C. P. v. Utah Office of Crime Victims' Reparations

966 P.2d 1226, 354 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 91, 1998 WL 721286
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 16, 1998
Docket971763-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 966 P.2d 1226 (C. P. v. Utah Office of Crime Victims' Reparations) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. P. v. Utah Office of Crime Victims' Reparations, 966 P.2d 1226, 354 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 91, 1998 WL 721286 (Utah Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

BILLINGS, Judge.

C.P. appeals the denial of her request for crime victim reparation funds to pay for her sexually abused daughter’s mental health counseling. We reverse and remand.

FACTS

C.P.’s daughter was sexually abused by her uncle. C.P. applied for reparation funds .from the Utah Office of Crime Victims’ Reparations (Crime Victims’) in 1989. Grime Victims’ granted C.P.’s daughter an award for mental health counseling on June 23, 1989. On June 29,1991, C.P.’s daughter was admitted into a Benchmark Hospital (Benchmark) counseling program, a non-Medicaid provider. Crime Victims’ learned of the admission on July 1, 1991, and notified Benchmark that because the daughter was eligible for Medicaid through July 31, 1991, Crime Victims’ would not reimburse the clinic for her treatment. On September 10, 1991, Crime Victims’ first notified C.P. that it would, not cover any charges stemming from her daughter’s stay at Benchmark because she was eligible for Medicaid at the time: In 1993, a Crime Victims’ reparations officer denied payment for the daughter’s stay at Benchmark because potential Medicaid coverage was considered as an available collateral source under the Crime Victims’ Act.

C.P. appealed the reparations officer’s decision. An administrative hearing officer affirmed the reparations officer’s decision to deny payment. C.P. appealed the hearing officer’s determination to the Crime Victims’ Board (the Board). The Board denied C.P.’s appeal on October 11, 1994, stating that Crime Victims’ unwritten “statements of policy were binding upon the director, the reparations officers and other staff,” and thus C.P.’s claims were properly reduced to exclude counseling received when her daughter was eligible for Medicaid.

On November 8, 1994, C.P. filed a Complaint and Petition for Review of Informal Adjudicative Proceedings in Third District Court. The court dismissed her complaint without prejudice on December 1, 1995, for failure to properly serve the complaint and petition. C.P. refiled her complaint on December 11,1995. Crime Victims’ filed a Motion to Dismiss C.P.’s December 11 complaint, alleging the statute of limitations had inn and therefore the district court lacked jurisdiction to hear the ease. The trial court ruled that C.P.’s complaint had been “saved” by Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-40 (1996), and thus C.P. timely filed the complaint under the Utah Administrative Procedures Act (UAPA). However, the trial court also held that Crime Victims’ properly denied C.P.’s claim. C.P. appeals.

ANALYSIS

Three issues are presented on appeal. As a threshold matter, Crime Victims’ argues that the Utah “savings statute,” Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-40 (1996), does not apply to C.P.’s claim and, because she filed her December 11, 1995, complaint after the thirty-day jurisdictional time limit set forth in UAPA section 63^6b-14(3)(a) (1997), we lack jurisdiction to hear her appeal. 1 C.P. raises two issues: First, she argues the *1228 Crime Victims’ Act does not identify potential Medicaid benefits as an available collateral source, and thus she should be able to recover for her daughter’s counseling. Second, she argues that the Board’s Medicaid policy does not bar her recovery because it was never adopted through the procedures required by the Utah Administrative Rule-making Act.

I. The Utah “Savings Statute” Applies to Judicial Review of Final Agency Action

We review the trial court’s legal determination that the Utah “savings statute” applies to UAPA’s judicial review provision under a correctness standard, and thus accord it no deference. See Standard Fed. Sav. & Loan v. Kirkbride, 821 P.2d 1136, 1137 (Utah 1991).

UAPA’s judicial review provision states in pertinent part; “A party shall file a petition for judicial review of final agency action within 30 days after the date that the order constituting the final agency action is issued or is considered to have been issued under Subsection 63-46b-13(3)(b).” Utah Code Ann. § 63-46b-14(3)(a) (1997). “The petition for judicial review of informal adjudicative proceedings shall be a complaint governed by the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure.” Id. § 63-46b-15(2)(a).

On October 11, 1994, the Board denied C.P.’s appeal of Crime Victims’ refusal to pay for her daughter’s treatment. C.P. filed her first complaint and petition for Judicial Review of Informal Adjudicative Proceedings on November 8, 1994 — before the thirty-day UAPA deadline had expired. The trial court dismissed her complaint without prejudice on December 1, 1995, for failure to properly serve the complaint and petition. C.P. refiled on December 11, 1995, after the thirty-day judicial review filing deadline had passed.

The Utah “savings statute” states:

If any action is commenced within due time and a judgment thereon for the plaintiff is reversed, or if the plaintiff fails in such action or upon a cause of action otherwise than upon the merits, and the time limited either by law or contract for commencing the same shall have expired, the plaintiff ... may commence a new action within one year after the reversal or failure.

Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-40 (1996). Thus C.P.’s action is timely if the “savings statute” applies to her claim.

This is not the first time Utah courts have interpreted the scope of the “savings statute.” In Kirkbride, 821 P.2d at 1138, the appellants argued that Standard’s deficiency judgment action should be dismissed because Standard’s original action was dismissed for failure to properly serve, and its second filing had exceeded the 120-day statutory filing deadline for deficiency judgments. Our supreme court held that the “savings statute” applied to save this statutory action:

[Appellants] reason that section 78-12-40 is a general renewal statute and, as such, it may appropriately be applied in a case asserting a common law action or a cause of action created by a statute lacking a specific limitation period. However, they assert that where a statute creates a cause of action and contains a specific limitation period for that cause of action, it should be inferred that the legislature intended to bar the application of a general renewal statute.
We find this argument unpersuasive. The relevant inquiry is whether the legislature made plain an intention to bar forever claims of those who are guilty of a procedural misstep....
A more sensible view of the operation of the three-month limitation period contained in section 57-1-32 is that its primary purpose is satisfied when the foreclosing party provides notice to the debtor that a deficiency will be sought by filing the action.

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Bluebook (online)
966 P.2d 1226, 354 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 91, 1998 WL 721286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-p-v-utah-office-of-crime-victims-reparations-utahctapp-1998.