United States ex rel. Schutte v. Supervalu Inc. HTML PDF
Decided: Syllabus | Majority Opinion
Syllabus
UNITED STATES ex rel. SCHUTTE v. SUPERVALU INC.
No. 21â1326, 9 F. 4th 455; No. 22â111, 30 F. 4th 649, vacated and remanded.
NOTE:âWhere it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued. The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
UNITED STATES et al. ex rel. SCHUTTE et al. v. SUPERVALU INC. et al.
certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the seventh circuit
In these cases, petitioners have sued retail pharmacies under the False Claims Act (FCA), 31 U. S. C. §3729 et seq. The FCA permits private parties to bring lawsuits in the name of the United States against those who they believe have defrauded the Federal Government, §3730(b), and imposes liability on anyone who âknowinglyâ submits a âfalseâ claim to the Government, §3729(a). Here, petitioners claim that respondentsâSuperValu and Safewayâdefrauded two federal benefits programs, Medicaid and Medicare. Both Medicaid and Medicare offer prescription-drug coverage to their beneficiaries, and both often cap any reimbursement for drugs at the pharmacyâs âusual and customaryâ charge to the public. But, according to petitioners, SuperValu and Safeway for years offered various pharmacy discount programs to their customersâyet reported their higher retail prices, rather than their discounted prices. Petitioners also presented evidence that the companies believed their discounted prices were their usual and customary prices and tried to prevent regulators and contractors from finding out about their discounted prices. In sum, petitioners claim that the evidence shows that respondents thought their claims were inaccurate yet submitted them anyway.
ââTwo essential elements of an FCA violation are (1) the falsity of the claim and (2) the defendantâs knowledge of the claimâs falsity. The District Court ruled against SuperValu on the falsity elementâfinding that its discounted prices were its usual and customary prices and  that, by not reporting them, SuperValu submitted false claims. However, the court granted SuperValu summary judgment based on the scienter element, holding SuperValu could not have acted âknowingly.â In a separate case, the court granted Safeway summary judgment on that same basis. The Seventh Circuit affirmed in both cases, relying heavily on Safeco Ins. Co. of America v. Burr, 551 U. S. 47âa case that interpreted the term âwillfullyâ in the Fair Credit Reporting Act. As the Seventh Circuit read Safeco, the companies could not have acted âknowinglyâ if their actions were consistent with an objectively reasonable interpretation of the phrase âusual and customary.â Thus, the Seventh Circuit concluded, the companies were entitled to summary judgment even if they actually thought that their discounted prices were their âusual and customaryâ prices (and thus thought their claims were false).
Held: The FCAâs scienter element refers to a defendantâs knowledge and subjective beliefsânot to what an objectively reasonable person may have known or believed. Pp. 8â17.
â(a) The FCAâs text and common-law roots demonstrate that the FCAâs scienter element refers to a defendantâs knowledge and subjective beliefs. The FCA sets out a three-part definition of the term âknowinglyâ that largely tracks the traditional common-law scienter requirement for claims of fraud: Actual knowledge, deliberate ignorance, or recklessness will suffice. See §3729(b)(1)(A). Each term focuses on what the defendant thought and believed: âActual knowledgeâ refers to what the defendant is aware of. âDeliberate ignoranceâ encompasses defendants who are aware of a substantial risk that their statements are false, but intentionally avoid taking steps to confirm the statementsâ truth or falsity. And â[r]eckless disregardâ captures defendants who are conscious of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that their claims are false, but submit the claims anyway. These forms of scienter track the common law of fraud, which generally focuses on the defendantâs lack of an honest belief in the statementâs truth. Restatement (Second) of Torts §526, Comment e. The focus is on what a defendant thought when submitting a claimânot what a defendant may have thought after submitting it. Pp. 8â11.
â(b)Â Even though the phrase âusual and customaryâ may be ambiguous on its face, such facial ambiguity alone is not sufficient to preclude a finding that respondents knew their claims were false. That is because the Seventh Circuit did not hold that respondents made an honest mistake about that phrase; it held that, because other people might make an honest mistake, defendantsâ subjective beliefs became irrelevant to their scienter. Respondents make three main arguments to support that theory, but the Court finds none to be persuasive.
âFirst, the facial ambiguity of the phrase âusual and customaryâ does  not by itself preclude a finding of scienter under the FCA. Even if the phrase is ambiguous, respondents could have learned its correct meaning. Indeed, petitioners argue that the companies received notice that the phrase referred to their discounted prices, comprehended those notices, and then tried to hide their discounted prices. Â
âSecond, the companiesâ reliance on Safecoâs interpretation of the common-law definitions of âknowingâ and ârecklessâ is misplaced, because Safeco interpreted a different statute with a different mens rea standard. 551 U. S., at 52. In any event, Safeco did not purport to set forth the purely objective safe harbor that respondents invoke. âNothing in Safeco suggests that [one] should look to factsââor, here, legal interpretationsââthat the defendant neither knew nor had reason to know at the time he acted.â Halo Electronics, Inc. v. Pulse Electronics, Inc., 579 U. S. 93, 106. â
âFinally, respondents contend their conduct is not actionable according to the common law of fraud incorporated by the FCA because common law fraud does not encompass misrepresentations of law. Respondents then posit that their alleged claims were false only because their claimsâ falsity turned in part on the meaning of the phrase âusual and customaryââwhich, they argue, means that their claims would be false only as misrepresentations of law. But that does not follow. Even assuming that the FCA incorporates some version of this rule, respondents did not make a pure misrepresentation of law; they did not say, for example, âthis is what âusual and customaryâ means.â â Rather, they made a statement that implied facts about their prices, essentially saying âthis is what our âusual and customaryâ prices are.â Petitionersâ case thus makes out a valid fraud theory even under respondentsâ common-law rule. Pp. 11â16.
No. 21â1326, 9 F. 4th 455; No. 22â111, 30 F. 4th 649, vacated and remanded.
âThomas, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Notes
1  Together with No. 22â111, United States et al. ex rel. Proctor v. Safeway, Inc., also on certiorari to the same court.
TOP
Opinion
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 21â1326 and 22â111
_________________
UNITED STATES, et al., ex rel. TRACY SCHUTTE, et al., PETITIONERS
21â1326âv.
SUPERVALU INC., et al.
UNITED STATES, et al., ex rel. THOMAS PROCTOR, PETITIONER
22â111âv.
SAFEWAY, INC.
on writs of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the seventh circuit
âJustice Thomas delivered the opinion of the Court.
âThe False Claims Act (FCA) imposes liability on anyone who âknowinglyâ submits a âfalseâ claim to the Government. 31 U. S. C. §3729(a). In some cases, that rule is straightforward: If a law authorized payment of $100 for âeachâ medical test, and a doctor knows that he did five tests but submits a claim for ten, then he has knowingly submitted a false claim. But sometimes the rule is less clear. If a law authorized payment for only âcustomaryâ medical tests, some doctors might be confused when it came time for billing. And, while some doctors might honestly mistake what that term means, others might correctly understand whatever âcustomaryâ meant in this contextâand submit claims that were inaccurate anyway.
 âThe cases before us today involve a legal standard similar to that latter example: In certain circumstances, pharmacies are required to bill Medicare and Medicaid for their âusual and customaryâ drug prices. And, critically, these cases involve defendants (respondents here) who may have correctly understood the relevant standard and submitted inaccurate claims anyway. The question presented is thus whether respondents could have the scienter required by the FCA if they correctly understood that standard and thought that their claims were inaccurate.
âWe hold that the answer is yes: What matters for an FCA case is whether the defendant knew the claim was false. Thus, if respondents correctly interpreted the relevant phrase and believed their claims were false, then they could have known their claims were false.
I
âThe FCA permits private parties to bring lawsuits in the name of the United Statesâcalled qui tam lawsuitsâagainst those who they believe have defrauded the Federal Government. §3730(b). Petitioners here brought two such lawsuits against respondents, which are companies that operate hundreds of retail drug pharmacies nationwide. In No. 21â1326, respondents are a group of companies that we collectively call SuperValu; in No. 22â111, respondent is Safeway, Inc. According to petitioners, respondents overcharged Medicare and Medicaid programs for years when seeking reimbursement for prescription drugs that the programs covered. In doing so, petitioners argue, respondents defrauded the Government and violated the FCA.
A
âThe claims at issue here relate to two federal benefits programs: Medicaid, which establishes a cooperative federal-state program that provides medical assistance to certain low-income individuals, see 42 U. S. C. §1396 et seq., and  Medicare, which provides federally funded health insurance coverage to individuals who are 65 or older or who are disabled, see 42 U. S. C. §1395 et seq.
âAs relevant here, Statesâ Medicaid plans may offer outpatient prescription-drug coverage to qualifying individuals. §1396d(a)(12). However, the Federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has promulgated regulations that limit the amount these programs may reimburse for certain drugs. See 42 CFR §447.512(b)(2) (2021). Those regulations limit any reimbursement to the lower of two amounts, one of which is the healthcare providerâs âusual and customary charges [for the drug] to the general public.â Ibid. State Medicaid agencies likewise typically reimburse pharmacies for the lowest of different amounts, one of which is often the pharmacyâs âusual and customary chargeâ to the public. See CMS, Medicaid Covered Outpatient Prescription Drug Reimbursement Information by State, Quarter Ending September 2022 (Nov. 16, 2022), https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/prescription-drugs/ state-prescription-drug-resources/medicaid-covered- outpatient-prescription-drug-reimbursement-information-state/index.html.
âThrough Medicare Part D, the Government also offers prescription-drug coverage to beneficiaries. See 42 U. S. C. §1395wâ101 et seq.; 42 CFR pt. 423. To administer that coverage, CMS awards contracts to private plan sponsors. See 42 U. S. C. §1395wâ115; 42 CFR §§423.315, 423.329. Those plan sponsors, in turn, enter contracts with pharmacies (sometimes through middlemen called pharmacy benefit managers). Many of the contracts at issue here limited any reimbursement to the pharmacyâs âusual and customaryâ price.
âThe bottom line is that, when respondents submitted reimbursement claims to these entities, they often were required to charge and disclose their âusual and customaryâ Â price for that drug.1 But, according to petitioners, respondents reported higher prices to these entities than the ones that they usually and customarily charged to the public.
B
âAccording to petitioners, in 2006, respondentsâ competitor, Walmart, began offering 30-day supplies of many drugs for $4.2 To compete with Walmart, SuperValu and Safeway adopted price-match programs in which their pharmacies would match a competitorâs lower price at a customerâs request. SuperValuâs pharmacies would then automatically apply that price to future refills of the drug for those customers. Meanwhile, Safeway also adopted a âmembershipâ discount program through which customers received discounted generic drug prices (often $4 for a 30-day supply). To enroll in that membership program, customers had to fill out a form with only basic information; petitioners argue that Safeway often already had this information on file. SuperValuâs programs continued until 2016; Safewayâs continued until 2015.
âRespondentsâ discount programs turned out to be popular. Though the exact extent of that popularity is disputed, petitioners have presented evidence that the discounted prices comprised a majority of sales for many drugs to customers who paid in cash (and not through insurance) for at least some years during the programsâ operation. For example, according to petitioners, a majority of SuperValuâs 2012 cash sales for 44 of its 50 top-selling prescription  drugs were made at those discounted prices. And, according to petitioners, 88% of Safewayâs 2014 cash sales for its top 20 generic drugs were at discounted rates.
âPetitioners contend that those discounted prices were actually respondentsâ âusual and customaryâ pricesâand that, rather than submitting those lower prices for reimbursement, respondents instead reported their higher, non-discounted prices. For example, petitioners have presented evidence that Safeway charged just $10 for 94% of its cash sales for a 90-day supply of a cholesterol drug between 2008 and 2012. Yet Safeway apparently reported prices as high as $108 as âusual and customaryâ during that time. And petitioners presented evidence that, at least at some times and for some drugs, SuperValu made more than 80% of its cash sales for prices less than what it disclosed as its âusual and customaryâ price.
âTo be sure, the phrase âusual and customaryâ on its face appears somewhat open to interpretation. But petitioners contend that respondents were informed that their lower, discounted prices were their âusual and customaryâ prices, believed their discounted prices were their âusual and customaryâ prices, and tried to hide their discounted prices from regulators and contractors. Petitioners have presented evidence that they claim supports that theory. For example, both SuperValu and Safeway received a notice in 2006 from a pharmacy benefit manager stating that the phrase âusual and customaryâ refers to discounted prices; Safeway apparently received the same message from state Medicaid agencies. And executives at both companies raised concerns about letting state agencies or pharmacy benefit managers find out about their discounted prices.
âFor example, some emails between SuperValu executives described their discount program as a âstealthy approachâ and noted concern for the âintegrityâ of their âU&C priceâ claims. App. to Pet. for Cert. in No. 21â1326, p. 67a (internal quotation marks omitted). An executive at Safeway  similarly stated that â[w]e may have some issues with U&Câ and that âif you [match a] price offer, that becomes your usual and customary [price] for that day.â 30 F. 4th 649, 667 (CA7 2022) (internal quotation marks omitted). Other documents directed Safewayâs employees to match Walmart prices, but cautioned that employees should not âput any of this in writing to stores because our official policy is we do not match.â Id., at 666. Petitioners argue that this and other evidence show that respondents thought that their claims were inaccurate yet submitted them anyway.
C
â Before proceeding, some context about how these cases reached us is useful to understand the question presented. The FCA (as relevant here) imposes liability on those who âknowingly presen[t] . . . a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval.â §3729(a)(1)(A). Thus, two essential elements of an FCA violation are (1) the falsity of the claim and (2) the defendantâs knowledge of the claimâs falsity.
âIn SuperValuâs case, the District Court ruled against SuperValu on the falsity elementâit determined that SuperValuâs discounted prices were its âusual and customaryâ prices and that, by not reporting them, SuperValu submitted claims that were false. But, the District Court then granted summary judgment for SuperValu based on the scienter element, holding SuperValu could not have acted âknowingly.â Soon after, it granted Safeway summary judgment on the same basis.
âThe Seventh Circuit affirmed. 9 F. 4th 455 (2021). In doing so, it relied heavily on Safeco Ins. Co. of America v. Burr, 551 U. S. 47 (2007)âa case that interpreted the term â âwillfullyâ â in the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), id., at 52. Specifically, the Seventh Circuit read Safeco to dictate a two-step inquiry for ascertaining whether a defendant acted recklessly or knowingly. At step one, the Seventh Cir cuit took Safeco to ask whether a defendantâs acts were consistent with any objectively reasonable interpretation of the relevant law that had not been ruled out by definitive legal authority or guidance. This step, the Seventh Circuit held, applied regardless of whether the defendant actually believed such an interpretation at the time of its claims. Only if the defendantâs acts were not consistent with any objectively reasonable interpretation would the court proceed, at step two, to consider the defendantâs actual subjective thoughts. Thus, under the Seventh Circuitâs approach, a claim would have to be objectively unreasonable, as a legal matter, before a defendant could be held liable for âknowinglyâ submitting a false claim, no matter what the defendant thought.
âTurning to the facts here, the Seventh Circuit held that respondents were entitled to summary judgment because their actions were consistent with an objectively reasonable interpretation of the phrase âusual and customary.â Specifically, the court reasoned that the phrase could have been understood as referring to respondentsâ retail prices, not their discounted pricesâeven if the phrase, correctly understood, referred to their discounted prices. It thus did not matter whether respondents thought that their discounted prices were actually their âusual and customaryâ prices. What mattered, instead, was that someone else, standing in respondentsâ shoes, may have reasonably thought that the retail prices were what counted.
âWe granted certiorari, see 598 U. S. ___ (2023), to resolve that legal question: If respondentsâ claims were false and they actually thought that their claims were falseâbecause they believed that their reported prices were not actually their âusual and customaryâ pricesâthen would they have âknowinglyâ submitted a false claim within the FCAâs meaning? Or is the Seventh Circuit correctâthat respondents could not have âknowinglyâ submitted a false claim unless no hypothetical, reasonable person could have thought  that their reported prices were their âusual and customaryâ prices?
âIt is equally important to recognize what we did not grant certiorari to review: We are not reviewing the meaning of the phrase âusual and customaryâ or whether any of respondentsâ claims were, in fact, inaccurate or otherwise false. Nor are we reviewing whether respondents actually thought that the phrase âusual and customaryâ referred to their discounted prices. Nor, for that matter, are we reviewing any factual disputes about what respondents did or did not believe or do. These cases come to us from the grant of summary judgment to respondents on one discrete legal issue, and we granted certiorari to resolve only that issue.
II
âBased on the FCAâs statutory text and its common-law roots, the answer to the question presented is straightforward: The FCAâs scienter element refers to respondentsâ knowledge and subjective beliefsânot to what an objectively reasonable person may have known or believed. And, even though the phrase âusual and customaryâ may be ambiguous on its face, such facial ambiguity alone is not sufficient to preclude a finding that respondents knew their claims were false.
A
âWe start, as always, with the text of the FCA. See Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, 579 U. S. 176, 187 (2016). Here, the FCA defines the term âknowinglyâ as encompassing three mental states: First, that the person âhas actual knowledge of the information,â §3729(b)(1)(A)(i). Second, that the person âacts in deliberate ignorance of the truth or falsity of the information,â §3729(b)(1)(A)(ii). And, third, that the person âacts in reckless disregard of the truth or falsity of the information,â  §3729(b)(1)(A)(iii). In short, either actual knowledge, deliberate ignorance, or recklessness will suffice.3
âThat three-part test largely tracks the traditional common-law scienter requirement for claims of fraud. See Restatement (Second) of Torts §526 (1976); Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Economic Harm §10 (2018). For example, one widely cited English decision, Derry v. Peek, [1889] 14 App. Cas., articulated the rule as follows: â[F]raud is proved when it is shewn that a false representation has been made (1) knowingly, or (2) without belief in its truth, or (3) recklessly, careless whether it be true or false.â Id., at 374 (judgment of Lord Herschell). And, capturing the FCAâs use of the term âdeliberate ignorance,â that decision noted that an action for fraud would lie if âa person making a false statement had shut his eyes to the facts, or purposely abstained from inquiring into them.â Id., at 376. Those standards have been cited and widely adopted by American courts in the century since. See 3 D. Dobbs, P. Hayden, & E. Bublick, Law of Torts §665, p. 645 (2d ed. 2011) (Dobbs); Restatement (Second) of Torts, App. §526, Reporterâs Note.
âThat the text of the FCA tracks the common law is unsurprising because, as we have recognized, the FCA is largely a fraud statute. See Escobar, 579 U. S., at 187â188, and n. 2. Indeed, the FCA was first enacted in 1863 to â âsto[p] the massive frauds perpetrated by large contractors during the Civil War.â â Id., at 181. To this day, the FCA refers to â âfalse or fraudulentâ â claims, pointing directly to âthe common-law meaning of fraud.â Id., at 187 (emphasis added). In the absence of statutory text to the contrary, we would assume that â âCongress intends to incorporate the well-settled meaningâ â of such a common-law term. See ibid. And here, the FCAâs definition of âknowinglyâ confirms that assumption by largely tracking the common-law scienter standards for fraud.
âOn their face and at common law, the FCAâs standards focus primarily on what respondents thought and believed. First, the term âactual knowledgeâ refers to whether a person is âaware of â information.4 See Intel Corp. Investment Policy Comm. v. Sulyma, 589 U. S. ___, ___â___ (2020) (slip op., at 6â7); Escobar, 579 U. S., at 191 (âA defendant can have âactual knowledgeâ that a condition is material without the Government expressly calling it a condition of paymentâ); Blackâs Law Dictionary 784 (5th ed. 1979) (âto understand,â or âthe perception of the truthâ); Restatement (Second) of Torts §526, and Comment c. Second, the term âdeliberate ignoranceâ encompasses defendants who are aware of a substantial risk that their statements are false, but intentionally avoid taking steps to confirm the statementâs truth or falsity. See Global-Tech Appliances, Inc. v. SEB S. A., 563 U. S. 754, 769 (2011); Blackâs Law Dictionary, at 672 (â[v]oluntary ignoranceâ); Derry, 14 App. Cas., at 376. And, third, the term âreckless disregardâ similarly captures defendants who are conscious of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that their claims are false, but submit the claims anyway. See Blackâs Law Dictionary, at 1142; Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U. S. 825, 836 (1994); Restatement (Third) of Torts §10, Comment c.5
 âAgain, that tracks traditional common-law fraud, which ordinarily âdepends on a subjective testâ and the defendantâs âculpable state of mind.â Id., §10, Comment a. What typically matters at common law is whether the defendant made the false statement âwithout belief in its truth or recklessly, careless of whether it is true or false.â Restatement (Second) of Torts §526, Comment e. If a defendant knows that he âlack[s an] honest belief â in the statementâs truth, that is often enough to establish scienter for fraud. Id., Comment d.; Dobbs §665, at 647.
âBoth the text and the common law also point to what the defendant thought when submitting the false claimânot what the defendant may have thought after submitting it. As noted above, the text encompasses those who âknowingly presen[t] . . . a false or fraudulent claimâ; the term âknowinglyâ thus modifies present-tense verbs like âpresents.â §3729(a)(1)(A). As such, the focus is not, as respondents would have it, on post hoc interpretations that might have rendered their claims accurate. It is instead on what the defendant knew when presenting the claim. See also Restatement (Second) of Torts §526, Comment e (âIt is enough that being conscious that he has neither knowledge nor belief in the existence of the matter he chooses to assert it as a factâ); accord, Halo Electronics, Inc. v. Pulse Electronics, Inc., 579 U. S. 93, 105 (2016) (â[C]ulpability is generally measured against the knowledge of the actor at the time of the challenged conductâ).
B
âThe difficulty here, however, is that the phrase âusual and customaryâ is, on its face, less than perfectly clear. We assume (as the District Court ruled in SuperValuâs case) Â that respondentsâ âusual and customaryâ prices were their discounted ones; if so, it might have been a forgivable mistake if respondents had honestly read the phrase as referring to retail prices, not discounted prices. But the Seventh Circuit did not hold that respondents made an honest mistake; it held that, because other people might make an honest mistake, defendantsâ subjective beliefs became irrelevant to their scienter. Respondents make three main arguments in support of that rule. But none is persuasive.
1
âRespondents first focus on the inherent ambiguity of the phrase at issue here, asserting that they could not have âknownâ that their claims were inaccurate because they could not have âknownâ what the phrase âusual and customaryâ actually meant. The most that is possible, respondents posit, is that they took a (correct) guess.
âWe disagree. Although the terms, in isolation, may have been somewhat ambiguous, that ambiguity does not preclude respondents from having learned their correct meaningâor, at least, becoming aware of a substantial likelihood of the termsâ correct meaning. To illustrate why, consider a hypothetical driver who sees a road sign that says âDrive Only Reasonable Speeds.â That driver, without any more information, might have no way of knowing what speeds are reasonable and what speeds are too fast. But then assume that the same driver was informed earlier in the day by a police officer that speeds over 50 mph are unreasonable and then noticed that all the other cars around him are going only 48 mph. In that case, the driver might know that âReasonable Speedsâ are anything under 50 mph; or, at the least, he might be aware of an unjustifiably high risk that anything over 50 mph is unreasonable. Indeed, if the same police officer later pulled the driver over, we imagine that he would be hard pressed to argue that some other person might have understood the sign to allow driving at 80 mph.
 âThe same analysis applies here. According to petitioners, respondents received notice that the phrase âusual and customaryâ referred to their discounted prices (in some cases, it seems, from the same entities to which they reported their prices). And, according to petitioners, respondents comprehended those notices and then tried to hide their discounted prices. If that is true, then perhaps respondents actually knew what the phrase meant; or perhaps respondents were aware of an unjustifiably high risk that the phrase referred to their discounted prices. And, if that is true, then respondents may have known that their claims were false. The facial ambiguity of the phrase thus does not by itself preclude a finding of scienter under the FCA.
2
âSecond, like the Seventh Circuit, respondents rely on Safeco. They contend that Safeco already interpreted the common-law definitions of âknowingâ and ârecklessâ and that it did so by looking first at whether the defendantâs âreading of the statuteâ was âobjectively unreasonable.â 551 U. S., at 69. Accordingly, respondents conclude that, because the FCA has the same common-law terms, it should be read with the same, objective common-law focus.
âThis argument fails twice over. First, Safeco interpreted a different statute, the FCRA, which had a different mens rea standard, â âwillfully.â â Id., at 52 (quoting 15 U. S. C. §1681n(a)). While Safeco did reference the common lawâs standards for âknowingâ and ârecklessâ conduct, see 551 U. S., at 59â60, 68â69, its interpretation was ultimately tied to the FCRAâs particular text. To take Safeco as establishing categorical rules for those terms would accordingly âabandon the care we have traditionally taken to construe such words in their particular statutory context.â Jerman v. Carlisle, McNellie, Rini, Kramer & Ulrich, L. P. A., 559 U. S. 573, 585 (2010). And, as explained above, the FCAâs scienter standards are plainly satisfied by a defendantâs  conscious belief that his claims are false.
âSecond, Safeco did not purport to set forth the purely objective safe harbor that respondents invoke. To the contrary, Safeco stated that a person is reckless if he acts âknowing or having reason to know of facts which would lead a reasonable man to realizeâ that his actions were substantially risky. 551 U. S., at 69 (emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted). Or, as Safeco alternatively put it, the common law of recklessness contained an objective standard because it encompassed actions involving âan unjustifiably high risk of harm that is either known or so obvious that it should be known.â Id., at 68 (emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted); see also Restatement (Second) of Torts §500, Comment a (1964) (âRecklessness may consist of either of two different types of conduct. In one the actor knows . . . of facts which create a high degree of riskâ). Thus, as we have stated previously, â[n]othing in Safeco suggests that we should look to facts that the defendant neither knew nor had reason to know at the time he acted.â Halo Electronics, 579 U. S., at 106.6 By a similar token here, we do not look to legal interpretations that respondents did not believe or have reason to believe at the time they submitted their claims.
3
âRespondents make one more argument, approaching the issue from a somewhat different angle. They contend that, at common law, their claims would not be actionable as fraudulent even if their reported prices were not accurate under the correct meaning of âusual and customary.â Their  argument is as follows: At common law, misrepresentations of law are not actionable; only misrepresentations of fact are. Because the FCA incorporates the common law of fraud, it embodies that same limitation. And the claims here would have been knowingly false only because respondents correctly understood what âusual and customaryâ meant. Therefore, respondents conclude, their reports were not false because of any misrepresentation of fact; to the contrary, their claims would have been false only because of their view of the law.
âBut those premises do not support that conclusion. To be sure, many courts appear to have statedâas a general ruleâthat misrepresentations of law are not actionable at common law. See Restatement (Second) of Torts §545; W. Keeton, D. Dobbs, R. Keeton, & D. Owen, Prosser and Keeton on Law of Torts §109, pp. 758â759 (5th ed. 1984) (Prosser & Keeton). So, for example, if a defendant had told the plaintiff, âyour claim will be dismissed because federal courts lack jurisdiction over claims like that,â that representation might not be actionable as a fraud. See ibid.; Utah Power & Light Co. v. Federal Ins. Co., 983 F. 2d 1549, 1556 (CA10 1993). Varying rationales appear to have been given for this rule, including that such statements are of mere opinion and that no one could justifiably rely on them. See Dobbs §677, at 688.
âFor purposes of these cases, we assume without deciding that the FCA incorporates some version of this rule; even then, the rule has significant limits on its own terms. As relevant here, statements involving some legal analysis remain actionable if they âcarry with [them] by implicationâ an assertion about âfacts that justifyâ the speakerâs statement. Restatement (Second) of Torts §545, Comment c; see also Prosser & Keeton §109, at 759. So, as a contrasting example, a person might be liable for falsely stating that âthe plumbing work that I did on your house complied with state law.â See Sorenson v. Gardner, 215 Ore. 255, 261, 334  P. 2d 471, 474 (1959). That is because such a statement says something about both the correct meaning of building codes and the facts about the homeâs construction. Ibid.; see also Hoyt Properties, Inc. v. Production Resource Group, L. L. C., 736 N. W. 2d 313, 319 (Minn. 2007). And homeowners might justifiably rely on that latter representation about the facts, which thus could be actionable as fraud.
âRespondentsâ disclosures here sound more like our hypothetical plumber, not our hypothetical legal advisor. Rather than saying, âthis is what âusual and customaryâ means,â respondents essentially said, âthis is what our âusual and customaryâ prices are.â In doing so, they plainly implied facts about their prices that were not known to the plan sponsors, pharmacy benefit managers, and state Medicaid agencies that received their claims. Petitionersâ cases thus make out a valid fraud theory even under respondentsâ common-law rule.
*ââ*ââ*
âUnder the FCA, petitioners may establish scienter by showing that respondents (1) actually knew that their reported prices were not their âusual and customaryâ prices when they reported those prices, (2) were aware of a substantial risk that their higher, retail prices were not their âusual and customaryâ prices and intentionally avoided learning whether their reports were accurate, or (3) were aware of such a substantial and unjustifiable risk but submitted the claims anyway. §3729(b)(1)(A). If petitioners can make that showing, then it does not matter whether some other, objectively reasonable interpretation of âusual and customaryâ would point to respondentsâ higher prices. For scienter, it is enough if respondents believed that their claims were not accurate.
âWe need not address any of the other factual or legal disputes involved in these cases, including whether petitioners have made a showing sufficient under the correct legal  standard to preclude summary judgment. Nor do we need to address any of the partiesâ policy arguments, which âcannot supersede the clear statutory text.â Escobar, 579 U. S., at 192. We accordingly vacate the judgments below and remand these cases to the Seventh Circuit for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Notes
1  The FCA covers claims presented both to the Federal Government and to a federal âcontractor, grantee, or other recipientâ when, as relevant here, the money is âto be spent or used . . . to advance a Government program.â 31 U. S. C. §3729(b)(2)(A).
2 Â Respondents, of course, demur and portray themselves in a far more sympathetic light. We do not resolve any of those factual disputes today, as we resolve only a legal question arising from the grant of summary judgment to respondents. In this posture, we must take the evidence in petitionersâ favor.
3  The FCA also specifies that the term â âknowinglyâ . . . require[s] no proof of specific intent to defraud.â §3729(b)(1)(B).
4  Respondents contend that âinformationâ can refer only to purely factual information, like the number of drugs sold. But the definition of âinformationâ is broad, referring to all âknowledge obtained from investigation, study, or instruction.â See Websterâs New Collegiate Dictionary 592 (1975); see also American Heritage Dictionary 674â675 (1981). And, in this context, the scienter requirement of the FCA is plainly directed to the falsity of the claims submitted. §3729(a)(1)(A).
5  In some civil contexts, a defendant may be called ârecklessâ for acting in the face of an unjustifiably high risk of illegality that was so obvious that it should have been known, even if the defendant was not actually conscious of that risk. See Farmer, 511 U. S., at 836â837. We need not consider how (or whether) that objective form of ârecklessnessâ relates to the FCA today because, as noted above, it is enough to say that the FCAâs standards can be satisfied by a defendantâs subjective awareness of the claimâs falsity or an unjustifiable risk of such falsity.
6  Respondents read a footnote in Safeco to establish the sort of purely objective safe harbor for which they argue. See Safeco, 551 U. S., at 70, n. 20. But that footnoteâeven if it does deem subjective intent to be irrelevant in the FCRA contextâcertainly was not meant to establish the general rule for the terms âknowingâ or ârecklessâ in all contexts. Cf. Halo Electronics, 579 U. S., at 106, n. (distinguishing the footnote in the patent-infringement context).