Matter of Edna Shannon v. Westchester County Department of Social Services

34 N.E.3d 351, 25 N.Y.3d 345, 12 N.Y.S.3d 600
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 2015
Docket80
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 34 N.E.3d 351 (Matter of Edna Shannon v. Westchester County Department of Social Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Edna Shannon v. Westchester County Department of Social Services, 34 N.E.3d 351, 25 N.Y.3d 345, 12 N.Y.S.3d 600 (N.Y. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Fahey, J.

On this appeal we are called upon to determine whether Mental Hygiene Law § 81.44 permits a guardian to retain property of an incapacitated person after the incapacitated person has died for the purpose of paying a claim against the incapacitated person that arose before such person’s death. We conclude that it does not.

L

Respondent Eastchester Rehabilitation & Health Care Center, a skilled nursing facility, began to care for Edna Shannon in December 2005. Approximately three years later, respondent Westchester County Department of Social Services (DSS) determined that Shannon was eligible for Medicaid benefits as of September 1, 2008. In April 2009, and pursuant to Eastchester’s request, Supreme Court appointed petitioner, Family Service Society of Yonkers (FSS Yonkers), as guardian of Shannon’s person and property. Shannon was discharged from Eastchester to another skilled nursing facility in November 2009.

In June 2010, Eastchester made a claim with FSS Yonkers seeking compensation for approximately $164,000 in services it rendered to Shannon that were not covered by Medicaid. Some *348 three months later, DSS advised FSS Yonkers that Shannon was indebted to DSS in the approximate amount of $166,000 for medical assistance paid on her behalf. Supreme Court approved the sale of Shannon’s real property for $308,000 in January 2011, and Shannon died at age 87 in December 2011. In the meantime, Shannon’s debts to Eastchester and DSS had grown such that by summer 2012 more than $200,000 was owed to each of those entities. By then, slightly less than $190,000 of Shannon’s property remained. The question whether that property, which consisted of cash and securities, remained in Shannon’s guardianship account or became the property of her estate lies at the core of this appeal.

In August 2012 FSS Yonkers commenced this proceeding to settle its final account as to the guardianship seeking a determination whether it was required to pay Shannon’s remaining property in equal amounts to DSS and Eastchester in satisfaction of their claims, or whether it should disburse the property in some other manner. By order entered in February 2013, Supreme Court held that the balance of Shannon’s remaining property (save for $9,000 that the court instructed FSS Yonkers to pay to its attorneys and to the Court Examiner for services rendered in connection with the guardianship estate) should be paid to DSS in satisfaction of DSS’s claim (see Social Services Law § 369 [2] [b] [i] [B] [permitting recovery for medical assistance correctly paid “from the estate of an individual who was (55) years of age or older when he or she received such assistance,” subject to certain qualifications immaterial here]). On appeal, the Appellate Division reversed insofar as appealed from, with the majority holding “that since Eastchester’s claim arose before Shannon’s death, and [Mental Hygiene Law § ] 81.44 (d) allows [FSS Yonkers] to retain assets to secure known claims, Eastchester’s claim has priority over that of DSS, which arose after Shannon’s death” (120 AD3d 128, 129 [1st Dept 2014]).

The dissenter, however, “would [have] affirm [ed] Supreme Court’s determination that the Medicaid lien imposed by Social Services Law § 104 (1) takes precedence over a claim by the general creditor, . . . Eastchester” (id. at 133-134 [Freedman, J., dissenting]). The dissenter concluded that “[o]nce . . . Shannon died, all funds other than those reserved for the administration of her guardianship in accordance with Mental Hygiene Law § 81.44 passed to her estate” (id. at 134), and that DSS thus had a claim superior to that of Eastchester against Shan *349 non’s property (see id. at 136, citing Social Services Law § 104 [1]). We subsequently granted DSS leave to appeal (24 NY3d 904, 905 [2014]) and, for the reasons that follow, we now reverse the order of the Appellate Division insofar as appealed from. 1

IL

The Medicaid program is designed “to pay for necessary medical care for those eligible individuals whose income and resources do not allow them to meet the costs of their medical needs” (Matter of Golf v New York State Dept. of Social Servs., 91 NY2d 656, 659 [1998]). Ultimately, the “goal of Medicaid [is] that the program be the payer of last resort” (Matter of Costello v Geiser, 85 NY2d 103, 106 [1995] [internal quotation marks omitted]). Apparently with that in mind, the legislature enacted what is now Social Services Law § 104 (1), which provides, in relevant part, that “[i]n all claims of the public welfare official made under [such] section the public welfare official shall be deemed a preferred creditor.”

Given the pertinent language of Social Services Law § 104 (1), to the extent that both DSS and Eastchester seek to recover from Shannon’s estate, DSS’s claim against property that passed to the estate would have priority over a competing claim brought by Eastchester because Eastchester did not take a judgment against Shannon before she died. Indeed, absent a judgment, Eastchester would be a general creditor, that is, “[a] creditor [that], upon giving credit, takes no rights against specific property of the debtor” (Black’s Law Dictionary 449, 450 [10th ed 2014]), and, in theory, a claim it made against property in Shannon’s estate would be subservient to any claim of DSS against such property. However, this appeal does not present a question of competing claims against property in *350 Shannon’s estate. Rather, the issue is whether property held by FSS Yonkers as Shannon’s guardian at the time of Shannon’s death automatically became the property of her estate or could be withheld by FSS Yonkers for the purpose of paying the claim, out of the guardianship account, that Eastchester had noticed before Shannon died.

As the dissenter at the Appellate Division noted, FSS Yonkers’s authority as Shannon’s guardian expired with Shannon’s death (see 120 AD3d at 136 [Freedman, J., dissenting], citing Mental Hygiene Law § 81.36 [a] [3] [providing that “(t)he court appointing the guardian shall discharge such guardian, or modify the powers of the guardian where appropriate, if it appears to the satisfaction of the court that . . . the incapacitated person has died”]), and the property in the guardianship account that remained after the fees of the guardianship were paid would normally have passed to her estate (see SCPA 103 [19] [defining “estate” as “(a)ll of the property of a decedent . . . or person for whom a guardian has been appointed”]). The question becomes whether, as the Appellate Division majority concluded, Mental Hygiene Law § 81.44 (d) provides for what amounts to a holdback authorizing “Eastchester . . . to be paid out of the guardianship account [maintained by FSS Yonkers for Shannon] before any funds passed to [Shannon’s] estate” (120 AD3d at 131), i.e., whether FSS Yonkers may withhold from Shannon’s estate funds in the guardianship account for the purpose of paying Eastchester. The text of section 81.44 (d) provides that

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E.3d 351, 25 N.Y.3d 345, 12 N.Y.S.3d 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-edna-shannon-v-westchester-county-department-of-social-services-ny-2015.