Wilkinson County Senior Care, LLC v. Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, in his Official Capacity as Executive Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 2022
Docket2020-SA-01332-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Wilkinson County Senior Care, LLC v. Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, in his Official Capacity as Executive Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid (Wilkinson County Senior Care, LLC v. Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, in his Official Capacity as Executive Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkinson County Senior Care, LLC v. Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, in his Official Capacity as Executive Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid, (Mich. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2020-SA-01332-SCT

WILKINSON COUNTY SENIOR CARE, LLC

v.

MISSISSIPPI DIVISION OF MEDICAID AND DREW SNYDER, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE MISSISSIPPI DIVISION OF MEDICAID

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/03/2020 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. J. DEWAYNE THOMAS TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: JULIE BOWMAN MITCHELL PHILIP JOSEPH CHAPMAN ELLEN PATTON ROBB RANDALL ELLIOTT DAY, III DION JEFFERY SHANLEY JANET McMURTRAY SAMUEL PHILIP GOFF COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: JULIE BOWMAN MITCHELL PHILIP JOSEPH CHAPMAN ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JANET McMURTRAY MAUREEN BURKE SPEYERER SAMUEL PHILIP GOFF NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - STATE BOARDS AND AGENCIES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/30/2022 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE KING, P.J., CHAMBERLIN AND ISHEE, JJ.

KING, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT: ¶1. After Wilkinson County Senior Care changed ownership, it received the maximum

per diem rate from the Mississippi Division of Medicaid (DOM) for a period of twenty

months. The DOM notified Wilkinson County Senior Care multiple times that the maximum

per diem rate it received during this time period was subject to adjustment based on its initial

cost report. The DOM did not seek recoupment of the overpayment based on the adjustment

until 2011. Wilkinson County Senior Care argues that this delay forecloses the DOM from

recouping the overpayment it received. The DOM and the chancery court both affirmed that

the recoupment was allowable. Because no legal or equitable principles provide that the

delay in this case forecloses recoupment, this Court affirms the decisions of the chancery

court and the DOM.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On May 1, 2002, Wilkinson County Nursing Center, now known as Wilkinson County

Senior Care, LLC (collectively, “Wilkinson”), had a change of ownership (CHOW). When

a nursing facility undergoes a CHOW, it must “file a cost report from the date of the change

of ownership through the end of the third month of ownership.” Medicaid State Plan 4.19-

D(M). This is generally referred to as the CHOW cost report. The DOM pays a facility that

has changed ownership the maximum per diem rate “until the rate is adjusted based on this

initial cost report.” Id. The per diem rate ultimately calculated based on the CHOW cost

report is retroactive to the CHOW date. Id. (“The rate computed based on the initial cost

report of the new owner will be effective the same date the change of ownership was

effective.”). Additionally, the DOM’s Provider Policy Manual at the time provided that new

2 facilities would “be paid the maximum established class rate[]” “[p]ending receipt of a cost

report.” DOM Provider Policy Manual 5.05. It further stated that, upon receipt of the

CHOW cost report, “a per diem rate will be established based on a desk review and will be

effective retroactively to the first day of certification.” Id.

¶3. The DOM sent Wilkinson an enrollment letter that informed Wilkinson that it had

been approved as a Medicaid provider effective May 1, 2002. The enrollment letter informed

Wilkinson that “the rate for the new provider number has been calculated based on the

maximum rate.” The enrollment letter also informed Wilkinson that its CHOW cost report

would be required for the period of May 1, 2002 through July 31, 2002, and would be due

on December 31, 2002. The enrollment letter specifically informed Wilkinson that “[t]he

rates will be adjusted retroactively to May 1, 2002 based on the initial cost report filed for

this facility.” In a January 31, 2003 letter, the DOM informed Wilkinson of its per diem rate

for the period of January 1, 2003 through March 31, 2003. The letter noted that “[t]he rate

will be adjusted based on a cost report submitted by your facility.”

¶4. In a January 28, 2004 letter, the DOM informed Wilkinson that it had reviewed

Wilkinson’s CHOW cost report for the period of May 1, 2002 through July 31, 2002. It sent

the letter to Wilkinson’s then accountant, David Stewart. It made downward adjustments to

some of Wilkinson’s reported costs. Thus, the costs that ultimately would be used to

calculate the per diem would be less than what Wilkinson reported in the CHOW cost report.

The DOM does not calculate the per diem rate based on the adjusted cost report until the

report is final—either after the time to appeal has run or after an appeal is complete.

3 Wilkinson did not appeal this decision regarding its CHOW cost report. Sometime in

approximately 2008, Wilkinson changed accounting firms, retaining Horne. Stewart did not

recall ever receiving the 2004 desk review.1 Wilkinson claims that it and “its accountant”

destroyed the desk review along with other records after five years.

¶5. On October 11, 2011, the DOM sent Wilkinson a letter providing the per diem rate

adjustments that had been made for the May 1, 2002 through December 31, 2003 time period

based on Wilkinson’s adjusted CHOW cost report. The total overpayment that the DOM

attempted to recoup from Wilkinson was $701,856.53. The detailed cost analyses that the

DOM attached to the 2011 letter reflected a printout date of August 9, 2005. Those analyses

calculated the per diem rates for various time periods within the overall May 1, 2002 through

December 31, 2003 time period, but did not calculate the total overpayment, i.e., they did not

apply the per diem rate to the previously paid claims (the rate for each period multiplied by

the number of beds and the number of days in each period, then subtracted from what was

actually paid for each of those smaller time periods). Wilkinson appealed the October 11,

2011 recoupment letter.

¶6. In 2002, the DOM changed fiscal agents. The new fiscal agent had software

incompatibilities with the software used by the previous fiscal agent, which resulted in the

DOM having issues handling claims and, particularly, with retroactively adjusting claims.

(“The system was incapable of” retroactively adjusting claims based on new rates.). Then,

due to new federal regulations, another new system for claims had to be created by October

1 The DOM produced a United States Mail return receipt for the desk review signed by Wilkinson’s accountant’s office on January 29, 2004.

4 2003. During this time, the DOM established monthly meetings for providers so that the

DOM could communicate the problems, issues, and delays it was experiencing with its

systems to the providers. Bruce Kelly, one of Wilkinson’s co-owners, participated in at least

some of these meetings, as did an accountant for Wilkinson, Shane Hariel.2 Hariel testified

that rate adjustments were a recurring item during the meetings. Hariel stated that delays in

rate adjustments were discussed in general terms, without specific facilities being mentioned.

Hariel did state that, based on the 2004 desk review, an accountant for Wilkinson would have

been able to calculate the rate and recoupment amount.

¶7. In appealing the October 11, 2011 recoupment attempt, Wilkinson argued that the

DOM failed to offer sufficient support for the computations, and made various arguments

that the recoupment violated record retention standards.3 A hearing was held on September

12, 2012. The hearing officer found that no statutory or regulatory provisions required the

DOM to issue rate adjustments within any set period of time and that Wilkinson knew it was

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Wilkinson County Senior Care, LLC v. Mississippi Division of Medicaid and Drew Snyder, in his Official Capacity as Executive Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkinson-county-senior-care-llc-v-mississippi-division-of-medicaid-and-miss-2022.