Estate of HAZEL B. MESSNER, Deceased.
PETER RANK, as Director, etc., Plaintiff and Respondent.
v.
WILLIAM R. THURSTON, as Executor, etc., Defendant and Appellant.
Court of Appeals of California, Fourth District, Division One.
*819 COUNSEL
Don L. Harrington for Defendant and Appellant.
John K. Van de Kamp, Attorney General, Charlton G. Holland, Assistant Attorney General, Anne S. Pressman and Richard A. Spector, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
*820 OPINION
WIENER, Acting P.J.
This appeal by defendant William R. Thurston, as executor of the estate of Hazel B. Messner, from the $45,019.24 judgment in favor of plaintiff Peter Rank, Director of the Department of Health Services (Department), presents the identical issue decided in Department of Health Services v. Fontes (1985)
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Following Messner's death on December 7, 1982, the Department timely filed a creditor's claim against her estate for $45,019.24 representing the total amount paid to various health care providers who had treated her under the Medi-Cal program from January 1, 1977, until the date of her death. The claim tracked the wording of section 14009.5 and alleged that reimbursement was authorized pursuant to that section since the Medi-Cal services rendered on Messner's behalf occurred after she was 65 and that she had died without leaving a surviving spouse or any surviving children under age 21 or any surviving children who were blind or disabled within the meaning of the Social Security Act. The claim was rejected. The Department successfully moved for summary judgment. This appeal ensued.
*821 DISCUSSION
(1a) Since the facts are not in dispute, the threshold question is whether the Legislature intended section 14009.5 to be applied retroactively.
(2) It is an established canon of statutory interpretation that statutes must be applied prospectively unless the Legislature clearly intended a retroactive application. (Aetna Cas. & Surety Co. v. Ind. Acc. Com. (1947)
Section 14009.5 was enacted as part of a chapter amending, adding, and repealing over 160 statutes in 10 different codes. Many of these statutes were in the Welfare and Institutions Code and were directed to developing pilot programs to save money, i.e., prospective savings. In this light, any force to a retroactivity argument based on the urgency of the legislation becomes ethereal. Moreover, we cannot overlook the Legislature's silence on this issue. Had the Legislature wanted section 14009.5 to be applied retroactively, it could have easily so stated. (See Perry v. Heavenly Valley (1985)
Fontes describes the pivotal question as "whether application of section 14009.5 to benefits received before the effective date of the statute, claimed from an estate which arose after the effective date of the statute, constitutes an unauthorized retroactive application." (Department of Health Services v. *822 Fontes, supra,
We have labored this point because of Fontes's concluding paragraph which states: "The application of this statute to estates which arose after its effective date did not affect any existing rights and accordingly, had no impermissibly retroactive effect, even where the benefits had been received prior to its effective date." (Department of Health Services v. Fontes, supra,
In the absence of Fontes, we would have thought the answer to the question before us was self-evident. (4) By definition, a prospective law, the opposite of a retrospective one, means a law which has no effect on rights, obligations, acts, transactions, and conditions performed or existing before the statute was adopted. (See Aetna Cas. & Surety Co. v. Ind. Acc. Com., supra,
We disagree with Fontes's statement that "[t]his statute merely affected the distribution of a Medi-Cal recipient's estate." (Department of Health Services v. Fontes, supra,
This case is not controlled by the principle that "[t]estamentary disposition, as well as intestate succession, is a creature of statute and is controlled by the law in effect as of the date of the death." (Department of Health Services v. Fontes, supra, at p. 305.) Among the authorities Fontes cites for this proposition is Estate of Phillips (1928)
*824 We also are not persuaded that section 14009.5 is being applied prospectively because it affects only those persons who died after the statute was enacted. Deciding this issue by phrasing the statute's application in chronological terms is question begging tied to the assumption that the statute was procedural having no affect on the substantive rights of the recipient. As noted earlier, we believe the statute is substantive because it has imposed "`a new or additional liability and [has] substantially affect[ed] existing rights and obligations.'" (In re Marriage of Buol, supra, 39 Cal.3d at pp. 758-759.) In reaching this conclusion, we disagree with the statement in Fontes that "this statute did not affect any existing rights held by the Medi-Cal recipient's estate because such an entity did not even come into existence until the time of her death." (Department of Health Services v. Fontes, supra,
*825 Based upon the foregoing, we hold the Department's right to seek reimbursement arose with the adoption of the statute and the payment of benefits after its effective date, not when the Department applied for reimbursement from Messner's estate. Accordingly, the Department is entitled to reimbursement only for $12,639.52 representing those payments made after the effective date of section 14009.5.
DISPOSITION
The $45,019.24 judgment in favor of plaintiff Peter Rank, Director of the Department of Health Services against William R. Thurston as executor of the estate of Hazel B. Messner is modified to $12,639.52 and as modified, the judgment is affirmed. The plaintiff is to bear all costs for this appeal.
Lewis, J., and Todd, J., concurred.
Respondent's petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 25, 1987.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code. Section 14009.5 provides in part: "Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, when a decedent has received health care services under this chapter or Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 14200) the department may claim against the estate of the decedent, ... an amount equal to the payments for the health care services received. The department may not claim where the eligible person was under 65 when services were received, or where there is a surviving spouse, or where there is a surviving child who is under age 21 or who is blind or permanently and totally disabled, within the meaning of the Social Security Act."
[2] Even the cases cited by Fontes do not support its conclusion. For example, Fontes says "[a] statute is not retroactive in its application merely because it draws upon antecedent facts for its operation." (Department of Health Services v. Fontes, supra,
