PER CURIAM.
Plaintiff Valley Hospital appeals from an order dated October 1, 2010, dismissing its complaint on the ground that the Superior Court did not have subject matter jurisdiction over its claim for money owed. Because the matter involves hospital bills arising out of work-related injury to a patient, the trial court concluded that
Our standard of review is plenary from an order as in this case dismissing a complaint pursuant to
Plaintiff's two-count complaint alleges that an employee of defendant LQ Management, LLC, was admitted and treated for work-related back injury at the plaintiff hospital. The hospital billed a total of $65,549.07 for its services and submitted the bill to defendant Zurich American Insurance Company, the workers' compensation carrier for LQ Management. Zurich utilized the services of a claim administrator to process the bill. According to the complaint, the claim administrator issued an explanation of benefits indicating that Zurich was paying the bill under the hospital's contract with FOCUS — Aetna Workers Comp Access, LLC ("Aetna contract").
The complaint alleges that, under the terms of the Aetna contract, the hospital accepts as full payment eighty percent of its billed charges in conformity with preferred provider rates. Plaintiff alleges that it should have been paid $52,456.38, which is eighty percent of the billed charges. Instead, Zurich paid $24,743.07, leaving a balance due of $27,713.31. Plaintiff alleges causes of action for breach of contract and unjust enrichment in defendants' failure to pay the balance due.
Defendants filed a motion to dismiss the complaint under
In opposition to the motion to dismiss, plaintiff submitted a certification of its accounts manager, to which was attached the hospital bill, its billing notes, and the explanation of benefits document from the claim administrator.
The separate listing of the hospital's charges in the explanation of benefits showed that no payment at all was made for a charge of $40,806.00 for implants that were apparently inserted as part of the patient's back surgery, and that all other hospital services were paid in full, totaling $24,743.07. The trial court relied on that document to conclude that the allegations and evidence did not support a claim that Zurich made payment under the discounted rate of an alleged Aetna contract. The court concluded that the issue in dispute is whether the implants are covered as medically reasonable and necessary treatment for the patient's injury, and that issue is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Division of Workers' Compensation.
Plaintiff argues, however, and we agree, that its complaint does not seek payment from the patient directly as in
Defendants dispute that they paid the hospital's charges under the discounted rate of the Aetna contract, or that the claim administrator's alleged use of that contract bound them to its terms. But those disputes are contested issues of fact that cannot be resolved on the pleadings and conflicting submissions pursuant to a motion to dismiss under
On a motion to dismiss a pleading for failure to state a claim, the court must accept as true the factual allegations of the pleading.
Plaintiff's claim under such a contract, however, is not a matter pertaining to compensable benefits under the Workers' Compensation Act. In other words, whether the implants were necessary and the charge for them reasonable is not an issue that must be decided to determine whether Zurich is bound by the terms of the alleged Aetna contract. Moreover, the Division of Workers' Compensation is not the appropriate forum to determine the terms of the Aetna contract and disputes arising under that contract. Jurisdiction of the subject matter of the litigation as presented in the complaint lies in the Superior Court.
If plaintiff fails to prove its allegations regarding the Aetna contract, its complaint can then be dismissed or transferred to the Division of Workers' Compensation in accordance with the holding of
Reversed and remanded for reinstatement of plaintiff's complaint.