Centennial Healthcare Management Corp. v. Department of Consumer & Industries Services

657 N.W.2d 746, 254 Mich. App. 275
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 2003
DocketDocket 225363
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 657 N.W.2d 746 (Centennial Healthcare Management Corp. v. Department of Consumer & Industries 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
Centennial Healthcare Management Corp. v. Department of Consumer & Industries Services, 657 N.W.2d 746, 254 Mich. App. 275 (Mich. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Holbrook, Jr., J.

Plaintiff Centennial Healthcare Management Corporation appeals as of right from an order of the circuit court granting defendants summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8). Centennial, a Georgia corporation, manages Westgate Healthcare Center, an eighty-one-bed, state-licensed nursing home located in St. Louis, Michigan. We affirm.

From May 25, 1999, through May 28, 1999, defendants Sahreleen Bower, Lawrence Miller, Lorraine Woodward, Raymond Hopkins, Jennifer Ezinga, and Timothy Smith, as agents of defendant Michigan *277 Department of Consumer and Industry Services (mdcis), conducted an annual survey of Westgate. During the survey, the agents requested that Centennial produce all incident reports and accident records (hereinafter I & A reports) for the prior six-month period. Centennial initially refused, asserting that because the documents had been generated and maintained by the Leadership Council, Westgate’s quality assurance and assessment committee, they were protected peer review material. Eventually, Centennial agreed to produce only certain I & A reports pertaining to three Westgate residents. 1

Centennial alleges that in retaliation for its refusal to release all the I & A reports sought by the mdcis agents, Westgate was cited for forty-nine deficiencies in the mdcis Statement of Deficiencies, twenty-one of which were violations of federal standards. One of the federal deficiencies was based on Centennial’s failure to provide the I & A reports. After Centennial’s representatives met with the MDCIS, the agency agreed to delete this deficiency. The agency also agreed to reduce the listed severity of a deficiency concerning room size from a level “E” to a level “B.” 2 Westgate *278 was informed that these changes would not affect the proposed remedies stemming from the annual survey.

In a letter dated June 15, 1999, the mdcis informed Centennial that “[b]ased on the current survey findings and [Westgate’s] . . . history of extended periods of noncompliance for previous surveys,” the mdcis would be immediately imposing the following enforcement remedies: (1) a Directed Plan of Correction, effective July 4, 1999; and (2) Directed In-Service Training, also effective July 4, 1999. The letter also indicated that the mdcis would recommend additional federal action if Westgate did not achieve substantial compliance by July 17, 1999. “We are also recommending to the hcfa[ 3 ] Region V Office and the State Medicaid Agency,” the letter continued, “that your provider agreement(s) be terminated on November 28, 1999 if substantial compliance is not achieved by that time.” (Emphasis in original.)

According to Centennial, during a revisit survey that took place from August 10, 1999, through August 16, 1999, mdcis agents again repeatedly asked for the production of various I & A reports. Specifically, Centennial asserts that at various times the agents alternatively sought I & A reports for (1) the entire facility, (2) the entire Dementia Unit of the facility, and finally (3) six particular residents of the Dementia Unit. Centennial again initially denied the requests on the basis that the material was protected peer review material. However, Centennial asserts that under the threat of prosecution made by defendant Woodward, it reluctantly agreed to produce the I & A *279 reports for the six residents of the Dementia Unit. Woodward testified that she never threatened West-gate personnel with civil or criminal penalties if they failed to produce the I & A reports.

Centennial contends that as a result of reviewing the I & A reports for these six residents, defendants found three specific violations. Regarding one of these violations, designated F-224 in the August 13, 1999, Statement of Deficiencies, Centennial argued below that the mdcis report on the violation contained a “verbatim recitation[]of the ... [I & A report], including the follow-up recommendations and the corrective actions (listed as preventive actions) taken by the facility.” 4

Centennial alleges that on August 23, 1999, West-gate received by way of facsimile a letter from the mdcis stating that it would recommend the imposition of a denial of payment for new Medicare and Medicaid residents, 5 a civil penalty of $3,050 a day beginning June 2, 1999, and continuing until terminated by the mdcis, and termination from the Medicare and Medicaid program effective September 11, 1999. 6 The August 23, 1999, mdcis letter also indicated that an additional Directed Plan of Correction was being imposed. The HCFA concurred with the recommended remedies.

*280 In count I of its two-count complaint, Centennial sought, in part, declarations that (1) the I & A reports are statutorily protected peer review material, (2) that 1979 AC, R 325.21101 contravenes statutory and case law, (3) that defendants shall return all I & A reports and be prohibited from obtaining further I & A reports, (4) that the May 1999 and August 1999 survey results were null and void because they were made in retaliation for Centennial’s refusal to supply the I & A reports, and (5) that all remedies were null and void. In support, Centennial cited MCL 333.20175 and 333.21515, 42 USC 1395i-3(b)(1)(B) and 42 USC 1396r(b)(1)(B), 7 and 42 CFR 483.75(b). 8 In count n, *281 Centennial sought to have defendants enjoined from (1) any further requests for I & A reports, (2) imposing any remedies stemming from the May and August 1999 surveys, (3) making any recommendations for enforcement actions based on these surveys, and (4) engaging in future retaliatory conduct.

Centennial also filed a motion for declaratory judgment and preliminary and permanent injunction along with its complaint. The essence of Centennial’s argument in support of its motion was that the I & A reports are, by statute, absolutely privileged materials, and that the mdcis’ findings of deficiencies were made in retaliation for Centennial’s handling of requests for this privileged material. Centennial asserted that this is not a matter for the federal courts because they were not asking for a court order declaring any remedies imposed by the federal government invalid.

In their brief in opposition to the motion, defendants focused on the claim that the May and August 1999 surveys were part of a federal investigatory protocol, and that they were just following federal and state rules and regulations when requesting the I & A reports. Defendants argued that Centennial could not “immunize” itself from disclosure by characterizing I & A reports as peer review material. At the hearing on the motion, defendants argued that

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Bluebook (online)
657 N.W.2d 746, 254 Mich. App. 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/centennial-healthcare-management-corp-v-department-of-consumer-michctapp-2003.