Betty Jensen v. Department of Human Services

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 2015
Docket319098
StatusUnpublished

This text of Betty Jensen v. Department of Human Services (Betty Jensen v. Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Betty Jensen v. Department of Human Services, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

BETTY JENSEN, by JASON JENSEN, personal UNPUBLISHED representative, February 19, 2015

Petitioner-Appellee,

v No. 319098 Muskegon Circuit Court DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES, LC No. 12-048738-AA

Respondent-Appellant.

Before: BECKERING, P.J., and BORRELLO and GLEICHER, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

We granted leave to appeal to consider a circuit court’s appellate review of an administrative decision. Were we permitted to review the facts de novo, we likely would have reached a different decision than the Department of Human Services (DHS) regarding the petitioner’s Medicaid eligibility. However, we are only permitted to review de novo the circuit court’s interpretation of the administrative policies underlying the DHS’s decision. And the DHS followed the plain language of the applicable policies in rendering its decision. Accordingly, we are bound to conclude that the circuit court did not apply correct legal principles in applying a different policy interpretation. We therefore reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

Betty Jensen was an elderly woman with dementia. She lived in her home without assistance until May 2011. At that time, Jensen’s concerned grandson, Jason Jensen, acted on Jensen’s behalf and hired a non-relative, Teresa Alexander, to serve as Jensen’s home health aide. Alexander was hired through an informal agreement and no contract entered. Between May 2011 and March 21, 2012, Jason paid Alexander biweekly for her time, using nearly $19,000 of Jensen’s assets.

By March 21, 2012, Jensen’s condition had worsened and she entered a nursing home. At some point thereafter, Jensen executed a written contract with Jason agreeing to reimburse him for mileage he accumulated while managing her affairs for the past year. Jensen then remitted $1,400 to Jason.

On April 30, 2012, Jason applied for Medicaid benefits on Jensen’s behalf. As described in Mackey v Dep’t of Human Serv, 289 Mich App 688, 693; 808 NW2d 484 (2010), participation

-1- in Medicaid is “needs-based.” Accordingly, the Department of Human Services (DHS) reviewed Jensen’s assets, income, and expenditures to determine if she qualified for benefits. While Jensen was eligible, the DHS penalized her for “divesting” funds. Specifically, the DHS found that the payments to Alexander, the mileage reimbursement to Jason, and a $28,128 gift to Jason were “divestments.”1 As a result of these divestments, the DHS delayed Jensen’s Medicaid benefits for 7 months and 2 days. Jensen died on August 28, 2012, before Medicaid began covering her nursing home expenses.

Jason concedes that his grandmother’s $28,128 gift to him was a divestment under Medicaid policies. He challenged before an administrative law judge (ALJ) and then in a circuit court appeal that Jensen’s payments to Alexander and mileage reimbursement to him should not be treated as divestments under the “Home Caretaker & Personal Care Contracts” provision of BEM 405—the applicable policy upon which the DHS relied. That policy states:

[¶ 1] A contract/agreement that pays prospectively for expenses such as repairs, maintenance, property taxes, homeowner’s insurance, heat and utilities for real property/homestead or that provides for monitoring health care, securing hospitalization, medical treatment, visitation, entertainment, travel and/or transportation, financial management or shopping, etc. would be considered a divestment. Consider all payments for care and services which the client made during the look back period as divestment.

[¶ 2] Note: The preceding are examples and should not be considered an all inclusive or exhaustive list.

[¶ 3] Relatives who provide assistance or services are presumed to do so for love and affection, and compensation for past assistance or services shall create a rebuttable presumption of a transfer for less than fair market value. A relative is anyone related to the client by blood, marriage or adoption.

[¶ 4] Such contracts/agreements shall be considered a transfer for less than fair market value unless the compensation is in accordance with all of the following:

• The services must be performed after a written legal contract/agreement has been executed between the client and provider. The services are not paid for until the services have been provided. The contract/agreement must be dated and the signatures must be notarized; and

• At the time of the receipt of the services, the client is not residing in a nursing facility, adult foster care home, institution for mental diseases, inpatient hospital, intermediate care facility for mentally retarded or

1 A “divestment” is a transfer made for less than fair market value within a specified “look back period” that is made to qualify or remain eligible for Medicaid benefits. Bridges Eligibility Manual (BEM) 400, January 1, 2015, p 1; BEM 405, April 1, 2012, p 1.

-2- eligible for home and community based waiver, home health or home help; and

• At the time services are received, the services must have been recommended in writing and signed by the client’s physician as necessary to prevent the transfer of the client to a residential care or nursing facility. Such services cannot include the provision of companionship; and

• DHS will verify the contract/agreement by reviewing the written instrument between the client and the provider which must show the type, frequency and duration of such services being provided to the client and the amount of consideration (money or property) being received by the provider, or in accordance with a service plan approved by DHS. If the amount paid for services is above fair market value, then the client will be considered to have transferred the asset for less than fair market value. If in question, fair market value of the services may be determined by consultation with an area business which provides such services; and

• The contract/agreement must be signed by the client or legally authorized representative, such as an agent under a power of attorney, guardian, or conservator. If the agreement is signed by a representative, that representative cannot be the provider or beneficiary of the contract/agreement.

[¶ 5] Assets transferred in exchange for a contract/agreement for personal services/assistance or expenses of real property/homestead provided by another person after the date of application are considered available and countable assets. [BEM 405, April 1, 2012, pp 6-7 (numeration added by circuit court, emphasis in original).]

The ALJ upheld the DHS’s treatment of these transfers as divestments. The transfers were made under personal care agreements, the ALJ reasoned, and were therefore presumed to be divestments under ¶ 1 unless they conformed to the requirements of ¶ 4. Jason admitted that neither transfer occurred under circumstances that rebutted the presumption.

On appeal, the circuit court reversed the ruling in relation to Jensen’s payments to Alexander. The court interpreted BEM 405 differently, concluding that ¶ 1 applies only to arrangements where the applicant pays up front for services, rendering an assessment of fair market value impossible. The elements to rebut a divestment presumption located in ¶ 4, the court ruled, apply only to agreements with relatives as contemplated in ¶ 3. Under this reading, Jensen’s contemporaneous payments to Alexander, a non-relative, for her services could not be characterized as divestments.

We subsequently granted the DHS’s application for leave to appeal the circuit court’s judgment. Jensen v Dep’t of Human Serv, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered April 30, 2014 (Docket No. 319098).

-3- II. ANALYSIS

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Betty Jensen v. Department of Human Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/betty-jensen-v-department-of-human-services-michctapp-2015.