People v. Yannett

70 A.D.2d 1001, 418 N.Y.S.2d 182, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12639

This text of 70 A.D.2d 1001 (People v. Yannett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Yannett, 70 A.D.2d 1001, 418 N.Y.S.2d 182, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12639 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

— Appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Broome County, rendered September 16, 1977, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of grand larceny in the second degree. On November 24, 1976 defendant was charged in a nine count indictment containing seven counts of grand larceny in the second degree and two counts of grand larceny in the third degree. Defendant was acquitted of all but the seventh count. That count alleged that he withheld and appropriated to his own use approximately $26,248 of Medicare payments by failing to reimburse the money to his nursing home patients who had paid for their care at the Endicott Nursing Home (Home), which he owned and operated. The Home opened on June 12, 1972, but it had not then received Medicare certification by the Federal Government, which is one of the prerequisites for a nursing home patient to receive Medicare benefits. Where a patient enters a certified nursing home, there may also be a time lag between the date of the patient’s entry and the date the Federal Government determines that the patient is eligible for Medicare benefits. Pending certification of a patient or the Home, payments to the Home for patients otherwise eligible for Medicare came from either the patients’ private funds or, if they were eligible, from the Department of Social Services through Medicaid. The Home was not obligated to charge patients during this period according to the rate fixed by the Government; rather, it charged its patients according to its private patient rate of $32 per day which was $7 higher than the Medicare rate of $25 per day ultimately assigned to the Home by the Federal Government. Some six and one-half months after it opened, the Home received Medicare certification on December 22, 1972, and it received its first Medicare payments in March of 1973 which were retroactive to the date of an eligible patient’s admission into the Home. Each month following March of 1973, the Home received increasing amounts of Medicare payments on behalf of patients who were in the Home as early as June of 1972. Thus, the Home had now received double payments for some patients, either from Medicaid and Medicare, or from private funds and Medicare. However, Federal law required the Home to reimburse those "moneys incorrectly collected” to the persons who had paid for the care of patients eventually found eligible for Medicare, here, Medicaid or private persons (see US Code, tit 42, § 1395cc). Medicare provides an eligible patient with 100 days of coverage at a nursing home. It pays the entire amount of the per diem rate for the first 20 days, and for the last 80 days, it pays a home the per diem rate less a coinsurance charge which the patient must pay directly to the nursing home. Thus, a Medicare patient is entitled to a refund from a nursing home of all the money he paid for the first 20 days, and all that he paid for the last 80 days less the coinsurance charge. Where a nursing home [1002]*1002receives certification after it has admitted patients who become eligible for Medicare, and when the patient is found eligible for Medicare benefits, the home must retroactively bill Medicare for the services it provided the patient during the hiatus between the patient’s admission and the date that Medicare notified the facility that it would cover the patient. This is so even though payments on behalf of eligible patients had already been received from private patients or Medicaid. Under Medicare regulations and the terms of the nursing home’s Medicare provider agreement, the nursing home must then give a refund to the private Medicare patient because the patient has already paid the home for the care he received during the period retroactively covered by Medicare (see 42 CFR 405.618, 405.620, 405.621). An audit of the Home’s records revealed that 31 patients whose stays were covered by Medicare did not receive from the Home proper refunds of money that they had paid to the Home before Medicare provided benefits for them, and that the total amount of the moneys was $20,474.65. The indictment did not charge defendant with wrongfully obtaining the money from more than one source; as noted, Federal regulations contemplated such a double payment (see 42 CFR 405.618). Rather, the essence of the charges was that defendant failed to correctly refund on time the Medicare payments to the private patients and the Departments of Social Services (Medicaid). Defendant was acquitted of eight of the nine counts charging him with embezzlement by withholding payment of these refunds to Medicaid, but he was convicted of Count No. 7, which charged that from on or about March of 1973 to January of 1975, defendant withheld and appropriated to his own use approximately $26,248 of Medicare payments by failing to reimburse that money to 31 private patients at the Home who had paid for their care. Subdivision 1 of section 155.05 of the Penal Law provides that “A person steals property and commits larceny when, with intent to deprive another of property or to appropriate the same to himself * * * he wrongfully takes, obtains or withholds such property from an owner thereof’, and subdivision 2 thereof defines larceny to include “embezzlement”. Defendant first contends that the prosecution failed to prove that he possessed the requisite intent necessary to sustain a larceny conviction. Harry Elliott, defendant’s nursing home administrator, testified that in June of 1973, three months after the Home began to receive Medicare reimbursement money, he explained to defendant the proper method of refunding Medicare payments, and showed him a Medicare handbook which set out the method to calculate refunds due to patients. He explained to defendant that he had refunded to a Mrs. Warner, whose mother was a patient in the Home for 20 days, all the money she had paid to the Home in advance of the Medicare benefits the Home subsequently received for her mother. Elliott told defendant that Medicare pays for all covered services which a patient receives during the first 20 days of nursing home care, and that for the last 80 days, Medicare pays everything less the per diem coinsurance charge. Elliott testified that defendant then became furious, stating that the Government had no right to "dictate” to him how to run his nursing home, and accordingly, ordered Elliott to refund to the patients no more than the amount which Medicare had paid to the nursing home on their behalf. In 1972, Medicare reimbursed the Home at $25 per day, which was $7 less than the rate of $32 per day the Home charged patients who were not eligible for Medicare benefits. Consequently, Elliott withheld from Medicare patients an amount equal to the difference between the Medicare rate and the private patient rate, which, however, violated Medicare regulations prohibiting a nursing home from charging its patients other than the [1003]*1003coinsurance charge. Elliott also testified that defendant told him that he would not pay any refund unless Elliott calculated the refunds on separate sheets of paper, which he would have to give to defendant before he signed any refund checks. Elliott further testified that he initially complied with defendant’s directive, to avoid incurring his "wrath”. Later, however, he surreptitiously credited the accounts of some private Medicare patients entitled to refunds. When defendant discovered this, he ordered Elliott to refrain from further crediting any patient’s account and again instructed him to disregard Medicare regulations.

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Bluebook (online)
70 A.D.2d 1001, 418 N.Y.S.2d 182, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-yannett-nyappdiv-1979.