In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 20-1268
MAO-MSO RECOVERY II, LLC; MSP RECOVERY, LLC; MSPA
CLAIMS 1, LLC; and MSP RECOVERY CLAIMS SERIES LLC,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY, an
Illinois Company,
Defendant-Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Central District of Illinois.
No. 1:17-cv-01537 — Joe Billy McDade, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED NOVEMBER 5, 2020 — DECIDED APRIL 20, 2021
____________________
Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and HAMILTON and SCUDDER,
Circuit Judges.
SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. For the second time in as many
years we affirm the district court’s dismissal of a lawsuit
brought under the Medicare Act by entities seeking to collect
on healthcare receivables assigned to them by so-called Med-
icare Advantage Organizations. The Medicare Act may
2 No. 20-1268
authorize the lawsuit but, regardless, the district court rightly
recognized that identifying a federal cause of action satisfies
only half of the inquiry necessary to establish subject matter
jurisdiction. The half left unsatisfied is Article III standing—
the same shortcoming that resulted in the dismissal of the
analogous lawsuit two years ago. Despite ample opportunity,
the plaintiffs once again were unable to show any injury in
fact. They failed to find within their basket of assigned receiv-
ables an example of a concrete and definite amount owed
them by the defendant, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insur-
ance Company. In affirming, we sound a word of caution.
This lawsuit mirrors scores like it filed in federal courts
throughout the country that have all the earmarks of abusive
litigation and indeed have drawn intense criticism from many
a federal judge. The plaintiffs should think hard before risk-
ing a third strike within our Circuit.
I
A
The Medicare Act is as unwieldy and complex as any stat-
ute in the U.S. Code. This appeal, fortunately, does not im-
merse us in the interpretive morasses that often define Medi-
care appeals. What is important here is understanding some
basic points about the flow of Medicare payment obligations
and the distinction between primary and secondary payers
under the program.
Congress divided the Medicare Act into so-called parts.
Part C of the Act allows private entities to provide insurance
coverage for some Medicare enrollees. See 42 U.S.C.
§ 1395w-21(a). These private entities are known as Medicare
Advantage Organizations or MAOs. See id. Just like the
No. 20-1268 3
Medicare program itself, these MAOs act as secondary payers
in situations where another insurer—for example, a worker’s
compensation plan or automobile insurer—is also responsible
for paying for medical care. See id. §§ 1395y(b)(2)(A)(ii);
1395w-22(a)(4). These other insurers are known as primary
payers.
A simple example illustrates this point. Suppose a driver
is injured in a car accident. Assume the driver has a car insur-
ance policy with a $10,000 limit for medical bills associated
with an accident and, separately, has coverage from an MAO
through Medicare Part C. In an ideal world, the driver’s car
insurance would cover the first $10,000 in medical expenses
with the MAO picking up the rest.
The real world, of course, is not always ideal, and primary
payers do not always pay (or timely pay) covered medical ex-
penses. The Medicare Act recognizes this reality and allows
an MAO (as a secondary payer) to make “conditional pay-
ments” if the primary payer “has not made or cannot reason-
ably be expected to make payment with respect to such item
or service promptly.” Id. § 1395y(b)(2)(B). If an MAO makes
such a conditional payment, the Act in turn creates a private
right of action allowing the MAO to seek reimbursement from
the primary payer who should have made payment in the first
place. See id. § 1395y(b)(3)(A). Importantly, this private right
of action allows an MAO to recover double damages for any
unreimbursed conditional payment. See id.
B
Because of the ubiquity of insurance in the modern econ-
omy, people often have overlapping coverage through both a
primary payer and an MAO. As a result, MAOs sometimes
4 No. 20-1268
make conditional payments with insufficient knowledge
about the responsible primary payer. If an MAO later learns
that a primary payer shouldered principal responsibility for a
particular covered expense, the organization is able to seek
reimbursement from the primary payer. But trying to collect
these unreimbursed payments can be tedious, costly, and un-
certain. This creates an incentive for MAOs to outsource this
process—essentially to assign or sell its right to reimburse-
ment to another party.
On the demand side, entities like the plaintiffs here see fi-
nancial opportunity in effectively becoming debt collectors
for MAOs. This arrangement can be lucrative because of the
Medicare Act’s double damages provision. If debt collec-
tors—or more accurately assignees of the MAO—can identify
unreimbursed conditional payments and successfully bring
suit under the Act, they can collect twice as much on a partic-
ular assigned receivable. But again, because it is not always
clear which assigned receivables in fact reflect conditional
payments, taking on this debt collection role brings with it fi-
nancial uncertainty. And, just like the MAOs, a third-party as-
signee may not know at the time of the initial assignment
which or how many conditional payments should actually be
reimbursed by a primary payer.
Note the financial realities that exist for the debt collectors
and MAOs alike. Both have financial incentives to expend as
little as possible on the front end of these assignment arrange-
ments. This is so because it is often unclear at the time of the
initial assignment what, if any, value exists in the assigned re-
ceivables.
We see this reality play out in the assignment contracts in
the record before us in the following way: MAOs agree to
No. 20-1268 5
assign their collection rights to large baskets of potential con-
ditional payments in exchange for a percentage of anything
recovered. For their part, the debt collectors agree to this fee
sharing arrangement but do not pay much, if anything, up
front for the assignation of collection rights. It is then on the
assignee—effectively the debt collector—to do its best to col-
lect and thereby realize value on the assignment. If the as-
signee is successful in recovering double damages through lit-
igation, there is sufficient revenue to make the litigation and
collection effort worth the collector’s while, with proceeds re-
maining to share with the MAO. If nothing is recovered, the
assignee loses only its litigation costs.
C
With this basic backdrop in place, we turn to the litigation
at hand. The plaintiff debt collectors in this case (whom we
refer to collectively as “MAO-MSO”) are various entities who
have entered into assignment contracts with MAOs and ac-
quired rights to collect conditional payments. Because of the
nature of the market we just described, these assignee debt
collectors had little incentive to perform any diligence on the
front end of these transactions to verify the value of what they
may have received in the assignment. And indeed MAO-MSO
do not appear to have done so with any of the assignments at
issue.
The lack of front-end diligence had a consequence: MAO-
MSO found themselves unable in the district court to do more
than show an assigned right to recover potentially unreim-
bursed payments. Put another way, they could identify bas-
kets of possible receivables arising from payments MAOs
made for healthcare provided to someone enrolled in Medi-
care but could go no further. They instead sought to use the
6 No. 20-1268
litigation process itself (in particular, discovery) as their path-
way to identifying any value in the assigned receivables and
then pursuing any available collections.
The district court demanded more. In order to show an ac-
tual injury—a necessary element of Article III standing—the
district court required the MAO-MSO plaintiffs to identify
something of value from within the basket of unidentified as-
signments. Even more specifically, MAO-MSO needed to
point to an “illustrative beneficiary”—that is, to a concrete ex-
ample of a conditional payment that State Farm, the relevant
primary payer here, failed to reimburse to the pertinent MAO.
The plaintiffs responded by filing an amended complaint
and alleging examples of particular unreimbursed condi-
tional payments. On their third try they named a specific il-
lustrative beneficiary identified by the initials “O.D.” MAO-
MSO outlined the injuries O.D. allegedly suffered in a car ac-
cident and contended that she “incurred accident-related ex-
penses that were to be paid by [State Farm]” pursuant to an
auto insurance policy, but for which State Farm “failed to ad-
equately pay or reimburse” the appropriate MAO.
The district court determined that these allegations suf-
ficed for pleading purposes to establish standing, so the liti-
gation moved forward. Everything changed at summary
judgment, however.
As the limited discovery process authorized by a magis-
trate judge progressed, MAO-MSO struggled to identify evi-
dence supporting the allegations of financial injury in their
complaint. The ensuing dispute centered on whether O.D.’s
MAO made payments related to medical care stemming from
a car accident before State Farm reached its limit under O.D.’s
No. 20-1268 7
auto policy. If so, then State Farm, as the primary payer,
should have reimbursed the MAO, and its failure to do so
would create an actionable injury. The specific payment in
question was to a physical therapist. MAO-MSO’s complaint
alleged this payment was for treatment stemming from O.D.’s
car accident, and therefore should have been paid by State
Farm under O.D.’s auto policy. State Farm disagreed, explain-
ing that the physical therapy services had no connection to
O.D.’s car accident and instead related only to her efforts to
recover from her prior knee surgery.
The district court framed the inquiry in terms of Article III
standing: if the medical evidence allowed a finding that the
physical therapy payment in question related to O.D.’s car ac-
cident—instead of the knee surgery—then MAO-MSO would
have made the showing necessary at summary judgment to
establish standing. After taking a close look at the record, the
district court determined that MAO-MSO had not met their
burden because no reasonable jury could find that the pay-
ment in question related to O.D.’s car accident. The absence
of a concrete injury meant that MAO-MSO lacked standing,
so the district court entered summary judgment for State
Farm.
The MAO-MSO entities now appeal. They challenge the
entry of summary judgment for State Farm as well as the dis-
trict court’s denial of requests to stay the summary judgment
ruling pending additional discovery and, separately, for per-
mission to file a third amended complaint.
II
We encountered a very similar appeal involving these
same parties two years ago. See MAO-MSO Recovery II, LLC v.
8 No. 20-1268
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 935 F.3d 573 (7th Cir. 2019)
(“MAO-MSO I”). In MAO-MSO I, these same plaintiffs sought
damages related to allegedly unreimbursed payments that
State Farm should have made pursuant to personal injury pol-
icies (instead of the no-fault auto policies at issue here). See
935 F.3d at 577. The district court dismissed MAO-MSO I for
lack of standing, and we affirmed. There, as here, the district
court required the plaintiffs to identify specific examples of
unreimbursed payments—the so-called illustrative benefi-
ciaries—to demonstrate the existence of an actual injury and
thus the Article III standing necessary to establish subject mat-
ter jurisdiction. In affirming, we determined that the district
court’s analysis was spot-on: because the assignment covering
the illustrative beneficiary presented in that case was invalid,
the plaintiffs did not establish standing. Id. at 580–81.
The district court charted the same analytical course here,
and we once again affirm.
A
Whether MAO-MSO have standing turns on two ques-
tions. First, we must consider whether the district court cor-
rectly demanded a showing of at least one illustrative benefi-
ciary. Second, if such a showing was necessary, we need to
assess whether the plaintiffs supported their illustrative ben-
eficiary allegations with enough evidence to show a concrete
and particularized injury. The district court was right to find
that MAO-MSO once again failed to meet this burden.
“[N]o principle is more fundamental to the judiciary’s
proper role in our system of government than the constitu-
tional limitation of federal-court jurisdiction to actual cases or
controversies.” Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 136 S. Ct. 1540, 1547
No. 20-1268 9
(2016) (quoting Raines v. Byrd, 521 U.S. 811, 818 (1997)). The
familiar test for Article III standing requires a plaintiff to show
an injury. See Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Env’t Servs.
(TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 180–81 (2000). And the Supreme
Court has made clear that the elements of standing are “not
mere pleading requirements but rather an indispensable part
of the plaintiff’s case [which] must be supported in the same
way as any other matter on which the plaintiff bears the bur-
den of proof, i.e., with the manner and degree of evidence re-
quired at the successive stages of the litigation.” Lujan v. Defs.
of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 561 (1992).
Because the cause of action here is a statutory claim for the
collection of unreimbursed payments, MAO-MSO’s injury
has to be the existence of an unreimbursed payment—a con-
crete right to collect from State Farm—not the mere existence
of an assignment to collect potentially unreimbursed pay-
ments. If, for example, State Farm adhered to its obligations
under an auto policy by fully paying particular medical ex-
penses, any assigned rights to reimbursement would have no
value, and MAO-MSO would have suffered no injury. Right
to it, the district court correctly required MAO-MSO to iden-
tify at least one illustrative beneficiary for whom State Farm
had failed to reimburse an MAO for medical expenses it paid
in the first instance.
MAO-MSO urge a different approach. For the first time on
appeal MAO-MSO contend that they did not need to present
an exemplar claim to establish standing at the summary judg-
ment stage. Instead, they insist that standing requires no more
than a showing of a valid assignment from an MAO to pursue
reimbursement from a primary payer like State Farm. Not so
in our view.
10 No. 20-1268
As an initial matter, MAO-MSO never made this argument
in their summary judgment briefing in the district court, and
so have waived it. See Perry v. Sullivan, 207 F.3d 379, 383 (7th
Cir. 2000) (“Arguments raised for the first time on appeal are
routinely deemed waived.”). But even if we entertain the con-
tention, MAO-MSO’s position conflates whether the entities
have a statutory private cause of action with the existence of
an injury-in-fact. For purposes of establishing subject matter
jurisdiction, the inquiries are distinct. Both Article III standing
and a cause of action are necessary to establish a Case or Con-
troversy over which we have jurisdiction. See Raines v. Byrd,
521 U.S. 811, 820 n.3 (1997) (“It is settled that Congress cannot
erase Article III’s standing requirements by statutorily grant-
ing the right to sue to a plaintiff who would not otherwise
have standing.”). But neither showing alone is sufficient.
That Congress created a cause of action and thereby au-
thorized the enforcement of a particular right or pursuit of a
certain remedy in federal court does not itself demonstrate the
existence of a concrete and particularized injury. The Su-
preme Court underscored this precise point in Spokeo, ex-
plaining that “Congress’ role in identifying and elevating in-
tangible harms does not mean that a plaintiff automatically
satisfies the injury-in-fact requirement whenever a statute
grants a person a statutory right and purports to authorize
that person to sue to vindicate that right.” 136 S. Ct. at 1549.
Congress can provide a cause of action, as it did here in Part
C of the Medicare Act (see 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(b)(3)(A)), and
that cause of action may be available to certain plaintiffs (alt-
hough whether third-party assignees can invoke this particu-
lar cause of action remains an open question). But even a
plaintiff seeking a congressionally authorized remedy must
still show a concrete and particularized injury.
No. 20-1268 11
The district court applied these well-established principles
when it required MAO-MSO to support their allegations of a
concrete, individualized injury through an illustrative benefi-
ciary with evidence produced at summary judgment.
B
Answering whether O.D. was a proper illustrative benefi-
ciary necessarily takes us into evidentiary details. And, in tak-
ing our own fresh look at the summary judgment record, we
looked specifically at what the record shows about O.D.’s car
accident and the surrounding medical treatment.
O.D. underwent knee replacement surgery in June 2013.
After the surgery she required physical therapy, and her ther-
apist recommended twelve sessions over four weeks begin-
ning on October 3, 2013. About two weeks after O.D. began
the physical therapy, she got into a car accident. The accident
occurred on October 15, 2013, at a time when O.D. had al-
ready attended two of the twelve therapy sessions. At the
scene of the accident, O.D. reportedly told the EMT that she
had a headache and pain in her left knee. O.D. conveyed the
same information to the ER nurse at the hospital.
The summary judgment record also contains notes from
the doctor who treated O.D. at the hospital. Those notes make
no mention of any knee injury or pain and only order tests
related to O.D.’s cervical spine. Nowhere do the doctor’s
notes say a word about O.D. needing any kind of knee treat-
ment.
The physical therapy that O.D. started before the car acci-
dent continued. The therapy treatment notes from the day af-
ter the car accident show that O.D. told her therapist that the
accident did not affect her knee. Subsequent therapy notes
12 No. 20-1268
likewise say nothing about the accident and reflect no change
in O.D.’s treatment after the accident. To the contrary, the
physical therapist’s notes continued to list O.D.’s knee sur-
gery as the “mechanism of injury.”
The district court relied on this evidence in determining
that no genuine dispute of material fact existed as to whether
the physical therapy treatment was for O.D.’s car accident in-
stead of her knee surgery. The district court concluded that
no reasonable juror could find that State Farm, as O.D.’s auto
insurer, was responsible for paying a physical therapist to re-
habilitate O.D.’s knee after reconstructive surgery, when the
surgery occurred four months before the car accident and no
reliable evidence indicated that the car accident exacerbated
any knee injury.
MAO-MSO disagree, focusing on O.D.’s statements to the
ER nurse that her knee hurt after the car accident. But MAO-
MSO entirely overlook their own procedural error in the dis-
trict court. Even though placing great weight on the ER
nurse’s notes, MAO-MSO failed to attach the notes to its sum-
mary judgment motion. We will not overlook the failing. In-
deed, we have repeatedly held that it is not the responsibility
of the district court to dig through the record to find eviden-
tiary support for a party’s summary judgment arguments. See
Grant v. Trustees of Indiana Univ., 870 F.3d 562, 568 (7th Cir.
2017) (“As the put up or shut up moment in a lawsuit, sum-
mary judgment requires a non-moving party to respond to
the moving party’s properly-supported motion by identifying
specific, admissible evidence showing that there is a genuine
dispute of material fact for trial.” (internal quotation marks
and citation omitted)). The district court acted well within its
No. 20-1268 13
discretion by declining to consider a document that was not
properly before it at summary judgment.
What is more, the fact that O.D. told an admitting nurse
that she had knee pain is not evidence that her car accident
caused that pain, let alone that subsequent physical therapy
treatments were the result of or even related to the car acci-
dent. And that is especially so given the evidence, including
the treating physician’s notes, pointing in a different direc-
tion. Summary judgment requires only that all reasonable in-
ferences be drawn in favor of the non-moving party. See
Poullard v. McDonald, 829 F.3d 844, 852 (7th Cir. 2016). An in-
ference is not reasonable if it is directly contradicted by direct
evidence provided at the summary judgment stage, nor is a
“conceivable” inference necessarily reasonable at summary
judgment. See Cont’l Casualty Co. v. Nw. Nat. Ins. Co., 427 F.3d
1038, 1041 (7th Cir. 2005).
Based on the record properly before the district court, we
agree that no genuine dispute of material fact existed regard-
ing allegedly unreimbursed payments for O.D.’s medical
treatment. Because O.D. was the only illustrative beneficiary
properly before the district court at summary judgment,
MAO-MSO failed to identify a specific receivable they had
been assigned from an MAO that State Farm, as the primary
payer under an applicable auto policy, was required to pay.
MAO-MSO thus did not show the type of concrete and par-
ticularized injury necessary to demonstrate standing. On this
record, the district court correctly granted State Farm’s mo-
tion for summary judgment.
14 No. 20-1268
III
We next consider two other rulings of the district court
that MAO-MSO challenge on appeal. The district court de-
nied MAO-MSO’s requests for a stay of summary judgment
pending further discovery under Federal Rule of Civil Proce-
dure 56(d) and for leave to file a third amended complaint.
We see no error in either of these rulings.
A
We review the denial of a Rule 56(d) motion for abuse of
discretion. See Arnold v. Villarreal, 853 F.3d 384, 389 (7th Cir.
2019). “Rule 56 permits a district court to delay consideration
of a summary judgment motion and order additional discov-
ery before ruling if the non-movant demonstrates that ‘it can-
not present facts essential to justify its opposition.’” Sterk v.
Redbox Automated Retail, LLC, 770 F.3d 618, 627–28 (7th Cir.
2014) (quoting FED. R. CIV. P. 56(d)). “The Rule places the bur-
den on the non-movant that believes additional discovery is
required to ‘state the reasons why the party cannot ade-
quately respond to the summary judgment motion without
further discovery.’” Id. at 628 (quoting Deere & Co. v. Ohio
Gear, 462 F.3d 701, 706 (7th Cir. 2006)). Additionally, “[a] party
seeking relief under Rule 56(d) must show by affidavit or dec-
laration specific reasons discovery should be extended, which
requires more than a fond hope that more fishing might net
some good evidence.” Smith v. OSF HealthCare Sys., 933 F.3d
859, 864 (7th Cir. 2019).
The MAO-MSO entities did not meet their burdens. First,
they once again waived part of their argument. MAO-MSO
never objected to the magistrate judge’s discovery order. They
cannot now use their appeal of a Rule 56(d) motion to
No. 20-1268 15
challenge a scheduling order they never objected to in the first
instance. See Pinkston v. Madry, 440 F.3d 879, 891 n.15 (7th Cir.
2006) (“[B]ecause [Plaintiff] failed to object to the magistrate
judge’s order prior to, during or after the hearing, the issue
has been waived.”).
Second, MAO-MSO failed to show why they needed addi-
tional discovery to oppose State Farm’s summary judgment
motion. More to it, in opposing the motion, MAO-MSO iden-
tified three additional illustrative beneficiaries they posited
could have established standing. But MAO-MSO knew of
these beneficiaries from the moment they signed the relevant
assignment agreement—years before State Farm filed its sum-
mary judgment motion—and indeed had previously pleaded
facts related to these individuals in other litigation. Plain and
simple, MAO-MSO had ample time to conduct non-party dis-
covery to develop the evidence related to these claims but
took no steps to do so. Nor did MAO-MSO send any discov-
ery requests to State Farm related to these specific beneficiar-
ies. The plaintiffs now say that State Farm was not responsive
to the general discovery requests they did send during class
discovery, but they never filed any motions to compel State
Farm to respond to a single request. On this record, now is not
the time to complain about what transpired during discovery.
We see no abuse of discretion in the district court’s denial
of MAO-MSO’s request to stay summary judgment under
Rule 56(d).
B
Nor did the district court abuse its discretion in refusing
to allow the MAO-MSO entities to file a third amended com-
plaint. “We review a district court’s denial of leave to amend
16 No. 20-1268
for abuse of discretion and reverse only if no reasonable per-
son could agree with that decision.” Schor v. City of Chicago,
576 F.3d 775, 780 (7th Cir. 2009). Additionally, because MAO-
MSO filed their motion for leave well after the deadline to
amend pleadings had passed, they must satisfy the “good
cause” standard of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(b)(4).
(“A schedule may be modified only for good cause and with
the judge’s consent.”). “Rule 16(b)’s ‘good cause’ standard
primarily considers the diligence of the party seeking amend-
ment.” Trustmark Ins. Co. v. Gen. & Cologne Life Re of Am.,
424 F.3d 542, 553 (7th Cir. 2005) (quoting Johnson v. Mammoth
Recreations, Inc., 975 F.2d 604, 609 (9th Cir. 1992)).
In an April 9, 2019 filing related to the enforcement of a
protection order, MAO-MSO told the district court that they
would “soon be moving to incorporate the [Florida] exemplar
beneficiaries from [a recently dismissed] matter [in the South-
ern District of Florida] into the present one.” They even dis-
cussed the Florida illustrative beneficiaries in their motion for
class certification. From there, however, MAO-MSO failed to
seek leave to amend their complaint until October 2, 2019—
the day after they filed their response to State Farm’s sum-
mary judgment motion. This six-month delay does not reflect
the level of diligence necessary to establish good cause. And
the district court did not abuse its discretion by so finding.
IV
We end where we began. This appeal, much like our 2019
decision affirming the dismissal of a very similar lawsuit by
the same parties, leaves us with the unmistakable impression
that these debt collector plaintiffs pull the litigation trigger be-
fore doing their homework. They sue to collect on receivables
they paid little or nothing for and then rely on the discovery
No. 20-1268 17
process to show they acquired something of value and thus
have an enforceable right to collect. This time around, at the
critical put up or shut up moment of summary judgment, the
plaintiffs once again failed to establish standing.
Federal courts do not possess infinite patience, nor are the
discovery tools of litigation meant to substitute for some mod-
icum of pre-suit diligence. The plaintiffs’ approach is not sit-
ting well with many judges, and multiple district courts have
already commented on what they perceive as MAO-MSO’s
rush to file litigation in the hope that discovery will show
whether an actual case or controversy exists. See, e.g., MSP
Recovery Claims, Series LLC v. AIG Property Casualty, Inc., 2021
WL 1164091, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 26, 2021) (criticizing the
complaint at issue as “long on invective and indignation but
short on facts”); MSP Recovery Claims, Series LLC v. New York
Cent. Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 2019 WL 4222654, at *6 (N.D.N.Y. Sept.
5, 2019) (“Plaintiffs’ tactics are a flagrant abuse of the legal
system.”); MSP Recovery Claims, Series LLC v. USAA Gen. In-
dem. Co., 2018 WL 5112998, at *13 (S.D. Fla. Oct. 19, 2018) (“In
light of the ever-shifting allegations Plaintiff has presented in
its four versions of its pleading, it is evident Plaintiff has
played fast and loose with facts, corporate entities, and ad-
verse judicial rulings.”).
Do not misread our opinion. Our message is directed to
the plaintiffs and their counsel before us and, even more spe-
cifically, to the claims they continue to press in federal court.
And our holding rests on a well-established principle of
standing law—the lack of any injury in fact by virtue of the
plaintiffs making no showing of a primary payer’s failure to
pay a particular obligation under the Medicare Act. Other ar-
eas of law (under consumer protection statutes perhaps most
18 No. 20-1268
especially) continue to present difficult and unsettled ques-
tions of Article III standing in the wake of Spokeo. We do not
intend our warnings in this case to chill good-faith litigation
on those broader issues of standing. But these plaintiffs’ sue
first and ask questions later approach risks stretching the lim-
its of judicial patience, and counsel for the plaintiffs would be
well advised to confirm the existence of an actual injury be-
fore once again availing themselves of the judicial process.
With these observations in mind, we AFFIRM.