Country Club Home, Inc. v. Harder

623 P.2d 505, 228 Kan. 802, 1981 Kan. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1981
Docket51,997
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 623 P.2d 505 (Country Club Home, Inc. v. Harder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Country Club Home, Inc. v. Harder, 623 P.2d 505, 228 Kan. 802, 1981 Kan. LEXIS 159 (kan 1981).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fromme, J.:

All parties to this appeal, including amicus curiae, have filed motions for modification. Plaintiff-appellee requests this court to affirm the judgment of the trial court. Defendant-appellant and amicus curiae urge modification and clarification of the original opinion. After considering these motions we find a change in the effective date of K.A.R. 30-10-12 from May 1, 1978, as it appears in the original opinion, to December 30, 1977 is necessary. This is the regulation which first omitted the limitation placed on payments to be made to nursing homes to funds which were made available or appropriated by the legislature. In order to understand why this change of date is necessary certain facts must be. disclosed.

The Kansas statutes authorizing agencies to adopt rules and regulations recognize two kinds of regulations, temporary regulations (K.S.A. 77-422) and permanent regulations (K.S.A. 77-426). Under K.S.A. 77-422:

“A temporary rule and regulation shall take effect, subject to subsequent action or enactment by the legislature, after approval by the secretary of administration and the attorney general, as provided by K.S.A. 77-420, and amendments thereto, upon filing with the revisor of statutes or upon a later date specified in the rule and regulation. A temporary rule and regulation filed after October 1, 1976, and on or before December 31, 1977, shall not be effective after April 30, 1978. . . .”

*803 Under K.S.A. 77-426 a new permanent regulation when filed with the revisor of statutes on or before December 31 of any year “shall become effective on and after May 1 of the succeeding year.” No rules and regulations may be filed “after December 31 or prior to May 1 in any year, except temporary rules and regulations.”

The agency in this case filed a new permanent regulation K.A.R. 30-10-12 on December 29, 1977. This was before the December 31st deadline and under K.S.A. 77-426 it did not become effective until May 1, 1978. However, the agency also filed a temporary regulation, identical in substance, on December 30, 1977. Under the provisions of K.S.A. 77-422, above quoted, this regulation became effective when filed with the revisor of statutes December 30, 1977, and remained in effect until May 1, 1978, when the permanent regulation became effective. The provisions of K.S.A. 77-426, which fixes May 1 of the year succeeding the filing of the regulation as the effective date of a permanent regulation, specifically excepts from the operation of the statute temporary regulations. Thus, K.A.R. 30-10-12 first became effective as a temporary regulation on December 30, 1977, after approval by the attorney general and the department of administration, and at the time it was filed with the revisor of statutes. R remained in effect until the permanent regulation became effective May 1, 1978.

Therefore, the objectionable features of the agency’s prior regulations concerning nursing homes, which limited the amount of payments to those funds which might be available and appropriated by the legislature, were removed by the adoption of the temporary regulation effective December 30, 1977, instead of May 1, 1978, as stated in the original opinion. Accordingly, it is held that the date May 1, 1978, in syllabus ¶ 8, should be and is hereby changed to December 30,1977, and a similar correction of date from May 1, 1978, to December 30, 1977, is ordered throughout the body of the original opinion, including the last two paragraphs.

In addition to the above corrections, two matters of clarification appear necessary after considering the motions for modification filed by amicus curiae and defendant-appellant. The first relates to regulations for the period from July 1, 1971, to July 28, 1972, and to the basis upon which it was held the administrative *804 action taken by the agency was without proper legal authority. During this period of time the agency adopted and had in effect three different regulations affecting payments for care in nursing homes. The first, K.A.R. 30-5-27, was filed October 1, 1970, and became effective January 1, 1971. It specified that the payments be made for reasonable, usual and customary charges. The second was a temporary regulation effective October 1, 1971, which called for payment of reasonable charges. The third was a permanent regulation filed October 1, 1971, which became effective January 1, 1972, and called for payment of reasonable charges.

In addition, these three different regulations each provided that payment levels for care should be based on the nursing homes’ “cost plus a reasonable profit,” and payments were to be determined by cost and other data submitted by the nursing homes. The federal requirements under the Social Security Act, both before and after July 1, 1976, talked of payments to be fixed with some reference to costs of the services furnished by the nursing homes. Prior to July 1, 1976, the federal Department of HEW had provided that payment rates not exceed rates determined using medicare principles of reimbursement for Title XVIII services. 45 C.F.R. 250.30(b)(3)(ii) and (iii) (1971-72-73). In setting Title XIX payments to providers, the rates were to be the lesser of reasonable cost or customary charges, which was the basis for reimbursement for Title XVIII services. Both federal and state regulations during the period spoke of “costs” as a basis for arriving at either reasonable charges or reasonable, usual and customary charges.

In the original opinion and here we see no conflict or invalidity by reason of the wording of the state and federal statutes or regulations for the period from July 1,1971, to July 28,1972. The Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services of the State of Kansas simply failed to comply with the existing federal and state regulations. The agency provided no schedule for reimbursements based on or tied to the cost of nursing home services furnished to Title XIX patients. We continue to hold the failure of the state agency to implement the state and federal requirements by administrative action, so as to provide some reasonable cost-related method to determine reasonable rates for reimbursement of nursing homes during this period rendered the regulations and the administrative action taken to be without legal authority. *805

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Bluebook (online)
623 P.2d 505, 228 Kan. 802, 1981 Kan. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/country-club-home-inc-v-harder-kan-1981.