Turner v. Chandler

955 P.2d 1062, 87 Haw. 330, 1998 Haw. App. LEXIS 53
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1998
Docket19833
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 955 P.2d 1062 (Turner v. Chandler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Chandler, 955 P.2d 1062, 87 Haw. 330, 1998 Haw. App. LEXIS 53 (hawapp 1998).

Opinion

WATANABE, Judge.

Two primary questions are presented by this appeal: (1) whether the Food Stamp Act of 1977 (the Act), 7 U.S.C. § 2011 et seq., and regulations promulgated by the Secretary to implement the Act, preempt Hawaii law on equitable estoppel from being applied against the State of Hawai'i (State), Department of Human Services (DHS) in DHS’s efforts to recover for overissuances of food stamps; and (2) whether DHS is equitably estopped from recovering the value of food stamps erroneously overpaid to Appellant-Appellant James E. Turner (Appellant) because Appellant applied for food stamps only after being told by a DHS employee that he was eligible to do so.

The Circuit Court of the First Circuit (the circuit court) answered the first question in the affirmative and the second question in the negative. We conclude that the circuit court’s answer to the first question was wrong. However, we agree with the circuit court that DHS was not equitably estopped from recovering the value of the food stamp overpayments made to Appellant.

BACKGROUND

A. Facts

On January 14, 1993, Appellant applied to DHS for medical benefits and general assistance, a form of public financial assistance available to individuals qualified as disabled under Hawai'i law. At the time of his application, Appellant was forty-seven years old and resided with his fifty-five-year-old sister (Sister), Sister’s sixty-four-year-old husband, and Sister’s children, who at the time were twenty-two and twenty-eight years old. On his initial application, Appellant did not request food stamps because he had been told in the past that he was not eligible to receive them.

It is undisputed that when a DHS caseworker interviewed Appellant on January 28, 1993, the caseworker advised Appellant that “the regulations had changed” and Appellant “was now eligible as a single head of household, to apply for food stamps.” Based on the caseworker’s advice, Appellant added to his application a request for food stamps. In February 1993, Appellant was certified by DHS to receive food stamps and thereafter received $1,020 in food stamps from February through July 1993.

The application for food stamps was approved based on the caseworker’s erroneous documentation that Sister’s children were minors. In 1993, the presence of minor children triggered an exception to the regulation that siblings living together are considered one household for food stamp purposes. See Hawai'i Administrative Rules § 17—663—2(b); 7 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) § 273.1(a)(2)(i)(D). However, because Sister’s children were adults, the exception did not apply to Appellant. Appellant moved out of Sister’s residence at the end of July 1993 and subsequently established eligibility for food stamps as a single-member household. This eligibility entitled Appellant to an additional $69 in food stamps for the month of August 1993.

Appellant’s case was subsequently assigned to a different DHS unit, which discovered DHS’s error in determining Appellant’s eligibility for food stamps. On July 28,1993, DHS sent Appellant a demand letter, notifying him that he had been overpaid $1,020 in food stamps. DHS also informed Appellant that it had reduced Appellant’s overpayment amount by $69, the additional amount which DHS owed him for his August benefits, resulting in a net overpayment owed by Appellant of $951, which DHS sought to recoup.

B. Prior Proceedings

On August 2,1993, Appellant requested an administrative fair hearing to challenge DHS’s recoupment efforts. At the September 2, 1993 hearing, Appellant did not challenge the factual basis for DHS’s determination that he had been ineligible for food stamps while he lived with Sister. Instead, he asserted that he should not have to repay the value of the overissuance because he had applied for food stamps based on the erroneous advice of a DHS caseworker. The DHS fair hearing officer conducting the hearing *332 held that she had no authority to consider Appellant’s equity claim:

[Hearing Officer]: I think what you need to understand though is what I need to look at and I don’t have any equity or jurisdiction [sic] here. What I need to look at are the Administrative Rules and I look at them very carefully.... So, for this particular kind of hearing in the food stamp program, I have to also determine whether benefits were paid when you are not entitled to receive them and how is it that they were paid in that particular fashion.... And they are saying it was their fault. Now, I can’t take all of those pieces of information and say well obviously no overpayment because it’s really not fair that it should happen that way.

In a September 30,1993 written decision, the hearing officer concluded that Appellant had been overpaid as a result of an agency error and that a claim against Appellant in the amount of $951 had been established. The hearing officer gave Appellant ten days within which to contact DHS and establish his substantive eligibility to receive food stamps. If Appellant chose not to exercise this option, the hearing officer directed DHS to establish a claim against Appellant for the $951 overpayment.

On October 29, 1993,. Appellant filed a timely appeal from the hearing officer’s decision to the circuit court, naming the DHS Director as the Appellee in the action. On February 9, 1994, the DHS Director filed a third-party complaint against the Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture (the Secretary), asserting that if Appellant prevailed, the Secretary should be liable for such relief as might be ordered. On February 17, 1994, the Secretary removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii (the federal court), alleging, among other grounds, that the Act and regulations governing overissuances of food stamps preempt Hawaii case law on equitable estoppel and that federal case law precludes the applicability of an equitable estoppel defense to an overpayment claim.

On September 9, 1994, on Appellant’s motion, the federal court entered an order remanding the action to the circuit court. In its order, the federal court specifically rejected the Secretary's preemption argument:

[T]he Secretary is not being sued for the way he is administering the food stamp program, nor are his regulations being challenged. Neither does this case involve issues of [Appellant’s] eligibility to receive food stamps. As one court has stated:
Although eligibility requirements are strictly governed by federal law, the collection of food stamp overissuances has been broadly delegated to the states. The Secretary of the Department of Agriculture has delegated to the state agencies “the authority to determine the amount of, and settle, adjust, compromise or deny all or part of any claim which results from fraudulent or non-fraudulent overissuances to participating households.” 7 C.F.R. 271.4(b). This delegation of authority to the states cuts squarely against the view that the federal act was intended to preempt any and all state law claims that relate to it.
Vang v. Healy,

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955 P.2d 1062, 87 Haw. 330, 1998 Haw. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-chandler-hawapp-1998.