Medicare&medicaid Gu 34,105 Minnesota Association of Health Care Facilities, Inc. Sunshine Villa, Inc. Augustana Lutheran Homes, Inc. Red Wing Nursing Home of Tlc Nursing Centers, Inc. Mala Strana Nursing Home of New Prague, and Excelsior Home of Iroquois- Excelsior, Inc. And Valleyview Nursing Home, Inc. v. Minnesota Department of Public Welfare and Leonard W. Levine, Commissioner of Public Welfare, and Nursing Home Residents' Advisory Council, Minnesota Hospital Association, a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation Canby Community Hospital and C & Nc Unit District No. 1, a Minnesota Municipal Corporation Divine Providence Hospital and Home, Inc., a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of Sauk Rapids, Minnesota, a Non- Profit Minnesota Corporation, and Guardian Angels Foundation of Elk River, Inc., a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation v. Minnesota Department of Public Welfare and Arthur E. Noot, Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Public Welfare

742 F.2d 442
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 1, 1984
Docket83-2446
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 742 F.2d 442 (Medicare&medicaid Gu 34,105 Minnesota Association of Health Care Facilities, Inc. Sunshine Villa, Inc. Augustana Lutheran Homes, Inc. Red Wing Nursing Home of Tlc Nursing Centers, Inc. Mala Strana Nursing Home of New Prague, and Excelsior Home of Iroquois- Excelsior, Inc. And Valleyview Nursing Home, Inc. v. Minnesota Department of Public Welfare and Leonard W. Levine, Commissioner of Public Welfare, and Nursing Home Residents' Advisory Council, Minnesota Hospital Association, a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation Canby Community Hospital and C & Nc Unit District No. 1, a Minnesota Municipal Corporation Divine Providence Hospital and Home, Inc., a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of Sauk Rapids, Minnesota, a Non- Profit Minnesota Corporation, and Guardian Angels Foundation of Elk River, Inc., a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation v. Minnesota Department of Public Welfare and Arthur E. Noot, Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Public Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medicare&medicaid Gu 34,105 Minnesota Association of Health Care Facilities, Inc. Sunshine Villa, Inc. Augustana Lutheran Homes, Inc. Red Wing Nursing Home of Tlc Nursing Centers, Inc. Mala Strana Nursing Home of New Prague, and Excelsior Home of Iroquois- Excelsior, Inc. And Valleyview Nursing Home, Inc. v. Minnesota Department of Public Welfare and Leonard W. Levine, Commissioner of Public Welfare, and Nursing Home Residents' Advisory Council, Minnesota Hospital Association, a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation Canby Community Hospital and C & Nc Unit District No. 1, a Minnesota Municipal Corporation Divine Providence Hospital and Home, Inc., a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of Sauk Rapids, Minnesota, a Non- Profit Minnesota Corporation, and Guardian Angels Foundation of Elk River, Inc., a Non-Profit Minnesota Corporation v. Minnesota Department of Public Welfare and Arthur E. Noot, Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Public Welfare, 742 F.2d 442 (8th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

742 F.2d 442

Medicare&Medicaid Gu 34,105
MINNESOTA ASSOCIATION OF HEALTH CARE FACILITIES, INC.;
Sunshine Villa, Inc.; Augustana Lutheran Homes, Inc.; Red
Wing Nursing Home of TLC Nursing Centers, Inc.; Mala Strana
Nursing Home of New Prague, and Excelsior Home of Iroquois-
Excelsior, Inc.; and Valleyview Nursing Home, Inc., Appellants,
v.
MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WELFARE and Leonard W.
Levine, Commissioner of Public Welfare, and
Nursing Home Residents' Advisory
Council, Appellees.
MINNESOTA HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION, a non-profit Minnesota
corporation; Canby Community Hospital and C & NC Unit
District No. 1, a Minnesota municipal corporation; Divine
Providence Hospital and Home, Inc., a non-profit Minnesota
corporation; Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of Sauk Rapids,
Minnesota, a non- profit Minnesota corporation, and Guardian
Angels Foundation of Elk River, Inc., a non-profit Minnesota
corporation, Appellants,
v.
MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WELFARE and Arthur E. Noot,
Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Public
Welfare, Appellees.

Nos. 83-2446, 83-2447.

United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.

Submitted April 11, 1984.
Decided Aug. 28, 1984.
Rehearing Denied in No. 83-2446 Oct. 1, 1984.

Law Offices of the Legal Aid Society of Minneapolis, Inc., M. Francesca Chervenak, Attorney for the Defendant-Intervenor Appellees.

Brad P. Engdahl, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., St. Paul, Minn., for appelless.

Broeker, Hartfeldt, Hedges & Grant, John M. Broeker, Steve M. Mihalchick, Minneapolis, Minn., for appellants in No. 83-2446.

Messerli, Roe & Kramer, Stephen P. Watters, Brian P. Lutterman, Minneapolis, Minn., for appellants in No. 83-2447.

Before ROSS, ARNOLD and FAGG, Circuit Judges.

FAGG, Circuit Judge.

These consolidated actions were brought to challenge the constitutionality of a Minnesota statute which, as a condition of participation in the state's Medicaid program, limits the rates nursing homes may charge residents who do not receive state medical assistance benefits, and retroactively mandates restitution to such residents of charges that exceeded a specified rate differential based on the rates approved by the state for medical assistance recipients. We affirmed the denial of a preliminary injunction, Minnesota Association of Health Care Facilities, Inc. v. Minnesota Department of Public Welfare, 602 F.2d 150 (8th Cir.1979), and following trial by consent before a magistrate, the district court entered judgment for the defendants.

In No. 83-2446, Minnesota Association of Health Care Facilities, Inc. (MAHCF) and the individual plaintiffs contend that the statute violates due process and equal protection guarantees, deprives them of property without just compensation, and unconstitutionally impairs the obligation of contracts. In No. 83-2447, Minnesota Hospital Association (MHA) and the individual plaintiffs challenge only the retroactive "payback provision" of the statute as an unconstitutional impairment of contracts. We hold unconstitutional the part of the statute which retroactively requires refund of collected charges, but reject the remaining constitutional challenges.

I. Background

The federal Medicaid program authorizes grants to the states to help fund medical assistance programs and specifies requirements for the administration of the state programs. Social Security Act, Title XIX, Secs. 1901-1917, 42 U.S.C. Secs. 1396-1396p. The Minnesota Department of Public Welfare administers the Minnesota state plan for medical assistance. A system of reimbursement to nursing homes for their care of medical assistance recipients is established by departmental regulations. See Minnesota Rules, ch. 9510 (1983) (formerly 12 Minn.Code Agency R. Sec. 2.049). The regulations specify criteria for prospective determination of the per diem reimbursement rate to a nursing home for each resident in its care receiving medical assistance. In this appeal the plaintiffs do not challenge these regulations.

If a nursing home chooses to participate in the Medicaid program it must comply with conditions established by Minn.Stat. Sec. 256B.48. On April 13, 1976, the Minnesota legislature approved the following pertinent language:

Subdivision 1. No nursing home shall be eligible to receive medical assistance payments unless it agrees in writing that it will refrain from:

(a) Charging nonmedical assistance residents rates for similar services which exceed by more than ten percent those rates which are approved by the state agency for medical assistance recipients; effective July 1, 1978, no nursing home shall be eligible for medical assistance if it charges nonmedical assistance recipients rates for similar services which exceed those which are approved by the state agency for medical assistance recipients; provided, however, that the nursing home may (1) charge nonmedical assistance residents a higher rate for a private room, and (2) charge for special services which are not included in the daily rate if medical assistance patients are charged separately at the same rate for the same services in addition to the daily rate paid by the state agency;

* * *

Minn.Stat. Sec. 256B.48 (1976) (amended 1977, 1978, 1983).

The magistrate found that following enactment of this provision consumers complained that some nursing homes raised to the statutory limit the rates charged residents not receiving state medical assistance. In 1977, the legislature amended section 256B.48 by adding the underlined language below:

(a) Charging nonmedical assistance residents rates for similar services which exceed by more than ten percent those rates which are approved by the state agency for medical assistance recipients. For nursing homes charging nonmedical assistance residents rates less than ten percent more than those rates which are approved by the state agency for medical assistance recipients, the maximum differential in rates between nonmedical assistance residents and medical assistance recipients shall not exceed that differential which was in effect on April 13, 1976. If a nursing home has exceeded this differential since April 13, 1976, it shall return the amount collected in excess of the allowable differential stated by this subdivision to the nonmedical assistance resident, or that person's representative, by July 1, 1977. Effective July 1, 1978, no nursing home shall be eligible * * *.

Minn.Stat. Sec. 256B.48(1)(a) (1977) (amended 1978, 1983).

II. Due Process

MAHCF contends that by limiting the rates charged to residents not receiving medical assistance, the statute, in combination with an already inadequate level of reimbursement provided nursing homes under state regulations for their care of medical assistance recipients, deprives Minnesota nursing homes of substantive due process and results in a taking of their property without just compensation in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.

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