K & P Grocery, Inc. v. Commonwealth

103 S.W.3d 701, 2002 WL 31641089
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 22, 2002
Docket2001-CA-001616-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 103 S.W.3d 701 (K & P Grocery, Inc. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K & P Grocery, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 103 S.W.3d 701, 2002 WL 31641089 (Ky. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

COMBS, Judge.

K & P Grocery, Inc. (K & P), appeals from an order of June 28, 2001, of the Wayne Circuit Court affirming the administrative sanction imposed upon it by the Cabinet for Health Services (Cabinet). The Cabinet suspended K & P for three years from participating as a vendor in the Women, Infants and Children Program (WIC), a program designed to provide nutritious foods to low-income women and children. After a review of the record and the applicable legal authorities, we affirm.

The WIC program falls under the authority of the United States Department of Agriculture, which provides cash grants to states to administer the program. Eligible recipients obtain food at no cost from participating vendors by presenting vouchers that specify the kind and quantity of food that they can obtain. The vouchers are then redeemed by the vendors. In order to participate as a vendor, a retail grocer must make application, undergo screening, and complete a training course pertaining *703 to WIC policies and procedures. If approved, the vendor must execute a contract with the Cabinet agreeing to record the actual purchase price of the food items received by the participants on the voucher “prior to obtaining the signature of the participant.” The regulations governing the program — including the sanctions for any violations — are attached to the vendor’s contract.

K & P Grocery, Inc., owned by Dennis Lester, has participated for several years in the WIC program. On three separate dates in April of 2000, an employee of the Office of Inspector General posed as a WIC recipient at K & P to make undercover purchases known as “compliance buys” in the WIC regulations. On each visit, the investigator had a voucher that entitled her to receive various items, including milk, cereal, and eggs. However, on each visit to K & P, she did not purchase the eggs. The purchase price of those items obtained by the investigator was not recorded on the voucher at the time of purchase for any of the three visits. When the voucher was ultimately submitted for payment by K & P, the eggs had been charged against the program for redemption. In addition, on one of the vouchers, K & P charged the program an amount more than the shelf price of one of the items actually chosen by the investigator.

Pursuant to regulations promulgated by the Cabinet and provided to all WIC vendors, three instances of overcharging the program for food not received by the recipient suffice to trigger the three-year sanction. Accordingly, on June 16, 2000, the Cabinet notified the owner of K & P that the grocery would be disqualified from the WIC program for three years pursuant to 902 EAR 1 4:040(12). The Cabinet also issued K & P a written warning for failing to record the actual purchase price on the voucher at the time of purchase.

K & P did not challenge the propriety of the latter sanction. However, it requested a hearing to challenge the three-year suspension. At the hearing, Dennis Lester, the owner of K & P, admitted that he had overcharged the program, but he testified that the violations were inadvertent. The hearing officer sustained the Cabinet’s sanctions and concluded that the regulations did not allow the Cabinet to mitigate its sanctions “even for unintentional violations.” The circuit court affirmed, and this review followed.

K & P argues that the sanction should be reversed because 902 KAR 4:040 violates Section 2 of the Kentucky Constitution; ie., that it is arbitrary and capricious. In the first of its three arguments, K & P contends that the regulation is void because it fails to distinguish between intentional and inadvertent violations by a vendor. In addressing this same argument, the Wayne Circuit Court cited extensively from Commonwealth, Cabinet for Human Resources v. Kanter, Ky.App., 898 S.W.2d 508, 513 (1995), where this court held that regardless of whether the violations are “intentional or unintentional,” the very occurrence of the violation alone suffices to justify imposing sanctions.

The facts in Ranter, supra, are nearly identical to those in the case before us, and the legal reasoning of that case remains applicable. K & P does not cite or attempt to distinguish Ranter in its brief. It simply emphasizes the arbitrariness inherent in the Cabinet’s failure to “differentiate between premeditated actions of fraud and mere mistake.” We disagree.

“Arbitrariness” arises when an agency: (1) rendered a decision on less *704 than substantial, evidence, (2) failed to afford procedural due process to an affected party, or (3) exceeded its statutory authority. See, Kentucky Board of Nursing v. Ward, Ky.App., 890 S.W.2d 641, 642 (1994). There are no disputed facts with respect to the quantum of evidence as Lester admitted to overcharging the program on all three compliance buys. Nor does K & P complain about the due process that it received. Thus, any arguable arbitrariness must rest upon the argument as to statutory authority: either on the Cabinet’s lack of authority to enforce its regulation or even more basically on its authority to promulgate the regulation in the first place.

KRS 2 194A.050(1) authorizes the Cabinet to promulgate regulations necessary to administer the WIC program. The federal regulations pertaining to the WIC program have developed a scheme of escalating sanctions for vendor violations ranging from a one-year suspension to a permanent disqualification from the program— depending on the seriousness of the violation. Pursuant to the federal regulations 3 , the Cabinet is required to disqualify a vendor from the program for three years if it displays a pattern of overcharging the state or of charging for food not received by the participant. Thus, the federal government treats overcharging the program for food as a very serious violation. We observe that the Cabinet was empowered both by statute and by federal regulations to define and to determine the so-called pattern that would trigger the sanctions mandated by the federal government.

We find no arbitrariness in the enforcement of the regulation. Whether a violation occurs as the result of an intentional act or of neglect on the part of a cashier to record the items in timely fashion, the effect is the same under the criteria and rules of the WIC program. Any improper amount — even an admittedly small amount as is at issue here — diminishes the funds available to feed needy women and children. It may be a rigid standard accounting-wise, but it is not arbitrary in the legal sense of the term to hold vendors strictly liable for violations that involve a diminution of funds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.W.3d 701, 2002 WL 31641089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/k-p-grocery-inc-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-2002.