639 S.E.2d 279 | Va. | 2007
Adam Afzall, an infant then nine years of age, was severely injured by the negligence of a third party. The Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS), the Commonwealth's provider of benefits under the national Medicaid program, paid $419,809.56 for a portion of the costs of Adam's treatment related to those injuries. Adam, by his parents and next friends, Sophia and Stephen Afzall, brought an action against the third *281party alleging the third party's negligence caused Adam's injuries. The parties settled the case, which was approved by the trial court on September 3, 2004.
By letter dated December 3, 2004, the Commonwealth claimed a lien for the amount DMAS paid for Adam's care. Adam's counsel computed the "Commonwealth's share" of Adam's expenses for legal fees and costs at $142,017.62 in obtaining the settlement.
Adam, by his parents and next friends, then filed a motion for declaratory judgment against the Commonwealth, seeking a declaration that the "Commonwealth's share" of his expenses for legal fees and costs in obtaining settlement of his negligence case should be deducted from the amount of the lien.
In support of his position, Adam cited a provision in the second paragraph of Code § 8.01-66.9, which, after establishing liens for payments made by DMAS and other institutions for persons who sustain personal injuries, provides as follows:
The Commonwealth's or such Department's or institution's lien shall be inferior to any lien for payment of reasonable attorney's fees and costs, but shall be superior to all other liens created by the provisions of this chapter and otherwise. Expenses for reasonable legal fees and costs shall be deducted from the total amount recovered.
Adam argued in the trial court that a plain reading of Code § 8.01-66.9 dictates that a plaintiff's legal fees and costs must be deducted from DMAS's share of any recovery. The Commonwealth argued that the statute did not require any deduction. The trial court rejected Adam's argument and dismissed his motion for declaratory judgment. We awarded Adam this appeal.
Adam makes the same argument on appeal as he made in the trial court. However, for the first time, the Commonwealth interposes an argument that "[s]overeign immunity bars a declaratory judgment against the Commonwealth or its agencies."
The Commonwealth concedes that it did not raise the doctrine of sovereign immunity in the trial court or in its brief in opposition to Adam's petition for appeal, but it asserts that the failure to raise the issue at an earlier time does not constitute the Commonwealth's waiver of its sovereign immunity, citing Commonwealth v. Luzik,
We agree that the Commonwealth can raise the defense of sovereign immunity for the first time on appeal because if sovereign immunity applies, the court is without subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the claim. Id. at 206-07,
In the absence of such a waiver by the legislature, the courts of this Commonwealth wealth do not have the necessary jurisdiction "to entertain [an] action." Luzik,
can only be acquired by virtue of the Constitution or of some statute. Neither the consent of the parties, nor waiver, nor acquiescence can confer it. Nor can the right to object for a want of it be lost by acquiescence, neglect, estoppel or in any other manner . . . . and the want of such jurisdiction of the trial court will be noticed by this court ex mero motu.
Board of Supervisors v. Board of Zoning Appeals,
"As a general rule, the Commonwealth is immune both from actions at law for damages and from suits in equity to restrain governmental action or to compel such action." Alliance to Save the Mattaponi v. Commonwealth,
Sovereign immunity may also bar a declaratory judgment proceeding against the Commonwealth. Virginia Bd. of Med. v. Virginia Physical Therapy Ass'n,
The dispositive question before the Court of Appeals was whether "the circuit court had subject matter jurisdiction to hear the case." Id. at 460,
The Court of Appeals noted that in the Virginia Administrative Process Act (VAPA),
the General Assembly has waived sovereign immunity only to allow a party to obtain judicial review of the Board's adoption of rules or the Board's case decisions, as such are defined in the VAPA, in the manner provided in the VAPA. In short, the Board has consented to and may be sued only for its promulgation of a rule or its decision of a case, as both are defined in the VAPA. The VPTA's right to bring a declaratory judgment action and in turn the court's jurisdiction to exercise jurisdiction over the action must be founded on the provisions of Code § 9-6.14:16(A) and fall within the explicit and limited waiver of sovereign immunity contained in that Code section.[
Id. at 466,
The Court of Appeals noted that this Court in Kenley v. Newport News Gen. & Non-Sectarian Hosp. Ass'n,
The Court of Appeals stated that, "[i]n its present form, Code § 9-6.14:16 clearly provides that the procedural steps for obtaining court review of agency actions adopting a rule or rendering a case decision are the procedural steps provided by the Rules of the Supreme Court." VBM I,
This Court awarded VPTA an appeal "to consider the question whether the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the circuit court lacked subject matter jurisdiction." We said that we had "considered this question and, for the reasons assigned by the Court of Appeals in its opinion, we will affirm its judgment." VBM II,
Adam argues that VBM I is distinguishable from the case at bar. He contends the only similarity between the two cases is that the plaintiffs in both filed for declaratory judgments and the Commonwealth was a party to both. Unlike the plaintiff in VBM I, Adam says, he does not "attempt to challenge the rules of a governmental agency or otherwise to interfere with governmental functions." Nor, Adam continues, does he "attempt to improperly influence the conduct of governmental affairs through the threat or use of vexatious litigation or for damages against the government or to restrain or compel it to act." What he has sought, Adam concludes, is "a judicial interpretation not of the government's right to recover its statutory lien, but to determine what the Legislature meant when it drafted the very statute that created the lien."
We agree with the Commonwealth that VBM I governs the outcome of this case and is not distinguishable. The close similarity between this case and VBM I is that in each case the plaintiff seeks to compel the Commonwealth to take certain actions: in VBM I to refrain from enforcing a rule against the use of electromyographic examinations by physical therapists and in this case to require a reduction in the amount of the Commonwealth's lien for payments made for Adam's treatment. Both would have the effect of interfering with governmental functions and, in Adam's case, the adverse effect upon "protecting the public purse." Messina,
In any event, the ultimate question in this case is whether Code § 8.01-66.9, upon which Adam relies, evinces an intention on the part of the General Assembly to waive sovereign immunity so as to permit a party to seek judicial review by way of a motion for declaratory judgment of action taken pursuant to that Code section. The second paragraph of Code § 8.01-66.9 makes the Commonwealth's lien "inferior to any lien for payment of reasonable attorney's fees and costs" but "superior to all other liens created by the provisions of this chapter," with "[e]xpenses for reasonable legal fees and costs [deductible] from the total amount recovered."
We find nothing in the language of this paragraph of Code § 8.01-66.9 that evinces such an intention. But, as the Commonwealth points out, another paragraph of Code § 8.01-66.9 makes it clear that when the General Assembly intends to waive sovereign immunity and provide a particular procedure for an injured person to follow in seeking judicial review, it knows how to demonstrate that intention. The final paragraph of the statute provides that "[t]he court in which a suit by an injured person . . . has been filed against the person . . . alleged to have caused such injuries or in which such suit may properly be filed, may, upon motion or petition by the injured person, . . . after written notice is given to those holding liens *284attaching to the recovery, reduce the amount of the liens and apportion the recovery . . . between the plaintiff, the plaintiff's attorney, and the Commonwealth or such Department or institution as the equities of the case may appear." Consequently, we conclude the bar of sovereign immunity applies in this case because the Commonwealth has not waived that defense in the context of a declaratory judgment action within the purview of Code § 8.01-66.9.
Since sovereign immunity applies in this case, the trial court was without jurisdiction to adjudicate Adam's claim. Therefore, we will dismiss the appeal and enter final judgment in favor of the Commonwealth.
Dismissed and final judgment.
The record shows that Adam's legal fees were based upon "one-third of the gross recovery, the amount of which is confidential."
Code § 9-6.14:16(A), part of the former Virginia Administrative Process Act, was repealed by Acts 2001 ch. 844 and is now Code § 2.2-4026, part of the present Administrative Process Act.