Callahan v. Department of Health & Mental Hygiene

517 A.2d 781, 69 Md. App. 316, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 424
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 3, 1986
DocketNo. 14
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 517 A.2d 781 (Callahan v. Department of Health & Mental Hygiene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callahan v. Department of Health & Mental Hygiene, 517 A.2d 781, 69 Md. App. 316, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 424 (Md. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

BLOOM, Judge.

Mary Callahan appeals from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, which affirmed a decision of appellee’s, Department of Health & Mental Hygiene’s, Board of Review denying Mrs. Callahan benefits under 'Maryland’s Medical Assistance State Only program. We shall affirm that judgment.

Facts

The Maryland Department of Health & Mental Hygiene (Department) is responsible for administering medical care programs for certain indigent individuals. Md. Health Gen. Code Ann. § 15-103 (Supp.1985). One such program, generally known as the Medical Assistance Program (federal/state program), is partially funded with federal money and is subject to federal and state regulations. COMAR 10.09.24.01, et seq. To be eligible under the federal/state program, an applicant must be deemed “categorically needy”1 or “medically needy”2 and have “income”3 and “resources”4 within prescribed limits. COMAR 10.09.24.08.

The program at issue in this appeal is the Medical Assistance State Only (MASO) program. As its name implies, MASO is funded and regulated solely by the State of [319]*319Maryland. See COMAR 10.09.25.01, et seq. Its purpose is to extend medical benefits to those persons who meet the income and resource limitations of the federal/state program but who have not been determined to qualify thereunder as either “categorically needy” or “medically needy.”

Both the MASO and the federal/state program provide that an applicant’s medical expenses may be offset against (deducted from) income for purposes of determining eligibility for medical benefits (“spend-down”). COMAR 10.09.24.-02B(57); COMAR 10.09.25.02B(47). Neither program, however, permits spend-down to offset resources in excess of the eligibility limitations. COMAR 10.09.24.09C(3); COMAR 10.09.25.090(3). This difference in treatment of income and resources generates the present appeal.

On August 9,1984, appellant’s husband, Donald Callahan, entered Baltimore County General Hospital where he remained until his demise on September 8, 1984. During his hospitalization, Mr. Callahan incurred $31,041.81 in medical expenses. To relieve this burden, appellant applied, on behalf of herself and her husband, to the Baltimore County Department of Social Services5 for medical assistance. The Callahans’ application was classified as seeking MASO benefits; it was denied because their resources of $6,255.00 exceeded the eligibility limitation of $2,600.00 for a family of two. COMAR 10.09.25.08J.

Mrs. Callahan appealed the denial and received a hearing before a Hearing Examiner of the Department of Health & Mental Hygiene, where she asserted:

(1) that the caseworker who evaluated the application failed to determine whether Mr. Callahan was disabled, thus potentially eligible for the federal/state program and ineligible for MASO; and
[320]*320(2) that regulations permitting spend-down of income while denying spend-down of resources operated to deny Mrs. Callahan equal protection under the law.

The Hearing Examiner upheld the denial of benefits finding that Mrs. Callahan was “overscale.” This finding was affirmed by order of the Department’s Board of Review after a hearing. Mrs. Callahan’s appeal to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County was also unavailing.

Issues

I Was appellant improperly considered for MASO due to a failure of the Department to determine whether appellant’s husband qualified for the federal/state program?

II Do MASO regulations that permit spend-down of income, but do not permit spend-down of resources violate the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights?

I

Appellant asserts that her application for medical assistance was improperly considered under the MASO program. It is her contention that the Department had a duty to determine whether her husband was “disabled”6 and thus potentially eligible for the federal/state program. Under the facts of this case we disagree.

Maryland regulations provide that to be eligible for MASO applicants “shall have been determined to be technically ineligible under the [federal/state] program through no fault of their own.” COMAR 10.09.25.02B. Although a [321]*321disabled individual may qualify for medical assistance under the federal/state program, COMAR 10.09.24.03C, we do not believe that the quoted regulation necessarily requires the Department to make a determination as to disability when the applicant does not apply for benefits on the basis of disability.

The record does not contain the application for medical assistance, but testimony before the Department’s Board of Review indicates that Mrs. Callahan did not apply for assistance based on the disability of her husband. Appellant’s counsel, when questioned on this point by a member of the Board of Review, stated that Mrs. Callahan was not advised of the difference between the various medical programs offered by the State. Nevertheless, appellant can hardly be heard to complain that her husband did not receive a disability evaluation when the application did not raise the issue of disability.

In any event, under no circumstances could the failure to investigate disability have prejudiced appellant in any way. Since the applicants failed to meet the financial criteria for eligibility under either program, it is immaterial whether Mr. Callahan could have met an additional test to qualify under the federal/state program. Appellant suggests that she might have had a better legal argument (or an additional one) were she attacking the validity of the federal regulations instead of the state regulations based thereon, but appellee’s function in administering both programs is to furnish medical assistance to those who qualify for such assistance, not legal arguments to those who fail to qualify.

II

As discussed previously, MASO regulations, as do the federal/state program regulations, permit an applicant to offset medical expenses against income to meet program eligibility requirements. This spend-down is not available to reduce the resources of the applicant. It is appellant’s [322]*322contention that a dollar is a dollar and thus it is irrational to distinguish between those who currently earn a sum of money and those who have saved a like sum of money. This distinction, appellant maintains, between those who earn and those, like herself, who save violates her equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. With this we cannot agree.

At the outset we note that this appeal does not concern the propriety of the spend-down provisions of the federal/state program. Appellant invites us to examine the propriety of a United States Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) interpretation of Title XIX, the Social Security Act, which states that a resource spend-down provision is not permissible for the federal/state program. HCFA Transmittal No. 80-58 (August 1980). We decline this invitation because the issue on this appeal concerns MASO, a program independent of the federal statute appellant would have us construe.

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517 A.2d 781, 69 Md. App. 316, 1986 Md. App. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callahan-v-department-of-health-mental-hygiene-mdctspecapp-1986.