Wayne Manor, Inc. v. Department of Public Welfare (In Re Wayne Manor, Inc.)

94 B.R. 240, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2192, 1988 WL 139284
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 15, 1988
Docket19-10810
StatusPublished

This text of 94 B.R. 240 (Wayne Manor, Inc. v. Department of Public Welfare (In Re Wayne Manor, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wayne Manor, Inc. v. Department of Public Welfare (In Re Wayne Manor, Inc.), 94 B.R. 240, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2192, 1988 WL 139284 (Mass. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ON TURNOVER

HAROLD LAVIEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtor, Wayne Manor, Inc., a nursing home, seeks to compel the Massachusetts Department of Public Welfare (“Department”) to turn over $26,138.46. The Department withheld these funds from the monies it disbursed to the debtor prepetition to pay for the care of Medicaid recipients residing at the debtor’s facility.

The strange history of this case started before 1981 when James D. Regan owned five nursing homes including Maregan Manor and Stadium Manor. On October 23, 1981, the debtor purchased the assets of Maragan Manor, Inc.

After the purchase of the assets of Mare-gan Manor, the Department, as was its custom in order to establish a permanent rate, audited interim payments made to Maregan Manor and Stadium Manor. The Department’s policy is to make interim payments to nursing homes and then later perform an audit to determine if there were any discrepancies between what the nursing homes actually received and what it should have received. The Department, in the course of its audits, found that both Maregan Manor and Stadium Manor, respectively, owed $26,318.46 and over $400,-000 to the Department for Medicaid over-payments.

In 1982, after the purchase by an unrelated third party of Maregan Manor’s assets and the change of its name to Wayne Manor, Inc., and after the discovery of the indebtedness, the debtor, although now under independent ownership, was required to sign an agreement stating it would assume liability for the indebtedness as a condition to receiving any further payments from the Department.

This agreement appears to have been successfully challenged in a state court proceeding; however, under the regulations of the Department of Public Welfare and the Court interpretations of the same nursing homes under joint ownership at the time of an overpayment might remain severally responsible. Mass.Regs.Code, title *242 106, § 456.703; Amherst Nursing Home v. Commonwealth, 16 Mass.App. 638, 454 N.E.2d 498 (1983) aff'd after remand, 398 Mass. 850, 501 N.E.2d 1161 (1987). In recognition that at least as to its predecessor, Maregan, there might be a rate adjustment for which it could be held responsible, the parties agreed as part of the sale of Mare-gan’s assets to the debtor, that in the event the debtor was compelled to pay a Maregan rate adjustment, it would be reimbursed.

The Department did hold the debtor liable for the indebtedness of Maregan Man- or. In the case of Stadium Manor, the Department, however, was looking towards Stadium Manor to pay off its own indebtedness. From December 1984 to June 1985, the Department deducted $26,318.36 from the debtor’s Medicaid checks, expressly indicating on the claims remittance advice sent to Wayne that the deductions were for previous overpayments to Maregan Manor. The debtor does not seek turnover of these funds because Maregan Trust fully reimbursed the debtor pursuant to the purchase and sale agreement between the debtor and Maregan Trust. At this point, in 1985, the Maregan overpayment has been repaid in full.

The facts here take a disturbing turn from that of a Department acting properly to protect the public fisc to that of a heavy handed bureaucracy. During the period the debtor was paying off Maregan Man- or’s indebtedness, Stadium Manor filed for bankruptcy and eventually had a plan confirmed that would pay the claim of the Department ten cents of every dollar owed. The Department, without providing any notice to either Maregan Trust or the debtor, transferred the monies paid to extinguish Maregan Manor’s indebtedness to Stadium Manor’s account thereby with a simple unilateral internal bookkeeping entry, sought to reconstitute the original pre-1981 Mare-gan overpayment.

Commencing in June 1985, the Department began directly deducting from the debtor’s Medicaid checks to offset Stadium Manor’s indebtedness. In September 1985, the debtor obtained the entry of a preliminary injunction in the Suffolk Superior Court, Civil Action No. 78044, to enjoin the Commonwealth from making any further deductions from the debtor’s Medicaid checks. The Department, had by this time again, withheld $26,138.36 from the debt- or’s Medicaid checks from June until September 1985, and it is these funds that that the debtor seeks to recover.

In 1986, the Department, in violation of the preliminary injunction, started to withhold funds from the debtor’s Medicaid checks to set off Maregan Manor’s reborn debt. The debtor went back to Superior Court and the Superior Court ordered the Department to return to the debtor the $15,563.94 in withheld payments as well as $438.47 in interest, and $750 in attorney’s fees. At the same time, the Department now played the game in reverse and the second $26,138.36 apparently wrongfully withheld to offset Stadium Manor’s indebtedness was transferred to pay the reborn Maregan Manor’s account.

In arguments before this Court, counsel for the Department vehemently denied that the debtor had previously paid the Mare-gan Manor account twice and insisted that the first $26,318.36 had been returned. However, when, in testifying or cross-examination, the Department director of Retroactive Rate Recovery Unit produced the check showing the alleged return of the first full withholding from the debtor in payment of the Maregan Manor account. The payee was not the debtor, but Stadium Manor. If there was any confusion, it was generated by the Department’s slight of hand bookkeeping. It was now clear that the indebtedness of Maregan Manor had been collected twice. Under the wonders of bureaucratic logic, however, their unilateral transfer of the funds from payment in full of the Maregan account to the account of Stadium resulted in a phoenix-like rebirth of the total Maregan overpayment. Considering the Department’s contention that this independent debtor was responsible in any event for any deficiency resulting from Stadium’s confirmed Chapter 11 plan, why then the convoluted bookkeeping? Can it be that the bureaucracy, when given a choice, prefers an indirect, complex, and devious approach to its prob *243 lems? Or, is this really a simple attempt to extract payment by reaching a deeper pocket, regardless of the method that has to be used?

The Department offered two defenses and filed a motion to dismiss. The basis of the first defense and the motion to dismiss is that the Eleventh Amendment deprives the Bankruptcy Court, as a federal court of jurisdiction. 1 The Department’s other defense is that the debtor failed to state a cause of action. The First Circuit has recently considered both defenses in a very similar dispute between two nursing homes and the Department. WJM, Inc. v. Massachusetts Department of Public Welfare, 840 F.2d 996 (1st Cir.1988).

The Court first considered the motion to dismiss which it denied. The motion to dismiss and the first defense rests on the Eleventh Amendment which states:

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Amherst Nursing Home, Inc. v. Commonwealth
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Bluebook (online)
94 B.R. 240, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 2192, 1988 WL 139284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayne-manor-inc-v-department-of-public-welfare-in-re-wayne-manor-inc-mab-1988.