Sandpoint Convalescent Services, Inc. v. Idaho Department of Health & Welfare

756 P.2d 398, 114 Idaho 281, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 69
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1988
Docket16898
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 756 P.2d 398 (Sandpoint Convalescent Services, Inc. v. Idaho Department of Health & Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandpoint Convalescent Services, Inc. v. Idaho Department of Health & Welfare, 756 P.2d 398, 114 Idaho 281, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 69 (Idaho 1988).

Opinions

BISTLINE, Justice.

Appellant Sandpoint Convalescent Services, Inc. (Sandpoint Manor) purchased its health care facility from D.J. Convalescent Care, Inc., on June 30,1983, for about 1.1 million dollars. Prior to that time the owner was reimbursed by the Department of Health and Welfare (DHW) for depreciation due to the wear and tear on the facility resulting from services provided to Medicaid recipients. Idaho Code § 56-104 provides that when such a facility is sold, the previously authorized depreciation is to be recaptured. Sandpoint Manor contends that because the statute requires that the recaptured depreciation be paid by the buyer rather than the seller, it violates substantive due process. We agree with the district judge that no constitutional infirmity is presented and therefore affirm.

Sandpoint Manor is a long-term health care facility providing skilled nursing care in Sandpoint, Idaho. As such, Sandpoint Manor is a participant in the Medicaid program, pursuant to Title XIX of the Social Security Act, which is administered in this state by DHW. Under this program, Sand-point Manor is a “provider” of medical services and is “reimbursed” for its costs by DHW.

This appeal arises from DHW’s Sand-point Manor Final Audit disallowances for the six month period ending December 31, 1983. Sandpoint Manor contested many [282]*282findings of the Final Audit, arguing that such costs disallowed were actually reasonable, ordinary and necessary in providing patient care. The hearing examiner disagreed, sustaining the disallowance in the Final Audit in its entirety. Sandpoint Man- or appealed to the district court on four issues, only one of which is at issue here, namely, whether I.C. § 56-104 violates due process. Judge Schwartzman found no constitutional violation in requiring Sand-point Manor to pay $34,216 in recaptured depreciation, previously allowed to D.J. Convalescent Care, Inc., from whom Sand-point Manor had purchased.

The statute in question, I.C. § 56-104(a) and (b), in 1983 read:

(a) Where depreciable assets that were used in the medicaid program by a facility subsequent to January 1, 1982, and for which depreciation has been reimbursed by the director, are sold for an amount in excess of their net book value, depreciation so reimbursed shall be recaptured from the buyer of the facility in an amount equal to reimbursed depreciation or gain on the sale, whichever is less. Depreciation shall be recaptured in full if a sale of the depreciated facility takes place within the first five (5) years of seller’s ownership after January 1, 1982. For every year the asset is held beyond the first five (5) years, the total depreciation recaptured shall be reduced by ten percent (10%) per annum of total depreciation taken.
(b) Depreciation shall be recaptured by the director from the buyer of the facility over a period of time not to exceed five (5) years from the date of sale, with not less than one-fifth (Vs) of the total amount being recaptured for each year after such date. (Emphasis added).1
1981 Idaho Sess. Laws ch. 159, § 1, at 273-74.

The gravamen of Sandpoint Manor’s argument is that because I.C. § 56-104 requires that the depreciation be recaptured from the buyer rather than the seller, property is taken without due process and therefore the statute cannot withstand constitutional scrutiny.2 To begin our analysis, we note that whenever possible, a statute must be construed so as to achieve a constitutional result. Matter of 1979 Valuation of Parcel No. R2348750330, 104 Idaho 681, 688, 662 P.2d 1125, 1132 (1983). Moreover, a statute is presumed to be constitutional; the burden is on the party disputing constitutionality to prove otherwise. Standlee v. State, 96 Idaho 849, 853, 538 P.2d 778, 782 (1975). This Court recently defined substantive due process in Pace v. Hymas, 111 Idaho 581, 586, 726 P.2d 693 (1986):

“Substantive due process” means “that state action which deprives [a person] of life, liberty or property must have a rational basis — that is to say, the reason for the deprivation may not be so inadequate that the judiciary will characterize it as ‘arbitrary.’ ” (Citations omitted; brackets in original).

Hence, refining further the burden of proof, Sandpoint Manor must show that application of the depreciation recapture statute is arbitrary, capricious, or without a rational basis.

Our review of I.C. § 56-104, and the legislative scheme of which it is part, convinces us that the depreciation recapture statute passes constitutional muster. Participation in the Medicaid program by a provider is voluntary. The program “is not designed to protect providers from consequences of their business decision or from business risks.” Briarcliff Haven, Inc., v. Dept. of Human Resources, 403 F.Supp. 1355, 1363 (1975).

Furthermore, the lucid reasoning of District Judge Schwartzman, which we adopt as our own, brought him to the legal conclusion that Sandpoint Manor was on notice as to the workings of the recapture statute, and therefore could have — or should have [283]*283—taken into account the applicability of § 56-104 at the bargaining table in arriving at the price to be paid to its seller.

The statute, quite simply, provides its own notice ... As noted by the Hearing Officer, Sandpoint Manor purchased with notice of the statute and was fully able to bargain with the seller as to the buyer’s recapture liability. Application of the depreciation recapture statute to Sandpoint Manor under these circumstances does not violate traditional notions of fundamental fairness. There is little difference in assessing the depreciation recapture against Sandpoint Manor in this case than in assessing delinquent property tax liability against the buyer of property encumbered by a tax lien.
Memorandum Decision, R. at 26.

As the district court pointed out, a tax lien, like the depreciation recapture statute, renders the buyer of property liable for sums accumulated during the seller’s ownership. This principle is not foreign to our law. For example, under the Bulk Transfer provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code (I.C. §§ 28-6-101 through 28-6-111), a purchaser of an enterprise who does not comply may become liable to the creditors for the entire amount of a seller’s existing indebtedness to his creditors at time of sale. Although a given purchaser may not actually know of those provisions, the legislature has left it to the parties to such transactions to become aware of the applicable law. In Ehco Ranch, Inc. v. State ex rel. Evans, 107 Idaho 808, 693 P.2d 454 (1984), we quoted with approval an opinion of the Attorney General which provides: “All persons are charged with knowledge of the law and the purchaser was in contemplation of law appraised by [certain legislation] of the necessary reservation of mineral rights in case of cancellation and reinstatement.”3

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Bluebook (online)
756 P.2d 398, 114 Idaho 281, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandpoint-convalescent-services-inc-v-idaho-department-of-health-idaho-1988.