Bergen Pines County Hospital v. New Jersey Department of Human Services

476 A.2d 784, 96 N.J. 456, 1984 N.J. LEXIS 2715
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 28, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by138 cases

This text of 476 A.2d 784 (Bergen Pines County Hospital v. New Jersey Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bergen Pines County Hospital v. New Jersey Department of Human Services, 476 A.2d 784, 96 N.J. 456, 1984 N.J. LEXIS 2715 (N.J. 1984).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

*461 SCHREIBER, J.

The centra] issue in this ease is whether a party who, though on notice of a proposed regulation, elects not to participate in the proceedings leading to adoption of the regulation may years later introduce evidence to attack the factual predicate of the regulation. This issue arose in a factual context in which plaintiff, Bergen Pines County Hospital (BPCH), questioned, among other things, the validity of regulations prescribing the methodology that was used to fix the rates paid to it for caring for medicaid patients in its long-term medical care facility. The Appellate Division remanded the proceedings to the Department of Health for submission of evidential proof and findings of fact justifying the regulations. The remand was also for the purpose of developing a record on several other items. We granted the Attorney General’s motion for leave to appeal from that part of the Appellate Division order concerning the promulgation of “regulations governing the reimbursement of long term care facilities under the Medicaid program.” The Attorney General has made it clear that his objection was to the attack that the regulations were arbitrary.

I

A

The procedural history of this case is complicated and intricate. Plaintiff, a health care facility owned and operated by Bergen County, has contested the rates fixed by the Department of Human Services, Division of Medical Assistance and Health Services (DMAHS), to be paid to BPCH for medicaid recipients who had been housed and maintained in BPCH’s long-term care facilities 1 during periods between July 1, 1976 *462 and June 30, 1981. BPCH’s appeal for rate relief for periods prior to January 1, 1978 was denied by the Appellate Division because that appeal had been filed more than two-and-one-half years after the rates for those periods had been fixed. Those appeals were well beyond the 45 days within which the appeals should have been taken. R. 2:4—1(b). We denied BPCH’s petition for certification to review that decision. However, the Appellate Division remanded several matters to the Department of Health for further hearings and fact findings concerning the rates applicable to periods commencing January 1, 1978. It is to be noted that DMAHS used a different method to fix rates after December, 1977, known as CARE (Cost Accounting and Rate Evaluation). The Attorney General’s motion for leave to appeal concerned primarily the attack on the regulations. The issues before us relate only to the methodology prescribed in the regulations for determining rates to be paid on and after January 1, 1978.

Medicaid, Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act (Act), is a shared federal-state program under which the federal government contributes money to defray part of the cost of a broad range of services including long-term nursing care in appropriate facilities for eligible patients. Medicaid covers welfare recipients who come within one of the federal categories — aged, blind, or disabled persons, or families with children deprived of parental support. 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 1396a(a)(10)(A)(i) (West 1983). At their option, states may expand the category of eligible persons. Id. § 1396a(a)(10)(A)(ii).

The Act prescribes numerous terms and conditions that the state must satisfy in order to qualify for the federal financial aid. One crucial condition is the existence of a state plan that, among other things, prescribes the manner in which rates for long-term nursing care for recipients of medicaid are to be *463 calculated. Id. § 1396a(a)(13). Each state’s plan must be approved by the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare 2 (Secretary). Id. §§ 1396, 1396a(b). The method in the state plan is then applied to each institution providing services to medicaid patients and payments are made accordingly.

The Act was amended in 1972 stating that, effective July 1, 1976, 3 state plans were to provide “for payment of the skilled nursing facility and intermediate care-facility services provided under the plan on a reasonable cost related basis, as determined in accordance with methods and standards which shall be developed by the State on the basis of cost-finding methods approved and verified by the Secretary [of HEW].” 42 U.S.C.A. § 1396a(a)(13)(E) (West 1976). 4 (Emphasis supplied).

Before this amendment many states had elected to reimburse nursing homes on a flat-rate basis so that some nursing homes were being overpaid, while others were “paid too little to support the quality of care that medicaid patients” were expected to need and receive. S.Rep. No. 92-1230, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. 287 (1972). Overpayment permitted reimbursement of expenses for unnecessary items such as luxury services, and created little incentive to employ the most efficient and econom *464 ical methods, “with the result that the State’s Medicaid dollars [did] not go as far as they could to provide needed medical care.” 41 Fed.Reg. 27,300 (1976). It was to ameliorate these problems that Congress enacted the amendment. Underpayment placed economic pressure on facilities to provide lower quality care, to compel non-medicaid patients to subsidize the cost of caring for medicaid patients, or to refuse to accept medicaid patients. Id.

Subject to the limitation that a reasonable cost-related basis be central to the rate guidelines, Congress contemplated that the states would have flexibility to develop methodologies to determine the costs of all elements that constitute the care rendered to the medicaid patient and to determine reasonable cost-related reimbursement for that care. S.Rep., supra, at 287. HEW has stated that Congress’ intent was that “[s]tates have great flexibility in determining classes in setting class rates, as long as their criteria and rates are reasonable.” 41 Fed.Reg. 27,304 (1976).

The Secretary’s regulations implementing the amendment provided that the state plan must not result in payment rates “lower than rates that the [state] agency reasonably finds to be adequate to reimburse in full the actual allowable costs of a facility that is economically and efficiently run.” 42 C.F.R. § 447.302(b) (1978). The Secretary, as noted above, was also required to review and approve a state’s cost-finding, rate-setting, and reimbursement methodologies to assure compliance with this standard. See Alabama Nursing Home Ass’n v. Harris, 617 F.2d 388, 394 (5th Cir.1980); S.Rep., supra, at 287 (“The methods would have to be approved and validated by the Secretary.”).

Reimbursement on a reasonable cost-related basis does not mean that each facility will be paid its actual costs. The legislative history makes clear that states may set their payment rates at a level that would reimburse institutions only for those costs that the state finds reasonable. The

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Bluebook (online)
476 A.2d 784, 96 N.J. 456, 1984 N.J. LEXIS 2715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bergen-pines-county-hospital-v-new-jersey-department-of-human-services-nj-1984.