Rio Grande Community v. Commonwealth of PR

465 F.3d 33, 66 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 332, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 24837, 2006 WL 2797711
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 2006
Docket05-2854
StatusPublished

This text of 465 F.3d 33 (Rio Grande Community v. Commonwealth of PR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rio Grande Community v. Commonwealth of PR, 465 F.3d 33, 66 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 332, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 24837, 2006 WL 2797711 (1st Cir. 2006).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

This appeal stems from a lawsuit filed on June 6, 2003 by three community health centers in Puerto Rico: Rio Grande Community Health Center, Inc. (“Rio Grande”), Concilio de Salud Integral de Loiza, Inc. (“Loiza”), and Dr. José S. Bela-val, Inc. (“Belaval”). Belaval is the sole appellant in this action.

In their suit, the three health centers alleged that the defendant, the Secretary of the Department of Health of Puerto Rico, 1 had failed to make required payments to them under the federal Medicaid statute. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396a. They sought declaratory and prospective injunc-tive relief. On November 1, 2004, after reviewing and adopting a magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendation, the district court issued an order granting plaintiffs a preliminary injunction. By its terms, the order required the defendant to implement, by November 30, 2004, a “wraparound” payment system that complied with the Medicaid law “for the purpose of providing such payments thereunder to plaintiffs.” In addition to giving the defendant a deadline to put in place a system to make the required payments, the order also provided that “[o]n or before December 10, 2004, defendant shall pay to the appearing plaintiffs which are currently operating all pending supplemental payments for 2004.” The second part of the order thus insured that the appearing plaintiffs would not be irreparably harmed in the interim by the defendant’s failure to make payments. Belaval was an appearing plaintiff who was operating at the time the order was entered, and as such was within the terms of the November 1, 2004 order.

On March 7, 2005, the district court issued another order, this one clarifying how the defendant was to structure its wraparound payments in light of our decision in Rio Grande Community Health *35 Center, Inc. v. Rullan, 397 F.3d 56 (1st Cir.2005), a case which affirmed earlier relief that had been granted specifically to Loiza. Payments under the clarified formula were required to begin with the amounts due from the fourth quarter of 2004, and were to continue until Puerto Rico established its compliance with federal law. The order also specifically mentioned Belaval and “reiterate[d]” the court’s finding that Puerto Rico’s failure to pay Belaval was in violation of the federal Medicaid statute. The court ordered the defendant to “establish forthwith a provisional payment system to alleviate the shortfall.”

After this second order, on March 22, 2005 the defendant filed a motion seeking to demonstrate that it was operating in compliance with the order’s method of calculation. The plaintiffs opposed this motion and argued there was no compliance. As to Belaval in particular, no payments had yet been made, so it opposed the motion.

The magistrate judge issued a Report and Recommendation on June 24, 2005 in which he found that the defendant was not fully in compliance because Puerto Rico was using an incorrect method of calculating payments. Turning to the payments owed to Belaval specifically, the magistrate judge found that the March 7, 2005 order required only future payments be made to Belaval, and that it did not address past payment obligations. Thus the defendant’s failure to pay Belaval up to that point did not mean that it was out of compliance with the March 7, 2005 order. However, the magistrate judge explicitly reserved judgment on whether any payment was owed to Belaval under the November 1, 2004 order, and on whether the defendant was in compliance with that order.

In response, Belaval asked the court to find the defendant in contempt of the November 1, 2004 preliminary injunction. On September 26, 2005, the magistrate judge agreed that the November 1, 2004 order had established Belaval’s right to payment for the months from March 31, 2004 onward. The defendant’s failure to pay Be-laval was thus not in compliance with that order. The magistrate judge held the motion for contempt in abeyance, and he gave the defendant Secretary several weeks to come into compliance.

On October 6, 2005, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s June 24 and September 26 Reports and Recommendations finding that the defendant was generally not in compliance. The district court also agreed that the November 1, 2004 order entitled Belaval to payments from at least the second quarter of 2004 onwards. As did the magistrate judge, the district court held the motion for contempt in abeyance despite the finding of noncompliance. The district court’s decision to hold the contempt motion in abeyance is not at issue in this appeal.

What is appealed is a separate portion of that October 6, 2005 order which modified the November 1, 2004 preliminary injunction as to Belaval. Parts of that original injunction had required that Belaval be paid “all pending supplemental payments for 2004” by December 10, 2004, and had also required that the defendant set up a federally compliant payment system, under which Belaval would receive what were then future payments, to be operational by November 30, 2004. The district court modified that original obligation, saying that “in light of the confusion” created by the magistrate judge’s June 24, 2005 Report and Recommendation, “wraparound payments to Belaval shall be made prospectively beginning in the third quarter of Fiscal Year 2005.”

*36 This modification of the November 1, 2004 preliminary injunction was entirely sua sponte and was not on motion of the defendant, who had sought no such relief. The order modifying the injunction was also entered without prior notice to the parties that the court was considering a modification to the November 1 order and without an opportunity to be heard. The effect of this unilateral change by the district court was to relieve the defendant from making several quarters’ worth of payments that previously had been ordered. Counsel for Belaval represented at oral argument that these payments would have totaled approximately 1.25 to 1.5 million dollars. Belaval appeals from this modification of the earlier preliminary injunction. We reverse this portion of the October 6, 2005 district court order and reinstate the payment obligation to Belaval originally imposed by the November 1, 2004 order.

I.

The defendant’s initial response to the appeal is to argue that this court lacks jurisdiction to hear an appeal from a significant modification of a preliminary injunction. The argument is without merit.

Under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), we may hear an interlocutory appeal from a district court order “granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions, or refusing to dissolve or modify injunctions, except where a direct review may be had in the Supreme Court.” While § 1292(a)(1) is to be “strictly construed,” Sierra Club v. Marsh, 907 F.2d 210, 214 (1st Cir.1990), the reviewing court must “look to the practical effect of the order rather than its verbiage,”

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465 F.3d 33, 66 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 332, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 24837, 2006 WL 2797711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rio-grande-community-v-commonwealth-of-pr-ca1-2006.