The Department of Public Welfare (DPW) adopted a regulation in 1979 which permitted it to recover overpayments made to one nursing home for the care of patients eligible for public assistance by offsetting amounts the DPW owed to another nursing home if at the relevant times the two facilities were “under a common ownership.” 1 On final audit the DPW determined that the interim payments it had made to the Skole Nursing Home, Inc. (Skole) for each of fiscal years 1970, 1971, and 1974 exceeded the amount to which Skole was entitled in each year. During those years Bettie Skole Kravetz was the president and sole stockholder of Skole, and she also owned 42% of the stock of the plaintiff Amherst Nursing Home, Inc. (Amherst).
Amherst brought this action to recover amounts that, in reliance on the 1979 regulation, the DPW in 1979 and 1980 had offset against funds it owed to Amherst. In doing so, the DPW sought to recover the overpayments to Skole, which had been dissolved as a corporation in November, 1975. A judge of the Superior Court entered summary judgment for Amherst. The Appeals Court vacated that judgment and remanded the case for a determination whether, under the regulation as construed by it, there was common ownership which permitted the offset.
1. Amherst seeks to raise before us the illegality of the retroactive application of the 1979 regulation. This issue was not discussed in the Appeals Court opinion (
2. Issues now argued which were also presented to the Appeals Court are fully before us for consideration on direct appellate review of the judgment entered in the Superior Court following the Appeals Court’s remand. Our denial of further appellate review on Amherst’s first appeal does not in any way restrict Amherst from presenting to us anew arguments that were unsuccessful before the Appeals Court in the first appeal. Our order “denying further review should not be considered in any case as an affirmation of the decision or reasoning of the Appeals Court.”
Ford
v.
Flaherty,
3. Because we agree with the Appeals Court’s construction of the governing regulation, we have no reason to comment extensively on the issues argued to that court. Simultaneous ownership by one person (or group of persons) of stock in
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each provider of services together with control of each provider warrants application of the regulation. Amherst contends, however, that, when the Appeals Court referred to control, it meant “complete domination,” and that the evidence did not warrant a finding of “complete domination.” The Appeals Court referred to “control of Amherst’s policy and operation” as providing, along with ownership, “a sufficient basis to support the application of the regulation providing for recoupment from Amherst of overpayments to Skole for the years in question.”
The judge’s finding that Kravetz had “effective control of the operation of the nursing home” in 1970, 1971, and 1974 was not clearly erroneous. Mass. R. Civ. P. 52(a),
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The regulation (106 Code Mass. Regs. § 456.703 [E] [1979]) provided: “If two or more facilities are, or were, under a common ownership, and if one or more of the facilities is owed money by the Commonwealth, the Department may offset the provider’s liability to the Department against the Department’s liability to the provider.”
