California Department of Social Services v. Leavitt

523 F.3d 1025, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 8932, 2008 WL 1836725
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 2008
Docket06-56136
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 523 F.3d 1025 (California Department of Social Services v. Leavitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Department of Social Services v. Leavitt, 523 F.3d 1025, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 8932, 2008 WL 1836725 (9th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

BERZON, Circuit Judge:

In State of California Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Thompson, 321 F.3d 835, 856-57 (9th Cir.2003) (referred to as “Rosales,” after intervenor-appellant Enedina Rosales), we rejected a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) interpretation of the statute determining eligibility for the Aid to Families with Dependent Children-Foster Care (“AFDC-FC”) program. 1 See 42 U.S.C. § 672. We remanded to the district court to implement what we held to be the proper interpretation of the statute. The district court subsequently issued an injunction against HHS and the California Department of Social Services (“CDSS”) enforcing the Rosales eligibility standard. We now consider whether HHS and CDSS are entitled to relief from judgment due to a statute enacted after Rosales and whether the district court failed to respond appropriately in the face of evidence that CDSS may not have complied with the injunction.

I. Background

On remand, the district court ordered CDSS to provide for the review of all foster care cases open on or after March 3, 2003, for benefits eligibility under Rosales’s construction of § 672. 2 CDSS was to pay benefits due “for the entire period, subsequent to December 23,1997, in which the child was entitled to AFDC-FC payments under [Rosales ] and was otherwise *1028 eligible for such benefits and those payments were not paid.” New applications were, of course, to be considered under the statute as construed in Rosales. To begin the process, CDSS was ordered to issue an All County Letter to the county officials who implement its programs, directing them to review their cases “to determine eligibility in accordance with [Rosales ] and consistent withfthe district court’s] judgment.” The review was to be completed no later than April 17, 2005, with benefits paid within 30 days of an eligibility finding. 3

Whether CDSS complied with the district court’s August 2Ó04 Order is the question at the core of this case. It is clear that CDSS did send an All County Letter in September 2004. But whether any review was conducted, or any benefits were paid, has not been documented. 4 The All County Letter itself ordered such steps, requiring that all cases “open on March 3, 2003 shall have the broader eligibility criteria applied retroactively,” recommending that counties “immediately review any case identified as potentially eligible” (emphasis in original), 5 and pro *1029 viding two claim forms — one for administrative costs associated with implementing the district court’s Order and one for the Rosales payments themselves. According to the All-County Letter and accompanying forms, counties were to record, among other details, the amount of the new federal AFDC-FC payments they were claiming as a result of the reviews, along with a “persons count” of parties receiving payments under county, state, and federal programs as a result of the reviews, and, if the county sought administrative costs, “the number of Rosales cases” that were shifted into AFDC-FC payment eligibility after the reviews. Even if a county had no costs to report, it was still to “complete and certify the form indicating zero expenditures.” The forms were to be submitted “no later than April 30, 2005.” The counties were ordered to “retain all supporting documentation for audit purposes.”

On April 20, 2005, after the mandated review period ended, Rosales’s counsel wrote to counsel for CDSS to request “a county-by-county list of the number of cases reviewed, the number of cases approved, the number of cases denied and the reason(s) for the denials,” along with “assurance that every county met the mandated deadline.” CDSS’s counsel replied on May 11, after the deadlines set by the Order and by the All County Letter had elapsed, that while “claims data” had been submitted, the information Rosales’s counsel sought was “not ascertainable from the claims submitted by the counties,” that CDSS had “no such data,” and that no “such ‘evidence’ of compliance [was] required by the Court’s order in Rósales.”

Counsel for Rosales served a Request for Production of Documents on CDSS the following January, requesting, inter alia, “All Documents relating, regarding or referring to Your efforts to comply with [Rosales ], including, but not limited to, all Communications regarding Your compliance efforts”; “All Documents relating, regarding or referring to all payments by You to all foster care cases in which dependency jurisdiction was open on or after March 3, 2003, based on the redetermination of eligibility in accordance with the [district court’s order]”; “All Documents relating, regarding or referring to [the All County Letter]”; “any follow-up communications to anyone after issuance” of the Letter “regarding [its] subject matter”; and “All Documents relating, regarding or referring to the contentions set forth in [CDSS’s counsel’s May 2005 letter] that county-by-county data listing the number of cases reviewed, the number of cases approved, the number of cases denied, and the reasons for denial was not ascertainable from claims submitted by the counties.”

CDSS refused to provide the requested information, in part because “the discovery requests ha[d] been propounded after entry of judgment,” and “[i]n the absence of threshold determinations by the Court regarding the existence and scope of an issue that requires resolution and that discovery is necessary to resolution of any such issue, the discovery requests [were] premature, unauthorized, and unduly burdensome.” Rosales did not move to compel discovery. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(a).

On February 8, 2006, Congress passed the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (“DRA”), which, among other effects, amended § 672 to foreclose the statutory construction set forth by Rosales. Pub.L. No. 109-171, § 7404-05, 120 Stat. 4, 151-55 (2006). In March, CDSS issued an All County *1030 Letter directing that the “counties must immediately ‘track’ all Rosales cases, for which federal foster care benefits were paid starting on October 1, 2005, and thereafter until clarification” on the effects of the statute was received from the district court and HHS. Not long afterward, both HHS and CDSS moved under Rule 60(b) for relief from judgment based on the DRA. While the motions were pending, on June 9, 2006, HHS directed that the DRA’s eligibility provision should be implemented on a rolling basis: As cases came up for annual eligibility reviews, children previously receiving benefits under Rosales

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Bluebook (online)
523 F.3d 1025, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 8932, 2008 WL 1836725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-department-of-social-services-v-leavitt-ca9-2008.