Personal Care Products, Inc. v. Albert Hawk

635 F.3d 155
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 2011
Docket09-50995
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 635 F.3d 155 (Personal Care Products, Inc. v. Albert Hawk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Personal Care Products, Inc. v. Albert Hawk, 635 F.3d 155 (5th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Personal Care Products, Inc. (PCP) furnishes incontinence supplies to Medicaid recipients in twelve states, including Texas. In the course of a Medicaid fraud investigation, the Texas Health and Human Services Commission withheld reimbursements from PCP. PCP filed suit against state officers, alleging civil rights violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and seeking damages and injunctive relief. The district court dismissed all claims, primarily on the grounds that PCP lacked a protected property interest in Medicaid payments withheld pending a fraud investigation. We affirm.

I.

Medicaid providers agree to comply with federal and state laws that govern the program, including billing and documentation requirements. However, state Medicaid agencies, such as the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, regularly overpay providers for services rendered because of incomplete paperwork, inadvertent errors, or fraud. To reduce these excess expenditures, the federal Medicaid statute mandates that state programs “provide for procedures of prepayment and postpayment claims review ... to ensure the proper and efficient payment of claims and management of the program.” 1 It also requires states to maintain a fraud control unit to manage the collection of *157 overpayments. 2 Serving as this unit, the Commission conducts audits of current providers and reviews reimbursement claims from years past to ensure proper payment. Under Texas law, the Commission may recover all overpayments, regardless of the cause. 3

One way to assure the state recovers overpayments is for the agency to withhold current reimbursements, even legitimate ones, while investigating the old, erroneous payments. Under federal regulations, a state Medicaid agency may withhold reimbursements “in whole or in part, ... upon receipt of reliable evidence that the circumstances giving rise to the need for a withholding of payments involve fraud or willful misrepresentation.” 4 Accordingly, Texas’s regulatory framework provides two avenues for recovering overpayments. First, “[w]hen no wrongdoing is established through investigation, the Inspector General may refer the matter for routine payment correction.” 5 However, when prima facie evidence of fraud is present, “[a] payment hold on payments of future claims submitted for reimbursement will be imposed.” 6 Further, a “payment hold may be imposed prior to completion of an investigation.” 7

II.

On May 31, 2006, the Commission notified PCP that it was conducting a preliminary investigation of PCP’s billing and had identified a potential overpayment for reimbursements issued for claims dating from January 1, 2004 to December 31, 2005. The notice included allegations that PCP submitted false statements to obtain compensation greater than the amount that PCP was legally entitled. Further, the notice included a spreadsheet specifying the services reviewed and the violation associated with each service. As a result of the prima facie evidence of fraud, the Commission stated it would withhold all Medicaid payments to PCP until the investigation was complete.

PCP timely sought a hearing to contest the payment hold, but it could not contest the merits of the fraud allegations or the overpayment amount until that amount became final. 8 After informal negotiations, the hold was lifted in August 2006, allowing a $600,000 payment to PCP for its *158 pending Medicaid claims. In October 2006, the Commission notified PCP of a potential overpayment of approximately $4 million, plus an administrative penalty of an additional $4 million. PCP requested an informal review and expedited appeal but was denied because there were no new sanctions imposed. 9 Later that month, the Commission instituted a 25% payment hold, in part because PCP refused to provide a security interest to assure the Commission that PCP was acting in good faith. 10 PCP requested a hearing to challenge this payment hold, but the parties could not agree upon a date. In September 2007, PCP filed this lawsuit; the Commission subsequently terminated the payment hold and released $350,000 that had accumulated from the October 2006 hold. A few days later, the Commission issued a notice of final sanctions for a $1.15 million overpayment and an administrative penalty of $2.3 million. When the overpayment amount was finalized, PCP had the right to a formal hearing on the merits of the overpayment and fraud. 11

In its lawsuit, PCP claimed the Commission denied it due process and tried to coerce settlement of the alleged Medicaid overpayment. The district court dismissed the case, concluding that PCP did not have a protected property interest in the reimbursement payments. PCP timely appealed.

III.

We review de novo a grant of motion to dismiss, viewing the facts pleaded in the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. 12 To survive a motion to dismiss, the plaintiff must state a “plausible claim for relief.” 13 If the well-pleaded facts, accepted as true, do not suggest unlawful conduct, a plaintiffs complaint must be dismissed. 14

Our question here is whether PCP has a property right in its Medicaid reimbursements, even those withheld pending a fraud investigation. A property interest requires “more than a unilateral expectation” of a benefit. 15 Instead, a person must “have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it.” 16 Property interests “are not created by the Constitution. Rather they are created and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law-rules or understandings that secure certain benefits and that support claims of entitlement to those benefits.” 17

*159-163 Nothing in Texas or federal law extends a property right in Medicaid reimbursements to a provider that is the subject of a fraud investigation. PCP admits that it may not have property rights in Medicaid reimbursements that are under investigation, but, PCP asserts, it does have a property interest in legitimately earned, current reimbursements that are not subject to investigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
635 F.3d 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/personal-care-products-inc-v-albert-hawk-ca5-2011.