Iowa Dental Association v. Iowa Insurance Division and Iowa Insurance Commissioner , 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 59 ( 2013 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 12–1280
    Filed May 17, 2013
    IOWA DENTAL ASSOCIATION,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    IOWA INSURANCE DIVISION and IOWA INSURANCE COMMISSIONER,
    Appellees,
    and
    FEDERATION OF IOWA INSURERS,
    Intervenor–Appellee.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Mary Pat
    Gunderson, Judge.
    A trade association representing Iowa dentists appeals the district
    court’s ruling upholding a declaratory order of the Iowa Insurance
    Commissioner. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Rebecca A. Brommel of Brown, Winick, Graves, Gross, Baskerville
    and Schoenebaum, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Jeanie Kunkle Vaudt,
    Assistant Attorney General, for appellees.
    2
    Scott A. Sundstrom of Nyemaster Goode, P.C., Des Moines, for
    intervenor–appellee.
    3
    MANSFIELD, Justice.
    This case asks us to decide whether to uphold the Iowa Insurance
    Commissioner’s interpretation of a recently enacted law governing dental
    insurance plans.     See Iowa Code § 514C.3B (2011).          Under the
    Commissioner’s interpretation of that law, an insurer may limit the
    maximum fees charged by dentists for services that are generally
    included in the insurer’s dental plan, even though they are not actually
    reimbursed by the insurer because of a plan restriction.
    On our review, we find that interpretation of the term at issue has
    not been clearly vested by a provision of law in the discretion of the
    Commissioner.      Therefore, de novo review is appropriate.      See 
    id. § 17A.19(10)(c).
    We then conclude that the services in question do not
    meet the statutory definition of “covered services,” because they have not
    been “reimbursed under the dental plan.”        See 
    id. § 514C.3B(3)(a).
    Accordingly, the fee for them may not be “set by the dental plan.” See 
    id. § 514C.3B(1).
    For these reasons, we reverse the decision of the district
    court upholding the Commissioner’s declaratory ruling and remand for
    further proceedings consistent herewith.
    I. Facts and Procedural Background.
    This case centers on the contractual relationships between dentists
    and insurers that provide dental plans. Many dentists in Iowa enter into
    these plans, under which insurers reimburse all or part of the costs of
    various dental procedures.       Typically the plan contracts include
    maximum fee schedules. In the schedule, the insurer sets a maximum
    amount the dentist can charge for a particular service. Dentists agree to
    abide by these maximum fees, in exchange for the benefit of providing
    services to insured patients.
    4
    Generally, the plans exclude certain services, such as cosmetic
    dentistry and teeth whitening.           Preventive plans have additional
    exclusions.    But even when services are covered, there may be limits
    such as deductibles, maximum annual benefits, waiting periods, and
    frequency limitations.    A common frequency limitation is that patients
    may be reimbursed for up to two teeth cleanings per year, but not for a
    third cleaning within that same time period.
    Before the general assembly passed section 514C.3B, some dental
    plans contained maximum fees that dentists could charge for services
    that were never reimbursable under their dental insurance plans, like
    teeth whitening. In 2010, and in apparent response to this practice, the
    legislature adopted “An Act prohibiting the imposition by a dental plan of
    fee schedules for the provision of dental services that are not covered by
    the plan.” 2010 Iowa Acts ch. 1179 (codified at Iowa Code § 514C.3B).
    Iowa’s law provides:
    A contract between a dental plan and a dentist for the
    provision of services to covered individuals under the plan
    shall not require that a dentist provide services to those
    covered individuals at a fee set by the dental plan unless
    such services are covered services under the dental plan.
    Iowa Code § 514C.3B(1). The statute contains the following definition of
    “covered services”:
    “Covered services” means services reimbursed under the
    dental plan.
    
    Id. § 514C.3B(3)(b).
    And a final subsection of the statute states:
    Nothing in this section shall be construed as limiting the
    ability of an insurer or a third-party administrator to restrict
    any of the following as they relate to covered services:
    a. Balance billing.
    b. Waiting periods.
    5
    c. Frequency limitations.
    d. Deductibles.
    e. Maximum annual benefits.
    
    Id. § 514C.3B(4).
    Following enactment of this law, insurers continued imposing
    maximum fees on services that were actually reimbursed under their
    dental plans, such as semiannual teeth cleanings. But some insurers
    went further.       They placed maximum fees on services that were
    potentially reimbursable but were not actually reimbursed because of
    some plan limit, such as a frequency limit.      For example, an insurer
    would require a dentist to charge no more than a certain amount for any
    teeth cleaning, even though only the first two cleanings were actually
    reimbursed under the plan.
    According to the Iowa Dental Association (IDA), the petitioner in
    this action, a number of its dentist–members inquired to insurers about
    maximum fees on these reimbursable, but not actually reimbursed,
    services.   The insurers responded that such services were “covered
    services” under section 514C.3B(3)(a), and could accordingly be subject
    to their fee schedules, even though they were not being reimbursed in a
    particular instance.
    The IDA argued that dentists faced “conflicting interpretations” of
    the statute: the dentists’ own interpretation that such services were not
    “covered,” and the insurers’ view that they were.         Accordingly, on
    August 19, 2011, the IDA filed with the Insurance Division a request for
    a declaratory order clarifying the meaning of “covered services” in section
    514C.3B.    See 
    id. § 17A.9
    (setting forth the procedure for seeking a
    declaratory order from an agency).      The IDA specifically requested an
    answer to the following question:
    6
    Is an insurer permitted to impose and enforce a
    maximum fee for services that are not reimbursed under the
    dental plan (except for standard co-payments or deductibles
    paid by the patient) due to limitations related to balance
    billing, waiting periods, frequency limitations, deductibles,
    and maximum annual benefits?
    The IDA proposed that the Commissioner answer the question in the
    negative, based on its reading of the statute’s definition of “covered
    services.”
    The Federation of Iowa Insurers—which represents dental plan
    providers Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa, Delta Dental of
    Iowa, and the Principal Financial Group—petitioned to intervene in the
    matter. After its petition was granted, the Federation submitted briefs
    urging the Commissioner to answer the IDA’s question in the affirmative.
    On November 8, the Insurance Commissioner issued a declaratory
    order that agreed with the Federation’s position: “covered services”
    include services that can be reimbursed generally, but that are not
    actually reimbursed in a particular circumstance due to a policy
    restriction. The Commissioner reasoned that this reading gave meaning
    to section 514C.3B(4) and also better served customers because it
    allowed insurers to keep prices down. As the Commissioner explained,
    Subsection 3 must be read in conjunction with subsection 4,
    to give meaning to the entire statute, which places several
    limitations on covered services related to balance billing,
    waiting periods, frequency limitations, deductibles, and
    maximum annual benefits. Subsection 4 indicates that the
    “covered service” does not lose its status as a covered service
    because of limitations placed on reimbursement to the
    dentist. Thus, the statute does not require . . . a service to
    actually be reimbursed under the dental plan.           Stated
    another way, non-covered benefits are dental procedures
    that a dental plan does not cover and never pays for.
    This determination fits well within the context of the
    consumer’s dental insurance contract.
    ....
    7
    Patients benefit when there [i]s certainty in the amount that
    will be paid for a given service. They lack the expertise to
    discuss and/or negotiate dental fees with the dentists that
    do not fall within the definition of covered services. A patient
    could end up paying significantly more than the negotiated
    fee between the insurer and dentist without the benefit of the
    insurer’s contract with the dentist.
    On December 11, the IDA filed a petition in Polk County District
    Court requesting judicial review of the Commissioner’s order. The IDA’s
    petition advanced several alternative arguments: (1) the Commissioner
    lacked clearly vested interpretive authority over the statutory term
    “covered services” and her ruling was erroneous; (2) the Commissioner,
    even if clearly vested with authority, issued an illogical, irrational, and
    unjustifiable order; (3) the Commissioner failed to consider a relevant
    matter—namely the meaning of the term “reimbursed”; and (4) the
    Commissioner’s     action   was    otherwise    unreasonable,       arbitrary,
    capricious, or an abuse of discretion.
    The Federation filed a brief in opposition.       It argued the district
    court should uphold the ruling because the Commissioner was clearly
    vested with interpretive authority and the ruling was neither illogical,
    irrational, nor unjustifiable.    The Federation also asserted that the
    Commissioner’s ruling was correct even if the court employed a less
    deferential standard of review. Finally, the Federation highlighted policy
    concerns and insisted that the IDA’s interpretation was anti-consumer
    because it would allow dentists to charge insured customers higher fees
    on policy-limited services, such as a third teeth cleaning.
    The district court affirmed the Commissioner’s declaratory ruling.
    The court relied on Iowa Code chapter 505 to conclude that the
    Insurance Commissioner had been clearly vested with interpretive
    authority. Section 505.8(2), in particular, provides:
    8
    The commissioner shall, subject to chapter 17A, establish,
    publish, and enforce rules not inconsistent with law for the
    enforcement of this subtitle and for the enforcement of the
    laws, the administration and supervision of which are
    imposed on the division, including rules to establish fees
    sufficient to administer the laws, where appropriate fees are
    not otherwise provided for in rule or statute.
    
    Id. § 505.8(2).
      The court next read section 514C.3B(3) in conjunction
    with   section    514C.3B(4)      to   conclude    that     the   Commissioner’s
    interpretation of “covered services” was not irrational, illogical, or wholly
    unjustifiable.
    The IDA now appeals and the parties make essentially the same
    arguments before us.           At issue here is whether to affirm the
    Commissioner’s      declaratory    order    that   dental    services   ordinarily
    reimbursable, but not actually reimbursed due to some plan policy limit,
    are “covered services” under section 514C.3B.
    II. Scope of Review.
    This is an appeal of a district court’s review of agency action; Iowa
    Code section 17A.19 determines the standard of review to apply. See 
    id. § 17A.19(10).
    Section 17A.19(10) states, in relevant part:
    10. The court may affirm the agency action or remand
    to the agency for further proceedings. The court shall
    reverse, modify, or grant other appropriate relief from agency
    action, equitable or legal and including declaratory relief, if it
    determines that substantial rights of the person seeking
    judicial relief have been prejudiced because the agency
    action is any of the following:
    ....
    c. Based upon an erroneous interpretation of a
    provision of law whose interpretation has not clearly been
    vested by a provision of law in the discretion of the agency.
    ....
    l. Based upon an irrational, illogical, or wholly
    unjustifiable interpretation of a provision of law whose
    9
    interpretation has clearly been vested by a provision of law
    in the discretion of the agency.
    ....
    n. Otherwise unreasonable, arbitrary, capricious, or
    an abuse of discretion.
    
    Id. We accordingly
    review an agency’s interpretation of a provision of
    law under either the highly deferential “irrational, illogical, or wholly
    unjustifiable” standard, or the nondeferential errors-at-law standard. We
    give deference to an agency only if our legislature clearly vested authority
    to interpret the provision with the agency.       Iowa Code § 17A.10(l).
    Otherwise, we review for erroneous interpretations of law.               
    Id. § 17A.10(c).
    Although the district court’s thorough decision appears to focus
    largely on whether the Commissioner has been clearly vested with
    authority to interpret the 2010 legislation, i.e., section 514C.3B, we have
    clarified the nature of the relevant inquiry in recent years. In Renda v.
    Iowa Civil Rights Commission, we had to decide whether the Iowa Civil
    Rights Commission (ICRC) had jurisdiction over an inmate’s civil rights
    claim alleging discrimination in employment and housing. 
    784 N.W.2d 8
    , 9 (Iowa 2010). At issue was whether the inmate was an “employee”
    and whether the correctional facility was a “dwelling” within the meaning
    of the Iowa Civil Rights Act. 
    Id. at 9.
    We explained:
    We begin by noting that despite the parties’
    articulation of the issue as whether the ICRC has the
    authority to interpret the Act, we do not view the issue so
    broadly. The focus of our inquiry is not whether the ICRC
    has the authority to interpret the entire Act. Rather, we
    must determine whether the interpretation of the specific
    terms “employee” and “dwelling” has been clearly vested in
    the discretion of the commission.
    10
    
    Id. at 10.
    We then reviewed our precedents and found they confirmed this
    approach.    
    Id. at 11–13.
      In prior cases, despite grants of rulemaking
    authority to the agencies in question, we had not found that the agencies
    had been vested with the authority to interpret terms such as competent
    evidence, hardship, public interest, willful, and confidential. 
    Id. at 13.
    We did note that an express legislative grant of authority to interpret the
    statute could resolve the issue. 
    Id. at 11.
    But a grant of rulemaking
    authority alone was generally not sufficient. 
    Id. at 13.
          We further noted that when a statutory provision “is a substantive
    term within the special expertise of the agency, we have concluded that
    the agency has been vested with the authority to interpret the
    provisions.” 
    Id. at 14.
    But when the term is found in other statutes or
    has “an independent legal definition that is not uniquely within the
    subject matter expertise of the agency, we generally [have] conclude[d]
    the agency has not been vested with interpretive authority.” 
    Id. Applying these
    principles, we held in Renda that the ICRC was not
    clearly vested with authority to interpret “employee” and “dwelling.” 
    Id. There was
    no express grant of interpretive authority in the underlying
    legislation, and “[b]oth terms have specialized legal meaning and are
    widely used in areas of law other than the civil rights arena.” 
    Id. A year
    after Renda, we had to decide whether a paint company was
    exempt from use tax on purchases of machines it used in its Iowa retail
    outlets to mix base paint with colorant. See Sherwin-Williams Co. v. Iowa
    Dep’t of Revenue, 
    789 N.W.2d 417
    , 419 (Iowa 2010).          The issue was
    whether a retail establishment could be considered a “manufacturer”
    within the meaning of Iowa’s use tax law. 
    Id. at 423.
    “Manufacturer”
    was defined in the statute. See 
    id. at 420
    (citing Iowa Code § 428.20).
    11
    We ultimately concluded that interpretive authority had not been vested
    in the department of revenue for the following reasons:
    The insurmountable obstacle to finding the department has
    authority to interpret the word “manufacturer” in this
    context is the fact that this word has already been
    interpreted, i.e., explained, by the legislature through its
    enactment     of    a   statutory  definition.      See  
    id. §§ 422.45(27)(d)(4),
    428.20. Under these circumstances, we
    do not think the legislature intended that the department
    have discretion to interpret—give meaning to—this term.
    
    Id. at 423–24.
    On the other hand, in Evercom Systems, Inc. v. Iowa Utilities Board,
    we found the utilities board had been vested with authority to interpret
    the term “unauthorized change in service.”        
    805 N.W.2d 758
    , 762–63
    (Iowa 2011).     The underlying legislation required the Board to “adopt
    rules prohibiting an unauthorized change in telecommunication service”;
    we did not consider that “an explicit grant of the authority to interpret
    the term.” 
    Id. at 762.
    However, in light of our precedent and the fact
    that “unauthorized change in service” was a “substantive term within the
    special expertise of the agency,” we held that authority had been vested
    with the board and a deferential standard of review should apply. 
    Id. at 762–63.
    In Neal v. Annett Holdings, Inc., we had to address the meaning of
    the phrase “suitable work” in a workers’ compensation case. 
    814 N.W.2d 512
    , 516 (Iowa 2012). Although the commissioner had been expressly
    granted statutory authority to “[a]dopt and enforce rules necessary to
    implement” the workers’ compensation laws, we reiterated that “the mere
    grant of rulemaking authority does not give an agency authority to
    interpret all statutory language.”        
    Id. at 519
    (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). We noted that the concept of “suitable work”
    is found in other legal contexts and “has a specialized legal meaning
    12
    extending beyond the context presented in this case.” 
    Id. Accordingly, we
    did not give deference to the commissioner’s interpretation of the
    phrase. 
    Id. In Burton
    v. Hilltop Care Center, we held that the legislature, which
    had provided an independent statutory definition of “gross earnings,” did
    not clearly vest interpretive authority for that term in the workers’
    compensation commissioner.       
    813 N.W.2d 250
    , 261–62 (Iowa 2012).
    Instead we applied a de novo standard of review and focused on whether
    inadvertent overpayments met the legislative definition of “gross
    earnings”—“payments by employer to the employee for employment.” 
    Id. at 261
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).      Ultimately we
    concluded, “Money received due to an accounting error would not be
    money that was earned for employment as the statute requires.” 
    Id. at 263.
    Applying Renda and its progeny here, we find that interpretive
    authority concerning the phrase “covered services” has not been clearly
    vested with the Insurance Commissioner. As noted by the district court,
    the legislature has given the Commissioner the power to make rules “not
    inconsistent with law for the enforcement of this subtitle and for the
    enforcement of the laws, the administration and supervision of which are
    imposed on the division.” Iowa Code § 505.8(2). However, granting the
    authority to make rules for enforcement purposes is not the same as
    granting authority to make interpretive rules.            In the workers’
    compensation field, we have said that the commissioner’s express
    statutory authority to “[a]dopt and enforce rules necessary to implement
    this chapter and chapters 85, 85A, 85B, and 87,” 
    id. § 86.8
    (emphasis
    added), does not by itself amount to a vesting of interpretive authority.
    13
    See Waldinger Corp. v. Mettler, 
    817 N.W.2d 1
    , 5 (Iowa 2012); see also
    
    Neal, 814 N.W.2d at 519
    ; 
    Burton, 813 N.W.2d at 261
    .
    Furthermore, as in Sherwin-Williams and Burton, the legislature
    has provided its own definition of the term at issue. This presents an
    “insurmountable obstacle” to a determination that the insurance
    commissioner has been vested with interpretive authority over “covered
    services.” Instead, it indicates we ought to apply the legislative definition
    ourselves. See 
    Burton, 813 N.W.2d at 261
    –62.
    Additionally, when we turn to the legislative definition, we find that
    the relevant word—“reimbursed”—is not a “substantive term within the
    special expertise of the agency.” 
    Evercom, 805 N.W.2d at 762
    (citation
    and internal quotation marks omitted). Rather, the word “reimbursed”
    appears hundreds of times within the Iowa Code. For all these reasons,
    we will review the Commissioner’s interpretation of the statute for errors
    at law.
    III. Interpretation of Section 514C.3B.
    We have to decide whether services that would be reimbursed but
    for a dental plan restriction constitute “covered services,” i.e., “services
    reimbursed under the dental plan.”        Iowa Code § 514C.3B(3)(a).     The
    Commissioner concluded that “the statute does not require that a service
    . . . actually be reimbursed under the dental plan.” On our review of the
    matter, we reach a different conclusion.
    The parties here essentially dispute the significance of the word
    “reimbursed,” which has no definition in the statute.           “Where the
    legislature has not defined words of the statute, we may refer to prior
    decisions of this court and others, similar statutes, dictionary definitions,
    and common usage.” Bernau v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 
    580 N.W.2d 757
    ,
    761 (Iowa 1998). The IDA argues the definition includes only services
    14
    that are actually reimbursed under the plan, while the Federation and
    the    Commissioner      argue    it   includes   services     that   are   generally
    reimbursed or reimbursable under a plan, whether or not reimbursed in
    the specific instance.
    When we examine the language of section 514C.3B(3)(a), it appears
    to favor the IDA’s position. The word “reimbursed” usually means that
    the cost has been repaid.         See Merriam–Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary
    983 (10th ed. 2002) (“reimburse . . . 1: to pay back to someone : REPAY
    <~travel expenses> 2: to make restoration or payment of an equivalent to
    <~him for his traveling expenses> . . . .”); see also Black’s Law Dictionary
    1399    (9th   ed.   2009)   (“reimbursement,        n.   1.    Repayment.         2.
    Indemnification.”). When a patient has a third teeth cleaning within a
    year, and the dental insurer declines to pay for it, we would not normally
    say that the cleaning has been “reimbursed under the dental plan.” Iowa
    Code § 514C.3B(3)(a).
    This meaning of “covered services” finds implicit support in what
    other states have done.          Iowa is not the only state to have enacted
    legislation that prevents dental insurers from imposing maximum fees on
    noncovered services. The first to do so was Rhode Island in 2009. See
    2009 R.I. Pub. Laws chs. 09–41, 09–52.               There the statute defined
    “covered services” as “services reimbursable under the applicable
    subscriber agreement, subject to such contractual limitations on
    subscriber benefits as may apply, including, for example, deductibles,
    waiting period or frequency limitations.” See R.I. Gen. Laws Ann. § 23-
    17.13-6(a) (Supp. 2012).
    During their respective 2010 legislative sessions, but before Iowa
    adopted what became section 514C.3B, Arizona, Idaho, Kansas,
    Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Virginia, and Washington all
    15
    enacted laws that limited the imposition of maximum fees on noncovered
    dental services and defined “covered services.”                 Six of these states
    (Kansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Dakota, and
    Washington) used the term “reimbursable.”1                The other three (Arizona,
    Idaho, and Virginia) expressed the same concept, although in different
    verbiage.2 None of these nine states used the term “reimbursed.” Thus,
    1See   Kan. Stat. Ann. § 40–2,186(a) (Supp. 2011) (“ ‘Covered service’ means a
    service which is reimbursable under the health benefit plan subject to any deductible,
    coinsurance, waiting period, frequency limitation, annual or lifetime benefit maximum
    or other contractual limitation contained in the health benefit plan.” (Emphasis
    added.)); Miss. Code Ann. § 83–51–31 (West Supp. 2012) (“For the purposes of this
    section, ‘covered services’ means services that are reimbursable under the applicable
    subscriber agreement, notwithstanding any deductibles, waiting periods or frequency
    limitations that may apply.” (Emphasis added.)); Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 36, § 7301 (West
    Supp. 2013) (“ ‘Covered services’ means services reimbursable under the applicable
    subscriber agreement, subject to the contractual limitations on subscriber benefits as
    may apply, including, for example, deductibles, waiting period or frequency limitations
    . . . .” (Emphasis added.)); R.I. Gen. Laws Ann. § 23-17.13-6(a) (“ ‘Covered services,’ as
    used herein, means services reimbursable under the applicable subscriber agreement,
    subject to such contractual limitations on subscriber benefits as may apply, including,
    for example, deductibles, waiting period or frequency limitations.” (Emphasis added.));
    S.D. Codified Laws § 58-17-146 (Supp. 2012) (“For the purposes of this section, the
    term, covered services, means services reimbursable under the plan, policy, or contract,
    subject to such contractual limitations on benefits as may apply, including deductibles,
    waiting periods, frequency limitations, or charges over the benefit maximum.”
    (Emphasis added.)); Wash. Rev. Code Ann. § 48.21.147(2) (Supp. 2012) (“For the
    purposes of this section, ‘covered services’ means dental services that are reimbursable
    under the applicable insurance policy, group plan, or subscriber agreement or would be
    reimbursable but for the application of contractual limitations such as benefit
    maximums, deductibles, coinsurance, waiting periods or frequency limitations.”
    (Emphasis added.)).
    2Ariz.  Rev. Stat. Ann. § 20-847 (West Supp. 2012) (“For the purposes of this
    section, ‘covered service’ means a service for which any reimbursement is available
    under a subscription contract without regard to contractual limitations by a deductible,
    copayment, coinsurance, waiting period, annual or lifetime maximum, frequency
    limitation, alternative benefit payment, exclusion or other limitation.”); Idaho Code Ann.
    § 41-1849(1) (2010) (“ ‘Covered services’ as used in this section means services under
    the applicable dental plan, dental plan contract or plan benefits subject to such
    contractual limitations on benefits of the dental plan, dental plan contracts or plan
    benefits as may apply.”); Va. Code Ann. § 38.2–3407.17(A) (Supp. 2012) (“ ‘Covered
    services’ means the health care services for which benefits under a policy, contract, or
    evidence of coverage are payable by a dental plan, including services paid by the
    insureds, subscribers, or enrollees because the annual or periodic payment maximum
    established by the dental plan has been met.”).
    16
    our general assembly apparently had other templates available if it had
    wanted to clearly prohibit dental plans from imposing maximum fees on
    services that would have been reimbursed but for a plan limitation.
    Instead of using language that paralleled that of the other states, our
    legislature defined “covered services” to mean “services reimbursed under
    the dental plan.”
    Of course, we must construe section 514C.3B in its entirety. See
    State v. Adams, 
    810 N.W.2d 365
    , 369 (Iowa 2012).                      Also, legislative
    history should be taken into account in construing an ambiguous
    statute. See Iowa Code § 4.6(3). In this regard, the Federation and the
    Commissioner point out that section 514C.3B was amended to add
    subsection 4 during the legislative process.3                As noted above, that
    subsection reads:
    3The  original legislation (HF 2229) passed the House without subsection 4 on
    February 24, 2010 on a vote of 93–1. See H. Journal, 83rd G.A., 2d Sess., at 711–12
    (Iowa 2010) [hereinafter H. Journal]; H.F. 2229 (Introduced), 83rd G.A., 2d Sess. (Iowa
    2010). On March 10, on the Senate floor, Senator McCoy offered an amendment (S-
    5185) to add the following version of subsection 4:
    Nothing in this section shall be construed as limiting the ability of an
    insurer or a third-party administrator to restrict balance billing, waiting
    periods, frequency limitations, and deductibles.
    S. Amendment 5185, 83rd G.A., 2d Sess. (Iowa 2010); see S. Journal, 83rd G.A., 2d
    Sess. at 768 (Iowa 2010) [hereinafter S. Journal].
    Senator Warnstadt then immediately offered an amendment to Senator McCoy’s
    amendment (S-5233) that contained what became the final version of subsection 4. S.
    Journal, at 768; S. Amendment 5233, 83rd G.A., 2d Sess. (Iowa 2010). This was
    approved by voice vote. S. Journal, at 768. The amended legislation as a whole passed
    the Senate 49–0. See 
    id. The legislation
    then returned to the House. In the House, Representative Quirk
    filed an amendment (H-8490) as follows:
    “Covered services” means services eligible for reimbursement under the
    dental plan, including services not otherwise reimbursed because of
    applicable contractual limitations, including but not limited to balance
    billing, deductibles, waiting periods, frequency limitations, and
    maximum annual benefits.
    H. Amendment 8490, 83rd G.A., 2d Sess. (Iowa 2010); see H. Journal, at 949.
    17
    4. Nothing in this section shall be construed as
    limiting the ability of an insurer or a third-party
    administrator to restrict any of the following as they relate to
    covered services:
    a. Balance billing.
    b. Waiting periods.
    c. Frequency limitations.
    d. Deductibles.
    e. Maximum annual benefits.
    
    Id. § 514C.3B(4).
          According to the Commissioner and the Federation,
    this provision was added to clarify that “covered services” would still be
    considered “covered” for purposes of the statute even if they were not
    reimbursed by the plan because of a plan limitation. The Commissioner
    and the Federation contend that if subsection 4 does not have this
    purpose, it becomes meaningless.                We are not persuaded by their
    arguments.
    As written, subsection 4 does not purport to qualify the definition
    of “covered services” in subsection 3—i.e., the requirement that the
    services be “reimbursed.”          Rather, it purports to clarify that insurers
    retain certain rights relating to “covered services.” If this is what it does,
    subsection 4 is not meaningless. Thus, subsection 4(a) would indicate
    ______________________
    On March 23, this amendment and several others were withdrawn; another
    amendment was defeated by voice vote. H. Journal, at 1172–73. The House then
    concurred in the Senate’s amendment and approved the legislation 98–1. See 
    id. at 1173.
    The Governor signed the legislation on April 29, 2010.
    It is difficult to draw definitive conclusions from this legislative history. One
    might infer that Senator Warnstadt’s amendment was intended to accomplish
    something different from Senator McCoy’s, or that it was just viewed as a better way of
    saying the same thing. One might infer that Representative Quirk’s amendment would
    have altered the meaning of the statute. In this respect, it would have resembled
    several other amendments that were offered at the same time, that presumably were not
    supported by the dentists, and that were also withdrawn—i.e., H-8500, H-8502, and H-
    8519. H. Journal, at 1123–24, 1173. Or, one might infer that Representative Quirk’s
    amendment was withdrawn because it was viewed as unnecessary (unlike those other
    amendments).
    18
    that an insurer still has the right to limit what a dentist can charge for a
    particular service above the insurance reimbursement—so-called balance
    billing.   For example, a dental plan could reimburse $50 per teeth
    cleaning, but also provide that the dentist may charge no more than $60
    in total, i.e., can “balance bill” no more than $10. This would be a limit
    “relating to” covered services. Likewise, subsections 4(d) and 4(e) would
    clarify that an insurer can impose a maximum fee on a service that it
    does not entirely reimburse because of a deductible or an annual
    maximum. Again, so read, these provisions serve a meaningful purpose.
    With regard to subsections 4(b) and 4(c), it is more difficult for IDA
    to explain why they are needed. True, insurers would want to have the
    ability to continue to impose waiting periods and frequency limitations,
    but it is not clear how that might be jeopardized by IDA’s interpretation
    of section 514C.3B. The most one can say is that subsections 4(b) and
    4(c) clarify that insurers can still impose waiting periods and frequency
    limitations as a condition of covering services—in addition to maximum
    fees on services they do cover.
    On the other hand, the Commissioner and the Federation’s
    interpretation of subsection 4 suffers from the same infirmity.        If the
    purpose of subsection 4 were to clarify that a “ ‘covered service’ does not
    lose its status as a covered service because of limitations placed on
    reimbursement to the dentist” by the plan, as reasoned by the
    Commissioner, then subsections 4(b), (c), (d), and (e) serve a purpose,
    but subsection 4(a) on balance billing seems like surplusage. Balance
    19
    billing is not a limitation on reimbursement, but on the dentist’s ability
    to bill more than the reimbursement.4
    Furthermore, the language of subsection 4 does not suggest that
    every part of it has to have meaning. It says, “Nothing in this section
    shall be construed . . . .”      In our experience, this kind of savings
    language is sometimes used by a legislature in an abundance of caution,
    rather than to resolve a genuine controversy that would exist if the
    language were not present.      See, e.g., 
    id. § 1.18(6)(c)
    (“Nothing in this
    section shall be construed to . . . [d]isparage any language other than
    English . . . .”); 
    id. § 20.26
    (“Nothing in this section shall be construed to
    prohibit voluntary contributions by individuals to political parties or
    candidates.”); 
    id. § 321.276(3)
    (“Nothing in this section shall be
    construed to authorize a peace officer to confiscate a portable electronic
    communication device from the driver or occupant of a motor vehicle.”);
    
    id. § 461C.7(2)
    (“Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to . . .
    [r]elieve any person using the land of another for recreational purposes
    or urban deer control from any obligation which the person may have in
    the absence of this chapter to exercise care in the use of such land and
    in the person’s activities thereon, or from the legal consequences of
    failure to employ such care.”); 
    id. § 515.103(6)(c)
    (“Nothing in this
    subsection shall be construed to provide a consumer or other insured
    with a cause of action that does not exist in the absence of this
    subsection.”); 
    id. § 524.821(1)
    (“Nothing in this section shall be
    construed as authority for any person to engage in transactions not
    otherwise permitted by applicable law . . . .”).
    4Notably,  none of the nine out-of-state laws that use the “reimbursable”
    approach to “covered services” mention balance billing.
    20
    Thus, reading the statute as a whole, we have a straightforward
    directive in subsection 3 that covered services must be “reimbursed
    under the dental plan,” followed by a somewhat cloudier statement in
    subsection 4 that “[n]othing in this section shall be construed as limiting
    the ability of an insurer or a third-party administrator to restrict any of
    the following as they relate to covered services.”      Had the legislature
    wanted to provide that insurers could impose maximum fees on services
    that were reimbursable, but were not reimbursed in a particular instance
    because of a plan limit, it could have said that directly.
    The Commissioner and the Federation also argue that their
    interpretation of section 514C.3B better protects consumers by allowing
    insurers to set a maximum price for a dental procedure even when that
    procedure is not covered because of a plan limitation.       However, this
    argument presumes that in enacting section 514C.3B, the legislature’s
    intent was to favor the interests of consumers over those of dentists. It
    appears, rather, that the general assembly was trying to balance the
    interests of both groups. If the legislature’s only goal had been to avoid a
    situation where insured patients might have to pay whatever the dentist
    charged without the benefit of a price cap, it would not have enacted
    section 514C.3B at all.    For this reason, we are unable to give much
    weight to this policy argument.       The only evident policy of section
    514C.3B is to “prohibit[] the imposition by a dental plan of fee schedules
    for the provision of dental services that are not covered by the plan.”
    2010 Iowa Acts ch. 1179.
    Based on our de novo review, we hold that a service is “covered”
    within the meaning of section 514C.3B only if it is actually reimbursed to
    some extent under the dental plan. Hence, an insurer may only impose
    21
    a maximum fee on a service when a reimbursement has been provided
    for that service.
    IV. Conclusion.
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude the district court erred in
    upholding the Commissioner’s declaratory order. We accordingly reverse
    the district court’s ruling and remand for proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12–1280

Citation Numbers: 831 N.W.2d 138, 2013 WL 2127575, 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 59

Judges: Mansfield

Filed Date: 5/17/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024