Union Manor, A Sole Proprietorship v. Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 2020
DocketWD82776
StatusPublished

This text of Union Manor, A Sole Proprietorship v. Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (Union Manor, A Sole Proprietorship v. Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Manor, A Sole Proprietorship v. Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

 UNION MANOR, A SOLE  PROPRIETORSHIP,  WD82776 Respondent,  OPINION FILED:  v.  March 31, 2020  MISSOURI DEPARTMENT OF  HEALTH AND SENIOR SERVICES,   Appellant. 

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri The Honorable Daniel Richard Green, Judge

Before Division One: Thomas N. Chapman, P.J., Mark D. Pfeiffer, and Anthony Rex Gabbert, JJ.

The Missouri Department of Health and Human Services (Department) appeals from a

summary judgment entered in favor of Union Manor, A Sole Proprietorship (Union Manor) by

the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri. The Department contends that Union Manor (a long

term care facility) is obligated to comply with a regulatory requirement that its bedrooms provide

70 square feet of floor space per resident. The circuit court ruled that Union Manor is entitled to

take advantage of a “grandfather clause” set forth in the same regulatory provision, allowing

older facilities to meet a lower minimum floor space requirement of 60 square feet per resident in

private (single) and multiple occupancy bedrooms. Because Union Manor is entitled to the

exemption with respect to its multiple occupancy bedrooms, but not with respect to its private

bedrooms, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings. Facts & Procedural Background

Union Manor was licensed as a residential care facility I (RCF I) in January 1985. In

December 2001, Union Manor applied to the Department for licensure as a residential care

facility II (RCF II) (residential care facilities II are now referred to as “assisted living

facilities”).1 Upon receiving Union Manor’s application, the Department conducted a

consultation visit at Union Manor’s facility to determine whether it would grant the application

for RCF II licensure. In July 2002, Union Manor was notified that, pursuant to standards

promulgated by the Department, the facility’s bedrooms needed to provide floor space of 70

square feet for each resident living in the room. See 19 CSR 30-86.012(6). The letter stated

further that several of the bedrooms were “a few square feet short of meeting requirements” and

that Union Manor could be licensed as an RCF II for a maximum of 35 residents. The

Department advised Union Manor that it “may want to consider requesting an exception for these

rooms” if it intended to increase its capacity above 35 residents.

In an April 2004 letter, Union Manor requested an exception to the regulatory

requirement that it provide each of its residents with 70 square feet of bedroom space and allow

the facility to operate as an RCF II while accommodating 52 residents. Following an inspection,

the Department granted Union Manor’s request for an exception on the condition that the facility

provide basement “storage lockers or wardrobe units” for several of the bedrooms that did not

meet the square footage requirement. The exception was valid for a period of three years and

subject to renewal thereafter. Union Manor was then licensed as an RCF II in June 2004.

1 See § 198.005. Statutory references are to RSMo 2016 as supplemented.

2 In 2010, Union Manor requested an exception to the square footage requirement “to

allow smaller resident rooms.” In an October 2010 letter, the Department granted the exception

request for a period of two years. The Department stated that Union Manor could obtain a two-

year renewal of the exception in October 2012, provided it “made progress toward reducing its

census during the initial exception period[.]” No further exceptions would be granted after

October 2012. The Department further advised that by October 2014, Union Manor would be

required to reduce its census to 32 residents or renovate its bedrooms as necessary to comply

with the requirement that it provide each resident with 70 square feet of floor space.

Union Manor requested an extension to its square footage exception in September 2012;

the exception was granted in May 2013. In August 2016, Union Manor applied to the

Department for a change of owner/operator. In December 2016, the Department sent Union

Manor a letter explaining that the facility was only permitted to house 32 residents due to square

footage limitations. At the time, 40 individuals were residing at the facility. Thus, the letter

advised Union Manor to again apply for an exception to the 70 square feet per resident

requirement. Union Manor’s administrator emailed the Department indicating the facility was

not required to procure an exception to the square footage requirement and that it would not be

doing so.

In May 2017, Union Manor filed a petition for declaratory judgment seeking a

determination that it was “exempt from the floor space requirement as it was in existence prior to

the adoption of the policy and applicable regulations [the Department sought] to enforce.” In its

petition, Union Manor relied upon a “grandfather” provision set forth in 19 CSR 30-86.012(6)

which permitted certain older facilities to meet a lower minimum floor space requirement of 60

square feet per resident. The Department counterclaimed, seeking to enjoin Union Manor from

3 admitting new residents until (1) it had performed construction necessary to expand the smaller

bedrooms to comply with the square footage requirement or (2) reduce its occupancy to 32

residents. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In April 2019, the circuit court

entered judgment in favor of Union Manor and against the Department, finding that the facility

was exempt from the 70 square feet per resident requirement. This appeal follows.2

Discussion

In reviewing a circuit court’s grant of summary judgment, we construe the record in the

light most favorable to the party against whom judgment was entered. ITT Commercial Fin.

Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp., 854 S.W.2d 371, 376 (Mo. banc 1993). “Our review is

essentially de novo[,]” and “[t]he propriety of summary judgment is purely an issue of law.” Id.

2 We note that the prayer for relief in Union Manor’s petition for declaratory judgment contained a request for reasonable attorney’s fees and costs. The circuit court’s judgment does not dispose of this request, which “can arrest the finality of the judgment,” and implicate this Court’s jurisdiction to hear the appeal. Ruby v. Troupe, 580 S.W.3d 112, 114 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019). However, a circuit court’s failure to address an attorneys’ fees issue will impact the finality of the judgment only when the claim is properly pleaded and pursued by the requesting party. Id. at 114-16. Under the first step, “a party must plead a basis for an award of fees, in addition to simply including a request for attorney’s fees in its prayer for relief.” Id. at 115 (emphasis added). Union Manor’s petition states only a bare request for attorney’s fees and costs without citing any statutory, factual, or other authority for such an award; thus, the request for attorney’s fees was not properly pleaded. Id. Nor does it appear that Union Manor pursued its request for attorney’s fees beyond merely mentioning it in the petition. Id. at 116. Under Ruby, this is an additional and independent reason for deeming the circuit court’s judgment final and appealable, notwithstanding its failure to address the issue of attorneys’ fees.

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