Salisbury Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, Inc. v. Division of Administrative Law Appeals

861 N.E.2d 429, 448 Mass. 365, 2007 Mass. LEXIS 32
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 861 N.E.2d 429 (Salisbury Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, Inc. v. Division of Administrative Law Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salisbury Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, Inc. v. Division of Administrative Law Appeals, 861 N.E.2d 429, 448 Mass. 365, 2007 Mass. LEXIS 32 (Mass. 2007).

Opinion

Cordy, J.

In this case, we consider the validity of the regulations that governed Medicaid rate calculations for nursing homes [366]*366in 1998 and 1999, and the application of those rates to the plaintiff, Salisbury Nursing Home & Rehabilitation Center, Inc. (Salisbury). We affirm both the regulations and their application to Salisbury. We also decline Salisbury’s invitation to modify the jurisdictional test we have developed to determine whether the division of administrative law appeals (DALA) has jurisdiction of rate appeals like Salisbury’s, where the challenge, although phrased as an attack on an individual calculation, is in effect a challenge to the substantive regulation.

1. Background.2 a. Parties. Salisbury is a nursing home in Worcester. Its patients include both private payers and Medicaid recipients. During the times relevant to this appeal, the rates of payment for care of Medicaid patients were set by the defendant division of health care finance and policy (division). See G. L. c. 118G, § 2 (b), inserted by St. 1996, c. 151, § 275, repealed by St. 2003, c. 26, § 338.3 The defendant DALA hears appeals from rate setting decisions. See G. L. c. 118G, § 9.4

b. Statutory and regulatory framework. The division has the power “to establish certain rates of payment for health care services.” G. L. c. 118G, § 2 (b). The rates must be “reasonable and adequate to meet the costs which are incurred by efficiently and economically operated facilities in order to provide care and services in conformity with applicable state and federal law, regulations and quality and safety standards, and which are within the financial capacity of the commonwealth.” Id.

The statute also mandates that the division “control rate increases,” to which end it must “impose such methods and [367]*367standards as are necessary to ensure reimbursement for those costs which must be incurred by efficiently and economically operated facilities and providers. Such methods and standards may include, but are not limited to the following: peer group cost analyses; ceilings on capital and operating costs; ... the revision of existing historical costs bases, where applicable, to reflect norms or models of efficient service delivery; and other means to encourage the cost-efficient delivery of services.” G. L. c. 118G, § 7, third par.

The regulations establishing rates for 1998 and 1999 appeared at 114.2 Code Mass. Regs. §§ 6.00. This appeal concerns only those two years. During that time, the division was making a transition between two different rate setting methodologies. In years prior to 1998, the division calculated rates based on a “prospective rates” system. That system used a facility’s actual costs and patient acuity figures for a “base year,” and then adjusted them annually to account for inflation and certain other permissible adjustments and ceilings. It did not compare a facility’s costs to the costs of other facilities or to market rates. By statute, the “base year” used could be no more than four years prior to the rate year. G. L. c. 118G, § 7, second par. Accordingly, the regulations for 1998 and 1999 set the base year at 1996. Starting in 1998, the division adopted a “standard rates” system, which set rates with reference to the expected market costs of three categories of care: nursing costs, operating costs, and capital costs. This change was designed to encourage economic efficiency in the operation of nursing homes. See Hingham Healthcare Ltd. Partnership v. Division of Health Care Fin. & Policy, 439 Mass. 643, 645 (2003) (Hingham Healthcare).

To implement the transition from prospective rates to standard rates, the 1998 and 1999 regulations calculated rates by blending the two formulas. This transitional rate scheme also included a provision known as the “total payment adjustment” (TPA). The TPA was designed to answer the concerns of facilities that the new system might lower their payments without providing time to adjust. See Hingham Healthcare, supra at 646. Accordingly, if the rate calculation resulted in a facility’s receiving a 1998 rate that was lower than its 1997 payment rate, the 1997 [368]*368level would be maintained (positive TPA). To offset the cost of the positive TPA, the TPA provision also capped rate increases (negative TPA) between 1997 and 1998 at nine per cent, and between 1998 and 1999 at six per cent. Salisbury was subject to a negative TPA in 1998 (as were eighty-three other facilities) and in 1999 (as were 107 other facilities). A positive TPA was applied to the rates of 117 facilities in 1998 and thirty-six facilities in 1999.

c. Prior proceedings. Salisbury first challenged its 1998 rates by filing a notice of claim for adjudicatory proceeding with DALA on May 28, 1998, alleging that its proposed rates were unfair, did not reasonably and adequately meet costs, and were based on an illegal base year. The challenge was later amended to encompass Salisbury’s 1999 rates as well. A DALA administrative magistrate held hearings over three days in June, August, and October, 2001, and issued a decision on July 2, 2003. He affirmed the division’s 1998 and 1999 rate calculations for Salisbury, concluding that the division had not used an unlawful base year and that Salisbury had failed to show that its rates were not “fair, adequate and reasonable.” The magistrate also noted that DALA has jurisdiction over challenges to the correctness of the application of the regulations to a facility, but not over “challenge[s] to the regulatory structure” as such. In other words, DALA could overturn Salisbury’s individual rate calculation, but not the rate setting regulation. The magistrate concluded that “this appeal involves a thinly disguised, frontal attack on the [TPA] regulations by Salisbury.” Thus, he concluded, DALA lacked jurisdiction.

Salisbury then filed the present action in the Superior Court. The complaint sought judicial review, under G. L. c. 30A, § 14, of DALA’s decision (including its conclusion that it lacked jurisdiction) (count 1) and a declaratory judgment, under G. L. c. 30A, § 7, regarding the validity of the division’s regulations (in particular the TPA provision) (count 2). The defendants answered by denying Salisbury’s legal claims, asserting various defenses, and asking the court to declare the division’s regulations valid. On Salisbury’s motion for judgment on the pleadings or summary judgment, the judge ordered judgment for the division and DALA. On count 1, she ruled that DALA did not [369]*369have jurisdiction to consider Salisbury’s appeal. On count 2, she found that Salisbury had failed to establish that the regulations violated G. L. c. 118G, § 7, or any other applicable law, or that they lacked a rational basis. We granted Salisbury’s application for direct appellate review.

On appeal, Salisbury makes two substantive challenges to the regulations. First, it claims that the application of the negative TPA in 1998 and 1999 subjected it to an illegal base year in violation of G. L. c. 118G, § 7. Second, it argues that the TPA regulations are illegal, arbitrary, and capricious. Salisbury also claims that DALA incorrectly concluded that it lacked jurisdiction of its appeal, and makes a subsidiary argument attacking the jurisdictional test we have established for appeals to DALA. We consider the challenges to the regulation in turn, and then discuss the jurisdictional question.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
861 N.E.2d 429, 448 Mass. 365, 2007 Mass. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salisbury-nursing-rehabilitation-center-inc-v-division-of-mass-2007.