United States v. Lance Bart Becker, M.D.

995 F.2d 779, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 13778, 1993 WL 199435
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 14, 1993
Docket92-2679
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 995 F.2d 779 (United States v. Lance Bart Becker, M.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Lance Bart Becker, M.D., 995 F.2d 779, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 13778, 1993 WL 199435 (7th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

CUMMINGS, Circuit Judge.

When David puts down his sling and makes a contract with Goliath, David should not be surprised when it turns out that Goliath has superior power under their agreement. So it is with this appeal. As a medical student, Lance Becker made a contract with the United States government. The government paid for two years of his medical schooling; in return Becker promised that after he became a doctor, he would practice medicine in an understaffed area for two *781 years wherever the government chose or return his scholarship. When the government changed its priorities and would not assign him to a position in his chosen ■ specialty, Becker neither served nor repaid the money. Now the government is suing Becker to collect its debt plus interest and penalties. Becker claims that he has served more than two years without credit in understaffed areas, and that the government improperly changed the rules that had determined his choice of residency programs. But the government had the power under their agreement to treat Becker as it did, and Becker must pay.

Becker was a medical student at the University of Illinois College of Medicine in Chicago from 1977 to 1981. During the 1977-1978 year, he received a scholarship award of $8,886 under the Public Health and National Health Service Corps Scholarship Training Program (“PH/NHSC”). 1 In return for this award, Becker agreed to serve the government for two years as a health care practitioner, and agreed that if he failed to do so he would be liable to repay the award amount plus interest. 'Becker’s application certified that he was willing to serve in any area as exigencies might require.

The following year Becker again requested scholarship funds and was awarded $8,438 under the National Health Service Corps Scholarship Program (“NHSC”), the successor to PH/NHSC. 2 This program allowed Becker to defer his service obligation for three years to complete his residency training. In return for the award, he agreed to serve for two years in a “health manpower shortage area” as a federal employee or in private practice — but in either case the government could assign him where it wished. He also agreed that if he failed to complete his service he would be liable for three times the amount awarded. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 254i(f), 254m-o. Becker declined federal support for his final two years of medical school and graduated in June 1981. The PH/NHSC and NHSC statutes provided that awardees must serve one year for each year they received a scholarship, but that each awardee must serve a minimum of two years. Thus although Becker accepted awards in both 1977 and 1978, his total service obligation was two years.

In August 1980 the Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) notified Becker that he could request a deferment of his service obligation in order to pursue advanced clinical training. Becker replied by requesting deferment for a combined four-year residency in internal and emergency medicine. .HHS never acted on this request, and explained in a December 1980 letter to Becker that it had developed a new form that he must complete before his deferment would be granted. Becker received the new form in March 1981 and requested deferment for a three-year residency in internal medicine. He had hoped to pursue a joint emergency and internal medicine residency, but he was not admitted to that course of study and he chose to pursue an internal medicine -residency because it allowed him to become board certified in both areas by practicing in an emergency room for five years. HHS granted Becker deferment for all three years of his internal medicine residency at Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center in Chicago.

In May 1983, Becker learned that HHS had a new policy for assigning scholarship recipients like himself to emergency rooms to complete their service obligation. In response to a glut of emergency room physicians, HHS had decided that it would assign NHSC awardees to emergency room practice only if the awardee had pursued an emergency medicine residency. This was bad news for-Becker. Although his residency was in. internal medicine, he had planned to become certified in emergency medicine by practicing in that area as he performed his service under the NHSC program, and HHS’s old policy would have permitted him, to do so. *782 The new policy threw Becker’s career plans awry. Unless he could figure out a way to fulfill his debt to the NHSC in an emergency room, he would be forced to choose between defaulting on the NHSC and abandoning his goal to become certified in emergency medicine.

Over the next few months, Becker made several efforts to get an emergency room placement that would satisfy his obligations to HHS, but all of these failed. Becker sought the assistance of a staff member at the Illinois Department of Public Health to find an emergency room placement that would meet HHS’s criteria, and learned that Michael Reese Hospital had a pressing need for emergency room physicians at that time. He applied to HHS for this placement in September 1983, but was rejected in May 1984 and again in August 1984 because that institution was no longer on an approved list of “Health Manpower Shortage Areas.” In May 1984 HHS notified Becker that to fulfill his service obligation he would be placed in an internal medicine practice at the South Chicago Medical Center.

Becker responded immediately with a letter to HHS stating that his assignment to internal medicine practice at South Chicago was “totally unacceptable,” and on July 5, 1984, HHS placed Becker in default because it concluded that he did not intend to begin fulfilling his service obligation. As to his first scholarship under the 1972 statute, he became liable to pay the government the amount of that award plus interest. As to his second scholarship under the 1976 statute, he became liable for three times the amount plus interest as set forth by the formula at 42 U.S.C. § 254o (b).

Becker’s run-ins with HHS were not over. In December 1987 Congress enacted a Special Repayment Program (“SRP”) for defaulting scholarship recipients like Becker. Pub.L. No. 100-177, § 204, 101 Stat. 986, 1000-1003; 42 U.S.C. § 254o (note). This program allowed them to discharge their liability by serving at a site on two 1988 Health Manpower Shortage Area Placement Opportunity Lists (“HPOLs”). As required by the statute, in February 1988 HHS notified Becker that he could satisfy his debt through service under the SRP. HHS sent him a contract stating that he could be assigned under the terms of the statute by August 1988. This contract only outlined the SRP’s general terms; it did not purport to assign Becker to a particular location. On May 25 of that year, Becker returned this contract but altered it to state that he would serve in internal medicine at the Mandel Clinic Acute Care Center affiliated with Michael Reese Hospital beginning July 1988. HHS rejected the altered agreement and offered Becker a second chance to sign the form contract. When Becker refused, HHS told Becker that he was no longer eligible to participate in the SRP.

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Bluebook (online)
995 F.2d 779, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 13778, 1993 WL 199435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lance-bart-becker-md-ca7-1993.