AFFIRMED and Opinion Filed November 2, 2021
S In The
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-19-01583-CV
DALLAS MEDICAL CENTER, LLC D/B/A DALLAS MEDICAL CENTER,
PRIME HEALTHCARE SERVICES–MESQUITE, LLC D/B/A DALLAS
REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, AND KNAPP MEDICAL CENTER,
Appellants
V.
MOLINA HEALTHCARE OF TEXAS, INC., Appellee
On Appeal from the 193rd Judicial District Court
Dallas County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. DC-18-06920
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Justices Osborne, Pedersen, III, and Reichek
Opinion by Justice Reichek
The case before us is the second appeal involving Molina Healthcare of Texas,
Inc. and its alleged failure to properly reimburse out-of-network providers for
emergency and other medical services to its insureds. Earlier this year, we issued
Texas Medicine Resources, LLP v. Molina Healthcare of Texas, Inc., 620 S.W.3d
458 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2021, pet. filed), which involved physician groups asserting
a private right of action to enforce the payment obligations set out in the Texas
Insurance Code. We concluded no such private right of action existed under the
statute and affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of the physicians’ statutory and
equitable claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Tex. Med., 620 S.W.3d at
472.
In this appeal, the providers are a group of out-of-network hospitals that allege
they provided emergency and other medical services to Molina’s insureds and were
not properly reimbursed. They seek payment under the insurance code and an
administrative regulation as well as asserting equitable and contractual theories. The
question before us is whether these claims remain viable after our holding in Texas
Medicine. For reasons set out below, we conclude they are not. We therefore
conclude the trial court did not err in granting the plea to the jurisdiction and
dismissing the claims.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiff/appellants Dallas Medical Center, LLC d/b/a Dallas Medical Center,
Prime HealthCare Services–Mesquite, LLC d/b/a Dallas Regional Medical Center,
and Knapp Medical Center (collectively, “Hospitals”) are general acute care
hospitals that provide emergency and non-emergency medical services to patients
without regard to a person’s insurance coverage or ability to pay.
Defendant/appellee Molina is an insurance company authorized to operate as a
Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) and Managed Care Organization (MCO)
pursuant to Texas law. Molina offers HMO health benefit plans through the federal
Affordable Care Act exchange (the Molina Marketplace benefit plans) and MCO
–2–
Medicaid managed care benefit plans to Medicaid-eligible individuals (Medicaid
plans).
For both Marketplace and Medicaid plans, Molina uses in-network healthcare
providers who agree to pre-negotiated, discounted rates. Hospitals were in-network
providers until October 16, 2016, when they terminated their contracts and became
out-of-network providers. As out-of-network providers, Hospitals do not have a
contract with Molina setting out an agreed rate or rates for the provisions of medical
services. All of the claims here involve out-of-network services provided to
Molina’s insureds (also referred to as “members”) under either a Molina
Marketplace or Medicaid plan.
Texas has statutes and administrative regulations regarding payment of out-
of-network providers of emergency and other authorized services to an insured. The
Texas Insurance Code obligates HMOs, such as Molina, to “pay for emergency care
performed by non-network physicians or providers at the usual and customary rate
or at an agreed rate.” TEX. INS. CODE ANN. § 1271.155(a). The Texas Administrative
Code obligates MCOs, such as Molina, to reimburse an out-of-network, in-area
service provider for emergency and authorized services at “the Medicaid [Fee For
Service] rate in effect on the date of the service less five percent, unless the parties
agree to a different reimbursement amount.” See 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §
353.4(f)(2)(A). Collectively, the parties refer to these provisions as the “Emergency
Care Laws.”
–3–
In this lawsuit, Hospitals assert they provided out-of-network emergency care
and other medical services to hundreds of Molina’s insureds, submitted claims to
Molina reflecting charges for those services, but “[d]espite state law and contractual
provisions requiring Molina to pay out-of-network providers for all emergency and,
in certain conditions, non-emergency services provided to their members,” Molina
refused to “fully and properly pay” for the claims. Instead, they allege, Molina paid
less than 10% of their charges for the services they provided. Hospitals filed this
lawsuit to recover for all services provided to Molina’s insureds through December
31, 2018. The live petition alleged the following:
Count 1: Violation of section 353.4 of Title 1 of the Texas
Administrative Code, seeking to recover the difference between the
amount paid, if any, and the Medicaid Fee for Service rates in effect on
date of service less 5% for services provided under the Molina
Medicaid plan;
Count 2: Violation of section 1271.155 of the Texas Insurance Code,
seeking to recover the difference between the amount paid, if any, and
the “usual and customary” rate for services provided under the
Marketplace plans, as well as prompt pay penalties, interest, and
attorney’s fees under sections 843.342 and 843.343 of the insurance
code;
Counts 3 and 5: Unjust enrichment and quantum meruit, alleging
Hospitals “conferred a benefit” on Molina and its insureds by
“providing valuable medical services.” Hospitals seek restitution and
damages for unjust enrichment. As for quantum meruit, they seek the
“value” of the services as defined under section 353.4 of the
administrative code and section 1271.155 of the insurance code;
Count 4: Breach of contract as assignees of Molina insureds’
contractual rights, seeking damages for Molina’s failure to “fully,
properly, and timely pay” for medical services provided, including
–4–
penalties and attorney’s fees under section 542.060 of the insurance
code (prompt payment of claims);
Count 6: Declaratory judgment, declaring the proper method for
calculating the “usual and customary rate” under section 1271.155 for
out-of-network emergency services rendered to Molina’s insureds and
the rate Molina is required to pay for such services rendered in the
future (on and after January 1, 2019);
Count 7: Attorney’s fees under chapters 37 and 38 of the Texas Civil
Practice and Remedies Code in connection with the claims for
declaratory relief and breach of contract, respectively.
Molina filed an amended answer and counterclaim, generally denying all
claims and alleging claims for declaratory relief and attorney’s fees. Subsequently,
Molina filed a plea to the jurisdiction asserting that Hospitals lacked standing to
assert any of their claims. In particular, Molina asserted that Hospitals do not have
a private right of action under either section 1271.155 of the insurance code or
section 353.4 of the administrative code, and Hospitals’ ability to assert the
remaining claims are necessarily dependent on standing under those provisions.
Thus, Molina asserted the trial court should dismiss the claims for lack of subject
matter jurisdiction.
Following a hearing, the trial court agreed with Molina, granted the plea, and
dismissed the Hospitals’ claims with prejudice. Thereafter, Molina nonsuited its
counterclaims. The trial court subsequently made extensive findings of fact and
conclusions of law to support its decision on the plea to the jurisdiction. This appeal
ensued.
–5–
In seven issues, Hospitals challenge the dismissal of each of its claims for lack
of standing. In an eighth issue, Hospitals argue that even if dismissal was proper,
the trial court erred in dismissing the claims “with prejudice.”
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
A plea to the jurisdiction challenges a trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction
to hear a case. Bland Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Blue, 34 S.W.3d 547, 554 (Tex. 2000).
The purpose of the plea is to defeat a claim without regard to whether it has merit.
Id.
Standing is a prerequisite to subject matter jurisdiction, and subject matter
jurisdiction is essential to a court’s power to hear a case. M.D. Anderson Cancer
Ctr. v. Novak, 52 S.W.3d 704, 708 (Tex. 2001). Thus, a plea to the jurisdiction is a
proper vehicle to challenge a plaintiff’s standing to maintain suit. Vernco Constr.,
Inc. v. Nelson, 460 S.W.3d 145, 149 (Tex. 2015) (per curiam). The plaintiff bears
the burden to plead and establish facts affirmatively showing the court has subject
matter jurisdiction. Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d 217,
225–26 (Tex. 2004).
We review a trial court ruling on a plea to the jurisdiction de novo. Miranda,
133 S.W.3d at 226. In performing our review, we consider only the pleadings and
evidence pertinent to the jurisdictional inquiry. Cty. of Cameron v. Brown, 80
S.W.3d 549, 555 (Tex. 2002). We construe the pleadings in the plaintiff’s favor and
–6–
look to the pleader’s intent. Id. When a plaintiff fails to plead facts that establish
jurisdiction, but the petition does not affirmatively demonstrate incurable defects,
the issue is one of pleading sufficiency and the plaintiff should be afforded the
opportunity to amend. Id. If, however, the pleadings affirmatively negate the
existence of jurisdiction, then the plea to the jurisdiction may be granted without
allowing the plaintiff to replead. Id.
B. Texas Medicine Resources, LLP v. Molina Healthcare of Texas, Inc.
In Texas Medicine, the plaintiffs were medical provider groups made up of
physicians who staffed hospital emergency departments and freestanding emergency
medical care centers. 620 S.W.3d at 461–62. The physicians claimed they provided
out-of-network emergency care to Molina’s enrollees under the Marketplace benefit
plan, billed Molina for their services, but were not adequately reimbursed. Id. at
462.1 And, as here, the physicians claimed the payments failed to satisfy Molina’s
obligation to pay the “usual and customary” rate for services under section 1271.155
of the insurance code. To recover those fees, the physicians sued for violations of
section 1271.155, arguing the statute implied a private cause of action. They also
alleged violations of the insurance code’s unfair settlement and prompt pay
provisions, claimed recovery under quantum meruit, and sought the same
declaratory relief as requested here. Id. As in this case, Molina filed a plea to the
1
The previous suit did not involve Molina’s Medicaid benefit plan.
–7–
jurisdiction asserting that the physicians lacked standing to assert their claims for
various reasons. Id. at 462–63. We agreed with Molina.
The physicians conceded section 1271.155 did not expressly confer a private
right of action; therefore, we analyzed whether the legislature intended to provide an
implied right of action. Id. at 620 S.W.3d 463–64. (“When a private cause of action
is alleged to derive from a statutory provision, as it is in this case, our duty is to
ascertain the drafters’ intent.”). As we explained, issues regarding “the availability
of and payment for emergency medical services” involves important policy
considerations that are “primarily for the legislature, not the courts.” Tex. Med., 620
S.W.3d at 464. And, while the legislature may delegate enforcement to any number
of bodies, separation of powers principles obligate us “to exercise restraint, strictly
construe statutory enforcement schemes, and imply a private cause of action to
enforce such statutes only when the legislature’s intent is clearly expressed from the
language as written.” Id.
In considering section 1271.155, we observed that the insurance industry is
“heavily and comprehensively regulated by both federal and state law,” set out the
various statutory provisions applicable to Molina as an HMO, and considered the
same case law argued here as well as the statute’s legislative history. Id. at 465–66.
After a detailed analysis, we ultimately concluded (1) the insurance code provides a
“distinct and comprehensive scheme” to enforce the statute that is not directed to the
courts, (2) the language of section 1271.155 does not provide any textual entitlement
–8–
of payment to the physicians, (3) Texas courts do not adhere to “necessary
implication test” to determine whether a private right action exists, and (4) the
legislative history confirmed the statute was intended to function as part of a broader
regulatory scheme. Id. In short, we concluded that the version of section 1271.155
applicable in the case (which is also applicable here),2 did not create a private right
of action in favor of non-network physicians or providers. Id. at 468.
We also rejected the physicians’ claims that quantum meruit and declaratory
judgment afforded alternative means to redress Molina’s alleged underpayment. We
reasoned that the physician’s equitable claim for quantum meruit sought to enforce
the same payment obligations under the statute and thus failed “because the judiciary
is precluded from creating a claim in equity that merely repackages a statutory claim
the legislature decline to create.” Id. at 470. As for physicians’ request for a judicial
declaration as to the rate Molina should pay under 1271.155(a) for future services,
we concluded that because the physicians lacked standing to enforce section
1271.155(a) directly, they likewise lacked standing to assert the claim indirectly
under the Declaratory Judgments Act. Id. at 471. We likewise rejected the
physicians’ prompt pay claim because (1) without contracted rates, there was no
2
In 2019, the legislature adopted amendments to the Texas Insurance Code to be effective
prospectively. As to section 1271.155, the legislature added subsection (f), which for the first time required
HMOs to pay non-network providers “directly,” and subsection (g), which substantially limits the right of
non-network providers to bill patients for the difference between the billed amount and the paid amount.
See Tex. Med., 620 S.W.3d at 467. Additionally, the bill included a detailed dispute resolution process in
chapter 1467, which allows for mandatory arbitration and judicial review under a “substantial evidence”
review. Id. As in Texas Medicine, these provisions do not apply here because all of the claims arose in
connection with payments prior to the effective date of the 2019 amendments.
–9–
basis for statutory penalties under the statute and (2) the claim was predicated on the
viability of the failed section 1271.155 claim. Id. at 469. In sum, we concluded the
trial court did not err in concluding it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the
physicians’ claims and in granting Molina’s plea to the jurisdiction.
C. Hospitals’ Claims
With the above in mind, we turn to the particular issues in this case to
determine, first, which claims remain to be resolved after Texas Medicine, and (2)
the opinion’s impact on the remaining issues.3 The Hospitals’ claims for insurance
code violations of section 1271.155 and related prompt pay penalties, interest, and
attorney’s fees under sections 843.342 and 843.343, quantum meruit, and
declaratory judgment are identical to those presented in Texas Medicine; thus, for
the same reasons expressed in our previous opinion, we conclude the trial court did
not err in dismissing those claims.4
Having so concluded, we turn to the remaining claims: violation of section
353.4 of the administrative code; unjust enrichment; breach of contract and
corresponding claims for section 542.060 penalties, attorney’s fees and interest in
3
Texas Medicine issued after the briefs in this case were filed. Each side, however, filed a letter brief
after the opinion issued addressing its impact on the appeal.
4
To the extent that Hospitals suggest we revisit any portion of our prior opinion, we decline to do so.
See TEX. R. APP. P. 41.1(a) (panel’s opinion constitutes court’s opinion); see also Chakrabarty v. Ganguly,
573 S.W.3d 413, 415 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2019, no pet.) (en banc) (“Once a panel of this Court has spoken,
subsequent panels are powerless to contradict that decision, barring reconsideration by the Court sitting en
banc or an intervening decision by the supreme court.”)
–10–
connection with the breach; and attorney’s fees under chapters 37 and 38 of the civil
practice and remedies code.
1. Violation of Administrative Code
Hospitals assert the trial court erred by dismissing their claim under section
353.4 of the administrative code. They contend section 353.4 (1) does not preclude
a private right of action or suggest that the Texas Health and Human Services
Commission has “exclusive authority” to enforce it, (2) is not “flanked” by other
sections that do contain a private right of action, which would undermine any
argument that a private right of action was implied and (3) while containing an
administrative process for complaints regarding reimbursement, the process is
“neither mandatory nor exclusive.” Hospitals argue this issue jointly with their issue
regarding section 1271.155 and rely on the same arguments previously rejected in
Texas Medicine. And, for the same reasons, we conclude the rationale of Texas
Medicine applies with equal force to section 353.4.
In reaching this conclusion, we note that the purpose of chapter 353 is to
define the requirements for the Medicaid Managed Care program, and it instructs
that its rules must be read in conjunction with, among other things, federal and state
statutes. 1 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 353.1. HHSC is the state agency responsible for
overseeing and monitoring the Medicaid managed care program. Id. at 353.4(a).
Section 353.4 specifically addresses MCO requirements concerning out-of-
network providers. Similar to 1271.155, section 353.4 has a “distinct and
–11–
comprehensive scheme” for enforcement and is not directed to the courts. See Tex.
Medicine, 620 S.W.3d at 464. Subsection(c) provides that an MCO may not refuse
to reimburse an out-of-network provider for medically necessary emergency
services, must allow its members to be treated by any emergency services provider
for emergency services as well as services to determine if an emergency condition
exists, and the MCO must pay for such services. See id. § 353.4(c). Subsection (f)
states that the MCO “must reimburse an out-of-network, in-area service provider the
Medicaid FFS rate in effect on the date of service less five percent, unless the parties
agree to a different reimbursement amount.” See id. § 353.4(f)(2)(A).
Subsection (i) addresses out-of-network payment disputes and contains an
administrative dispute resolution process. Under this rule, if a complaint is made,
HHSC investigates it and can impose a corrective action plan for the MCO if it
determines the MCO failed to reimburse the provider at the allowable rate. See id.
§ 353.4(i), (j). If additional reimbursement is owed, the rule sets out a timetable by
which the MCO must make payment. See id. § 353.4(j)(5). “HHSC pursues any
appropriate remedy authorized in the contract between the MCO and HHSC if the
MCO fails to comply with a corrective action plan under subsection (j).” Id. §
353.4(i)(7).
As in Texas Medicine, this comprehensive scheme is not directed to the courts.
Thus, we presume the legislature did not intend for a private right of action to be
included. See Tex. Med., 620 S.W.3d at 464 (“[I]n cases such as this, where the
–12–
relevant statutes are silent on a private right of action but provide detailed
administrative enforcement mechanisms, we may presume the legislature intended
that a separate private right of action not be included.” Given the standard applicable
to legislative intent, the text of section 353.4, our previous reasoning in Texas
Medicine, and Hospitals’ reliance on the same cases distinguished in Texas
Medicine, we conclude that section 353.4 does not provide an implied private right
of action to enforce its terms. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in dismissing
this claim.
2. Remaining Claims
Hospitals challenge the dismissal of their breach of contract claim, arguing
they obtained valid assignments of benefits from Molina’s insureds and thus have
standing independent of the statute or rule
In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court determined it did
not have subject matter jurisdiction to resolve the breach of contract claim for three
reasons. First, the court determined the breach of contract claim arose from Molina’s
obligation to pay at the rates set out in sections 1271.155 and 353.4, and because
neither section provides a private right of action, Hospitals do not have standing to
bring a contract claim under those sections. Second, the court determined that
because Hospitals did not bill Molina’s insureds for the difference between what it
charged and what Molina paid (known as “balance billing”), the insureds have not
incurred any damages and, thus, no claim for breach of contract capable of
–13–
assignment existed. And, finally, the court determined that Hospitals’ claim is
barred by a valid and enforceable anti-assignment provision in the insureds’
insurance contracts. Because we agree with the first basis, we do not reach the latter
two.
In their live pleading, Hospitals sought to recover as assignees of Molina’s
insured’s contractual rights. They claim they obtained a valid and enforceable
assignment of benefits from each of those insureds before the services were rendered
and that, under these assignments, Molina’s insureds transferred and assigned all
hospital and medical provider benefits payable under the insurance contracts,
including all related rights and remedies. Hospitals then submitted “clean claims”
for those services and Molina breached the agreement “by failing to fully and
properly pay” for the services provided “in accordance with those contracts and
Texas law.”
On appeal, Hospitals contend this claim does not “arise” from the Emergency
Care Laws but from the terms of Molina’s contracts with its insureds. By way of
example, they argue that “certain of Molina’s Marketplace contracts” state that
“[w]hen services are received from Non-Participating Providers for the treatment of
an Emergency Medical Condition, Molina Healthcare will calculate the allowed
amount that will be covered at the usual and customary rate or agreed upon rate.”
(Emphasis added.) The highlighted portion of the contract mirrors the language in
section 1271.155, and the pleadings seek reimbursement “in accordance with those
–14–
contracts and Texas law.” Thus, while Hospitals argue the claim does not arise from
the statute or rule, the claim on its face is the exact obligation they seek to enforce
under sections 1271.155 and 353.4. Consequently, it is nothing more than an
improper repackaging of their statutory claim for which there is no standing. See
Tex. Med., 620 S.W.3d at 470 (“Accordingly, the claim fails because the judiciary is
precluded from creating a claim in equity that merely repackages a statutory claim
the legislature declined to create.”); Davis v. Hendrick Autoguard, Inc., 294 S.W.3d
835, 840 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2009, no pet.) (concluding that party cannot “achieve
indirectly through a common law contract action what he cannot do directly under
the statute”).
Hospitals also sought statutory penalties, attorney’s fees, and interest under
section 542.060 of the insurance code in connection with Molina’s alleged breach of
contract. Hospitals argue that section 1271.005(c) states that a health maintenance
organization “shall comply” with Subchapter B, Chapter 542 “with respect to prompt
payment to an enrollee.” (Emphasis in brief). Hospitals contend they asserted their
breach of contract claim as an assignee of Molina’s members and thus “stand in the
shoes” of those enrollees. We have, however, concluded that Hospitals do not have
standing to bring their breach of contract claim; thus, we likewise conclude that they
lack standing to seek penalties in connection with that claim.
–15–
As for Hospitals’ equitable claim for unjust enrichment, we reach the same
conclusion as Texas Medicine did on the physicians’ equitable claim for quantum
meruit. There, we concluded that the quantum meruit claim failed “because the
judiciary is precluded from creating a claim in equity that merely repackages a
statutory claim the legislature declined to create.” Id. at 470. Although Hospitals
contend they are not seeking the value of their services “pursuant” to either section
353.4 or section 1271.155, the bottom line is that Hospitals are seeking to enforce
the same payment obligations they cannot enforce under either provision. Moreover,
as in Texas Medicine, we are unpersuaded that Hospitals “conferred a benefit” on
Molina by providing valuable services to its insureds. As we explained in Texas
Medicine, the benefits at issue are healthcare services provided to the insured
patients, not to Molina. Id.
In Angelina Emergency Medicine Associates PA v. Health Care Service
Corp., physicians associations sued multiple insurance companies, alleging they had
been underpaid for emergency services provided to patients. 506 F. Supp.3d 425,
430 (N.D. Tex. 2020). Among those claims was one for quantum meruit in which
the plaintiffs alleged that by “providing medically necessary emergency services” to
the defendants’ insurance customers, they had “conferred a benefit” on them by
“satisfying their ‘obligations to arrange and pay for healthcare services’ for these
members.” Id. 432. The court rejected the argument:
–16–
Saddling someone with a debt to repay hardly qualifies as a benefit.
And the phrasing of the plaintiffs’ quantum meruit claim implies its
failure. Serving a defendant’s customers is hardly the same as serving
the defendant itself.
Id.
We agree and see no reason why this logic does not equally apply to Hospitals’
equitable unjust enrichment claim. See id. (“Quantum meruit is a state-law equitable
remedy founded in unjust enrichment.”). Accordingly, we conclude the trial court
did not err in dismissing Hospitals’ unjust enrichment claim.
Lastly, Hospitals challenge the dismissal of their claims for attorney’s fees
under chapters 37 and 38 in connection with their declaratory relief and breach of
contract claims, respectively. Because we have concluded Hospitals lack standing
to bring both underlying statutory claims, they likewise lack standing to assert a
claim for attorney’s fees under those statutes.
Based on the foregoing, we conclude Hospitals lack standing to assert any of
the claims brought in the lawsuit. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in granting
Molina’s plea to the jurisdiction. We overrule issues one through seven. The
question remains, however, as to whether the suit should have been dismissed “with
prejudice.
In their eighth issue, Hospitals argue that despite determining it “lacked
subject matter jurisdiction” to resolve their claims, the trial court dismissed the suit
with prejudice. They assert this disposition was error.
–17–
A plea to the jurisdiction does not challenge the merits of a claim, but simply
challenges the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction without regard to the merits.
Thus, dismissal with prejudice is improper if a plaintiff can remedy the jurisdictional
defect. Harris Cty. v Sykes, 136 S.W.3d 635, 639 (Tex. 2004); McMillan v. Aycock,
No. 03-18-00278-CV, 2019 WL 1461427, at *3 (Tex. App.—Austin Apr. 3, 2019,
no pet.) (mem. op.). Here, Hospitals have made no argument that they can take any
action that would either cure the jurisdictional impediment inherent in this suit or
create jurisdiction in the future. Under these circumstances, we conclude the trial
court did not err in dismissing the case with prejudice. We overrule the eighth issue.
We affirm the trial court’s order granting Molina’s plea to the jurisdiction.
/Amanda L. Reichek/
AMANDA L. REICHEK
JUSTICE
191583F.P05
–18–
S
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
JUDGMENT
DALLAS MEDICAL CENTER, On Appeal from the 193rd Judicial
LLC D/B/A DALLAS MEDICAL District Court, Dallas County, Texas
CENTER, PRIME HEALTHCARE Trial Court Cause No. DC-18-06920.
SERVICES–MESQUITE, LLC Opinion delivered by Justice
D/B/A DALLAS REGIONAL Reichek; Justices Osborne and
MEDICAL CENTER, AND KNAPP Pedersen, III participating.
MEDICAL CENTER, Appellants
No. 05-19-01583-CV V.
MOLINA HEALTHCARE OF
TEXAS, INC., Appellee
In accordance with this Court’s opinion of this date, the trial court’s order
granting the plea to the jurisdiction is AFFIRMED.
It is ORDERED that appellee MOLINA HEALTHCARE OF TEXAS, INC.
recover its costs of this appeal from appellants DALLAS MEDICAL CENTER,
LLC D/B/A DALLAS MEDICAL CENTER, PRIME HEALTHCARE
SERVICES–MESQUITE, LLC D/B/A DALLAS REGIONAL MEDICAL
CENTER, AND KNAPP MEDICAL CENTER.
Judgment entered November 2, 2021.
–19–