Pharmserv, Inc. v. Texas Health and Human Services Commission Office of the Inspector General of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission Kyle Janek, in His Official Capacity as Commissioner of Texas Health and Human Services Commission

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 2015
Docket03-13-00526-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pharmserv, Inc. v. Texas Health and Human Services Commission Office of the Inspector General of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission Kyle Janek, in His Official Capacity as Commissioner of Texas Health and Human Services Commission (Pharmserv, Inc. v. Texas Health and Human Services Commission Office of the Inspector General of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission Kyle Janek, in His Official Capacity as Commissioner of Texas Health and Human Services Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Pharmserv, Inc. v. Texas Health and Human Services Commission Office of the Inspector General of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission Kyle Janek, in His Official Capacity as Commissioner of Texas Health and Human Services Commission, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

ACCEPTED 03-13-00526-CV 3712698 THIRD COURT OF APPEALS AUSTIN, TEXAS 1/9/2015 12:35:22 PM JEFFREY D. KYLE CLERK NO.03-13-00526-CV IN THE COURT OF APPEALS RECEIVED IN 3rd COURT OF APPEALS THIRD COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT AUSTIN, TEXAS 1/9/2015 12:35:22 PM PHARMSERV, INC., Appellant JEFFREY D. KYLE Clerk

V.

THE TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION and OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL OF THE TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION, ET AL Appelles

On Appeal from the 261 sf Judicial District Court of Travis County, Texas Cause No. D-I-GN 12-00107-CV

TexasTruecare's Amicus Curiae Brief

Respectfully submitted,

RIGGS ALESHIRE & RAY, P.C.

Jennifer S. Riggs Bar No. 16922300 700 Lavaca St., Suite 920 Austin, Texas 78701 (512) 457-9806 Telephone (512) 457-9066 Facsimile Jriggs@r-alaw.com TABLE OF CONTENTS

Table of Contents .i Index of Authorities ii Disclosure of Interest iv Summary of the Argument. 1 Argument and Authorities 3 1. Due Process 3 II. Statutory Authority: Payment holds and hearings to challenge them S III. Separation of Powers 9

IV. A sanction by any other name is still a sanction 12 Prayer 14 Certificate of Compliance 14 Certificate of Service 15

Texas TrueCare Amicus Brief - Page i INDEX OF AUTHORITIES Cases Grounds v. Tolar Independent School Dist., 856 S.W.2d 417 (Tex. 1993) 3, 4

Harlingen Family Dentistry, Pc. v. Texas Health and Human Services Commission , --- S. W 3d .----, 2014 WL 6844947 , (Tex. App.-Austin, Nov 25,2014, no pet. hist.) (NO. 03-14-00069-CV) 8, 12

McAllen Hospitals, L.P. v. Suehs, 426 S.W.3d 304 (Tex. App.-Amarillo, 2014, no pet.) .4

State v. Flag-Redfern Oil Co., 852 S.W.2d 480 (Tex. 1993) 10

Stratton v. Austin Independent School Dist., 8 S.W.3d 26,29 (Tex. App.-Austin 1999, no writ) 3

Texas Dept. ofHuman Services v. Christian Care Centers, Inc., 826 S.W.2d 715 (Tex. App.-Austin, 1992, writ denied) 8, 9

Texas Constitution TEX. CONST. Art. I, section 13. 11 TEX. CONST. Art. II, section 1. 10

Texas Statutes TEX. GOV'T CODE § 2260 11 TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 53 l.l02(a) 6,7,12 TEX GOV'T CODE §531.1101(1) 6 TEX HUMAN RESOURCES CODE § 32.0291 5, 6, 7,12

Texas TrueCare Amicus Brief - Page ii Administrative Rules 1 TAC. §354.1811 13 1 TAC. §354.1891. 5, 12, 13 1 TAC. §371.1667 5, 7,12

Texas TrueCare Amicus Brief - Page iii DISCLOSURE OF INTEREST (COMPLIANCE WITH TRAP 11) This amicus curiae brief is submitted on behalf of Pharmacy Buying Association, Inc., d/b/a Texas TrueCare and PBA Health. Texas TrueCare is a Pharmacy Services Administration Organization CPSAO") recognized by federal govermnent as an agent authorized to negotiate and/or sign contracts on behalf of providers in the Medicaid program. See CMS Standard Operating Procedures §50.8.l CSome pharmacies, particularly independent pharmacies, work with agents or Pharmacy Services Administration Organizations (PSAO) for purposes of negotiating and/or signing contracts with Part D sponsors."). Texas TrueCare is a membership-based organization with over 600 member independent pharmacies in Texas. Texas TrueCare keeps its members informed of potential changes in law or regulations that may affect their businesses and their patients. Texas TrueCare has been closely following this case due to the tremendous impact it could have on its member pharmacies and their patients.

Texas TrueCare is paying the fee for the preparation of this amius curiae brief. This brief contains a certificate of service, as required by TRAP 11 (c).

Texas TrueCare Amicus Brief - Page iv SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT The Texas Health and Human Services Commission and its Office of

Inspector General (collectively HHSC-OIG) take the position that a provider of

pharmacy services under contract with the HHSC to provide services in the Texas

Medicaid program simply has no right to judicial review. The HHSC-OIG

contends (1) that the due process clauses of the Texas Constitution, Article I,

sections 13 and/or 19, do not confer such rights; (2) that section 32.029lof the

Texas Human Resources Code does not confer such rights because it does not

apply; (3) that 1 T.A.C. §371.1667 does not confer such rights because it applies

only to "sanctions" and a pharmacy audit recoupment is not a "sanction"; (4) that 1

T.A.C. §354.l89l(c) does apply but does not provide for a hearing and judicial

review; and (5) that the HHSC Medicaid contract itself does not create a right to a

hearing and judicial review.

The simple resolution of this matter is that a sanction by any other name is

still a sanction. The HHSC cannot avoid the consequences of its actions simply by

labeling its action an "audit," as opposed to a sanction. As noted in Harlingen II,

affording a provider a full adjudicative hearing on alleged fraud and abuse while

providing no hearing and no judicial review on simple program violations makes

no sense.

Texas TrueCare Amicus Brief - Page 1 The HHSC-OIG, however, contends that program violations subject to audit

that do not involve fraud and abuse are fundamentally different. That may well be

true - the essence of an adverse audit finding is that the provider has breached its

agreement with the HHSC. What the HHSC-OIG glosses over, however, is the

complete absence of statutory authority to exercise self-help by withholding future

payments to remedy alleged past breaches of the Medicaid contract. It is the

statutes that afford a provider a hearing and judicial review that confer the

authority to withhold funds from providers. If the hearing and judicial review

provisions of such legislation do not apply then neither does the authority to

withhold pending hearing and judicial review.

At issue here is not just the jurisdiction of the courts, but the jurisdiction of

the HHSC. The HHSC has no authority to adjudicate contract rights. When the

HHSC withholds money under its contracts with pharmacy providers to enforce

audit findings, it is effectively adjudicating contract rights. The fact that the

doctrine of sovereign immunity may prevent a pharmacy provider from suing the

HHSC for breach of contract does not mean that the HHSC may effectively sue the

pharmacy provider for breach of contract without doing so in court. There are two

sides to that coin. Absent a legislative scheme that transfers the contract remedy to

an agency, a pharmacy provider has the right to defend alleged breach of contract

claims in court.

Texas TrueCare Amicus Brief - Page 2 As a result, the HHSC-OIG lacks authority to withhold the funds at issue

until and unless it files a breach of contract claim in district court. The district

court has the jurisdiction to consider its failure to do so.

ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES

I. Due Process

The HHSC-OIG appears to acknowledge that a statute, agency rule or

contract can confer rights that are protected by due process, depending on its

terms. (Appellees' Brief, pp. 16-19, can depend on parties "understanding") It is

not necessary, however, that such a statute or contract expressly provide the right

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Pharmserv, Inc. v. Texas Health and Human Services Commission Office of the Inspector General of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission Kyle Janek, in His Official Capacity as Commissioner of Texas Health and Human Services Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pharmserv-inc-v-texas-health-and-human-services-commission-office-of-the-texapp-2015.