Crudup v. Missouri State Division of Family Services

600 S.W.2d 129, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2615
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1980
DocketNo. KCD 29984
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 600 S.W.2d 129 (Crudup v. Missouri State Division of Family Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crudup v. Missouri State Division of Family Services, 600 S.W.2d 129, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2615 (Mo. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

SHANGLER, Judge.

The appeal comes from a judgment of the circuit court to affirm the decision of the Director of the Division of Family Services to deny the claim of Crudup for medical assistance benefits.1 The refusal rests on the determination that Crudup was not permanently and totally disabled. The appeal contends the decision was not upon competent and substantial evidence and that the [130]*130procedure used denied the claimant a fair hearing.

The claim was for medical assistance for the treatment of a permanent disability. The fund for such a benefit derives from both state and federal sources. § 208.170, RSMO 1978. The assistance Crudup claims is a species of state welfare [§ 208.151(3), RSMO 1978] and of federal aid under Title XIX of the Social Security Act [42 U.S.C. § 301 et seq.]. The federal Act requires that a participant state shall provide medical assistance to any disabled person eligible for such benefit under any plan in effect in that state on January 1,1972. The medical eligibility standard in effect on that date for a person permanently and totally disabled was that enacted by § 208.051 [since repealed by Laws 1973] by the definition:

[A person] [w]ho is disabled by illness, injury, or other physical or mental impairment which is medically determinable and can be expected to be of long-continued and indefinite duration or to result in death, [emphasis added]

The promulgated agency regulation [13 C.S.R. § 40-2.100] defines permanent and total disability to mean that the person

has some physical or mental impairment, disease, or loss from which recovery or substantial improvement cannot be expected, and which substantially precludes him from engaging in any occupation within his competence, such as holding a job or homemaking, [emphasis added]

The essential statutory standard for medical assistance eligibility was given effect by formal Regulation No. 95 of the Division of Family Services [13 C.S.R. § 40-2.100], The ostensible ground for the decision of the Director to deny benefits was that the evidence did not prove a total and permanent disability under the definition of Regulation No. 95:

Permanent and total disability means that the individual has some physical or mental impairment, disease, or loss from which recovery or substantial improvement cannot be expected, and which substantially precludes him from engaging in any occupation within his competence, such as holding a job or homemaking.

That definition of regulation is further refined by the provision of the Income Maintenance Manual of the Division of Family Services that to qualify for medical assistance benefits, the disability impairment “must be of major importance and must be a condition not likely to improve or which will continue for at least 12 months.”

The implicit ground for decision [acknowledged by the Director on appeal] was, simply, that the medical evidence did not prove disability would continue for at least twelve months. That such was the policy for eligibility actually enforced by the Division emerges from the testimony of the social workers, medical review teams and other official personnel. The claimant Crudup contends that the Income Maintenance Manual provision which equates eligibility for medical benefits with a forecast of continuous disability for at least twelve months conflicts with the statute and agency regulation definitions of the permanent and total disability qualification. We note that the Income Maintenance Manual was not in evidence and was of no effect either as an authoritative definition or expression of agency policy. Nor was the substance of the Manual a regulation of the agency, duly promulgated and published as a component of the code of state regulations, which the court was bound to notice even in the absence of proof. § 536.031.5, RSMo 1978; State v. Crowell, 560 S.W.2d 889, 891 [4,5] (Mo.App.1978).

Our decision need not determine whether the agency policy that a medical assistance claimant show a continuous disability for more than twelve months contradicts the permanent disability standard for eligibility. Rather, we assume the validity of the agency policy2 — on which the admin[131]*131istrative decision is acknowledged to rest— to conclude that the Director exacted a greater proof by the claimant than the policy requires. The provision of the Income Maintenance Manual — [the administrative policy on which decision rests] — for ¡medical assistance eligibility expects only that a claimant prove that the impairment “be a condition not likely to improve or which will continue for at least 12 months.”3 The proof imposed, however, was not of a disability actually continuous for more than twelve months — as the policy literally charges — but of a disability medically predictable for that period. Thus, although the claimant gave evidence of a concatenated series of disabilities continued for almost two years, Crudup was denied benefit because there was no medical forecast of such a period of disability.

The claim period in contention was from August of 1975 to August of 1976. The first application for medical assistance benefits was made in June of 1975 and denied by administrative appeal decision in August of 1975. The rejection of claim was based on the administrative medical review team [a social worker and a physician] decision that the estimate of the then attending physician was that the disability would endure for only six to eight weeks — and thus for a less period than a continuous twelve months. At the time of that decision, the record before the administrative officer showed this chronology of disability:

DATE CONDITION PHYSICIAN DISABILITY PROGNOSIS
4-74 Chest Pain Pericarditis Anthony 3 months
8-74 Hospital surgery Fistulectomy Diez Reevaluation after 1 month
9-74 Heart Disease [Vocational Rehabilitation] Referred to General Hospital
10-74 Recurrent perianal abscess Johns Reevaluation after 2 months
11-74 Pericarditis Fistulectomy performed Connor 1 month
12-74 Rectal surgery Chest pains Connor 8 weeks
1-75 Interned for Pneumonia None shown Released after 3 days
2-75 Diffuse lung disease, anal fistula, abscessed syphilis, treated Butterworth 3 to 6 months (chemotherapy for lungs for 2 more years]
3-75 Incision of perirectal abscess Howard No notation
4-75 Hypertensive cardiovascular disease, arteriosclerotic heart disease, pulmonary fibrosis, rectal disorder Calovich The disability depended upon how soon the rectal difficulty was resolved.
4-75 Perianal abscess surgery Howard No notation
5-75 Perianal abscess surgery Petit No notation except: “Final Diagnosis — Rectal fistula, recurrent.”
[132]

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Bluebook (online)
600 S.W.2d 129, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crudup-v-missouri-state-division-of-family-services-moctapp-1980.