Marble v. State

2000 MT 240, 9 P.3d 617, 301 Mont. 373, 2000 Mont. LEXIS 243
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 2000
Docket99-347
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2000 MT 240 (Marble v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marble v. State, 2000 MT 240, 9 P.3d 617, 301 Mont. 373, 2000 Mont. LEXIS 243 (Mo. 2000).

Opinion

JUSTICE NELSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Intervenor Benefis Healthcare (Benefis) appeals an Order issued by the Eighth Judicial District Court, Cascade County, denying its motion to declare Carolyn Marble (Marble) eligible for Medicaid, and compel payment of Medicaid nursing home benefits. We affirm.

¶2 Benefis raises the following issues for review:

1. Does Montana’s Administrative Procedures Act (MAPA) preclude the Department of Health and Human Services from raising new reasons to deny Medicaid eligibility before the District Court when the Department failed to raise those issues that were previously known at the administrative level?
2. Does the doctrine of res judicata preclude the Department of Health and Human Services from raising a new basis of denial before the District Court when the Department failed to raise those issues that were previously known at the administrative level?
3. Whether the Department of Health and Human Services may claim that excess resources should have been spent down during a period when the Department claimed the applicant was ineligible for another independent reason and was constructively prevented *375 from spending down the resources because such a spend-down would not remove the independent basis for denying Medicaid eligibility?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 This appeal is a product of a fairly lengthy and complex administrative hearings process which resulted, ultimately, in the denial of Marble’s eligibility for Medicaid nursing home benefits. Marble, who suffers from Alzheimer’s disease and has resided at Appellant’s Benefis Skilled Nursing Center since June of 1993, filed an application for benefits in December of 1996. This application followed the death of her husband that year, and was submitted by her son, Don, who serves as her guardian. The application was merely intended to continue Marble’s eligibility, a determination that the Department of Public Health and Human Services (hereinafter Department), had already made in 1994, but then terminated in July of 1996 following Marble’s receipt of insurance proceeds.

¶4 Marble’s eligibility application was denied by the Department in January of 1997, due to “excess resources,” which included a bank account with a balance of a little over $3,000, and approximately $31,000 in life insurance proceeds she had received. This determination usually requires that the person first expend such excess resources — i.e., “spend-down” the assets — on medical care before eligibility is reinstated. In some instances, however, this can be accomplished within a month, and eligibility is then reinstated.

¶5 The Department also informed Marble that she may be ineligible due to her late husband’s transfer of the family home to their children, which was deemed a “transfer of resources,” because her husband did not receive “adequate compensation for this property.” The key difference between this latter determination and the former is that the ineligibility due to such a transfer continues for a specified period of time, based on the value of the transfer. This period cannot be shortened by any action on the part of the person deemed ineligible. The record here indicates that the penalty period would have extended until July of 1999. For this reason, this latter determination became the focal issue in dispute.

¶6 Marble challenged her denial of eligibility based on the “transfer of resources” determination, requesting a hearing before a Fair Hearing officer, which took place on Jeme 4, 1997. Likewise, Benefis became involved, seeking Medicaid payments for Marble’s nursing *376 home care expenses dating back to 1996. Marble and the Department both filed briefs following the tele-conference hearing. Again, the focal argument pertained to the “transfer of resources” issue. The Department’s denial based on “excess resources” was referenced only in the factual portions of the briefs and was not addressed in either party’s argument.

¶7 On September 12,1997, the presiding officer of the Fair Hearing determined that the house transfer in question did not disqualify Marble from receiving benefits. Specifically, the hearing officer determined that “the property Claimant’s spouse transferred to the children was transferred exclusively for a purpose other than to qualify Claimant for medicaid.” The officer ordered that “Cascade County shall not find Claimant ineligible for Medicaid for purposes of the transfer of property” (emphasis added). Although addressing the issue of “excess resources,” in its findings, the officer did not issue a final determination on whether the bank account and insurance proceeds rendered Marble ineligible.

¶8 On September 26,1997, the Department appealed the officer’s decision regarding the “transfer of resources” to the Board of Public Assistance, which reversed the decision, concluding that the house transfer rendered Marble ineligible.

¶9 In January of 1998, Marble then turned to the District Court for a judicial review, and filed a brief in support of her petition in April of that year. The petition and supporting brief, although mentioning the “excess resources” basis for the Department’s original denial, exclusively addressed and argued that the “transfer of resources” decision by the Board should be reversed.

¶10 In the mean time, the Department informed the court that it had reversed its determination regarding Marble’s Medicaid eligibility based on the “transfer of resources,” and subsequently did not file a response brief. In a May 22, 1998 letter to the presiding District Court judge, the Department explained that:

[T]he Department has determined that the transfer of the Marble family home by her husband, James Marble, to their children without compensation in July 1996 does not constitute a disqualifying transfer of assets which renders Mrs. Marble ineligible for Medicaid nursing home care.

The Department also informed the court that, based on the foregoing, it would draft a settlement agreement for Marble’s signature. At this point, the penalty for the transfer would have expired in little more *377 than a year anyway. It is unclear, however, whether the Department’s “settlement” would have fully reinstated Marble’s eligibility, including retroactive payments for her nursing home care.

¶ 11 The dispute failed to quietly disappear. Apparently, the Department refused Marble’s overtures that a settlement should include attorney’s fees, and thus no settlement was executed. Further, based on the Department’s concession on appeal, Benefis requested that the Department pay it retroactive Medicaid benefits on Marble’s behalf. In response, the Department asserted that although the transfer of the family home issue had been resolved, the other basis for denial — excess resources — remained viable, and therefore denied Benefis’s request.

¶12 This dispute led to both Marble and Benefis filing motions in the fall of 1998 with the District Court, requesting attorney’s fees, and an order to declare Marble eligible for Medicaid and compel payment of Medicaid benefits.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 MT 240, 9 P.3d 617, 301 Mont. 373, 2000 Mont. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marble-v-state-mont-2000.