Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid v. Women's Pavilion of South Mississippi, PLLC

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 2024
Docket2023-SA-00098-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid v. Women's Pavilion of South Mississippi, PLLC (Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid v. Women's Pavilion of South Mississippi, PLLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid v. Women's Pavilion of South Mississippi, PLLC, (Mich. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-SA-00098-SCT

MISSISSIPPI DIVISION OF MEDICAID AND DREW SNYDER, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS DIRECTOR OF THE MISSISSIPPI DIVISION OF MEDICAID

v.

WOMEN’S PAVILION OF SOUTH MISSISSIPPI, PLLC

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/30/2022 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DENISE OWENS TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: THOMAS L. KIRKLAND, JR. ALLISON CARTER SIMPSON MATTHEW DAVID SITTON JANET McMURTRAY MAUREEN BURKE SPEYERER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: JANET McMURTRAY MAUREEN BURKE SPEYERER ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: THOMAS L. KIRKLAND, JR. ALLISON CARTER SIMPSON MATTHEW DAVID SITTON NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - STATE BOARDS AND AGENCIES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED AND REMANDED - 03/07/2024 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE RANDOLPH, C.J., COLEMAN AND MAXWELL, JJ.

MAXWELL, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. In 2021, this Court overruled past precedent giving deference to an agency’s

interpretation of its own administrative rules. Instead, courts “review agency interpretations of rules and regulations de novo, without deference to the agency’s interpretation.”1

Applying this de novo review, the Hinds County Chancery Court, First Judicial District,

concluded that the hearing officer overseeing a Medicaid provider’s appeal failed to apply

the clear rules governing Medicaid administrative appeals. These rules—in place at the time

of the administrative appeal—required the hearing officer to provide “findings of fact and

a determination of the issues presented.”2 But the hearing officer instead applied the

deferential standard courts apply to final agency decisions and merely evaluated whether

Medicaid’s initial decision was supported by substantial evidence. Because the hearing

officer failed to follow Medicaid’s administrative rules, the chancellor vacated Medicaid’s

provider-related decision and remanded the issue of the provider’s reimbursement rate to the

hearing officer.

¶2. The Mississippi Division of Medicaid (Medicaid) appealed, arguing its hearing officer

was right to apply a deferential standard when reviewing the initial Medicaid reimbursement-

rate decision because he was essentially acting as an appellate judge. Medicaid asks this

Court to reinstate the final agency decision and affirm its reimbursement-rate decision. But

Medicaid cannot get around the plain language of its own administrative rules that governed

the administrative appeal. These rules did not direct the hearing officer to defer to the

1 Miss. Methodist Hosp. & Rehab. Ctr., Inc. v. Miss. Div. of Medicaid, 319 So. 3d 1049, 1055 (Miss. 2021). 2 Miss. Admin. Code Pt. 300, R. 1.1(B)(7) (effective Aug. 1, 2020). On March 1, 2023, Medicaid changed its rules governing administrative appeals. When this opinion refers to the new rules, it will cite the March 1, 2023 effective date. But whenever this opinion refers to the old rules—the rules in place at the time of Women’s Pavilion’s administrative appeal—it will cite the August 1, 2020 effective date.

2 agency’s initial decision. Instead, they required the hearing officer to make findings of fact

and a determination of the issues presented. For this reason, we affirm the decision of the

Hinds County Chancery Court, which vacated Medicaid’s reimbursement-rate decision. And

we remand the reimbursement-rate issue to Medicaid.

Background Facts & Procedural History

¶3. Women’s Pavilion of South Mississippi, PLLC, is a physician-owned OBGYN clinic

in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. In 2016, Medicaid approved Women’s Pavilion as a Rural

Health Clinic. Medicaid compensates Rural Health Clinics by paying an “encounter

rate”—that is, a set amount of money per visit by a Medicaid patient. Medicaid State Plan,

Attachment 4.19-B, § 2b.II (State Plan 4.19-B). The rate is determined by dividing a year’s

worth of reported costs to run the clinic by a year’s worth of patient visits. Once this rate is

set, it is adjusted annually for inflation. Id. § 2b.II(B). But it does not otherwise change. So

setting the encounter rate is critical to both Medicaid and the provider.

I. Medicaid Calculated Women’s Pavilion’s Encounter Rate

¶4. After some back-and-forth with Women’s Pavilion, Medicaid set the clinic’s

encounter rate at $157.94. This rate was higher than the average rate of $116.89 paid to rural

health clinics in the area. But it was substantially lower that the $207.71 rate that would have

applied had Medicaid accepted at face value the annual cost report Women’s Pavilion

submitted to Medicare.3

3 Medicaid discovered Women’s Pavilion had under-reported the number of patient visits in its Medicare cost report. Instead of the 6,500 visits reported, Women’s Pavilion had 10,003 visits. Women’s Pavilion does not contest this correction. Catching this error alone changed the encounter rate from $318.03 to $207.71.

3 ¶5. But Medicaid did not simply accept Women’s Pavilion Medicare annual cost report.4

Instead, the agency tasked an auditor to make a retroactive adjustment. Significantly, the

auditor determined $823,253.90 in compensation to the five physician owners of the clinic

was unreasonably high. This was because the five owners only worked part time for the

Hattiesburg clinic. Under Medicaid policy, reasonable compensation for physician owners

who work part time must be based on a full-time equivalency (FTE). The auditor calculated

the owners’ FTE by dividing the collective amount of hours the five owner physicians

worked by 2,080—which represents 40 hour a week for 52 weeks—to reach an FTE of 1.09.

Because $823,253.90 in compensation for the equivalent 1.09 full-time physician seemed

extremely high compared to other rural health clinics, the auditor set out to determine a

reasonable compensation rate.

¶6. The auditor did this by turning to the federal Medicare and Medicaid Provider

Reimbursement Manual (PRM). Ctrs. for Medicaid & Medicare Servs., Provider

Reimbursement Manual, Pt. 1, Ch. 9 (PRM). PRM 905.7 provides two options for

determining a reasonable amount of compensation for physician owners of rural health

clinics. The agency could “establish[] ranges of compensation for comparable institutions

4 Medicaid does not require its own separate cost report. Instead, it uses the cost report submitted to Medicare. Throughout its appeal, Women’s Pavilion has taken the position that, once Medicare accepted the cost report as reasonable, Medicaid had to do the same. But Medicaid asserts there is a critical difference between how the two agencies handle encounter rates for rural health clinics. According to Medicaid, Medicare has a rate cap, which was $82.30 in 2017, the year used to set the permanent rate. So once the costs- divided-by-visits exceeds the cap, Medicare had little incentive to scrutinize the amount of costs and the number of visits reported, in Medicaid’s view. Medicaid is different. It has no cap. So Medicaid asserts it had a strong incentive to ensure the costs reported by Women’s Pavilion were reasonable.

4 as provided in § 905.1”—this is the route Women’s Pavilion has insisted Medicaid must

follow. PRM 905.7. “Alternatively,” Medicaid could use a salary range developed by the

federal Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services presented in a table in PRM 905.7. Id.

The auditor chose to use the chart. After consulting some internet websites, he determined

the upper amount on the chart for the Southeast region, $294,555, was a reasonable amount

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Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, In His Official Capacity as Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid v. Women's Pavilion of South Mississippi, PLLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-division-of-medicaid-and-drew-snyder-in-his-official-capacity-miss-2024.