Cameron Manor, Inc. v. Department of Public Welfare

681 A.2d 836, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 250
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 14, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 681 A.2d 836 (Cameron Manor, Inc. v. Department of Public Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cameron Manor, Inc. v. Department of Public Welfare, 681 A.2d 836, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 250 (Pa. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Cameron Manor, Inc. (Cameron) petitions for review of the June 2, 1995 final order of the Executive Deputy Secretary of the Department of Public Welfare (DPW) that reversed a decision of the Office of Hearings and Appeals (OHA) and denied payment to Cameron of the federal share of Medical Assistance (MA) reimbursement for 4,332 days of long-term inpatient care provided to MA patients for the period from October 16, 1986 through February 13, 1987, during which time Cameron was decertified from participation in the MA program.

The primary question presented, as stated by Cameron, is whether Cameron is entitled to reimbursement from DPW, under common law contract theories of implied consent, promissory estoppel, quasi-contract or unjust enrichment and equitable estoppel for the 4,332 long-term inpatient days of care provided to MA patients, where the Department of Health (DOH) directed Cameron to continue service and DPW twice promised payment for these services. Cameron also questions whether DPW’s June 2, 1995 final order is invalid in that it does not actually set forth its factual and legal basis, it is unsupported by substantial evidence and it is arbitrary and capricious; and whether Cameron’s due process rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution were violated by DPW’s final order denying reimbursement to Cameron for the fair value of patient days provided to MA patients pursuant to DPW directions.

I.

In the calendar year 1986 and before, Cameron participated in the Commonwealth’s MA program as a licensed provider of long-term inpatient intermediate care services, at Cameron’s 120-bed nursing home facility in Indiana, Pennsylvania. In 1986 Cameron began having trouble complying with both state and federal MA certification requirements.1 Although DOH did not revoke Cameron’s nursing home license, DPW did decertify Cameron from MA participation for the period from October 16,1986 through February 12, 1987. DPW’s decertification letter states in part:

[838]*838This is to notify you that the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare is issuing an Order to Show Cause against the [sic] Cameron Manor. The issuing of this Order has been necessitated by the facility’s failure to comply with applicable federal statutes and regulations regarding participation in the Medical Assistance Program, 55 Pa.Code § 1101.77(a)(1). Because of these violations, the Medical Assistance Intermediate Care Facility Agreement cannot be renewed. The expiration date was July 31,1986.
On August 21, 1986, the Department of Health, which is the survey agency for reviewing Medical Assistance participation requirements, informed the Department of Public Welfare that your facility did not meet these requirements. This report, which details the deficiencies, is attached hereto and incorporated by reference. Effective thirty (30) days from the date of this letter, you may no longer receive payments under the Medical Assistance Program for intermediate care and services. It is your responsibility to assure the safe and orderly transfer of all Medical Assistance residents to facilities certified to provide the appropriate level of care.

DPW’s Order to Show Cause of September 15,1986.

Evidentiary hearings were held before the Attorney Examiner during which both parties presented evidence. John A. Parse, DPW’s Attorney Examiner, made the following findings of fact. Although DPWs order directed Cameron to relocate the MA. patients by mid-October 1986, DOH contacted Cameron in response to Cameron’s inquiries about what to do with the patients. During the period of its MA decertification, DOH twice instructed Cameron not to relocate the MA patients. In fact, DOH granted Cameron a partial lifting of the ban on admissions and granted two consecutive six-month provisional licenses to provide long-term health care.

The Attorney Examiner also found that DPW was aware of Cameron’s continuing provision of MA services and that Secretary Walter Cohen met with Cameron’s president, who advised Secretary Cohen of the situation. Secretary Cohen then assured Cameron’s president that, if what he said was true, Cameron would be paid. Further, Secretary John White, Cohen’s 1987 successor, also promised Cameron that it “would get its money” for the MA patients. The Attorney Examiner noted that these facts are unrefut-ed. In November 1987 DPW made an interim payment to Cameron for the period from October 1986 to February 1987 in the amount of $65,000. In a DPW in-house memorandum to its Comptroller, Assistant Counsel Bruce G. Baron, stated: “These funds are to be drawn from State Funds Only, and represent a State Share on services rendered during this period.” DPW’s Packet Ex. No. 1, DPW Memorandum, Assistant Counsel to Comptroller, November 4, 1987. DPW, however, refused to reimburse Cameron’s federal share for 4,332 patient days at Cameron’s per diem rate of $42.82, a total amount of $190,377.72.

In written decisions dated February 18, 1994 and February 18, 1995, the Attorney Examiner twice determined that DPW was equitably estopped from denying MA reimbursement to Cameron.2 After issuance of the Attorney Examiner’s second adjudication, which was adopted by OHA in its entirety, DPW sought a second reconsideration. On June 2, 1995, without taking any further evidence, the Executive Deputy Secretary reversed OHA’s decision and denied Cameron MA reimbursement for the period at issue. Cameron petitions this Court for review of that order.

II.

One of Cameron’s theories of recovery is that DPW is equitably estopped from denying MA reimbursement to Cameron under the circumstances of this case. In Chester Extended Care Center v. Department of Pub-[839]*839lie Welfare, 526 Pa. 350, 586 A.2d 379 (1991), the Supreme Court reviewed a similar case, where a nursing facility sought to recover approximately $250,000 in payments for the care of MA patients during a five-month period in 1984 when its participation in the MA program had been terminated.3

The Supreme Court reiterated in Chester Extended Care Center that the doctrine of estoppel is an equitable remedy that may be asserted against the Commonwealth. The Supreme Court noted that the three elements of estoppel are misleading words, conduct or silence by the party against whom the estoppel is claimed; unambiguous proof of reasonable reliance upon the misrepresentation by the party claiming the estoppel; and the lack of a duty to inquire on the party claiming the estoppel. In that case the Court determined that DPW misled the nursing facility into believing that it was still eligible to participate in the MA program by continuing to make MA payments, never making any effort to remove MA patients from the facility and continuing to send patients to it. The facility in Chester Extended Care Center also relied on representations by DOH that it was still in compliance with the MA program. Commonwealth Court, however, held that the facility’s reliance on DPW and DOH actions was unreasonable because the payments made by DPW were in derogation of statutory law.

The Supreme Court reversed on the ground that DPW and DOH lulled the facility into the false belief that its participation in the MA program was not in jeopardy so long as it continued to comply with the terms of its settlement with DOH.

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Bluebook (online)
681 A.2d 836, 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-manor-inc-v-department-of-public-welfare-pacommwct-1996.