recording . . . be
    an additional requirement to a $2 charge under the statute.”5 
    Id. 5 The
    court tries to distinguish Finnegan by suggesting that both notarization
    and proper recording were “within the [notaries’] control.” Ante at 6. It is not clear
    what difference this makes. After all, the notary statute was grammatically
    indistinguishable from the one here, and Finnegan emphasized “the plain language”
    and the significance of the word 
    “and,” 246 S.W.3d at 930
    , not the feasibility of
    completing the recording.
    -9-
    I would reach the same conclusion here. To use Finnegan’s words, retrieval
    of a medical record is “an additional requirement to a [$24.85] charge under the
    statute.” 
    Id. CIOX did
    not retrieve any records, so it was not entitled to payment.
    II.
    The court disagrees and interprets the statute to allow CIOX to charge the
    fee, regardless of whether it retrieves anything. It provides two reasons, but neither
    is persuasive.
    The court begins with policy. It asks why the Missouri General Assembly
    would prohibit health-care providers from charging a fee when they have taken the
    time to search for records, but by “happenstance . . . there are [no] pre-existing
    records to be found.”6 Ante at 6. It says that such a decision would be “unusual,”
    but even if this were true, it would not matter because the text is unambiguous. See
    Kerperien v. Lumberman’s Mut. Cas. Co., 
    100 S.W.3d 778
    , 781 (Mo. banc 2003)
    (“Where the language of a statute is unambiguous, courts must give effect to the
    language used by the legislature.”).
    But the court’s logic falls short on its own terms too. Viewed from the
    perspective of consumers, this decision is not unusual at all. As a consumer-
    protection statute, one of its purposes seems to be to protect patients from
    overcharges. So if a patient requests something, but receives nothing, then it is not
    odd for the patient to pay nothing. Although this scheme may be unfair to CIOX,
    it is the result of how the Missouri General Assembly decided to balance the
    6
    Even if the “no records” letter is, as the court concludes, itself a record, it was
    newly created in response to Graham’s inquiry and could not have been “retriev[ed]”
    by CIOX. See The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 1500 (5th
    ed. 2016) (defining “retrieve” as “[t]o gain access to (stored information)”); Webster’s
    Third New International Dictionary 1940 (2002) (defining “retrieve” as “REGAIN,
    REPOSSESS”).
    -10-
    interests of patients and health-care providers in the statute. See Goerlitz v. City of
    Maryville, 
    333 S.W.3d 450
    , 456 (Mo. banc 2011) (discussing the “time-honored
    principle” that “policy decisions” are left to the legislature). It is not our place to
    second-guess its judgment. In re Brockmire, 
    424 S.W.3d 445
    , 450 (Mo. banc
    2014).
    The court ends its analysis by relying on subparagraph (1)(b)’s reference to
    “search, retrieval, and copying fees,” but this phrase provides no help either.7 The
    court believes it provides “a strong textual indication that . . . ‘search’ fees and
    ‘retrieval’ fees [are] distinct.” Ante at 6. But this reads too much into a simple
    cross-reference to the fees found elsewhere “under this section”: the “[s]earch and
    retrieval” fee in subparagraph (1)(a), which includes compensation for copying;
    and a separate fee, contained in the next subsection, for the “reasonable cost of all
    duplications of health care record material or information which cannot routinely
    be copied or duplicated on a standard commercial photocopy machine.” Mo. Rev.
    Stat. § 191.227.2(1)(a), .3 (Supp. 2017). It does not, in other words, change the
    only reasonable reading of the statute: CIOX was only entitled to collect a fee from
    Graham if it conducted a search and retrieved a medical record, the latter of which
    never occurred here.
    ______________________________
    7
    As relevant here, subparagraph 1(b) says that health-care providers must
    furnish records electronically, “upon payment of the search, retrieval, and copying
    fees set under this section at the time of the request . . . if such person: [listing three
    conditions].” Mo. Rev. Stat. § 191.227.2(1)(b) (Supp. 2017).
    -11-