TIMOTHY J. CORRIGAN, District Judge.
On January 7, 2016, the Court entered an Order in this False Claims Act case granting Liberty Ambulance Service, Inc.'s motion to dismiss the government's complaint in intervention, but giving the government leave to amend. Doc. 47. The government filed an amended complaint (Doc. 48), Liberty again moved to dismiss (Doc. 55), and the government responded (Doc. 61).
Because the government has failed to incorporate the right allegations into all the right counts, it will have to re-plead one more time. Putting that aside and assuming the government can easily make that modification, the Court will address the merits of Liberty's other arguments.
First, for the reasons stated in the Court's earlier Order (Doc. 47), which is incorporated by reference, the Court rejects Liberty's argument that the amended complaint (which contains more information than the government's original complaint), fails to meet the Rule 8 standard of pleading, and further rejects Liberty's argument that Count III (for unjust enrichment) should be dismissed as based on fraud because the Court views that claim as having been pled in the alternative.
Second, even assuming arguendo that Counts III and IV (for unjust enrichment and payment by mistake) must be pled with particularity under Rule 9(b) as based on fraud, sufficient allegations are within the complaint and could be incorporated. The Court therefore rejects Liberty's argument that those two counts must be dismissed for failure to satisfy Rule 9(b).
Third, the crux of Liberty's motion is, as it was before, that the government has failed to supply sufficient allegations under Rule 9(b) to present "some indicia of reliability" that "a false claim" was presented and paid (Counts I and II).
Fourth, Liberty challenges the False Claims Act Anti-Kickback Statute claim (Count III) on the ground that the allegations incorporated fail to identify any claim referred to Liberty following the allegedly illegal kickback agreement. The government contends that its showing is sufficient because all claims submitted from Liberty for a patient referred from Memorial after the 2009 agreement between Liberty and Memorial Hospital are false claims. The Court agrees with Liberty— allegations regarding a claim post-dating that agreement should be incorporated in Count III to satisfy Rule 9(b).
Finally, Liberty contends that allowing this complaint to go forward permits the government to engage in a fishing expedition searching for the proof that it should have had before bringing the case. Because the plaintiff here is the government (as opposed to a relator), it already has the records. The Court has found the amended complaint satisfies Rules 8 and 9(b) so the case must be allowed to proceed. Of course, this case is at the beginning stage and the Court expresses no views on the ultimate merit of the government's case.
Accordingly, it is hereby
Liberty's Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 55) is