Court Opinion

ID: 4227683
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-12-11 23:32:53.514875+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:26:40.616251
License: Public Domain

2011DEC 11 L.,U    .

  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
                      DIVISION ONE

CHAN HEALTHCARE GROUP, PS,        )                No. 75541-2-1
a Washington professional services)
corporation,                      )
                                  )
                  Respondent,     )
                                  )
          v.                      )
                                  )
LIBERTY   MUTUAL  FIRE  INSURANCE )
COMPANY and LIBERTY MUTUAL        )
INSURANCE COMPANY,foreign         )                PUBLISHED OPINION
insurance companies,              )
                                  )                FILED: December 11, 2017
                  Petitioners.    )
                                  )

       VERELLEN, C.J. — This appeal turns on the standard governing a due
process collateral attack on a sister state's resolution of a multistate class action.

Under full faith and credit principles, a collateral attack in Washington fails if that

same due process challenge was raised, litigated, and decided in the sister state.

Under these circumstances, Washington courts do not second guess the analysis

and resolution by the trial and appellate courts in the sister state.

       Because the substance of respondent's due process claim of inadequate

representation was raised, litigated, and decided in Illinois, the Illinois settlement is

entitled to full faith and credit.

       Therefore, we reverse.
No. 75541-2-1/2

                                        FACTS

       This appeal concerns use by Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (Liberty) of

a computerized database to determine the amounts payable for treatments

covered by personal injury protection (PIP) coverage under automobile insurance

policies. Washington's PIP statute requires automobile insurers to pay all

reasonable and necessary medical expenses incurred by the insured.' Insurers

must "conduct[]a reasonable investigation" before refusing to pay claims.2

Liberty sets the benchmark reasonable medical charges payable using the FAIR

Health database, reflecting other healthcare provider charges in the same

geographic area.

       Liberty's use of the FAIR Health database was previously challenged in

Lebanon Chiropractic Clinic v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, a multistate

class action lawsuit litigated in Illinois.3 The class included Washington providers.

The lawsuit alleged that Liberty's use of the FAIR Health database was unfair

under the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act4 and

other states' equivalent acts, including the Washington Consumer Protection Act.5

Chan, a Lebanon class member, received reasonable notice and did not opt out.

       1   RCW 48.22.095(1), .005(7).
       2 WAC    284-30-330(4).
       3 No. 5-15-0111, 150111,2016 IL App (5th) 150111-U, 2016 WL 546909
(Feb. 9, 2016)(unpublished).
       4 815 ILL. COMP. STAT. ANN. 505/1 (2007).

       5 Ch. 19.86   RCW.

                                          2
No. 75541-2-1/3

       In October 2014, the parties in Lebanon reached a proposed class

settlement. In January 2015, class member Dr. David Kerbs, a Washington

chiropractor, filed an objection to the proposed settlement asserting, among other

things,"Lebanon Chiropractic Clinic is an inadequate class representative for

Washington providers and has a conflict of interests with Washington providers."6

Dr. Kerbs argued the conflict of interest was the result of differences between

Illinois and Washington's consumer protection statutes.

      In February 2015, following a fairness hearing, the Illinois court entered a

final order and judgment approving settlement and dismissing the case. In the

order, the court acknowledged Dr. Kerbs' objection, overruled all objections to the

proposed settlement, and determined the named plaintiff was an adequate

representative.7

       Dr. Kerbs appealed the judgment to the Appellate Court of Illinois. He

specifically challenged the adequacy of representation resulting from conflict

between the Illinois and Washington's consumer protection and PIP statutes. In

February 2016, the Illinois appellate court affirmed the trial court in an unpublished

opinion.8

       In September 2015, while Dr. Kerbs' appeal was still pending in Illinois,

Chan Healthcare Group, PS(Chan)filed the current case against Liberty in King

      6   Clerk's Papers(CP)at 4042.
       7 See   CP at 4155-56.
      8   Lebanon Chiropractic, 2016 WL 546909, at *15.

                                          3
No. 75541-2-1/4

County Superior Court. Chan alleged Liberty's reliance on the FAIR Health

database constituted an unfair practice under the Washington Consumer

Protection Act.

       Chan moved for a declaratory judgment that Lebanon did not preclude the

claims because the class representative was an inadequate representative.

Liberty moved for summary judgment seeking dismissal of the case. The superior

court declined to give full faith and credit to the Lebanon settlement and found the

named plaintiff in Lebanon did not adequately represent the interests of
                                                                      -
Washington providers. The trial court granted Chan's motion and denied Liberty's

motion.

       We granted Liberty's motion for discretionary review.

                                      ANALYSIS

       Liberty contends the trial court erred when it failed to give full faith and

credit to the Lebanon settlement.

       We review a court's refusal to accord full faith and credit to a foreign

judgment de novo.° The full faith and credit clause of the United States

Constitution requires states "to recognize judgments of sister states."1° A state

court judgment in a class action is "presumptively" entitled to full faith and credit

       9 OneWest Bank, FSB     v. Erickson, 185 Wn.2d 43, 56, 367 P.3d 1063
(2016).
      10 Id. at 55 (citing U.S. CONST. art. IV,§ 1).

                                           4
No. 75541-2-1/5

from the courts of other jurisdictions.11 "[P]arties can collaterally attack a foreign

order 'only if the court lacked jurisdiction or constitutional violations were

involved.'"12 Specifically, "a foreign state is not required to give full faith and credit

to a judgment against an affected party who did not receive due process when the

judgment was entered."13 Due process in a class action requires (1)"'reasonable

notice' that apprises the party of the pendency of the action, affords the party the

opportunity to present objections, and describes the parties' rights,"(2)the

opportunity to opt out, and (3)"a named plaintiff who adequately represents the

absent plaintiffs' interests."14

       Here, there is no dispute Chan had adequate notice and did not exercise

the right to opt out. The sole dispute is whether Chan can collaterally attack the

Lebanon settlement for lack of adequate representation. We must decide, under

full faith and credit, the standard for a collateral attack asserting lack of due

process in a sister state's class settlement approval.

       In In re Estate of Tolson, Division Two of this court considered whether a

Washington court was bound in a probate proceeding to a prior determination by a

California court that decedent was domiciled in California at date of death.15

       11 Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Epstein, 516 U.S. 367, 374, 1168.
Ct. 873, 134 L. Ed. 2d 6(1996).
       12 OneWest Bank, 185 Wn.2d at 56 (quoting State v. Berry, 141 Wn.2d 121,
128, 5 P.3d 658 (2000)).
       13 Nobl Park, L.L.C. of Vancouver v. Shell Oil Co., 122 Wn. App. 838, 845,
95 P.3d  1265(2004).
       14   Id.
       15 89 Wn. App. 21, 32, 947 P.2d     1242(1997).

                                            5
No. 75541-2-1/6

Division Two concluded that while "enforcement of a judgment under [the full faith

and credit clause] can be challenged by a showing that the court rendering

judgment lacked jurisdiction[,]. .. it is also well settled that if the jurisdictional

question has been litigated in the rendering court, principles of res judicata attach,"

and that question cannot be relitigated on collateral attack.16

       Our Supreme Court adopted a similar approach in OneWest Bank, FSB v.

Erikson when considering "whether a Washington court must give full faith and

credit to an Idaho court order encumbering Washington property."17 "This case

arose through OneWest Bank FSB's attempted foreclosure of Washington

property based on a reverse mortgage that an Idaho court ordered through [the

decedent's] conservatorship proceeding."18 The decedent's daughter

"challeng[ed] the foreclosure, claiming the reverse mortgage [was] void because

she was the actual owner of the property and the Idaho court had no jurisdiction to

affect Washington property."19

       Our Supreme Court concluded,"[W]e cannot question [the decedent's]

domicile because the personal jurisdiction issue was already litigated and decided

in the Idaho conservatorship proceedings."26 The court was persuaded the issue

of jurisdiction was already litigated and decided because the record, chiefly the

       16   Id.(emphasis added).
       17   185 Wn.2d 43, 55, 367 P.3d 1063(2016).
       18   Id. at 47-48.
       19   Id.
       29   Id. at 57(emphasis added).

                                             6
No. 75541-2-1/7

Idaho court's docket entries, revealed the decedent "objected to personal

jurisdiction in the Idaho court, but the court denied his objection and exercised

jurisdiction over him."21

       Although we do not have the particular Idaho court order at issue, we
       have sufficient evidence that the Idaho court considered challenges
       to [the decedent's] domicile and ruled that it had jurisdiction to
       appoint a conservator over him. ... There was enough evidence for
       the Idaho court to conclude it had sufficient contacts to exercise
       jurisdiction over [the decedent]. If[the daughter] wanted to challenge
       this determination, the Idaho court was the proper forum for doing
       so. She cannot collaterally attack that determination here.E22]

       Limited collateral review of a sister state court's finding of jurisdiction as

provided by Tolson and OneWest Bank is consistent with nonbinding federal

authority addressing the scope of collateral review in the context of a due process

challenge to a foreign court's class settlement approval.

       In Epstein v. MCA, Inc., the Ninth Circuit addressed the effect of a

Delaware state court judgment that approved a class action settlement releasing

exclusively federal claims.23 The Ninth Circuit rejected a broad, merit-based

collateral review and held that collateral review is limited to "whether the

procedures in the prior litigation afford the party against whom the earlier judgment

is asserted a 'full and fair opportunity' to litigate the claim or issue."24 Due process

       21   Id. at 58.
       22   Id.(emphasis added).
       23 179   F.3d 641,643(9th Cir. 1999).
       24   Id. at 649(emphasis added).

                                           7
,No. 75541-2-1/8

 "does not require collateral second-guessing of those determinations and that

 review."25

        Consistent with Tolson, OneWest Bank, and Epstein, we hold Washington

 courts do not relitigate questions of due process previously raised, litigated, and

 decided by a sister state court when approving a class settlement. To determine

 whether a due process issue has been previously raised, litigated, and decided,

 we consider(1) whether the specific due process objection was before the sister

 state court,(2) whether the parties presented briefing on the objection, and

 (3) whether the sister state court ruled on the objection. If, after conducting this

 limited collateral review we are reassured the sister state court litigated and

 decided the same due process objection currently raised, we will not second

 guess the determination of that court.26

        Here, Chan reargues Dr. Kerb's contention that the class representative in

 Lebanon inadequately represented Washington providers, noting

        there are fundamental differences between the Washington and
        Illinois consumer protection acts (including the public interest impact
        prong in Washington and the more restrictive requirement in Illinois
        of intent); between the remedies available in Washington and Illinois
        (e.g. treble damages versus punitive; rates of interest in judgments);
        and most importantly in the substantive laws underlying the

        25   Id. at 648.
        26 The  parties disagree about the significance of the Ninth Circuit decision in
 Hesse v. Sprint Corporation, 598 F.3d 581, 588 (9th Cir. 2010). At most, the
 Hesse decision recognizes that in the absence of any determination of adequate
 representation by the forum state, a collateral attack review of adequate
 representation is permissible. But here, the question of adequate representation
 of Washington class members was raised, litigated, and decided in both the Illinois
 trial and appellate courts.

                                            8
No. 75541-2-1/9

      [consumer protection act] claims of Washington and Illinois
      providers.[271

       But the same objection concerning lack of adequate representation was

before the Illinois trial court in Lebanon. Dr. Kerbs objected to the proposed

settlement because, among other things,"Lebanon Chiropractic Clinic is an

inadequate class representative for Washington providers and has a conflict of

interests with Washington providers."28

       The parties in Lebanon presented briefing on that specific conflict of

interest. In his written objection, Dr. Kerbs argued:

       Washington providers have rights and causes of action for relief
       under the Washington Consumer Protection Act not possessed or
       available to Lebanon as an Illinois provider. Lebanon could not
       adequately represent Washington providers and had a conflict of
       interests in obtaining benefits that benefited Lebanon but not
       Washington providers who get nothing under the Lebanon settlement
       and see key benefits and rights taken away from them.[281

       The court also received responses from Liberty and the class

representative rebutting Dr. Kerbs' various objections. The class representative

specifically addressed Dr. Kerbs' argument concerning differences between Illinois

and Washington law:

      While [Dr. Kerbs and another objector] claim that a conflict exists,
      neither has specified one. Objector Kerbs fails to identify how rights
      under the Washington Consumer Protection Act are different. ... In
      the end, there is no material difference or conflict, and both

       27   Resp't's Br. at 20.
       28 CP   at 4042.
       29   CP at 4049-50.

                                          9
No. 75541-2-1/10

       Objectors simply argue that providers from their respective states
       have done or could do better.[30]

       The record of the arguments made to the Illinois trial court is more detailed

than the docket entries relied on in OneWest Bank.31

       And the issue of adequate representation was decided by the Illinois trial

court. In the written order approving class settlement, the court "overrule[d] all

objections to the Stipulation and the proposed Class Settlement and approve[d] all

provisions and terms of the Stipulation and the proposed Class Settlement in all

respects."32 The Illinois trial court also determined "Plaintiff Lebanon Chiropractic

Clinic. . . and Class Counsel will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the

Settlement Class."33 In context, this was not a mere boilerplate finding of

adequate representation.

       Dr. Kerbs appealed, and the Illinois appellate court considered the same

issue of inadequate representation stemming from alleged conflicts between

Illinois and Washington law.34

       In his brief to the Illinois appellate court, Dr. Kerbs renewed his specific

argument concerning differences in available relief under Illinois and Washington

       30 CP   at 4073.
       31   OneWest Bank, 185 Wn.2d at 58.
       32 CP   at 4156.
       33 CP   at 4154.
       34 See CP at 4671 (notice of appeal to appellate court of Illinois)("Lebanon
Chiropractic Clinic is an inadequate class representative for Washington providers
and has a conflict of interest with Washington providers because Lebanon does
not possess a Washington CPA claim and cannot obtain the broader relief
available to Washington health care providers.").

                                          10
No. 75541-2-1/11

law.35 He argued the class representative had a conflict of interest with

Washington providers because

      the Washington Act provides for treble damages, attorneys fees and
      litigation costs and prejudgment interest at the rate of 12% per
      annum on the award of actual damages. Lebanon did not have
      claims that would provide such relief. It was therefore in Lebanon's
      interests to negotiate a settlement with Liberty in which Washington
      providers got nothing.[38]

       In response, Liberty Mutual claimed

      Dr. Kerbs' argument that the damages available under the
      Washington Consumer Protection Act are marginally greater than
      those available under the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act is legally
      irrelevant. Even if his damages calculations are correct, Dr. Kerbs
      fails to explain how such a difference creates antagonistic interests
      between Plaintiff and Washington providers.[371

       The class representative similarly argued,"Objector Kerbs has never

identified any relief that Lebanon Chiropractic sought that is antagonistic to the

interests of the Washington provider class members.. . In the end, Objector Kerbs

simply argues that Washington providers might'do better.'"38

       The Illinois appellate court's unpublished opinion addressed Dr. Kerbs'

adequate representation objection, described the appropriate legal standards for

analyzing adequate representation, and rejected the claims:

       36 SeeCP at 4354(Lebanon "has no claim that Liberty's reductions made to
Washington provider bills using the FAIR Health database violated Washington
insurance regulations, the Washington PIP or CPA.").
       36   CP at 4354-55(emphasis omitted).
       37 CP   at 349(emphasis omitted).
       38 CP   at 1738.

                                           11
No. 75541-2-1/12

              Kerbs argues the trial court abused its discretion in approving
       the settlement where Lebanon did not fairly and adequately protect
       the interests of the class members.. .. When evaluating whether the
       class representative can provide fair and adequate representation, the
       court must determine that the representative party is not seeking relief
       which is potentially antagonistic to the members of the class... .

               Here, in support of his objection filed with the trial court, Kerbs
       identified the following relief that was sought by Lebanon that was
       antagonistic to the interests of the Washington providers:... that
       Washington law requires payment of all reasonable charges[,] and
       that Washington providers receive nothing under the Lebanon
       settlement.[39]

       It is clear the Illinois appellate court was aware of and rejected Dr. Kerbs'

argument concerning material differences between Washington and Illinois law.4°

The court observed that Kerbs had not demonstrated any "outcome-determinative

differences in Washington law and Illinois law."41

       Dr. Kerbs did not seek review by the Illinois Supreme Court. The Illinois

state court system was the appropriate avenue for continuing to challenge the

certifying court's determination of adequate representation.42

       39   Lebanon Chiropractic, 2016 WL 546909, at *13-14.
       40 Id. at 11 ("[I]n his appellate briefs, Kerbs notes that Illinois is an at-fault
state where Washington is a no-fault state, Illinois has no comparable PIP statute
requiring the payment of all reasonable medical expenses submitted, and Illinois
has no comparable insurance regulation requiring insurers to investigate a PIP
claim before refusing to pay a claim.")
       41   Id.
       42 See  Nobl Park, 122 Wn. App. at 845, n.3 ("[A] party's right to due process
is protected by the court certifying a class action and the court's reviewing
subsequent appeals in the state issuing the judgment in such action; it is not the
obligation of the courts of another state to collaterally review due process
challenges.").

                                           12
No. 75541-2-1/13

       In essence, Chan asks this court to take on the role of the Illinois trial court

deciding the issue of adequate representation. But we do not review de novo

whether we would have found adequate representation as the Illinois trial court.

Neither do we decide whether we would have affirmed the trial court determination

of adequate representation sitting as the Illinois appellate court. And we do not

consider whether we would have affirmed the appellate court's decision if we were

the Illinois Supreme Court.

       In conducting a full faith and credit analysis, we do not dwell on the precise

rationale and analysis used by the sister state to resolve the due process claim.

To allow an automatic de novo review by collateral attack whenever lack of due

process is alleged would be contrary to full faith and credit principles emphasizing

the importance of finality.

       The scope of collateral attack is narrow. Our consideration of the argument

and materials before the Illinois court is limited to whether the issue at hand was

raised, litigated, and decided by that court. Chan contends the issues litigated in

Illinois are completely different than the issues raised in Washington. But in

Illinois, Dr. Kerbs argued the Lebanon plaintiff was an inadequate representative

because differences between the consumer protection and PIP statutes in

Washington and Illinois created a conflict of interest. Chan now attempts to revive

those same claims that were raised, litigated, and decided in the Illinois trial and

                                          13
 No. 75541-2-1/14

< appellate courts.43 Chan's collateral attack fails. The Lebanon settlement is

 entitled to full faith and credit."

        Therefore, we reverse.

 WE CONCUR:

 --.C
    :10'elt•-
     .      ,c

        43 To the  extent Chan suggests Washington class action standards are
 different than Illinois, he provides no authority that the due process standards
 applicable to class action settlements vary.
        44 We deny Liberty's motion to strike Chan's statement of additional
 authorities.

                                          14