GGNSC Clarion LP d/b/a “Golden Living Center – Clarion“, GGNSC Warren Kinzua Valley LP d/b/a “Golden Living Center – Kinzua“, GGNSC Wilkes-Barre II LP d/b/a “Golden Living Center – Summit“, HarmarVillage Care Center LLC d/b/a HarmarVillage Care Center, Providence Care Center LLC d/b/a Providence Care Center, Mulberry Square Elder Care & Rehabilitation, LLC, Guardian Elder Care at Carlisle, LLC, Guardian Elder Care at Mountain Top I, LLC & Rehabilitation Center, Guardian Elder Care at Nanticoke LLC, Jefferson Hills Manor LLC, Brookline at Mifflintown, Inc., Reliant Audubon Holdings LLC, Reliant Evergreen Holdings LLC, Reliant Palmyra Holdings LLC, Reliant Silver Oaks Holdings LLC, Reliant Kade Holdings LLC, Reliant Coventry Holdings LLC, Reliant Overlook Holdings LLC, Reliant Briarcliff Holdings LLC, Pennsylvania Health Care Association, Petitioners v. Kathleen G. Kane, in her Official Capacity as Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC, Respondents
No. 165 M.D. 2015
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
January 11, 2016
Argued: November 18, 2015
HONORABLE BERNARD L. McGINLEY, Judge
HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Judge
HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
OPINION BY PRESIDENT JUDGE PELLEGRINI
FILED: January 11, 2016
Before the Court are the preliminary objections and motion to dismiss of Kathleen G. Kane, in her Official Capacity as Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (collectively, OAG) and Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC (Cohen Milstein) to the amended petition for review seeking declaratory relief filed by GGNSC Clarion LP d/b/a “Golden Living Center – Clarion,” et al. (collectively, Facilities)2 pursuant to the Declaratory Judgments Act.3 We sustain the preliminary objections, grant the motion to dismiss, and dismiss the amended petition for review.
I.
A.
In 2012, OAG entered into a contingent fee agreement with Cohen Milstein, which has been subsequently amended, through which Cohen Milstein began an investigation into whether a number of the Facilities had fraudulently, deceptively or falsely represented their services in their billing and marketing practices under the Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law (Consumer Protection Law),4 breach of contract and unjust enrichment.
- In Count I, that OAG lacks authority to investigate or pursue litigation concerning staffing levels at their skilled nursing facilities because the Health Care Facilities Act5 vests exclusive jurisdiction in DOH and that OAG‘s action in this case violates their due process rights by circumventing the authorized regulatory process;6
In Count II, that OAG is not empowered to delegate its authority to Cohen Milstein and the contract between OAG and Cohen Milstein constitutes an improper expenditure of state funds under state law and the Pennsylvania Constitution;7 and In Count III, that OAG‘s subpoenas were improperly issued for the purpose of litigation in violation of Sections 918,8 919,9 and 921 of the Administrative Code of 1929 (Administrative Code)10 and are unenforceable as overbroad and lacking definiteness.
In May 2015, this Court granted the Pennsylvania HealthCare Association (PHCA) leave to intervene in the action. In its petition, PHCA stated that “[i]f permitted to intervene, PHCA will adopt the petition for review filed by [the Facilities] as the basis for challenge to [OAG‘s] actions, and would not propose to file a separate petition for review.” (Unopposed Petition for Leave to Intervene at ¶28).
B.
Overtaking the Facilities’ declaratory judgment action, in July 2015, OAG filed Kane v. GGNSC, LLC, et al., docketed in this Court at No. 336 M.D. 2015, which is an enforcement action under the Consumer Protection Law against two of the GGNSC facilities and twelve other Golden Living nursing homes. In that case, OAG alleged violations of the Consumer Protection Law and common
II.
A.
As noted above, presently before the Court are OAG‘s preliminary objections12 and motion to dismiss13 the amended petition for review. With respect
As noted above, OAG has filed an enforcement action under the Consumer Protection Law in Kane v. GGNSC, LLC, et al., docketed at No. 336 M.D. 2015, against two of the GGNSC facilities and twelve other Golden Living nursing homes and has asserted that any administrative subpoenas issued to these entities have been mooted or withdrawn. As a result, those Facilities may raise all of the claims raised in Counts I and III of the instant petition seeking declaratory relief that directly challenge OAG‘s authority to enforce the Consumer Protection Law against them in that enforcement proceeding. In fact, those Facilities raise the same claims in their preliminary objections to OAG‘s petition for review in the enforcement action that are raised in Counts I and III of the instant petition seeking declaratory relief.
B.
Regarding the claims made by the remaining facilities and PHCA in Count I of the amended petition for review, which are not subject to the enforcement action, OAG contends in its first and second preliminary objections that the allegations fail to state a valid claim for relief. We agree.
Contrary to the Facilities’ assertion, DOH does not have exclusive authority to investigate or pursue litigation concerning staffing levels at skilled nursing facilities or to employ a model to establish such standards within the context of an anticipated action under the Consumer Protection Law. As outlined above, the Health Care Facilities Act does vest DOH with the authority to establish and enforce regulations setting minimum standards in the operation of health care facilities, to assure safe, adequate and efficient facilities and services, and to
However, DOH has no authority to investigate the consumer marketing and billing practices of skilled nursing and long-term care facilities or to initiate litigation to correct illegal acts in this regard. Rather, Section 204(d) of the Administrative Code authorizes OAG to administer its provisions regarding consumer protection, and Sections 4, 4.1 and 5 of the Consumer Protection Law specifically authorize OAG to restrain and obtain restitution for acts deemed illegal
Moreover, the health care services that the Facilities provide to their residents fall within the ambit of the Consumer Protection Law. See, e.g., Chalfin v. Beverly Enterprises, Inc., 741 F.Supp. 1162, 1175-76 (E.D. Pa. 1989) (holding that the corporate owner of a nursing home was a “person” within the meaning of Section 2(2) of the Consumer Protection Law; that the health care services provided by the nursing home were within the scope of “trade or commerce” Section 2(3); and that the nursing home‘s representation that it would assist the residents in procuring Medical Assistance benefits when it never intended to do so was an “unfair or deceptive act or practice” under Section 2(4)(xviii)); Zaborowski v. Hospitality Care Center of Hermitage, Inc., 60 Pa. D. & C.4th 474, 493-94 (2002) (“Nursing homes are not one-dimensional business enterprises, but instead they are hybrid organizations, offering both medical and non-medical services. Thus, this court holds that a plaintiff can maintain a private cause of action against
Any investigation or enforcement action initiated by OAG is directly related to “unfair or deceptive acts or practices” purportedly committed by the Facilities with respect to the staffing levels at their facilities. As a result, while minimum staffing levels may be regulated by DOH for health and safety purposes, any representations, advertisements or agreements that the Facilities made with their residents with respect to staffing levels, whether in accord with those required
C.
Regarding the remaining claims raised by the remaining facilities and PHCA in Count III of the amended petition for review regarding the subpoenas, OAG contends in its sixth and seventh preliminary objections that the Facilities fail to state a valid claim for relief and that the claims with respect to the subpoenas are not ripe. We agree.
Section 919(a) of the Administrative Code provides, in relevant part:
In case of disobedience of any subpoena ... the Attorney General or his representative may invoke the aid of the Commonwealth Court or any court of record of the Commonwealth, and such court may thereupon issue an order requiring the person subpoenaed to obey the subpoena ... or to produce books, accounts, papers, records, documents and files relative to the matter in question. Any failure to obey such order of the court may be punished by such court as a contempt thereof.
As outlined above, OAG has no independent authority to enforce its subpoenas and the Facilities cannot contest the validity of the subpoenas in an action in equity until OAG invokes the foregoing enforcement procedure in a court of record or this Court. In re Subpoena of Pennsylvania Crime Commission, 309 A.2d 401, 404 (Pa. 1973). With respect to a motion to quash an administrative subpoena issued by the Pennsylvania Crime Commission, the Supreme Court explained:
[W]e note that appellants’ motion to quash the subpoena in the Common Pleas Court was improper. Appellants cannot contest the validity of the subpoena until the Commission invokes enforcement procedures in either the Courts of Common Pleas or the Commonwealth Court. This is so because, unlike a judicial subpoena, the Crime Commission is not given power to enforce compliance. Therefore, individuals are not placed in the dilemma of having to disobey the Commission‘s subpoena at their peril in order to contest its validity. Failure to comply is not punishable by fine or imprisonment unless it continues after a court has ordered compliance....
Until the Commission invokes the aid of a court to enforce compliance with its subpoenas, the court is without jurisdiction in the matter. To hold otherwise would be to ignore the obvious possibility that the Commission may elect not to enforce its subpoena. Until the decision is made by the Commission to seek enforcement the subpoena is no more than an invitation to appear which can be ignored without peril by the recipient. Therefore, the premature initiation of equitable proceedings by appellants is in effect a nullity and it is incapable of divesting the Commission of its legal right
to elect to proceed to seek enforcement in the forum of its choice as provided under the statute[]....
Id. at 404-05 (footnotes omitted). Likewise, in the instant matter, the Facilities’ initiation of the instant declaratory judgment proceeding to challenge OAG‘s administrative subpoenas is premature because OAG has not yet asked a court to enforce the subpoenas under Section 919(a) of the Administrative Code. Accordingly, Counts I and III in the amended petition for review are dismissed.
D.
Finally, in OAG‘s third preliminary objection, it alleges that the Facilities and PHCA lack standing to challenge OAG‘s use of outside counsel to conduct its investigation in Count II of the amended petition for review, citing Section 103 of the Commonwealth Attorneys Act, and Commonwealth v. Janssen Pharmaceutica, Inc., 8 A.3d 267, 276 (Pa. 2010).19 With respect to the Facilities’ and PHCA‘s standing to assert Count II or any claims in Counts I and III relating to the contingent fee agreement with Cohen Milstein or its participation in the investigation and litigation, we find that the Supreme Court‘s opinion in Janssen Pharmaceutica is dispositive.
The trial court denied the motion and the Supreme Court exercised extraordinary relief21 to consider, inter alia, whether Section 103 of the Commonwealth Attorneys Act dictated that Janssen lacked standing to seek the
[T]he language of Section 103 is clear and unambiguous and thus provides a clear indication of the General Assembly‘s intent. The obvious interpretation of Section 103 is that no party to an action, other than the Commonwealth agency involved in the action itself, may challenge the authority of the agency‘s legal representation. Looking for the occasion of the Attorneys Act, Janssen has constructed a cogent argument that Section 103 could be read as intending only to preclude parties involved in litigation against the Commonwealth from challenging whether [OAG] or OGC properly should represent the Commonwealth agency, but does not extend to challenges against outside counsel representing the Commonwealth agency. But, to credit Janssen‘s extra-textual argument would require a policy and statutory construction analysis of Section 103 that is not fairly invited by the clear and unambiguous statutory language actually employed in the legislation. And, in any event, if we were to indulge in a digression into the purpose of the provision, we note that it is perfectly logical to conclude that the General Assembly fully intended the broad effect of the actual words chosen: i.e., that, in addressing the authority of Commonwealth attorneys, it intended that no party but the affected agency should be heard to complain about so fundamental an executive matter as the identity of the lawyers representing Commonwealth entities....
[T]he OGC, on behalf of the Commonwealth and two of its agencies, sued Janssen, retaining Bailey Perrin to prosecute the action. Pursuant to the plain language of Section 103, Janssen, as a party to the action other than the Commonwealth party, cannot be heard to challenge Bailey Perrin‘s authority to represent the Commonwealth party. Because the statutory language is plain and unambiguous, the alternative construction offered by Janssen must fail.
Accordingly, the preliminary objections of the Attorney General and Cohen Milstein are sustained; their motion to dismiss is granted; and the Facilities’ amended petition for review is dismissed.
DAN PELLEGRINI, President Judge
Judge Cohn Jubelirer did not participate in the decision of this case.
Judge McCullough dissents.
GGNSC Clarion LP d/b/a “Golden Living Center – Clarion“, GGNSC Warren Kinzua Valley LP d/b/a “Golden Living Center – Kinzua“, GGNSC Wilkes-Barre II LP d/b/a “Golden Living Center – Summit“, HarmarVillage Care Center LLC d/b/a HarmarVillage Care Center, Providence Care Center LLC d/b/a Providence Care Center, Mulberry Square Elder Care & Rehabilitation, LLC, Guardian Elder Care at Carlisle, LLC, Guardian Elder Care at Mountain Top I, LLC & Rehabilitation Center, Guardian Elder Care at Nanticoke LLC, Jefferson Hills Manor LLC, Brookline at Mifflintown, Inc., Reliant Audubon Holdings LLC, Reliant Evergreen Holdings LLC, Reliant Palmyra Holdings LLC, Reliant Silver Oaks Holdings LLC, Reliant Kade Holdings LLC, Reliant Coventry Holdings LLC, Reliant Overlook Holdings LLC, Reliant Briarcliff Holdings LLC, Pennsylvania Health Care Association, Petitioners v. Kathleen G. Kane, in her Official Capacity as Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC, Respondents
No. 165 M.D. 2015
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
ORDER
AND NOW, this 11th day of January, 2016, the preliminary objections of Kathleen G. Kane, in her Official Capacity as Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC, are sustained; their motion to dismiss is granted; and the petition for review seeking declaratory relief filed by GGNSC Clarion LP d/b/a “Golden Living Center – Clarion,” et al. is dismissed.
DAN PELLEGRINI, President Judge
