Hartford Healthcare, Inc. v. Williams

751 So. 2d 16, 1999 WL 219640
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 16, 1999
Docket2971218
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 751 So. 2d 16 (Hartford Healthcare, Inc. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Healthcare, Inc. v. Williams, 751 So. 2d 16, 1999 WL 219640 (Ala. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

1 Gwendolyn H. Williams no longer serves as the commissioner of Alabama Medicaid Agency. See Rule 43(b), Ala.R.App.P., which automatically substitutes a public officer's successor as a party.

Hartford Healthcare, Inc. ("Hartford"), was the operator of a nursing home in Geneva that furnished services to patients eligible for Medicaid benefits. On July 1, 1996, Hartford sold the nursing home to Advocat, Inc., d/b/a Diversicare Management Services ("Diversicare"). Because Hartford would no longer be providing long-term nursing home care after the sale of the nursing home, it was required to file a final cost report with the Alabama Medicaid Agency ("Medicaid") pursuant to Rule 560-X-22-.15(4) of the Alabama Administrative Code. After conducting an audit of Hartford's final cost report, Medicaid determined that it had overpaid Hartford $25,354.74, and it sought repayment from Hartford in that amount.

In a letter written on February 7, 1997, Hartford formally disagreed with the findings of Medicaid's audit. Hartford asserted that Medicaid had failed to include a direct-patient-care-cost incentive allowance of $4.60 per patient per day in its audit calculations. Hartford claimed that the total amount of direct-patient-care-cost incentives owed to it was $95,930.04. Hartford also asserted that the amount of provider-specific taxes it had paid to Medicaid for the period from July 1, 1995, to June 30, 1996, was $71,910.00, rather than the $69,744.00 determined by Medicaid. Hartford contended that this amounted to an overcharge of provider-specific taxes by Medicaid in the amount of $2,166.00. Hartford claimed that because of these two errors Medicaid's audit should be corrected to reflect that Medicaid actually owed Hartford $72,741.30.2

Hartford subsequently requested an informal conference with Medicaid to discuss the disputed portions of the audit, and a conference was held on February 19, 1997. Following the conference, Jesse Loving, the director of Medicaid's provider-audit division, wrote a letter to Hartford in which he agreed with Hartford's position concerning the discrepancy in provider-specific taxes, and stated that $2,166.00, the amount in dispute, should be added to Hartford's allowable property cost. However, Loving also stated in the letter that Medicaid disagreed with Hartford's claim that it was entitled to the direct-patient-care-cost incentive allowance of $4.60 per patient per day.

At Hartford's request, an administrative hearing was held on June 30, 1997. Before the hearing officer, Medicaid and Hartford presented arguments regarding whether Hartford was entitled to the direct-patient-care-cost incentives. The parties' dispute on this issue focused on the *Page 18 proper interpretation of Rule 560-X-22-.15(3), which provides as follows:

"(3) Upon voluntary or involuntary complete withdrawal of a facility participating in the Medicaid program, the provider will be subject to a retroactive adjustment based upon the difference between the amount of reimbursement paid by Medicaid and the actual allowable costs incurred by the former provider during the following periods: . . . ."

Hartford argued that it was not subject to the retroactive adjustment provision of Rule 560-X-22-.15(3), because, it said, it was a "provider" and not a "facility" as defined in the rules promulgated under the Alabama State Medicaid Plan. The term "facility" is defined under the rules as "any structure licensed by the State of Alabama for the purpose of providing long-term care to the aged, ill, or disabled." Rule 560-X-22-.03(10). The rules defined "provider" as "a person, organization, or facility who or which furnishes services to patients eligible for Medicaid benefits." Rule 560-X-22-.03(25). Hartford also contended that Medicaid had not followed the practice of applying Rule 560-X-22-.15(3) to providers in the past. Hartford argued that Medicaid had reversed its former position on this issue without notice, and had thus violated the Alabama Administrative Procedure Act ("AAPA") (§ 41-22-1 et seq., Ala. Code 1975).

Medicaid argued that the retroactive adjustment set forth in Rule 560-X-22-.15(3) applied to Hartford because the terms "facility" and "provider" are interchangeable in the nursing home industry. Medicaid contended that this was particularly true with respect to the implementation of the Alabama State Medicaid plan in the nursing home industry. Medicaid admitted to changing its prior interpretation of the rule in question, reversing its former practice of allowing terminating providers to be paid incentives. Medicaid contended that its former interpretation of the rule had been in error. Medicaid claimed that when it discovered the error in January 1996, it ceased its practice of paying incentives to terminating providers. Medicaid argued it was not required to give notice of its change in the interpretation of the rule, because the rule was not being amended. Following the hearing, the hearing officer recommended that Medicaid should not credit Hartford with the direct-patient-care-cost incentive allowance in Hartford's final cost report, and that Diversicare, Hartford's successor, should be liable for the $25,354.74 that Medicaid had overpaid Hartford for the 1995-96 reporting period. On September 2, 1997, Gwendolyn Williams, the commissioner of Medicaid, entered an order adopting the hearing officer's recommendations.

Hartford petitioned for review in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County. On May 13, 1998, the trial court entered a judgment affirming Medicaid's decision. In that judgment the trial court found that Hartford was subject to a retroactive adjustment pursuant to Rule 560-X-22-.3 based on the difference between the amount Medicaid had paid to Hartford during the 1995-96 reporting period, and Hartford's actual allowable costs as reflected in its final cost report. In its judgment the trial court held that Medicaid's interpretation of this rule was reasonable and in compliance with federal guidelines. The trial court further held that, although Medicaid had departed from its prior interpretation of the rule, this change in interpretation was prompted by compelling reasons and was therefore permissible. In support of this proposition, the trial court cited MobileCounty Gas District v. Mobile Gas Service Corp., 227 So.2d 565 (Ala. 1969).

On appeal Hartford argues that the trial court erred in determining that it was subject to the retroactive-adjustment provision of Rule 560-X-22-.15(3).

An overview of the framework of Medicaid's cost reimbursement is necessary to gain an understanding of how this dispute arose. Chapter 560-X-22 of the Alabama Administrative Code outlines the *Page 19 procedures and policies for Medicaid's cost-reimbursement system. Ala. Admin. Code Rule 560-X-22-.01. Medicaid reimburses nursing homes based upon a per diem rate that is determined by cost data submitted in the nursing homes' cost reports. Ala. Admin. Code Rule 560-X-22-.05.

Medicaid's cost-reimbursement system implements an advance-payment plan. In order to allow nursing homes adequate time to prepare and submit a cost report and to provide Medicaid with sufficient time to compute current rates for the nursing homes, Medicaid pays each nursing home an interim per diem rate for the period from July 1 through December 31 of each year. Rule560-X-22-.05(1).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
751 So. 2d 16, 1999 WL 219640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-healthcare-inc-v-williams-alacivapp-1999.