Rice v. Department of Social & Health Services
This text of 610 P.2d 970 (Rice v. Department of Social & Health Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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—In this consolidated appeal, the plaintiffs challenge the validity of WAC 388-86-120(2) (h),1 commonly referred to as the 7-day rule. That regulation provides in part that a person in need of noncontinuing general [34]*34medical assistance must notify the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) of that fact within 7 days of the date medical care is begun in order to receive coverage from the onset of the care.
Dana Rice's hospitalization began on January 3, 1978, and continued through January 15. At the time she was admitted to the hospital, she was employed and hoped that medical insurance through her job would cover her expenses. When that coverage did not materialize, she submitted an application for medical assistance to DSHS on January 23. Because she had not notified DSHS within 7 days of the onset of treatment, her application was denied.
Violet Baker was admitted to the hospital on March 13, 1977. At that time, she advised the hospital staff that she would need financial assistance in order to pay her bills, but no one notified DSHS of her need. When Violet Baker was released from the hospital on March 23, she took a taxi directly to the local DSHS office and applied for aid. She, too, was denied assistance because her application came after the seventh day of her hospitalization.
Both women requested and received hearings on the denial of their applications. In each case, the Department's action was found proper. The women appealed to the Superior Court where the Department was again affirmed. In this appeal, the women's position is that the 7-day rule is invalid because it creates a criterion for eligibility for medical assistance that is inconsistent with the statutes governing the medical care program. RCW 74.09. We agree.
Under RCW 74.09.070,2 DSHS is given the authority and responsibility for setting standards to measure the eligibility of persons applying for public assistance. However, those standards are to be consistent with the provisions of [35]*35the public assistance statutes and are to comply with their spirit and purpose. RCW 74.08.090;3 RCW 74.09.900.4 That purpose, as set out in RCW 74.98.040,5 is to provide for the public welfare by aiding those in need so that they might have a reasonable subsistence compatible with decency and health. Nowhere in RCW Title 74 is it suggested that DSHS is to utilize a time limitation as a basis for eligibility at the expense of persons in need. In fact, the only stated qualifications for a medical care applicant are contained in RCW 74.09.510, which provides:
Medical assistance may be provided in accordance with eligibility requirements established by the department of social and health services to an applicant: (1) Who is in need; (2) who has not made a voluntary assignment of property or cash for the purpose of qualifying for an assistance grant; (3) who is not an inmate of a public institution except as a patient in a medical institution or except as an inmate in a county or city jail or juvenile [36]*36detention facility, or except as an inmate in a public institution who could qualify for federal aid assistance; and (4) who is a resident of the state of Washington.
It is well established that administrative regulations may not limit eligibility for public assistance in derogation of the governing statutes. A regulation which attempts to do so is void and of no effect. Fecht v. Department of Social & Health Servs., 86 Wn.2d 109, 542 P.2d 780 (1975).6 "[R]ules must be written within the framework and policy of applicable statutes." Washington Fed'n of State Employees v. Higher Educ. Personnel Bd., 87 Wn.2d 823, 827, 557 P.2d 336 (1976); Kitsap-Mason Dairymen's Ass'n v. State Tax Comm'n, 77 Wn.2d 812, 815, 467 P.2d 312 (1970).
Here, DSHS has attempted to limit the time within which an application for medical assistance can be made. In doing so, it has exceeded the criteria for determining eligibility established by the legislature. In enacting RCW Title 74, the legislature intended to make assistance available to those Washington residents who are in need. The Department, through the 7-day rule, has limited the availability of such assistance to those who are fortunate enough to have family or some other third party who takes the responsibility of timely notifying DSHS when they cannot. We do not believe the legislature intended that persons less fortunate [37]*37would be denied benefits accruing prior to the giving of notice or the filing of an application. The power to set a time period for aid is one that should remain with the legislature unless expressly delegated to the Department.7 In the absence of such legislative delegation, DSHS may use the equitable doctrine of laches to cut off those claims where delay has prejudiced its ability to determine need. Consequently, the trial court erred in upholding the 7-day rule.
The Department's argument in support of the challenged regulation is not persuasive. It cites RCW 74.08.060 which provides:
The department shall be required to approve or deny the application within forty-five days after the filing thereof and shall immediately notify the applicant in writing of its decision: Provided, That if the department is not able within forty-five days, despite due diligence, to secure all information necessary to establish his eligibility, the department is charged to continue to secure such information and if such information, when established, makes applicant eligible, the department shall pay his grant from date of authorization or forty-five days after date of application whichever is sooner.
(Second italics ours.) According to the Department, this statute limits coverage to no earlier than the date of application.
We do not find the statute applicable to the medical care provision of the act. RCW 74.09. By its language, the statute is limited to general public assistance "grants", i.e., a money payment awarded directly to the recipient. WAC 388-22-030(28).8 We are here concerned with "vendor [38]*38payments"9
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610 P.2d 970, 26 Wash. App. 32, 1980 Wash. App. LEXIS 2030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-department-of-social-health-services-washctapp-1980.