In the Matter of COUNTY OF ST. LAWRENCE, Respondent, v NIRAV R. SHAH, as Commissioner of Health, et al., Appellants.
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Third Department
945 N.Y.S.2d 443
Kavanagh, J. Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Demarest, J.), entered August 22, 2011 in St. Lawrence County, which granted petitioner‘s applicatiоn, in a proceeding pursuant to
As of December 2010, petitioner had submitted three claims to respondent Department of Health (hereinafter DOH) seeking reimbursement for certain payments, known as overburden expenditures, that it made to the state for Medicaid services provided to certain mentally disabled recipients (see
Medicaid is a government-funded health program that prоvides medical services to individuals with low incomes and limited resources (see Matter of Nazareth Home of the Franciscan Sisters v Novello, 7 NY3d 538, 542 [2006]). In New York, it is administered by DOH and is funded by subsidies received from federal, state and local governments (see
In 2006, the Medicaid Cap Statute was enacted for the singular purpose of providing counties with relief from the financial burdens imposed upon them by Medicaid. Before the Medicaid Cap Statute was enacted, the federal govеrnment paid 50% of the medical costs incurred under Medicaid, while the state and counties, as a general rule, each paid a 25% share of these expenses. The Medicaid Cap Statute altered this funding formula by, in effect, limiting each county‘s liability to the net Medicaid expenditures it madе in 2005 with adjustments for in-flation
While litigation was pending, the Legislature, in 2010, amended the Medicaid Cap Statute to providе that “the state/local social services district relative percentages of the non-federal share of medical assistance expenditures incurred prior to January 1, 2006 shall not be subject to adjustment on and after July 1, 2006” (L 2010, ch 109, § 1, part B, §§ 24, 40).3 In effect, this amendment locked in a county‘s percentage share for the cost of Medicaid services at the figure calculated under the cap and prohibited any adjustment in that percentage after July 1, 2006.4 After this amendment took effect, respondents once again claimed that the state was no longer required to rеimburse counties for these overburden expenditures because such a refund would result in an alteration of each county‘s “percentage of the non-federal share” for Medicaid expenditures made prior to January 1, 2006 in violation of this statute. Distilled to its essence, respondents’ claim is that if a county was given a refund for these expenditures, it would, in effect, have paid less for Medicaid prior to January 1, 2006 and its
Medicaid liability as calculated under the cap would thereby be reduced. For reasons that follow, we do not agree, and affirm the judgment of Supreme Court requiring respondents to reimburse petitioner for overburden expenditures that it incurred prior to January 1, 2006.
We begin by noting, as respondents concede, that the 2010 amendment—and its legislative history—make no reference to the state‘s obligatiоn to reimburse counties for overburden expenditures that accrued prior to January 1, 2006 or the court decisions declaring that this obligation was not altered or affected by the Medicaid Cap Statute. Moreover, the amendment, by its terms, does not explicitly repeal
Initially, we note that “[r]epeal by implication is distinctly not favored in the law[,]” and a court “should not lightly infer that the Legislature has repealed one if its own enactments when it hаs failed to do so expressly” (Alweis v Evans, 69 NY2d 199, 204 [1987]). Here, respondents have presented no rationale for why the Legislature, if it intended to repeal
We also reject respondents’ position that the 2010 amendment and
As for respondents’ contention that their interpretation of this amendment is entitled to deference, we note that the phrase “relative percentages of the non-federal share of medical assistance expenditures incurred prior to January 1, 2006” is not a highly technical term or a concept that implicates respondents’ operating practices or procedures. Instead, it refers to what petitioner and the state paid for Medicaid expenditures prior to January 1, 2006 and, as applied to the issues raised in this proceeding, involves a question of “pure statutory reading and analysis” for which deference is not rеquired (Matter of Belmonte v Snashall, 2 NY3d 560, 566 [2004]). Moreover, the affidavit submitted by respondents interpreting the 2010 amendment and its impact on the state‘s obligation to pay these overburden expenditures was prepared long after the amendment was enacted and is not supported by any relevant legislative history as to the conclusions contained therein (see Matter of County of Niagara v Daines, 91 AD3d 1288, 1290 [2012]).
Finally, since 1982, it has been the state‘s statutory obligation to pay the county share for Medicaid expenditures incurred in providing medical services to certain mentally disabled individuals. While the state, and not the county, has been obligatеd to pay for these medical services, it has continued to charge petitioner for these expenses and used these funds to satisfy its obligations under this statute. Since the state was never entitled to these funds, the 2010 amendment, even if found to apply to overburden expenditures, cannot sеrve to transform these county funds into state property and relieve the state of the legal obligation to return them.
Rose, J.P., Spain, Malone Jr. and McCarthy, JJ., concur.
Ordered that the judgment is affirmed, without costs.
