Court Opinion

ID: 6498827
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-08 20:00:33.702868+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:11:02.215434
License: Public Domain

In the

    United States Court of Appeals
                 For the Seventh Circuit
                     ____________________
No. 21‐3109
RICARDO VASQUEZ,
                                                  Plaintiff‐Appellant,
                                 v.

INDIANA UNIVERSITY HEALTH, INC., et al.,
                                               Defendants‐Appellees.
                     ____________________

         Appeal from the United States District Court for the
         Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
           No. 21‐cv‐1693 — Jane Magnus‐Stinson, Judge.
                     ____________________

        ARGUED APRIL 8, 2022 — DECIDED JULY 8, 2022
                 ____________________

   Before WOOD, HAMILTON, and JACKSON‐AKIWUMI, Circuit
Judges.
    WOOD, Circuit Judge. Dr. Ricardo Vasquez is a vascular sur‐
geon; he has practiced in Bloomington, Indiana, since 2006.
Vasquez alleges that in the time since he opened up shop, In‐
diana University Health (IU Health) has amassed considera‐
ble market power in the region’s medical industry. Vasquez
sued IU Health, claiming antitrust violations under the Sher‐
man Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1–7, and the Clayton Act, id. §§ 12–27.
2                                                 No. 21‐3109

IU Health moved to dismiss, arguing that neither the Sher‐
man Act nor the Clayton Act claims were premised on a plau‐
sible geographic market, and that the Clayton Act claims also
were time‐barred. The district court agreed on both points
and dismissed the suit. But Vasquez’s allegations passed mus‐
ter for the pleading stage, and so we reverse.
                               I
   We begin with a few more details about Bloomington and
the surrounding region, Vasquez’s practice, IU Health’s his‐
tory in the market, and the complaint’s allegations. At this
stage, we accept all well‐pleaded facts as true and draw all
reasonable inferences in Vasquez’s favor. Mashallah, Inc. v.
West Bend Mut. Ins. Co., 20 F.4th 311, 317 (7th Cir. 2021).
    Bloomington is a city in Monroe County, Indiana, with a
population of about 90,000. The surrounding metropolitan
statistical area has a population of about 200,000. Blooming‐
ton is the largest metro area in its corner of southwestern In‐
diana. From Bloomington, one can drive an hour and ten
minutes northeast to Indianapolis (population 865,000); two
hours southwest to Evansville (population 120,000); two
hours southeast to Louisville, Kentucky (population 620,000);
or two and a half hours east to Cincinnati, Ohio (population
300,000). Most of the region bounded by those larger cities is
rural, albeit spotted with small cities and large towns.
   Vasquez arrived in Bloomington in 2006 and soon after
opened an independent vascular‐surgery practice. Many vas‐
cular‐surgery patients require treatment with specialized
equipment in a hospital setting, and so Vasquez sought and
obtained admitting privileges at three diﬀerent area hospitals:
Bloomington Hospital, Monroe Hospital, and the Indiana
No. 21‐3109                                                      3

Specialty Surgery Center. Vasquez performed the lion’s share
of his inpatient procedures (over 95%) at Bloomington Hospi‐
tal, which had the best equipment.
    IU Health entered the Bloomington market in 2010 when
it acquired Bloomington Hospital. (At the time, IU Health was
known as Clarian Health Partners; it rebranded in 2011. Clar‐
ian was formed by the merger of three Indianapolis‐area hos‐
pitals in 1997.) In May 2017, IU Health expanded its footprint
in southwestern Indiana by acquiring Premier Healthcare, an
independent physician group based in Bloomington. At the
time of the acquisition, Premier employed many of the re‐
gion’s doctors, especially primary‐care providers (PCPs).
Vasquez alleges that, as a consequence of the Premier acqui‐
sition, IU Health now employs 97% of PCPs in Bloomington
and over 80% of PCPs in the wider region.
    Vasquez’s alleged problems with IU Health began shortly
after the Premier acquisition. At this early stage, little turns on
the details, so we can be brief. Vasquez contends that in
“[a]pproximately 2017,” around the time of the acquisition, IU
Health launched “a systematic and targeted scheme” to ruin
his reputation and practice. The scheme was motivated by
Vasquez’s commitment to independent practice. IU Health
preferred to employ the region’s doctors directly, an agenda
which Vasquez resisted. In June 2018, IU Health threatened to
revoke Vasquez’s privileges at Bloomington Hospital, and its
employees began to cast aspersions on his reputation—alleg‐
ing, for example, that he had been sued with unusual fre‐
quency. Needless to say, Vasquez disputes the factual accu‐
racy of these claims. In April 2019, IU Health followed
through on its threat, revoking Vasquez’s Bloomington ad‐
mitting privileges.
4                                                   No. 21‐3109

   In June 2021, Vasquez filed this lawsuit. IU Health moved,
successfully, to dismiss, and Vasquez now appeals.
                               II
    Vasquez’s appeal raises three issues: (1) the dismissal of
his claims under Sherman Act section 2, 15 U.S.C. § 2, and
Clayton Act section 7, id. § 18, for failure to allege a proper
geographic market; (2) the dismissal of the Clayton Act claims
on timeliness grounds; and (3) the decision not to give him
one opportunity to amend his complaint before dismissing
with prejudice. We review the first two issues de novo, Warciak
v. Subway Restaurants, Inc., 949 F.3d 354, 356 (7th Cir. 2020),
and the third for abuse of discretion.
                               A
    We begin with the geographic‐market analysis. Vasquez’s
complaint needed to allege only one plausible geographic
market to survive a motion to dismiss. See Bell Atlantic Corp.
v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007). A rational jury could find
that Bloomington is such a market, as we now explain.
    In FTC v. Advocate Health Care Network, 841 F.3d 460 (7th
Cir. 2016) (“Advocate”), a case concerning a hospital merger,
we endorsed the use of the “hypothetical monopolist test” to
analyze geographic healthcare markets. As a general matter,
that test asks “what would happen if a single firm became the
only seller in a candidate geographic region.” Id. at 468. “If
that hypothetical monopolist could profitably raise prices
above competitive levels, the region is a relevant geographic
market.” Id. But if, instead, “customers would defeat the at‐
tempted price increase by buying from outside the region, it
is not a relevant market; the test should be rerun using a larger
candidate region.” Id. In this sense, the inquiry “is iterative,
No. 21‐3109                                                                    5

meaning it should be repeated with ever‐larger candidates
until it identifies a relevant geographic market.” Id. Im‐
portantly, the determination of the area of effective competi‐
tion poses a question of fact, not one of law. See Fishman v.
Estate of Wirtz, 807 F.2d 520, 531 (7th Cir. 1986).
   We see no reason to break with Advocate here. The hypo‐
thetical‐monopolist test remains the best approach to geo‐
graphic‐market analysis in the healthcare context. It focuses
courts’ attention on the crucial question whether it is possible,
within a given defined geographic area, for a hypothetical sin‐
gle firm to engage in anticompetitive practices (i.e., raising
price or reducing output, or otherwise harming consumer
welfare). With that in mind, we turn to Vasquez’s arguments.
    Vasquez first posits that the vascular‐surgery market in
Bloomington is inherently local. This is because “vascular sur‐
gery patients need ongoing care, oftentimes lifetime care.” So,
Vasquez reasons, if a Bloomington patient “is sent to Indian‐
apolis, that patient must continue to travel for a lifetime if he
or she wants continuity of care.” And because most patients
would consider that a bad deal—as Advocate recognized, see
841 F.3d at 470—insurers (the most directly affected buyers
here) face pressure to provide vascular surgery in or near
Bloomington.1 An insurer that does not provide such care

    1  We note in this connection that the antitrust laws confer a right of
action on “any person … injured in his business or property,” see 15 U.S.C.
§ 15, and that the Supreme Court has confirmed that both consumers, such
as the insurers here, and competitors, such as Vasquez, fall within the
scope of the law. See Assoc. Gen. Contractors of Cal., Inc. v. Cal. State Council
of Carpenters, 459 U.S. 519, 538 (1983) (“[T]he Sherman Act was enacted to
assure customers the benefits of price competition, and [the Court’s] prior
6                                                           No. 21‐3109

risks being outcompeted by other insurers within Blooming‐
ton. It follows that a hypothetical monopolist over vascular
surgery in Bloomington would be able to abuse its market
power considerably by jacking up payor prices and freezing
out potential competitors. In particular, because much vascu‐
lar surgery is performed in a hospital setting with special
equipment, a hypothetical vertically integrated monopolist
that controlled the hospital, the equipment, and most of the
surgeons would be well‐positioned to engage in anticompet‐
itive practices.
    Vasquez also alleges that vascular surgeons’ reliance on
referrals makes Bloomington an appropriate geographic mar‐
ket in a second sense. The idea is that while Bloomington res‐
idents may be willing to travel to Indianapolis for some cate‐
gories of specialist care, they will not be willing to drive an
hour or more for routine primary care. Bloomington, after all,
has two hospitals, a medical‐school campus, and a metro pop‐
ulation that ought to be more than adequate to support a
healthy, competitive primary‐care practice market. All agree
that vascular surgeons, who are specialists, get most patients
by referral from primary‐care providers. Thus, a hypothetical
monopolist over primary‐care services in Bloomington would
control not only that market but also the flow of patients to
vascular surgeons. By cutting off the flow of new patients to
its vascular‐surgery competitors, the monopolist could cap‐
ture the entire market, thereby positioning itself to raise payor
prices without repercussion.

cases have emphasized the central interest in protecting the economic free‐
dom of participants in the relevant market”).
No. 21‐3109                                                   7

    Both stories are plausible accounts of how a hypothetical
monopolist could wield anticompetitive power in Blooming‐
ton’s vascular‐surgery market. We could stop there; at the
pleading stage, a plausible scenario is all we require to estab‐
lish the geographic market. But as it happens, Vasquez goes
considerably further. He alleges not only that a hypothetical
monopolist could dominate the Bloomington market in the
two ways he suggests but also that IU Health already does so.
With regard to vascular surgery itself, Vasquez contends that
IU Health controls the hospital with the most advanced
equipment and, other than him, all the vascular surgeons.
And regarding upstream referrals, he alleges without contra‐
diction that IU Health employs 97% of the primary‐care phy‐
sicians in Bloomington, meaning that virtually every patient
sees an IU Health PCP. (That is one reason why the existence
of other hospitals in the Bloomington area does not neces‐
sarily defeat Vasquez’s claim.) To repeat: these contentions
are by no means necessary in order adequately to plead a ge‐
ographic market. But they are sufficient. The hypothetical‐
monopolist test concerns hypotheticals, as it says on the label,
not realities. But the detailed allegations about the on‐the‐
ground realities in Bloomington drive home the key point:
Vasquez’s allegations easily clear the plausibility bar.
    This is not the time to evaluate the merits of Vasquez’s al‐
legations, and that in any event is a task that requires expert
testimony. The motion‐to‐dismiss stage does not lend itself to
rigorous hypothetical‐monopolist analysis. Normally, the
way that analysis is conducted is by survey. Experts canvass
a representative sample of local market participants, asking
about both their actual behavior in the market as it is and how
it would change if certain hypothetical conditions came to
pass. Here, for instance, an expert might try to determine at
8                                                              No. 21‐3109

what price point an insurer would stop paying for vascular‐
surgery services in Bloomington, opting instead to cover only
patients who went to specialists in Indianapolis. It may turn
out that Indianapolis providers are close enough to act as a
market check on any and all price increases. If so, Blooming‐
ton would not be a geographic market. But for present pur‐
poses, we cannot substitute our own speculations for the req‐
uisite analysis.2
    It is worth recalling at this juncture what is required in a
pleading. As the Supreme Court put it in Twombly, “a com‐
plaint attacked by a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss does not
need detailed factual allegations … .” 550 U.S. at 555. Indeed,
the allegations do not even need to establish the probability
of the plaintiff’s recovery. Id. at 556. They need only present
“enough fact to raise a reasonable expectation that discovery
will reveal evidence” of illegal acts. Id. So too in this case, we
need not decide whether Vasquez’s story is probable; we are
assessing only its plausibility.
    The district court found Vasquez’s complaint wanting for
two reasons. First, it thought that Vasquez’s geographic‐mar‐
ket allegations were contradictory. The purported contradic‐
tion was between two factual claims in the complaint: (1) that

    2 We note, in this connection, that Vasquez alleges an alternative mar‐

ket, “Southern Indiana,” which he defines to include Morgan, Owen,
Monroe, Brown, Greene, Daviess, Martin, Lawrence, Orange, and Wash‐
ington counties. For present purposes, we focus on Bloomington, both be‐
cause it is the smallest plausible market alleged and because the alterna‐
tive market includes it. That said, the Southern Indiana market may turn
out to be the best object of analysis as this litigation progresses and further
facts emerge. Our present attention to the Bloomington market should in
no way be taken to limit the parties to arguments about that market.
No. 21‐3109                                                    9

patients “prefer to stay within Bloomington to receive care,”
and (2) that “many of the patients who arrive at Bloomington
Hospital for care travel from rural areas, some of them up to
two hours away.” The district court saw an inconsistency be‐
tween the two claims, and it thought that clash undermined
the Bloomington market’s plausibility.
    We see several problems with this reasoning. First, Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 8(d)(3) specifically permits contradic‐
tory pleadings, and so this criticism was misplaced. And in
any event, our own examination of the allegations persuades
us that they are not contradictory at all. They concern two dif‐
ferent groups of people—urban and rural patients—with dif‐
ferent expectations, motivations, and market behaviors.
Bloomington is a regional hub, home to a major university
and substantial medical infrastructure. Patients who reside
there no doubt expect to get most medical care close to home.
Patients in surrounding rural communities, in contrast, real‐
istically expect to travel to hospitals in large cities when the
alternative is getting sick or dying, though they may other‐
wise prefer to purchase services at home in Loogootee (popu‐
lation 2,751) or French Lick (population 1,841). Both allega‐
tions could be true; indeed, both are true in many places. On
top of that, the allegation about two‐hour travel is hardly the
linchpin of Vasquez’s theory of the geographic market. It
comprises two clauses buried thirty pages into the complaint,
in the context of a tangential discussion of the impacts IU
Health’s alleged monopoly has on patients. And even assum‐
ing some level of tension between Vasquez’s allegations, a fi‐
nal problem is that the district court did not attempt to situate
that tension in any antitrust market‐analysis doctrine. A con‐
tradiction could undermine a market’s plausibility if it
10                                                   No. 21‐3109

showed that the alleged market failed the hypothetical‐mo‐
nopolist test. But we do not see how that could be true here.
    The district court also reasoned that Bloomington could
not be “the appropriate geographic market” if “a significant
portion of [IU Health’s] patients regularly travel substantial
distances to get to Bloomington.” But this confuses two dif‐
ferent sorts of market. The geographic market for an antitrust
claim need not—and very often will not—correspond to the
comprehensive market that the alleged monopolist serves.
See United States v. E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 353 U.S. 586,
593 (1957) (explaining that “the bounds of a relevant market
for the purposes of [a] case” need not be “coextensive with the
total market”). At the fringes, even a monopolist is likely to
face competition. Under Advocate, 841 F.3d at 476, the appro‐
priate object of the geographic‐market analysis is the smallest
market a hypothetical monopolist could dominate. Patient
flows may help to define the borders of that market, but such
flows are just one piece of data in the broader picture—they
are not likely to be dispositive. To hold otherwise would be to
carve a large loophole into antitrust law; realistically, some
fuzziness about market boundaries will occur in most cases.
   To sum up: Either of Vasquez’s accounts of how a hypo‐
thetical monopolist could dominate Bloomington’s vascular‐
surgery market suffice for the pleading stage. Dismissal was
thus not warranted.
                                B
    The district court also gave a second reason for dismissing
Vasquez’s Clayton Act claims (but not his Sherman Act
claims): timeliness. The Clayton Act’s statute of limitations
requires a damages action to be “commenced within four
No. 21‐3109                                                   11

years after the cause of action accrued.” 15 U.S.C. § 15b. The
district court understood that requirement to bar Vasquez’s
Clayton Act damages claim, and by analogy applied the equi‐
table doctrine of laches to bar his injunctive claims. (Like the
district court, we treat the laches defense at issue here as ris‐
ing or falling with the statute of limitations defense, though it
need not in every case.)
    Timeliness is an affirmative defense. “An antitrust cause
of action accrues and the statute begins to run when a defend‐
ant commits an act that injures a plaintiffʹs business.” In re
Copper Antitrust Litig., 436 F.3d 782, 789 (7th Cir. 2006)
(cleaned up). That rule “is qualified by the discovery rule,
which postpones the beginning of the limitations period from
the date when the plaintiff is wronged to the date when he
discovers he has been injured.” Id. (cleaned up). We have ap‐
plied a demanding standard to dismissals on timeliness
grounds at the pleading stage of antitrust cases, asking
whether “the plaintiff pleads itself out of court.” Xechem, Inc.
v. Bristol‐Myers Squibb Co., 372 F.3d 899, 902 (7th Cir. 2004).
    Vasquez did not. To be sure, he filed suit four years and
one month after IU Health acquired Premier. So, if that acqui‐
sition started the clock, Vasquez missed his window by a
month. But to affirm the dismissal, we would need to be sure
that the undisputed facts show that the operative injury both
occurred and was discovered at the moment of acquisition (or
at the latest, during the following month). But the complaint
does not paint such a one‐sided picture.
    The earliest potential injury the complaint identifies is its
allegation of a “systematic and targeted scheme to ruin Dr.
Vasquez’s reputation and practice” in “approximately 2017,
around the time that IU Health acquired Premier.” But
12                                                 No. 21‐3109

“[a]round the time” plausibly could mean “six weeks after,”
which would be enough to save the Clayton Act claims for
now. Nor do we have enough information, at this stage, to
ascertain exactly when Vasquez learned of the purported
scheme, which is what really matters. Another plausible
measuring stick occurred a year later, in June 2018, when IU
Health’s anti‐Vasquez vendetta is alleged to have started in
earnest. That is when, for instance, IU Health employees be‐
gan to suggest that Vasquez had often been sued and to
threaten termination of privileges. A third plausible measur‐
ing stick is the actual revocation of Vasquez’s privileges in
April 2019—the event that one assumes would have had the
most concrete impact on Vasquez’s income. Until IU Health
took that step, Vasquez reasonably may have thought that an
accommodation was possible.
    Without discovery, choosing among these alternatives is
difficult, if not impossible. What matters is that the complaint
presents a plausible account under which his suit is timely.
We note as well that timeliness is an affirmative defense and
thus normally (and here) is not properly resolved at the Rule
12(b)(6) stage.
                              III
   Given our disposition of Vasquez’s principal arguments,
we have no need to discuss his request to file an amended
complaint. The district court’s grant of IU Health’s motion to
dismiss is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further pro‐
ceedings consistent with this opinion.