St. Joseph General Hospital v. Department of Revenue

158 Wash. App. 450
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 9, 2010
DocketNo. 39487-1-II
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 158 Wash. App. 450 (St. Joseph General Hospital v. Department of Revenue) 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.

Bluebook
St. Joseph General Hospital v. Department of Revenue, 158 Wash. App. 450 (Wash. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Bridgewater, J.

¶1 St. Joseph General Hospital (St. Joseph or hospital) appeals from a Board of Tax Appeals (Board) order requiring it to pay business and occupation (B&O) tax pursuant to RCW 82.04.220 for amounts (1) received from Medicare beneficiaries1 and their secondary insurers (Medigap insurers) for patient copayments and deductibles and (2) the hospital paid to an emergency room physician organization. The hospital argues that, under the plain language of former RCW 82.04.4297 (1988), Medicare beneficiaries and Medigap insurers act as instrumentalities of the United States when they pay patient copayments and deductibles. Thus, the hospital argues, it may deduct those amounts from its gross revenue for purposes of the B&O tax. In addition, the hospital contends that the amounts it paid to the emergency room physicians do not meet the statutory definition of “gross income” and are therefore not subject to the B&O tax. We affirm the Board as to the hospital’s obligation to pay B&O taxes on Medicare beneficiaries’ copayments and deductibles but we reverse, vacate, and remand the Board’s ruling regarding the amounts paid to emergency room physicians.

[456]*456FACTS

¶2 St. Joseph contracts with Medicare to provide services to Medicare beneficiaries. Although Medicare pays St. Joseph for part of the costs its beneficiaries incur, Medicare beneficiaries still pay a deductible and/or copayment. Medicare beneficiaries may also purchase supplemental insurance, called Medigap insurance, to help cover the costs of their copayments and deductibles. If Medicare beneficiaries or Medigap insurers fail to pay St. Joseph the copayments and deductibles owed, Medicare, at its discretion, will reimburse the hospital for a portion of the amount owed. These unpaid amounts are called “bad debtfs],” and the hospital must undertake certain collection actions before Medicare will pay. Board of Tax Appeals Record (BTAR) at 357. Medicare pays a varying percentage of the hospital’s bad debts based on budgetary factors.

¶3 St. Joseph is not licensed to provide physician services, so it contracts with physicians to perform these services. During the relevant period, St. Joseph had a contract with Northwest Emergency Physicians (NEP), in which NEP agreed to provide emergency room physician services to St. Joseph’s patients. The hospital granted NEP the exclusive right to provide emergency services at the hospital. In exchange, the hospital provided space, utilities, supplies, transcription, medical records, and equipment for NEP’s physicians. The hospital was also responsible for hiring all nonphysician personnel supporting the contract physicians. St. Joseph treats NEP as an independent contractor, and each physician is an NEP employee or agent.

¶4 NEP “appointed St. Joseph] as its agent for the limited purpose of acting as a billing and collecting agent for the professional charges to patients for services by [NEP] physicians and physician extenders.” BTAR at 410. NEP agreed to charge patients on a fee-for-service basis, and St. Joseph agreed to bill the patients those amounts. St. Joseph agreed to send patients one bill that separately identified the professional component of the services.

[457]*457¶5 In 1998, the hospital agreed to pay NEP 66.7 percent of the gross professional charges for the prior month. The hospital retained 33.3 percent as payment for the hospital’s administrative duties, billing, contractual disallowances, bad debt, and other contractual duties. St. Joseph conceded that the amount it retained is subject to the B&O tax. The hospital paid NEP 66.7 percent of the gross amount of the prior month’s billings regardless of how much it collected, even if this resulted in an over- or underpayment. The hospital recalculated the percentage it paid NEP at the beginning of each new contract based on the amount the hospital had actually recovered during the most recent time period.

¶6 The Department of Revenue (Department) audited St. Joseph’s finances for the 1997-2000 tax period and assessed B&O tax on money the hospital received as income from Medicare beneficiaries and Medigap insurers for their Medicare copayments and deductibles, as well as for the money received from emergency room services, without deducting the amounts paid to NEP. St. Joseph unsuccessfully appealed to the Department’s appeals division. St. Joseph then appealed to the Board, which granted the Department’s motion for summary judgment. As to the Medicare payments, the Board found:

Although patients have legal rights in accordance with the statutory provisions of Medicare, it is not a “contractual” relationship where the patients are agreeing to pay the deductibles and co-payments for Medicare. The patients are making the payments for themselves. The patients’ insurers are making payment on behalf of the patient (patients voluntarily pay for supplemental insurance policies with their funds), not Medicare. The statutory scheme requiring a Medicare patient to pay a deductible or co-payment makes the patients’ payment their individual responsibility, not Medicare’s responsibility.

BTAR at 26. Finding that the hospital did not meet the pass-through B&O exception of WAC 458-20-111 (Rule 111), the Board also upheld the Department’s assessment [458]*458on the entire amount the hospital received for emergency room services provided by NEP. St. Joseph appealed to the superior court, which also affirmed.2

ANALYSIS

I. B&O Deduction — Instrumentalities of the United States

¶7 St. Joseph argues that it may deduct from its gross income subject to the B&O tax Medicare copayments and deductibles received from Medicare beneficiaries and their Medigap insurers because the hospital receives these amounts from instrumentalities of the United States. We disagree.

A. Standard of Review

¶8 We review the Board’s decision, not the trial court’s. Conway v. Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs., 131 Wn. App. 406, 414, 120 P.3d 130 (2005). On review of an agency order under the Administrative Procedure Act, chapter 34.05 ROW, we reverse an agency decision when based on an erroneous interpretation or application of the law. ROW 34.05.570(3)(d). We review de novo decisions based on interpretation of the law. Advanced Silicon Materials, LLC v. Grant County, 156 Wn.2d 84, 89, 124 P.3d 294 (2005). We accord substantial weight to the agency’s interpretation of the law, although we may substitute our judgment for the agency’s. Haley v. Med. Disciplinary Bd., 117 Wn.2d 720, 728, 818 P.2d 1062 (1991). As the challenging party, the hospital bears the burden of demonstrating an invalid agency action. RCW 34.05.570(l)(a); DaVita, Inc. v. Dep’t of Health, 137 Wn. App. 174, 180, 151 P.3d 1095 (2007).

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Bluebook (online)
158 Wash. App. 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-joseph-general-hospital-v-department-of-revenue-washctapp-2010.