Mullins v. Bordeleau

517 A.2d 600, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 554
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 17, 1986
Docket84-218-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 517 A.2d 600 (Mullins v. Bordeleau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullins v. Bordeleau, 517 A.2d 600, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 554 (R.I. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

KELLEHER, Justice.

In this Superior Court class action for a preliminary injunction and a decision on the merits, the trial justice found the General Public Assistance (GPA) “lump sum” rule as set forth in the Department of Human Services (DHS)1 Manual § 605(III)(H) to be in direct contravention of G.L.1956 (1984 Reenactment) § 40-6-9 and declared it null and void. The trial justice further permanently enjoined Joseph Murray, then the acting director of DHS, from applying the rule.2 The DHS now appeals.

The facts in this case are not in dispute. In November of 1981 John J. Affleck, then the director of DHS, promulgated the lump sum rule at issue.3 The rule provides that a GPA recipient receiving any lump sum, such as an insurance award or an inheritance, shall become ineligible for GPA benefits for a fixed period. The length of time in which benefits are denied is determined by calculating what the recipient would have received on a weekly basis had the recipient not received the lump sum. The DHS then assumes that the would-be recipient will expend the lump sum at a rate equivalent to the rate at which the weekly benefits normally would have been exhausted. A recipient, for example, normally entitled to $50 per week, would be ineligible for benefits for ten weeks if the recipient acquired a lump sum of $500.

Catherine Mullins, the named plaintiff, suffered from mental retardation, chronic anxiety, and depression. She received GPA benefits totalling $50.27 per week, based upon her financial need and her inability to sustain full-time employment. In July of 1982 her son died, and she was awarded death benefits under an insurance policy of $18,064.32. She notified DHS of her award, whereupon DHS informed her that she was no longer eligible for benefits owing to her receipt of the lump sum insurance-policy award.

The plaintiff then for some ten months engaged in various occupations including jewelry work and house cleaning. During this time she exhausted nearly all of the insurance award on funeral and other expenses and in April of 1983 plaintiff reapplied for GPA. In a document dated April 27, 1983, DHS rejected plaintiffs application for benefits because of her receipt in July 1982 of the lump sum insurance award.

Applying the formula in Rule 605(III)(H), plaintiff was ineligible to receive benefits until March of 1987. Again, her period of ineligibility was determined by dividing her $13,064.32 insurance award by the amount of the weekly GPA payment ($50.27) she normally would have received. Her period of ineligibility therefore totaled nearly five years.

Allen Gioielli, who intervened in this action, was also denied benefits upon application of the lump sum rule. Gioielli suffered from a temporary disability owing to a back injury. He received GPA benefits totaling $30.95 per week. In April of 1983 he received a $1,000 back-pay award relating to some previous employment. He notified DHS of the award and was found ineligible for GPA benefits until November of 1983 upon application of the lump sum rule.

[602]*602In August of 1983 Gioielli reapplied for benefits. His application was again rejected based on the DHS lump sum rule. His ineligibility again was determined by dividing his $1,000 back-pay award by the amount of the weekly GPA payment ($30.95) he normally would have received. His period of ineligibility therefore totaled some thirty weeks.

On May 20, 1983, Ms. Mullins filed suit on behalf of herself and all others similarly situated, that is, all others who had or were to have their GPA benefits terminated by application of the lump sum rule. She challenged the validity of the lump sum rule, maintaining that the rule was inconsistent with § 40-6-9 and further claiming that defendant lacked the statutory authorization to promulgate the rule. She asked for declaratory relief and for an injunction enjoining DHS from applying the lump sum rule to deny GPA benefits. The parties subsequently stipulated to the certification of a class, consisting of all persons “who have had or will have their GPA benefits terminated because of the receipt by such persons, or by members of their families, of ‘lump-sum’ income, under the policies set out in [the lump-sum rule].”

On February 13, 1984, the trial justice entered his decision. He concluded that the lump sum rule was in direct contravention of the statutory mandate of § 40-6-9, that only “available” income be considered when determining eligibility for GPA benefits. Second, he found that the lump sum rule was promulgated by the director of DHS outside the boundaries of his authority and was therefore null and void. He permanently enjoined enforcement of the rule and ordered DHS to identify each current and former applicant for and recipient of GPA benefits who had benefits denied or terminated upon application of the rule and provide those persons with the benefits denied.

The DHS contends that the trial justice erred in failing to recognize that Rhode Island law expressly grants DHS the power to promulgate the lump sum rule. In particular, DHS submits that two sections of the Rhode Island public assistance law, §§ 40-6-5 and 40-6-8, expressly delegate such authority to DHS.

Section 40-6-5 provides that ownership of real or personal property shall not disqualify a person from receiving assistance so long as the value of the property or the income therefrom is within the “limitations of standards established by regulations of the [DHS].” (Emphasis added.) Section 40-6-8 provides that assistance may be “provided either in the form of work relief or home relief and may include such medical care and supplies, hospitalization, and funeral expenses as the department by regulation determines." (Emphasis added.)

We agree with DHS that the sections cited plainly grant rule-making authority to DHS. We fail, however, to see language within either § 40-6-5 or § 40-6-8 constituting an express grant of power to create the lump sum rule before us, nor do we believe that such a grant can be implied upon a reading of the entire body of Rhode Island public-assistance law. As this court has emphasized in the past, “[a]s creations of the Legislature, administrative agencies must have specific statutory authority for the regulations they promulgate.” Berkshire Cablevision of Rhode Island, Inc. v. Burke, 488 A.2d 676, 679 (R.I.1985); see also Little v. Conflict of Interest Commission, 121 R.I. 232, 236, 397 A.2d 884, 886 (1979).

Section 40-6-5 plainly grants rule-making power with respect to the valuation of property, just as § 40-6-8 grants such power with respect to determining the manner in which relief is provided as well as whether it may include the covering of certain types of medical and emergency expenses. The power to promulgate a lump sum rule, however, does not extend from either of these grants of rule-making power. A lump sum rule, such as Rule 605 (III) (H), when applied, has the effect of barring an otherwise eligible recipient for a rigidly fixed period of time without regard [603]*603to the individual’s needs and circumstances. Nowhere in § 40-6-5 or in § 40-6-8 do we find “specific statutory authority” for this regulation, Berkshire Cablevision,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
517 A.2d 600, 1986 R.I. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullins-v-bordeleau-ri-1986.