Sycamore Manor Health Center v. Department of Public Welfare

663 A.2d 820, 1995 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 349
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 27, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 663 A.2d 820 (Sycamore Manor Health Center v. Department of Public Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sycamore Manor Health Center v. Department of Public Welfare, 663 A.2d 820, 1995 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 349 (Pa. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Sycamore Manor Health Center (Sycamore), a 123-bed nursing facility owned and operated by Presbyterian Homes, Inc. (PHI), petitions for review of an order of the Secretary of the Department of Public Welfare (DPW) upholding on reconsideration an order of the Director of the Office of Hearings and Appeals that adopted the adjudication of an attorney examiner in Sycamore’s challenge to DPWs disallowance of certain costs claimed as expenses reimbursable by DPW under the Pennsylvania Medical Assistance Program (Medicaid) for the years 1988 and 1989.1

The questions presented are: (1) whether DPW properly included certain money PHI received from various trusts as investment income to be offset against Sycamore’s allowable interest expense; (2) whether DPW properly allocated PHI’s investment income among its various facilities, including Sycamore, based upon the expenses of each facility relative to the expenses of all the facilities; and (3) whether DPW properly limited Sycamore’s interest expense claim after refinancing to the amount under the original loan.

Sycamore is one of several facilities owned and operated by PHI, which is a non-profit corporation. Sycamore is entitled to reimbursement of the cost of care provided to qualified Medicaid patients. In 1988 and 1989 PHI received disbursements from estate planning trusts totalling $147,764.28 and $103,997.30, respectively. In late 1987 Sycamore accepted an invitation from the Farmers Home Administration to refinance and pay off an existing $1.2 million loan at 5% interest for forty years in exchange for forgiveness of approximately $400,000. Sycamore secured refinancing from a bank at 10.3% for three years, to be followed by a variable rate, with a term ten years shorter.

DPWs Manual for Allowable Cost Reimbursement for Skilled Nursing and Intermediate Care Facilities (Manual) is codified as amended at 55 Pa.Code §§ 1181.101-1181.274. Interest on capital indebtedness is among the costs expressly identified as allowable. § 1181.212(25). Certain forms of investment income, however, are used to offset the allowable interest cost, § 1181.260(h) and (m), and the allowable interest on capital indebtedness may not exceed that which a prudent borrower would pay. § 1181.260(e).

In reviewing PHI’s cost reports for the years at issue, DPWs auditors applied all of the money PHI received from the testamentary trusts to offset PHI’s claim for interest costs. In addition, they allowed interest costs on the refinanced loan only to the extent of what Sycamore paid before refinancing. Sycamore challenged these adjustments, as well as the method the auditors employed for allocating PHI’s home office income among the facilities, at a hearing before an attorney examiner.

The attorney examiner concluded that all receipts from testamentary trusts fell within the definition of “Investment income” in 55 Pa.Code § 1181.202: “Actual or imputed income available to or accrued by a facility from funds which the facility invests or lends or which are held by others for the benefit of the facility.” (Emphasis added.) He stated that the situation here is similar to that in Tressler Lutheran Service Assocs., Inc. v. Department of Public Welfare, 100 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 279, 514 A.2d 661 (1986), where the Court held that investment income of the cash management office of a parent corporation was properly allocated among the separate nursing facilities it owned and operated and then offset against their interest expense claims.

[823]*823“Interest allowance” is the subject of 55 Pa.Code § 1181.260. Except for receipts from four specific trusts, the attorney examiner concluded that the trust proceeds were not exempt from use for offset under § 1181.260(h)(1), which provides that investment income shall be used to reduce allowable interest expense unless it is from “[g]ifts or grants, of which the corpus and interest are restricted by the donor.” He further concluded that even money received from those four trusts was covered by the language of § 1181.260(m): “Income earned from funds included in a trust agreement, including those funds deemed to be funded depreciation, shall be offset against allowable interest on capital indebtedness,” which he stated was not limited to business-related or investment-related escrow accounts only.

The attorney examiner also found applicable § 1181.273(a): “Any form of investment income from the use of restricted funds found to be used for purposes other than their designated purpose, will be used to reduce the allowable interest on capital indebtedness first, then other interest.” Finally, the attorney examiner concluded that all the money PHI received from trusts must be used for offset because it was placed in a large general account containing PHI’s gross revenues. Without separation and channeling of particular money directly into the operation of a particular facility, it could not be determined whether the money was used for its designated purpose.

I.

a.

On appeal,2 Sycamore first notes the attorney examiner’s finding that testamentary trust contributions “differ considerably from traditional investments or business trust related income,” Finding of Fact (F.F.) No. 8, and contends that his reliance on Tressler was misplaced. There the Court noted that the parent corporation was the provider; its operations were funded by donations and grants (the nursing homes did not generate funds for investment); and the parent allocated funds to the cash management office, which then earned the investment income at issue in the case. Emphasizing that only one corporation was involved— the petitioner — the Court held that its internal operating procedures should not be used to increase the amount of public reimbursement. Sycamore stresses that the income at issue in Tressler and the cases on which it relied was on funds owned by the provider and controlled by its home office, whereas the funds that generate the income PHI receives from testamentary trusts are owned and controlled by the decedent donors’ nominees — bank trust departments — and are not controlled by PHI in any way.

Concerning particular trusts, Sycamore notes that the trust established under the will of Charles Shock specifically recites that the funds are to be used for boarding homes for elderly needy women and not for a nursing home for “bed-stricken patients.” The trust contributed $54,834.75 to PHI in 1988 and $28,561.64 in 1989. The Shock Home did not offer services reimbursable by Medicaid, and it operated at a loss. F.F. Nos. 13-15. In 1988 only, PHI received $2,247.92 from a trust established by the will of Sara Palmer, over which PHI had no control. The trust specifies that income be directed to the Presbyterian Homes at New-ville, Pennsylvania, where no reimbursable nursing care is provided. F.F. Nos. 28 and 29.

The Elizabeth Allen estate trust contributed approximately $250 each year, specifying that the money is to be used by the Ladies Auxiliary of the Presbyterian Homes of Central Pennsylvania, the predecessor of PHI. PHI received $4,212.30 from a trust from the estate of Anna Davis, which directs that the income from the trust is to be used to benefit a separate PHI facility, Westminster Village, which includes a nursing home. F.F. 35-37. A trust created by the will of Ellen A. Parker [824]

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Bluebook (online)
663 A.2d 820, 1995 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sycamore-manor-health-center-v-department-of-public-welfare-pacommwct-1995.