ORDER
This matter comes before the Court on plaintiffs construed Motion for Preliminary Injunction (doc. 4). The parties have submitted extensive briefing on the Motion (including supplemental briefing as directed by the Court). The Motion is now ripe.
1. Relevant Background.
Plaintiff, GOS Operator, LLC (“GOS”), is the operator of Gordon Oaks Healthcare Center (“Gordon Oaks”), a skilled nursing facility located in Mobile, Alabama. At present, Gordon Oaks participates in the Medicare program pursuant to a provider agreement (the “Provider Agreement”) with defendant Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human
On January 19, 2012, the Secretary (by and through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (“CMS”), an agency within the Department of Health and Human Services) issued a written notice of involuntary termination to Gordon Oaks. (Doc. 26, Exh. 1.) The notice referenced surveys performed on January 8, 2012 and January 18, 2012, and set forth CMS’s conclusion that Gordon Oaks “remains out of substantial compliance with the Medicare/Medicaid participation requirements.” (Id. at 1.)
It is undisputed that GOS has invoked the administrative appeals process as to each survey conducted between July 21, 2011 and January 18, 2012 that has found Gordon Oaks not to be in substantial compliance with program requirements. (Doc. 1, ¶¶ 69, 71 & Exh. T; McAuliffe Deck (doc. 34-1), at Att. 2.) Most recently, in a January 30, 2012 letter sent to CMS and the Departmental Appeals Board, GOS requested “an expedited hearing on its appeals,” on the grounds that “[a]n expedited hearing is warranted in order to ensure that the administrative proceeding is resolved as expeditiously as possible.” (McAuliffe Deck, at Att. 2.) To date, GOS has not received an administrative hearing on any of its appeals from deficiencies identified in surveys conducted at Gordon Oaks between July 2011 and January 2012.
The trouble with this arrangement from GOS’s perspective is that, according to its evidence, termination of the Provider Agreement would inflict devastating harm on Gordon Oaks, inasmuch as: (i) it would necessitate transfer all Medicaid and Medicare residents to other facilities; (ii) the loss of Provider Agreements would constitute a catastrophic event of default under GOS’s lease, resulting in termination of the lease and closure of the entire Gordon Oaks campus; and (iii) the ultimate effect of termination of the Provider Agreements would be that GOS would cease operations and go out of business. (Feuer Deck (doc. 1, Exh. B), ¶¶ 3-5.) In GOS’s view, a post-termination administrative hearing would be useless and ineffectual because “Plaintiff will not survive long enough to contest the termination through the appropriate administrative process.” (Doc. 34, at 1.)
In light of these circumstances, GOS filed its Complaint and Motion for Temporary Restraining Order on January 19, 2011, the same day that CMS issued the termination notice and a bare two days before the Secretary intended to terminate Gordon Oaks’ Provider Agreements. The Complaint does not seek review of the underlying administrative determinations. GOS is not asking this Court to make any findings as to whether Gordon Oaks was or was not in substantial compliance with program requirements at any time. Nor does the Complaint request that judicial review supplant the administrative appeals process. Rather, the Complaint by its terms “seeks only to preserve the status quo pending the outcome of the administrative hearing” by enjoining defendants from terminating Gordon Oaks’ provider agreements “until its challenges to the Defendants’ actions have been heard and decided by an administrative law judge of the Departmental Appeals Board of Defendant HHS.” (Doc. 1, ¶ 6.) As grounds for the requested injunction, the Complaint alleges causes of action for violation of plaintiffs procedural due process rights (failure to provide pre-termination administrative hearing), violation of substantive due process (arbitrary and capricious termination of provider agreements), and ultra vires (Secretary exceeding statutory authority by terminating provider agreement despite no “immediate jeopardy” deficiencies and during pendency of administrative hearing process). Plaintiff has joined neither the constitutional claims nor the ultra vires claim to its pending administrative appeals before the HHS Departmental Appeals Board.
II. Jurisdiction.
As a threshold matter, the Government asserts that this action should be dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
A. Section 405(h) and the Channeling Requirement.
The statutory underpinning of defendants’ jurisdictional argument is 42 U.S.C. § 405(h). That section provides, in part, as follows: “No action against the United States, the [Secretary], or any officer or employee thereof shall be brought under section 1331 or 1346 of Title 28 to recover on any claim arising under this subchapter.” 42 U.S.C. § 405(h).
The Supreme Court has explained that the net effect of § 405(h) is that it “demands the ‘channeling’ of virtually all legal attacks through the agency,” thereby assuring the Secretary “greater opportunity to apply, interpret or revise policies, regulations, or statutes without possibly premature interference by different individual courts.” Illinois Council,
B. Plaintiff’s Claims “Arise Under” the Medicare Act.
In response to these expansive, binding judicial proclamations regarding the § 405(h) channeling requirement for claims arising under the Medicare statute, GOS asserts, with no citations or explanatory reasoning, that “the claims asserted herein do not arise under the Medicare Act.” (Doc. 34, at 6.) This contention is not persuasive. “A claim arises under the Medicare Act if both the standing and the substantive basis for the presentation of the claim is the Medicare Act, ... or if the claim is inextricably intertwined with a claim for Medicare benefits.” RenCare, Ltd. v. Humana Health Plan of Texas, Inc.,
C. “No Review at All” Exception.
Next, GOS contends that even if its claims do arise under the Medicare Act, § 405(h) poses no impediment to this lawsuit at this time because deferring judicial review until after a potentially lengthy administrative appeals process expires would be tantamount to no judicial review at all.
The Supreme Court has found that § 1395Ü “does not apply § 405(h) where application of § 405(h) would not simply channel review through the agency, but
Make no mistake: This “no review at all” exception (sometimes dubbed the “Illinois Council exception” or the “Michigan Academy [Bowen v. Michigan Academy of Family Physicians,
GOS maintains that the Gordon Oaks situation lies within the narrow confines of the Illinois Council exception. In that regard, it bears repeating that GOS’s claims in this action are for violation of procedural due process (grounded in the notion that the Secretary’s termination of Gordon Oaks’ provider agreements without a prior administrative hearing violates the Fifth Amendment) and for ultra vires (predicated on the theory that the Secretary is exceeding her statutory authority by terminating a provider agreement in
There is a glaring flaw in GOS’s attempt to evade § 405(h) through this reasoning. The problem is this: Why couldn’t GOS present the very claims it seeks to bring in this action (ie., procedural due process violation, ultra vires) to the Secretary first via the administrative process? In other words, why couldn’t plaintiff honor the special review path contemplated by § 405(g) and (h) for these constitutional/statutory claims, and then seek judicial review of the Secretary’s final decision of those claims while the administrative process is still pending as to the underlying substantive appeals of the “not-in-substantial-compliance” determinations? GOS has not done so, and has not explained this omission. Yet Illinois Council made clear that it is, indeed, possible to channel review of such claims through the agency. “The fact that the agency might not provide a hearing for that particular contention, or may lack the power to provide one ... is beside the point because it is the ‘action’ arising under the Medicare Act that must be channeled through the agency. After the action has been so channeled, the court will consider the contention when it later reviews the action.”
To be clear, the Court is not suggesting that GOS’s failure to present its constitutional and statutory claims to the Secretary amounts to a violation of the nonwaivable, nonexcusable requirement that it present its action arising under the Medicare Act to the agency before bringing it in federal court. As discussed infra, the Supreme Court has deemed this nonwaivable element to be satisfied where a claimant presented to the Secretary a claim that his benefits should not be terminated, without raising a constitutional claim to a pretermination hearing that he later brought in federal court. Mathews v. Eldridge,
It is no response to the foregoing for plaintiff to protest that administrative review of these claims could not be completed in time to allow meaningful judicial review. The Supreme Court in Illinois Council specifically shot down this line of reasoning, concluding that during agency review of such statutory or constitutional claims, the Secretary is capable of proceeding in a nimble and prompt manner. See Illinois Council,
In short, then, the availability of this alternative administrative path, which GOS elected not to take with regard to its constitutional and statutory claims, forecloses it from availing itself of the “no review at all” exception to the § 405(h) special re
D. “Entirely Collateral” Exception.
Next, GOS asserts that the requirements of § 405(g) should be waived because “Plaintiffs claims are entirely collateral to the issues being litigated through the administrative process.” (Doc. 34, at 10.)
In support of this argument, plaintiff relies on Mathews v. Eldridge,
GOS contends that Eldñdge is applicable here and that the exhaustion element embodied in the § 405(g) “final decision” requirement should be deemed waived.
In response, the Secretary posits three arguments against application of Eldñdge here.
Second, the Government contends in conclusory fashion that “jurisdiction is lacking because Gordon Oaks’s claim is not colorable.” (Doc. 26, at 11.) The “color-able” element of this exception is that the claimant must raise “at least a colorable claim that ... an erroneous termination [of benefits] would damage him in a way not recompensable through retroactive payments.” Eldridge,
Third, the Government states that “Plaintiff failed to satisfy the non-waivable presentment requirement; it failed to file a hearing request with the Secretary prior to filing its complaint and motion for temporary restraining order.” (Doc. 26, at 11.) That is incorrect. Plaintiffs January 13, 2012 Request for Appeal unambiguously requests a hearing as to its contention that CMS’s deficiency findings were erroneous. (Doc. 1, Exh. T, at 4.) At the time, plaintiff could not have filed a written request for a hearing as to the January 19, 2012 termination notice because CMS had not prepared it yet. Certainly, the matters on which the January 13 Request for Appeal did request a hearing encompassed many of the very same matters on which the Secretary’s termination decision was grounded. Besides, GOS promptly filed another Request for Appeal on January 30, 2012, this time expressly referencing the termination notice that CMS had issued in the interim. The Court cannot find based on the Government’s skeletal contention on this point that the nonwaivable presentment requirement has not been satisfied.
III. Analysis of Plaintiffs Request for Preliminary Injunction on the Merits.
A. The Rule 65 Framework.
To be eligible for a preliminary injunction under Rule 65, a movant must establish each of the following elements: (1) a substantial likelihood of success on the merits; (2) that irreparable injury will be suffered if the relief is not granted; (3) that the threatened injury outweighs the harm the relief would inflict on the nonmovant; and (4) that entry of the relief would serve the public interest. See Schiavo ex rel. Schindler v. Schiavo,
B. Substantial Likelihood of Success on the Merits.
“A substantial likelihood of success on the merits requires a showing of only likely or probable, rather than certain, success.” United States v. Alabama,
1. Procedural Due Process.
Again, the gravamen of GOS’s procedural due process claim is that it has a constitutional right to an administrative hearing before the Secretary can terminate the Provider Agreement.
In the January 20 Order, the Court cited authority for the proposition that “[hjealth care providers have a constitutionally protected property interest in continued participation in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.” (Doc. 13, at 9-10 n. 13.)
The analysis set forth in these opinions is persuasive. First, the “private interest that will be affected by the official action” is simply not compelling. Eldridge,
Second, “the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest,” Eldridge,
And third, “the Government’s interest,” Eldridge,
In light of both the considerable persuasive authorities finding no right to pretermination hearing for Medicare providers and the undersigned’s preliminary application of the Eldridge factors to this case, the Court is of the opinion that GOS has failed to meet its burden of showing that success is likely or probable on its procedural due process claim.
2. Secretary’s Authority to Terminate without “Immediate Jeopardy.”
As noted, one of GOS’s ultra vires claims is that the Secretary lacks statutory authority to terminate a provider agreement in the absence of a finding of immediate jeopardy.
In seeking to terminate GOS’s Provider Agreement, the Secretary is acting pursuant to its own regulations, which provide in pertinent part as follows: “If a facility’s deficiencies do not pose immediate jeopardy to residents’ health or safety, and the facility is not in substantial compliance, CMS ... may terminate the facility’s provider agreement.” 42 C.F.R. § 488.412(a); see also § 488.412(d) (“CMS terminates the provider agreement ... if the facility is not in substantial compliance within 6 months of the last day of the survey.”); § 488.456(b)(l)(i) (“CMS ... may terminate a facility’s provider agreement if a facility ... [i]s not in substantial compliance with the requirements of participation, regardless of whether or not immediate jeopardy is present”). Unquestionably, the Secretary’s contemplated termination of GOS’s Provider Agreement falls squarely within the terms of these regulations.
Moreover, these regulations do have a reasonable foundation in the text of the Medicare statute. Most significantly, the Act provides that the Secretary “may refuse to renew or may terminate [a provider] agreement after the Secretary ... has determined that the provider fails to comply substantially with the provisions of the agreement, with the provisions of this sub-chapter and regulations thereunder.” 42 U.S.C. § 1395ec(b)(2)(A). Likewise, the statutory provision that GOS contends limits the remedy of termination only to circumstances' of “immediate jeopardy” also states that “[n]othing in this subparagraph shall be construed as restricting the remedies available to the Secretary to remedy a skilled nursing facility’s deficiencies.” 42 U.S.C. § 1395i-3(h)(2)(A). That language directly contradicts plaintiffs reliance on that subparagraph to argue that Congress was trying to restrict the remedies available to the Secretary to remedy a skilled nursing facility’s deficiencies.
In its briefs, plaintiff sets forth its own analysis of the relevant statutory provisions that diverges widely from the regulations and largely overlooks the two statutory sections on which the Secretary relies. Not surprisingly, GOS’s view is that the Medicare statute restricts the Secretary’s use of the termination remedy to circumstances where immediate jeopardy exists.
Nor does plaintiffs position negate the persuasive effect of the district court decisions rejecting this very challenge. See, e.g., Beverly Health & Rehabilitation Services, Inc. v. Thompson,
For these reasons, the Court concludes that plaintiff has not met its burden of showing that it is likely or probable that it will succeed on the merits on its ultra vires claim that the Secretary lacks the statutory authority to terminate a provider agreement in the absence of a finding of immediate jeopardy.
3. Secretary’s Authority to Terminate during Administrative Review.
The third and final ground on which GOS predicates its Motion for Preliminary Injunction is its ultra vires claim that the Medicare statute precludes the Secretary from terminating a provider agreement
In this ultra vires claim, plaintiff relies on the following provision from the Medicare statute: “The remedies described in clauses (i), (ii)(IV), and (iii) of paragraph (2)(B) may be imposed during the pendency of any hearing.” 42 U.S.C. § 1395i-3(h)(5). The enumerated remedies consist of denial of payment, collection of civil money penalties, and appointment of temporary management. Termination of a provider agreement is not listed among the remedies specified in § 1395i — 3(h)(5). GOS contends that this omission bars the Secretary from terminating the Provider Agreement during the pendency of the administrative hearing proceeding that it has now initiated.
Plaintiffs position is substantially undermined by several considerations. First, even though § 1395i-3(h)(5) has been on the books for a quarter century, GOS cannot point to a single published or unpublished decision from any court anywhere interpreting it in the manner plaintiff champions. In other words, GOS is asking this Court to impose a statutory constraint on the Secretary’s termination power that it appears no court has previously recognized. Second, contrary to plaintiffs argument, the statute itself is ambiguous. To be sure, § 1395i — 3(h)(5) unequivocally states that the intermediate sanctions created by the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987’s amendments to the Medicare statute (the “OBRA Amendments”) may be imposed during the administrative hearing process. But it does not specify that only those intermediate sanctions may be imposed, nor does it expressly state that termination may not be imposed until the hearing process concludes. It is thus far from obvious that, as GOS contends, “Congress made a clear policy choice not to include termination as a remedy that the Secretary may utilize during the pendency of hearings.” (Doc. 41, at 3.)
Another important aspect of context is that the OBRA Amendments (including § 1395i-3(h)) were fashioned with the legislative intent of expanding the remedies available to the' Secretary. Prior to the creation of those new remedies, the Secretary’s enforcement mechanism for noncom-pliant Medicare providers was confined to the binary option of terminating or not terminating the provider agreement, with such termination remedy having been created by § 1395ce(b)(2)(A). The OBRA Amendments greatly expanded the remedies available to the Secretary by creating intermediate sanctions, to-wit: denial of payment, imposition of civil money penalties, and appointment of temporary management. See, e.g., Vencor Nursing Centers, L.P. v. Shalala,
Also critical to the context analysis in this case is that GOS’s proposed interpretation of § 1395i — 3(h)(5) would yield a result that is both inconsistent with other aspects of the statute and nonsensical. Significantly, plaintiffs reading of § 1395i— 3(h)(5) would preclude the Secretary from ever terminating a provider agreement as long as an administrative appeal was pending, regardless of how severe and immediate the risks to the care and safety of aged and infirm Medicare patients at the facility might be. Under that construction, a provider’s mere invocation of its administrative appeal rights would necessarily condemn Medicare patients to continue residing and receiving care at a facility where the Secretary has made an initial determination that they are receiving substandard care (and perhaps even egregiously substandard care) until the conclusion of the appeals process, rendering the Secretary powerless to protect those persons during that process and elevating the procedural interests of Medicare providers (who are incidental beneficiaries of the statute) far above the health and safety interests of Medicare patients (who are the primary, designed and intended beneficiaries of the statute).
But this would make no sense.
The bottom line is this: “[T]he Secretary’s responsibility for insuring the safety and care of elderly and disabled Medicare patients is of primary importance” in the Medicare statutory and regulatory scheme. Cathedral Rock,
IV. Conclusion.
Although the Court finds that there is subject-matter jurisdiction over this case under a “entirely collateral” analysis pursuant to Matheios v. Eldridge, GOS has not met its burden of showing a substantial likelihood of success on the merits as to any of the three grounds for relief advanced in its Rule 65 Motion. With respect to the procedural due process claim, it is neither likely nor probable that a constitutional right to a pre-termination administrative hearing exists in this setting. With respect to the ultra vires claims, it is neither likely nor probable that (i) the Medicare statute forbids the Secretary from terminating a provider agreement absent an “immediate jeopardy” finding, or (ii) the Medicare statute forbids the Secretary from terminating a provider agreement if the administrative hearing process is pending. Absent a substantial likelihood of success on the merits as to any of these claims, plaintiff cannot meet its burden of establishing an entitle
For all of these reasons, it is ordered as follows:
1. Plaintiffs Motion for Leave to Exceed Page Limit for Reply Brief (doc. 33) is granted;
2. The Secretary’s Motion to Dismiss (doc. 25) for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction is denied;
3. Plaintiffs construed Motion for Preliminary Injunction (doc. 4) is denied;
4. The Temporary Restraining Order (doc. 13) entered on January 20, 2012 is dissolved and is of no further force or effect; and
5. Inasmuch as plaintiffs claims for permanent injunctive relief remain pending (such that there remains a live case or controversy between the parties, notwithstanding disposition of the Rule 65 Motion), defendants are ordered to file their respective answers to the Complaint on or before February 24, 2012.
Notes
. The Court takes this matter under submission without a hearing. See Local Rule 7.3. Under Circuit law, a hearing is required on a motion for preliminary injunction only if there are contested issues of fact that require credibility determinations. See Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, B.V. v. Consorcio Barr, S.A.,
. The day after briefing closed on the Motion for Preliminary Injunction, defendants filed a document styled "Defendant’s Request for Hearing” (doc. 35) setting forth certain supplemental legal arguments and case authorities. The Court will treat this filing as a surreply and will consider the materials presented therein in resolving the Rule 65 Motion.
. The specific findings and determinations of these surveys are, in large part, beyond the scope of the narrow judicial proceedings instituted by GOS. Nonetheless, it is potentially significant that the January 8 survey did not reveal any deficiencies rising to the level of "immediate jeopardy" to residents' health and safety, and that the sole “immediate jeopardy” deficiency (relating to the faulty performance of a generator during survey testing) identified on January 18 was abated to the surveyors’ satisfaction before they departed the premises. As such, there is no indication that Gordon Oaks is laboring under an "immediate jeopardy" situation at the present time, and the Secretary does not purport to be terminating the Provider Agreement pursuant to an “immediate jeopardy” finding.
. In fairness to defendants, it does not appear that GOS specifically requested that the administrative hearing be expedited until its January 30, 2012 letter, some 11 days after it filed this lawsuit. Moreover, the record shows that GOS did not file a written administrative appeal of deficiencies noted in October 2011 and November 2011 surveys until January 13, 2012, just six days before it filed this lawsuit. That is not to say that GOS’s administrative appeals were untimely, but it is to say that plaintiff does not appear to have been as diligent as it might have been in seeking out an expedited administrative hear
. Again, however, the record is silent as to important questions of timing. How soon could GOS receive a post-termination administrative hearing and decision? How soon after any default event would Gordon Oaks have to vacate the premises if, indeed, the lessor declines to waive the default? It appears, however, that the catastrophic harm to GOS for termination of the Provider Agreement would not be incurred instantaneously up on termination, but that there would be some lag time during which such harm could be avoided via prompt post-termination hearing, assuming that such a hearing could be convened and resolved with sufficient swiftness.
. Because this fact is material to the jurisdictional analysis, the Court has carefully reviewed the administrative appeal papers sub
. This argument must be considered antecedent to reaching the merits of the Motion for Preliminary Injunction. After all, "[i]f the court finds that it does not have subject matter jurisdiction, the court’s sole remaining act is to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction.” Guevara v. Republic of Peru,
. Although § 405(h) is found in the Social Security Act, rather than the Medicare Act, this provision is adopted and incorporated into the Medicare Act by operation of 42 U.S.C. § 1395Ü. See, e.g., Shalala v. Illinois Council on Long Term Care, Inc.,
. The parties and, indeed, many courts colloquially refer to § 405(h) as an exhaustion requirement. In actuality, however, "the bar of § 405(h) reaches beyond ordinary administrative law principles of 'ripeness’ and 'exhaustion of administrative remedies’.... Doctrines of 'ripeness’ and 'exhaustion’ contain exceptions, however, which exceptions permit early review when, for example, the legal question is 'fit' for resolution and delay means hardship ... or when exhaustion would prove 'futile’." Illinois Council,
. See Puerto Rican Ass'n of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Inc. v. United States,
. On this point, Northlake Community Hospital v. United States,
. See also American Chiropractic Ass'n, Inc. v. Leavitt,
. Nowhere in its filings on the request for preliminary injunction does GOS argue that its substantive due process claim either creates a jurisdictional hook or a sufficient merits argument to warrant Rule 65 relief. To the contrary, that claim appears targeted more at the substance of the Secretary’s decision, which overlaps substantially with the administrative appeal and is the kind of judicial review that GOS elsewhere professes not to seek in this case. Accordingly, the Court confines its analysis herein to the procedural due process and ultra vires claims animating plaintiff’s request for preliminary injunction.
. See also Lifestar Ambulance,
. In this case, GOS’s presentment of these claims would allow the Secretary an opportunity to reconsider the propriety of its prac
. In the alternative, GOS maintains that the "no review at all” exception applies because termination of its Provider Agreements "will result in the ultimate destruction of Gordon Oaks long before the administrative process has run its course.” (Doc. 34, at 11.) To be sure, as noted in the January 20 Order granting plaintiff a TRO, GOS has made a substantial showing that its economic and business circumstances, the default provision in its lease, and other realities of plaintiff’s condition render it unlikely that Gordon Oaks can remain in business long enough to conclude the administrative appeals process and have its day in court, such that the prospect of subsequent judicial review may be a mirage. The problem with that argument is that, as the Government correctly explains, it is too closely tied to GOS's individual, specific circumstances to trigger the Illinois Council exception to § 405(h)’s channeling requirement. Fundamentally, what GOS describes is an individual hardship in this isolated, particular case if judicial review is postponed. Plaintiff has not shown that "as applied generally to those covered by a particular statutory provision, hardship likely found in many cases turns what appears to be simply a channeling requirement into complete preclusion of judicial review.” Illinois Council,
. GOS also asserts that it has complied with the nonwaivable "presentment” element because its Notices of Appeal squarely presented a claim for benefits to the Secretary, and did so before GOS initiated this litigation in federal court.
. The Government does not raise any challenge to plaintiffs framing of its claims in this action as "entirely collateral” for purposes of an Eldridge analysis. Accordingly, the Court accepts plaintiff's characterization of its claims in this manner as accurate.
. The validity of this interpretation is bolstered by Illinois Council’s explanation that "the agency can waive many of the procedural steps set forth in § 405(g) ... and a court can deem them waived in certain circumstances, see Eldridge,
. Besides, Illinois Council had no reason to abrogate Eldridge because, fundamentally, Eldridge (like the case at bar) was a case about when waivable exhaustion requirements may be deemed waived when the presentment element is satisfied. See
. The Court recognizes that certain authorities have construed the "colorable” requirement as meaning that the constitutional claim itself must be colorable. See, e.g., Cathedral Rock,
. Insofar as the Secretary’s position is that the § 405(g) presentment requirement obligates GOS to present its due process and ultra vires claims administratively (in addition to the substantive administrative appeals it has already brought), Eldridge shows otherwise. Recall that in Eldridge, the claimant brought an administrative claim for benefits, and instituted a judicial action claiming a constitutional right to a pretermination hearing (which constitutional claim he never presented to the agency). The Eldridge Court readily deemed the presentment requirement satisfied by the claimant’s submission of his benefits claim to the agency, even though he did not present his constitutional claim to the agency. See Eldridge,
. See, e.g., Vencor Nursing,
. By way of example, the record shows that Gordon Oaks provided the surveyors with extensive written materials and rebuttal on January 10, 2012, in response to information furnished by the surveyors at an exit interview on January 7, 2012. (Doc. 1, Exh. S.) This kind of back-and-forth and opportunity to be heard constitutes considerable procedural protection that GOS has already received and enjoyed, albeit without bringing about a modification of the Secretary’s termination decision.
. The critical provision on which plaintiff relies reads that if the Secretary determines that a skilled nursing home's deficiencies “(i) immediately jeopardize the health or safety of its residents, the Secretary shall take immediate action to remove the jeopardy and correct the deficiencies ..., or terminate the facility's participation under this subchapter and may provide, in addition, for one or more of the other remedies described in subparagraph (B); or (ii) do not immediately jeopardize the health or safety of its residents, the Secretary may impose any of the remedies described in subparagraph (B).” 42 U.S.C. § 13951— 3(h)(2)(A). Plaintiff contends that inclusion of the termination remedy in subsection (i) (which covers immediate jeopardy situations)
. The Court is, of course, well aware of the interpretive canon expressio unius est exclusio alterius, on which GOS’s argument rests. "The principle of expressio unius simply says that when a legislature has enumerated a list or series of related items, the legislature intended to exclude similar items not specifically included in the list.” Christian Coalition of Florida, Inc. v. United States,
. As previously discussed, the termination remedy was created by 42 U.S.C. § 1395cc(b)(2)(A), which authorized the Secretary to "terminate [a provider] agreement after the Secretary ... has determined that the provider fails to comply substantially with the provisions of the agreement, with the provisions of this subchapter and regulations thereunder.” Id. That termination remedy predates the OBRA Amendments, of which § 13 95i — 3(h)(5) is a part.
. Despite its weaknesses in other respects, plaintiffs position has the virtue of being unwavering and unflinching. Under plaintiff’s reading of the statute, there can be no distinction between immediate jeopardy and other situations for purposes of this section. Either way, the provider’s initiation of the appeals process would block the Secretary from terminating the Medicare provider agreement. GOS acknowledges (as it must) that its reading of § 1395i — 3(h)(5) would forbid the Secretary from terminating a provider agreement even in the most dire of immediate jeopardy circumstances until such time as the administrative hearing process is concluded. Plaintiff insists that this was a conscious, intentional "policy choice” by Congress, to forbid the Secretary from taking any stronger action beyond appointment of temporary management whilst the appeals process is underway. (Doc. 41, at 6-7.) On its face, appointing a temporary manager would be a woefully inadequate remedy to safeguard Medicare patients' basic care and safety in a host of scenarios. Besides, this purported "policy choice” is contradicted by other statutory provisions. It runs afoul of the responsibilities that Congress expressly imposed on the Secretary. And it is not a clearly articulated policy choice in the text of the statute or the legislative history. Surely, if Congress had intended to adopt the counterintuitive and frankly bizarre policy choices attributed to it by GOS, it would have offered a clear, plain statement of that intent, as contrasted with the weak and ambiguous statutory language on which GOS hangs its hat.
. GOS’s principal critique of the Secretary’s position on the § 1395i-3(h)(5) issue is that there is no "indication of what the Government believes the words used by Congress in subsection (h)(5) actually mean.” (Doc. 41, at 1.) But plaintiff reads the Secretary's brief too narrowly. It is not the Secretary's position that the statute's recitation of intermediate sanctions that may be imposed during the pendency of a hearing is a sentence devoid of any meaning. But it is the Secretary’s position that this sentence of § 1395i — 3 (h.)(5) must be read in context. Again, the context of the 1 OBRA Amendments was that Congress was engrafting a set of intermediate sanctions onto a pre-existing statutory scheme that already authorized the Secretary to terminate the provider agreement of a Medicare provider that was not in substantial compliance with program requirements. Section 1395i-3(h) created those intermediate sanctions, so it comes as no surprise that Congress couched subsection (5) in terms of those intermediate sanctions rather than the termination sanction found elsewhere in the statutory scheme. As the Secretary’s brief puts it, taken in context, the challenged subsection may naturally be read "as an explication of the Secretary's remedial authority established in the OBRA amendments rather than as creating, by implication, a limitation on the pre-existing termination power.” (Doc. 40, at 2.) Accordingly, plaintiff's objection that defendants would read subsection (5) as being meaningless is inaccurate.
