Bradley A. Chicoine, Dr. Bradley A. Chicoine, D.C., P.C., Mark A. Niles, Niles Chiropractic, Inc., Rod R. Rebarcak, and Ben Winecoff, on Behalf of Themselves and Those Like Situated v. Wellmark, Inc. D/B/A Wellmark Blue Cross A , 2017 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 38 ( 2017 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 16–0364
    Filed April 21, 2017
    BRADLEY A. CHICOINE, DR. BRADLEY A. CHICOINE, D.C., P.C.,
    MARK A. NILES, NILES CHIROPRACTIC, INC., ROD R. REBARCAK,
    and BEN WINECOFF, on Behalf of Themselves and Those Like Situated,
    Appellants,
    and
    STEVEN A. MUELLER, BRADLEY J. BROWN, MARK A. KRUSE, KEVIN
    D. MILLER, and LARRY E. PHIPPS, on Behalf of Themselves and Those
    Like Situated,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    WELLMARK, INC. d/b/a WELLMARK BLUE CROSS AND BLUE
    SHIELD OF IOWA, an Iowa Corporation, and WELLMARK HEALTH
    PLAN OF IOWA, INC., an Iowa Corporation,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Michael D.
    Huppert, Judge.
    A district court indefinitely stayed state antitrust proceedings in
    favor of further proceedings in federal multidistrict antitrust litigation.
    RULING ON MOTION VACATED; REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
    Glenn L. Norris of Hawkins & Norris, P.C., Des Moines, and
    Steven P. Wandro and Kara M. Simons of Wandro & Associates, P.C.,
    Des Moines, for appellants.
    2
    Hayward L. Draper, Ryan G. Koopmans, and John T. Clendenin
    (until withdrawal) of Nyemaster Goode, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees.
    3
    HECHT, Justice.
    Thirteen Iowa chiropractors filed this class-action lawsuit against
    Iowa’s largest health insurer alleging it conspired with nonparty
    competitors to fix prices, allocate markets, and engage in other
    anticompetitive conduct in Iowa in violation of the Iowa Competition Law.
    See Iowa Code ch. 553 (2015). The Iowa chiropractors allege that this
    anticompetitive conduct has had the purpose and effect of driving down
    chiropractor reimbursements to discriminatorily low levels.
    On the defendants’ motion, and over the plaintiffs’ objection, the
    district court stayed the case in its entirety pending further proceedings
    in federal multidistrict litigation (MDL) in Alabama brought under the
    federal antitrust laws. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 1, 4 (2012). The Alabama MDL
    includes physicians, hospitals, and other healthcare providers from
    around the country as plaintiffs. As in the present case, the plaintiffs
    allege conspiracies by the insurers to fix prices and allocate markets.
    However, the MDL complaint alleges that the conspiracies have had the
    effect of driving down all healthcare provider reimbursements to
    artificially low levels.    One of the plaintiffs in the Alabama MDL is an
    Iowa chiropractor and one of the defendants is Iowa’s largest health
    insurer.
    On interlocutory review, we conclude the district court abused its
    discretion in staying the Iowa litigation pending further proceedings in
    the Alabama MDL.           Resolution of the Alabama MDL, which is still in
    bellwether pretrial proceedings, could take years, and although there is
    some overlap between the two cases, there are also considerable
    differences in the issues they present. Accordingly, we vacate the order
    staying this action and remand for further proceedings.
    4
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    The plaintiffs are Iowa chiropractors who treat patients enrolled in
    health insurance plans offered or administered by the defendants,
    Wellmark, Inc. d/b/a Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa and
    Wellmark Health Plan of Iowa, Inc. (collectively, Wellmark). Wellmark is
    an Iowa health insurance corporation and a member of the national Blue
    Cross and Blue Shield Association (BCBSA), a federation of over thirty-
    five independent Blue Cross and Blue Shield (BCBS) affiliates known as
    the Blues.
    Wellmark contracts with the plaintiffs and other healthcare
    providers who agree to provide services to BCBS subscribers at or under
    a discounted fee in exchange for being added to Wellmark’s network of
    preferred providers.   Wellmark shares this fee schedule and provider
    network with the self-funded employee plans it administers in exchange
    for a fee and with the other BCBS affiliates in exchange for their
    promises to not use the BCBS trademark in Iowa and to share their own
    fee schedules and provider networks with Wellmark’s subscribers (the
    BlueCard® Program) seeking medical services in other states.            See
    Mueller v. Wellmark (Mueller II), 
    861 N.W.2d 563
    , 566–67 (Iowa 2015).
    A. Prior Iowa Chiropractic Litigation. Wellmark’s involvement
    in the BlueCard® Program and its arrangements with self-funded
    employee plans have been challenged by Iowa chiropractors in related
    chiropractic litigation that has come before our court four times.      See
    Abbas v. Iowa Ins. Div., ___ N.W.2d ___ (Iowa 2017); Wellmark, Inc. v.
    Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    890 N.W.2d 636
    (Iowa 2017); Mueller II, 
    861 N.W.2d 563
    ;
    Mueller v. Wellmark, Inc. (Mueller I), 
    818 N.W.2d 244
    (Iowa 2012). For a
    brief summary of those cases, see Wellmark, 
    Inc., 890 N.W.2d at 638
    –42.
    5
    B. Chicoine Petition. On October 5, 2015, the plaintiffs filed a
    class-action petition alleging Wellmark violated section 553.4 of the Iowa
    Competition Law under the rule of reason. See Iowa Code § 553.4 (“A
    contract, combination, or conspiracy between two or more persons shall
    not restrain or monopolize trade or commerce in a relevant market.”). 1
    The petition alleges Wellmark entered a combination or conspiracy with
    potential      competitors—the       other       BCBS   affiliates   and     self-funded
    employee plans Wellmark administers—to restrain trade, commerce, and
    competition in the sale and purchase of healthcare services in Iowa. The
    plaintiffs argue this alleged conduct violates the Iowa Competition Law
    under the rule of reason because “the anticompetitive consequences of
    such conspiracy or conspiracies outweigh any procompetitive benefits.”
    The alleged restraints include agreements to
    (a) . . . artificially fix a lower price for chiropractic services
    and to limit or exclude chiropractic coverage from health
    plans offered by other potential competitors for chiropractic
    services in Iowa[;]
    (b) . . . allocate territories and not to compete with each other
    in those allocated territories[;]
    (c) impose maximum fee schedules to which chiropractors
    must agree with defendants, their co-conspirators, and with
    each other in order to provide diagnostic and treatment
    services for their patients in Iowa;
    (d) prescribe fees for chiropractic services which are
    discriminatory to doctors of chiropractic in relation to the
    1Five    of the named plaintiffs in this case, led by Steven A. Mueller, D.C.,
    previously challenged Wellmark’s preferred-provider arrangements as constituting a
    per se violation of section 553.4 of the Iowa Competition Law. See Mueller 
    II, 861 N.W.2d at 574
    –75 (affirming summary judgment in favor of Wellmark on the plaintiffs’
    per se liability claim); Mueller 
    I, 818 N.W.2d at 264
    . The Mueller plaintiffs contend this
    lawsuit asserting a rule-of-reason claim is a continuation of Mueller I, commenced in
    May 2008. See Iowa Code § 614.10 (“If, after the commencement of an action, the
    plaintiff, for any cause except negligence in its prosecution, fails therein, and a new one
    is brought within six months thereafter, the second shall, for the purposes herein
    contemplated, be held a continuation of the first.”).
    6
    fees for other health care practitioners for the same or
    similar services;
    (e) prescribe limitations upon and make optional the
    coverage of diagnostic and treatment services of
    chiropractors while not imposing the same standards and
    practices to the coverage of diagnostic and treatment
    services of other practitioners of health care in Iowa licensed
    under the chapters of Title IV, subtitle 3, of the Code of Iowa
    [Chapters 147 through 158];
    (f) historically enter into a contract, combination and
    conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce in Iowa with
    health care providers other than chiropractors to first
    boycott and then later discriminate against the diagnostic
    and treatment services to members provided by Iowa
    chiropractors[.]
    The petition also challenges Wellmark’s attempt to implement plans and
    policies for itself and its alleged coconspirators under which
    (g) . . . subscriber-patients who elected to seek chiropractic
    treatment would be covered for only three treatment
    procedures per visit to a doctor of chiropractic regardless of
    the acuity, severity, or nature of the patient’s condition or
    the number of her complaints;
    (h) . . . subscriber-patients and those persons who were
    employees of self-funded entities administered by Wellmark
    . . . would be required to seek preapproval . . . before any
    chiropractic services would be paid, which policy solely
    related to chiropractic services and to no other services of
    any other health care practitioner licensed by the state of
    Iowa;
    (i) . . . Iowa chiropractors only are subject to a capitated
    payment system whereby chiropractors are paid at [a] rate
    less than 50% of the rate payable for PPO services, while all
    other Iowa licensed practitioners covered by WHPI are paid
    pursuant to a schedule derived from the PPO payment
    schedules with a 7-9% discount.
    The plaintiffs seek certification of a class comprised of all similarly
    situated chiropractors who were either Iowa citizens (1) on the date the
    petition was filed or (2) “at all times during their Iowa licensure as
    doctors of chiropractic after May 20, 2004, which is four years prior to
    7
    the filing of the Plaintiffs’ First [Amended Petition] in [Mueller I, 
    818 N.W.2d 244
    ].”
    C. Motion to Stay. In December 2015, Wellmark filed a motion
    to stay proceedings in favor of multidistrict litigation pending in the
    United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. See In
    re Blue Cross Blue Shield Antitrust Litigation, MDL No. 2406, No. 2:13–cv–
    20000 (N.D. Ala. 2012) [hereinafter MDL No. 2406].          MDL No. 2406
    consolidated for pretrial purposes a significant number of federal
    antitrust cases brought by various healthcare providers and health
    insurance subscribers against the BCBSA and at least one affiliate.
    Wellmark asserted a stay was appropriate because MDL No. 2406 was
    filed first, had advanced farther, concerned the same putative class, and
    involved common issues and parties. Wellmark also argued a stay would
    be consistent with principles of comity, give the Iowa court the benefit of
    federal judicial expertise, save significant resources by eliminating
    duplicative efforts, and help avoid inconsistent interpretations of the
    Iowa Competition Law and the Federal Sherman Act.
    MDL No. 2406 has two master class-action complaints, a provider
    complaint and a subscriber complaint. Only the provider complaint is
    relevant to this case. The most recent version of the provider complaint
    available in the record on appeal was filed in MDL No. 2406 on
    November 25, 2014, by medical suppliers and healthcare providers,
    including Iowa chiropractor Joseph Ferezy, D.C. d/b/a Ferezy Clinic of
    Chiropractic and Neurology (FCCN).        The provider complaint alleges
    Wellmark, the other BCBS affiliates, and the BCBSA conspired to
    allocate markets, fix prices, and boycott providers outside each affiliate’s
    allocated market in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act under
    per se, quick-look, or rule-of-reason analyses.     The plaintiffs ask the
    8
    federal court to certify a class of healthcare providers and a subclass of
    plaintiffs for Iowa that includes all Iowa chiropractors who provided
    insured services within four years of the filing of the action, with Joseph
    Ferezy as representative for the subclass of Iowa chiropractors.
    With respect to Iowa chiropractor Joseph Ferezy’s claims, the
    complaint states,
    During the relevant time period, FCCN provided medically
    necessary, covered services to patients insured by Wellmark,
    Inc. d/b/a Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa
    (“Wellmark”) or who are included in employee benefit plans
    administered by Wellmark pursuant to his in-network
    contract with Wellmark, and billed Wellmark for the same.
    FCCN was paid less for those services than he would have
    been but for Defendants’ anticompetitive conduct and has
    been injured by Defendants’ conduct as a result thereof. On
    information and belief, FCCN has also provided medically
    necessary, covered services to other Blue Cross and Blue
    Shield Plan members through national programs, has billed
    for same, and has been paid less for those services than he
    would have been but for Defendants’ anticompetitive
    conduct.
    Corrected Consolidated Second Amended Provider Complaint, MDL
    No. 2406, No. 2:13–cv–20000, EFC No. 236, at *29, ¶51 (N.D. Ala. filed
    Nov. 25, 2014).
    On October 30, 2015, the court in MDL No. 2406 issued a
    scheduling order adopting a bellwether approach to streamlining MDL
    No. 2406. See Order, MDL No. 2406, No. 2:13–cv–20000, EFC No. 469
    (N.D. Ala. filed Oct. 30, 2015). The court stayed all but the two cases
    filed in its district until January 2018—American Electric Motor Services,
    Inc. v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Alabama, Case No. 2:12-cv-02169, a
    subscriber case, and Conway v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Alabama,
    Case No. 2:12-cv-02532, a provider case (collectively, the bellwether
    cases). 
    Id. at 5.
    The court then set an accelerated schedule for pretrial
    9
    proceedings in the two bellwether cases to occur throughout 2017. 2 
    Id. at 5–6.
    A pretrial conference would occur no sooner than January 2018,
    with a trial date for the two bellwether cases to be set by separate order.
    
    Id. at 6.
    D.   Subsequent Proceedings. The plaintiffs resisted Wellmark’s
    motion to stay this action in December 2015, asking the court to
    conclude under standards established in First Midwest Corp. v. Corporate
    Finance Associates that a stay is unwarranted. See 
    663 N.W.2d 888
    , 891
    (Iowa 2003). Wellmark replied, and the district court held a hearing in
    January 2016. On January 28, 2016, the district court stayed the case
    “in favor of further proceedings in [MDL No. 2406], until further order of
    this court.”     We granted the plaintiffs’ application for interlocutory
    appeal.
    II. Standard of Review.
    We review the decision to grant or deny a stay for abuse of
    discretion.    
    Id. at 890–91.
        Reversal is warranted when discretion “is
    capriciously exercised or abused.” 
    Id. (quoting Chrysler
    Credit Corp. v.
    Rosenberger, 
    512 N.W.2d 303
    , 305 (Iowa 1994)). Discretion is abused
    unless the evidence clearly and convincingly shows that the need for a
    stay outweighs the potential for harm or prejudice to the other litigants.
    See Landis v. N. Am. Co., 
    299 U.S. 248
    , 255, 
    57 S. Ct. 163
    , 166 (1936)
    (“[T]he suppliant for a stay must make out a clear case of hardship or
    2The court required factual discovery to be completed by January 13, 2017;
    expert reports to be submitted by February, 28, 2017 and March 28, 2017, for the
    plaintiffs and defendants, respectively; expert discovery to be completed by April 28,
    2017; class certification and Daubert motions to be submitted by June 1, 2017; and
    potentially dispositive motions to be submitted by September 7, 2017. Order, MDL
    No. 2406, No. 2:13-cv-20000, EFC No. 469, at 5–6. The court also set a nonrecord
    economics day in January 2017 so the parties could educate the court about relevant
    economic issues. 
    Id. 10 inequity
    in being required to go forward, if there is even a fair possibility
    that the stay for which he prays will work damage to some one else.”);
    see also Williford v. Armstrong World Indus., Inc., 
    715 F.2d 124
    , 127 (4th
    Cir. 1983) (“The party seeking a stay must justify it by clear and
    convincing circumstances outweighing potential harm to the party
    against whom it is operative.”).
    III. Analysis.
    The issue on appeal is whether the district court abused its
    discretion by staying the plaintiffs’ lawsuit in its entirety pending further
    proceedings in MDL No. 2406. We begin by reviewing the law governing
    stays.
    A “stay” is the temporary postponement of all or part of a judgment
    or judicial proceeding by court order. Stay, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th
    ed. 2014). 3 The power to grant a stay “is incidental to the power inherent
    in every court to control the disposition of the causes on its docket with
    economy of time and effort for itself, for counsel, and for litigants.”
    
    Landis, 299 U.S. at 254
    , 57 S. Ct. at 166; see also Brenton Bros. v. Dorr,
    
    213 Iowa 725
    , 728, 
    239 N.W. 808
    , 809 (1931).                  District courts have
    broad discretion in deciding whether to grant or deny a stay. See First
    Midwest 
    Corp., 663 N.W.2d at 890
    .              That discretion, however, is not
    unbridled. 
    Id. A district
    court must act reasonably when deciding whether to stay
    a case in favor of a proceeding in another jurisdiction, taking into
    3Werecognize three classes of stays: those issued under a court’s common law
    authority to control the disposition of causes on its docket, those granted pursuant to
    statute, and those associated with appellate proceedings and certain postjudgment
    motions. Brenton Bros. v. Dorr, 
    213 Iowa 725
    , 728, 
    239 N.W. 808
    , 809–10 (1931); see
    also Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.1006 (permitting a stay pending the resolution of motions for
    judgment notwithstanding the verdict, for a new trial, or to vacate or modify a
    judgment). The first class of stay is at issue in this case.
    11
    account the parties’ competing interests, the consequences of a stay to
    the parties, and other relevant considerations. See 
    Landis, 299 U.S. at 254
    –58, 57 S. Ct. at 166–67. The other relevant considerations include
    comity, 4 the desirability of avoiding a multiplicity of forums,
    whether the foreign litigation is at an advanced or
    preliminary stage, the likelihood of obtaining complete relief
    in the foreign jurisdiction, and the possibility that a
    judgment entered in the foreign jurisdiction will give rise to
    collateral estoppel or will render the matter before the court
    res judicata.
    First Midwest 
    Corp., 663 N.W.2d at 891
    (quoting 1 Am. Jur. 2d Actions
    § 78, at 773 (1994)).             Other considerations include the relative
    convenience of the forums; which action was filed first; the forums’
    subject-matter knowledge and expertise; whether the actions were
    brought in good faith; and the similarity of “the parties, causes of action,
    and issues in the two actions.” E.H. Schopler, Annotation, Stay of Civil
    Proceedings Pending Determination of Action in Federal Court in Same
    State, 
    56 A.L.R. 2d 335
    , § 2, Westlaw (database updated April 2017)
    (footnotes omitted).
    “Where a prior foreign action involves the same parties and the
    same issues and is pending before a court capable of doing prompt and
    complete justice, the court’s discretion may be freely exercised in favor of
    a stay.” First Midwest 
    Corp., 663 N.W.2d at 891
    (quoting 1 Am. Jur. 2d
    Actions § 78, at 773).          Conversely, where the parties or issues are
    different, a stay will only be justified in rare circumstances. See 
    Landis, 299 U.S. at 255
    , 57 S. Ct. at 166. A stay may be justified in favor of
    another case involving different parties if both cases require “the minute
    4“Comity is . . . a principle in accordance with which the courts of one state will
    give effect to the laws and judicial decisions of another, not as a matter of right but out
    of deference and respect.” Jacobsen v. Saner, 
    247 Iowa 191
    , 193, 
    72 N.W.2d 900
    , 901
    (1955).
    12
    investigation of intercorporate relations, linked in a web of baffling
    intricacy” or present “novel problems of far-reaching importance to the
    parties or public.” 
    Id. at 256,
    57 S. Ct. at 166. Likewise, a stay may be
    justified in favor of another case involving different issues of fact and law
    if “in all likelihood it will settle many [issues] and simplify them all.” 
    Id. The seminal
    case concerning a trial court’s common law authority
    to stay a case pendent lite is Landis. In Landis, the Supreme Court held
    that the terms of a stay must be moderate in extent and unoppressive in
    effect. 
    Id. at 256,
    57 S. Ct. at 166. “[A] stay is immoderate and hence
    unlawful unless so framed in its inception that its force will be spent
    within reasonable limits, so far at least as they are susceptible of
    prevision and description.”     
    Id. at 257,
    57 S. Ct. at 167.       The Court
    concluded the trial court abused its discretion by granting a stay pending
    the final appellate decision in another case that was still in pretrial
    proceedings because the stay would be in effect for years and might
    ultimately be of little to no benefit to the stayed case, depending on how
    the other case was decided. 
    Id. at 256–57,
    57 S. Ct. at 167. The stay did
    not become moderate merely “because conceivably the court that made it
    may be persuaded at a later time to undo what it has done.” 
    Id. at 257,
    57 S. Ct. at 167.
    In this case, the only limit the district court placed on the duration
    of the stay was that it would remain in effect “until further order of this
    court.”   Absent the district court’s decision to end the stay, it will
    continue in effect through a decision by the district court in the
    bellwether cases and any appeal to the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit and United States Supreme Court.               Once the
    bellwether cases are resolved, the stay could continue while the
    nonbellwether cases proceed through the pretrial phase of MDL
    13
    No. 2406. The stay order concluded a stay was warranted even though
    “the eventual trial of the Iowa portion of the MDL action may not come
    for several years,” indicating the district court might even consider letting
    the stay remain in effect through the remand and trial of the Iowa
    portion of the MDL action.
    As in Landis, the stay in this case serves to prolong the decision-
    making process for years without adequately protecting or advancing the
    plaintiffs’ interest in receiving a prompt decision.   At a minimum, the
    stay will last until 2018—the earliest date the bellwether cases could
    precede to trial under the current scheduling order in MDL No. 2406. In
    all likelihood, the stay could last several years or even a decade or more
    as the bellwether cases and the consolidated federal case involving the
    Iowa plaintiff move through their trial and appellate stages.        Such a
    lengthy and indefinite stay violates the plaintiffs’ interest in prompt and
    complete justice. Cf. First Midwest 
    Corp., 663 N.W.2d at 891
    . The stay
    does not become moderate simply because the plaintiffs could petition
    the court to enter an order ending the stay or because the court could
    end the stay sooner of its own accord. See Landis, 299 U.S. at 
    257, 57 S. Ct. at 167
    .
    Furthermore, any benefit of a decision in MDL No. 2406 advancing
    the resolution of this case is uncertain for several reasons. First, if MDL
    No. 2406 is resolved under a per se or quick-look theory, it will provide
    little or no benefit to the economic and econometric analyses in the Iowa
    plaintiffs’ rule-of-reason claim.    Second, the federal court in MDL
    No. 2406 has adopted a bellwether approach, making it more likely that
    the Iowa portion of MDL No. 2406 will settle before trial or even pretrial
    proceedings, thus removing many of the potential benefits of a stay in
    this case. See In re Chevron U.S.A., Inc., 
    109 F.3d 1016
    , 1019 (5th Cir.
    14
    1997) (“The notion that the trial of some members of a large group of
    claimants may provide a basis for enhancing prospects of settlement or
    for resolving common issues or claims is a sound one that has achieved
    general acceptance by both bench and bar.”).                The bellwether cases
    involve Alabama plaintiffs, and it is possible that competitive conditions
    in Alabama may have no connection to those in Iowa.5
    Finally,   as    the   district   court     found,   the   plaintiffs   raised
    approximately “ten detailed specifications of wrongdoing” concerning
    Wellmark’s treatment of Iowa chiropractors while MDL No. 2406 focused
    on two allegations concerning the BCBSA’s treatment of all healthcare
    providers. Although there appears to be an allegation common to both
    cases that the BCBSA entities have generally conspired to stay out of
    each other’s territories (i.e., Iowa and South Dakota in the case of
    Wellmark),    the      present   case    alleges   discriminatory    treatment     of
    chiropractors instead of artificially low reimbursements for all healthcare
    providers.    In addition, the present case alleges other anticompetitive
    agreements, including between Wellmark and self-insurers. It is unclear
    in our view whether any resolution of claims in MDL No. 2406 would
    result in the resolution of claims in this action. See Landis, 299 U.S. at
    
    256, 57 S. Ct. at 166
    (noting a stay may be justified in favor of a case
    with nonidentical issues if “in all likelihood it will settle many and
    simplify them all”).
    An indefinite delay for uncertain benefits is patently immoderate.
    Cf. Univ. of Utah Hosp. & Med. Ctr. v. Twin Falls County, 
    842 P.2d 689
    ,
    692 (Idaho 1992) (finding the stay of an application for medical indigency
    5A federal MDL is for pretrial purposes only, and cases are returned to their
    home district for trial. See 28 U.S.C. § 1407(a).
    15
    pending a final appellate decision in a disability application to be
    patently unreasonable), superseded by statute, 1996 Idaho Sess. Laws
    1360, as recognized in St. Luke’s Magic Valley Reg’l Med. Ctr., Ltd. v. Bd.
    of Cty. Comm’rs, 
    237 P.3d 1210
    , 1215 (Idaho 2010). “Relief so drastic
    and unusual overpasses the limits of any reasonable need, at least upon
    the showing made when the motion was submitted.” Landis, 299 U.S. at
    
    257, 57 S. Ct. at 167
    . Under the circumstances, we conclude it was an
    abuse of discretion for the district court to stay this litigation.
    We disagree with Wellmark’s contention that Iowa Code section
    553.2 supports a stay here. 6 Although section 553.2 provides that the
    Iowa Competition Law “shall be construed to complement and be
    harmonized with” federal antitrust laws, it also directs that it shall not be
    construed “in such a way as to constitute a delegation of state authority
    to the federal government.” Iowa Code § 553.2. The purpose of section
    553.2 is to achieve “a uniform standard of conduct so that businesses
    will know what is acceptable conduct and what is not acceptable
    conduct.” Comes v. Microsoft Corp., 
    646 N.W.2d 440
    , 446 (Iowa 2003).
    But attainment of that purpose does not necessarily require an Iowa
    state trial court to wait for and then defer to the legal rulings of an
    Alabama federal trial court in a specific case. Our courts are capable of
    applying antitrust precedent.
    6Iowa   Code section 553.2 provides,
    This chapter shall be construed to complement and be
    harmonized with the applied laws of the United States which have the
    same or similar purpose as this chapter. This construction shall not be
    made in such a way as to constitute a delegation of state authority to the
    federal government, but shall be made to achieve uniform application of
    the state and federal laws prohibiting restraints of economic activity and
    monopolistic practices.
    16
    IV. Disposition.
    The order of the district court is vacated, and the case is
    remanded.
    RULING      ON     MOTION      VACATED;       REMANDED     WITH
    DIRECTIONS.
    All justices concur except Appel, J., who takes no part.