MARVIN GRUBY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. THE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH, LAMAR HASBROUCK, in His Official Capacity as Director of Public Health, and MANORCARE HEALTH AND REHABILITATION SERVICES, d/b/a Manorcare Highland Park, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 2-14-0790
Appellate Court of Illinois, Second District
March 26, 2015
Modified upon denial of rehearing June 17, 2015
2015 IL App (2d) 140790
JUSTICE ZENOFF delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Hutchinson and Spence concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Lake County, No. 14-MR-0354; the Hon. Christopher C. Starck, Judge, presiding. Judgment Affirmed.
Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Chicago (Carolyn E. Shapiro, Solicitor General, and Frank Bieszczat, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel), for appellees Lamar Hasbrouck and Department of Public Health.
Matthew R. Heimlich, of McVey & Parsky, LLC, of Chicago, for appellee Manorcare Health and Rehabilitation Services.
OPINION
¶ 1 In this administrative review action, plaintiff, Marvin Gruby, contends that defendant the Illinois Department of Public Health (Department) violated provisions of the Illinois Nursing Home Care Act (Act or Nursing Home Care Act) (
¶ 2 I. BACKGROUND
¶ 3 Plaintiff became a resident of Manorcare’s Highland Park facility in August 2012. On October 7, 2013, Manorcare delivered to plaintiff a notice of involuntary transfer or discharge, as contemplated by section 3-402 of the Act (
¶ 4 A hearing commenced but was continued for various reasons. On February 9, 2014, before the hearing was completed, plaintiff entered Northwestern Memorial Hospital for a preplanned surgical procedure. Two days later, Manorcare informed plaintiff that it would not allow him to return to the facility upon his discharge from the hospital. Plaintiff’s counsel e-mailed Manorcare’s counsel, asserting that plaintiff was entitled to a 10-day bed hold during his hospitalization, pursuant to section 3-401.1 of the Act (
¶ 5 Manorcare then notified the Department via a certified letter that it was “formally withdraw[ing]” its notice of involuntary transfer or discharge, and it asked the Department to “close this file with your office.” In an e-mail to the Department’s administrative law judge (ALJ) assigned to the matter, plaintiff requested that his hearing continue, arguing that it was “illegal and inappropriate for the facility to discharge [him] *** in the middle of his involuntary discharge hearing.” Plaintiff further argued that Manorcare violated the Act’s bed-hold provision by refusing to readmit him following his hospitalization.
¶ 6 On February 18, 2014, the ALJ issued a written report and recommendation, finding that Manorcare had “sent a letter of withdrawal” and that “[t]he Notice of Involuntary Transfer or Discharge would no longer be necessary.” On February 24, 2014, the Department accepted the ALJ’s recommendation and entered a final order “dismissing” Manorcare’s notice of involuntary transfer or discharge and closing the matter without completing plaintiff’s hearing.
¶ 7 Plaintiff timely filed a complaint for administrative review in the circuit court of Lake County. On the Department’s motion, the court dismissed the complaint with prejudice on the ground that the controversy became moot when Manorcare withdrew its notice of involuntary transfer or discharge. Plaintiff timely appeals.
¶ 8 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 9 Plaintiff contends that this appeal presents “a narrow legal issue that has significant public policy implications.” He frames the issue as follows: “[C]an a State and Federally regulated nursing home facility eliminate a resident’s statutorily protected right to an involuntary discharge hearing by simply withdrawing its notice of discharge but simultaneously refusing to allow the resident to return to *** the facility after hospitalization?”
¶ 10 A. Motion to Strike Manorcare’s Brief
¶ 11 As an initial matter, we address plaintiff’s request that we strike Manorcare’s brief for violations of Illinois Supreme Court Rule 341 (eff. Feb. 6, 2013). Plaintiff correctly points out that the brief does not contain any citation of authority or the record, in violation of the requirement that an appellee’s brief contain argument “with citation of the authorities and the pages of the record relied on.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(7), (i) (eff. Feb. 6, 2013).
¶ 12 A party’s brief that fails to substantially conform to the pertinent supreme court rules may justifiably be stricken. Hall v. Naper Gold Hospitality LLC, 2012 IL App (2d) 111151, ¶ 7. The purpose of the rules is to require parties to present clear and orderly arguments, supported by citations of authority and the record, so that this court can properly ascertain and dispose of the issues involved. Hall, 2012 IL App (2d) 111151, ¶ 7. Striking a party’s brief, in whole or in part, is a harsh sanction and is appropriate only when the violations hinder our review. Hall, 2012 IL App (2d) 111151, ¶ 15.
¶ 13 We conclude that Manorcare’s glaring rule violations warrant striking its brief. Not only has Manorcare failed to cite a single authority or the record, but also it has provided only one page of argument, in which it offers nothing of substance
well established that in an administrative review action the appellate court reviews the agency’s decision, not the trial court’s decision. Lambert v. Downers Grove Fire Department Pension Board, 2013 IL App (2d) 110824, ¶ 23. Because Manorcare’s rule violations hinder our review, we strike its brief. We will consider only plaintiff’s and the Department’s briefs.
¶ 14 B. Statutory Background
¶ 15 Before we reach the merits of the appeal, it is helpful to outline the applicable federal and state statutes and regulations, which we group into two categories: (1) those governing the transfer or discharge of residents from nursing homes; and (2) those governing the reservation of beds for residents who leave nursing facilities for temporary hospitalizations.
¶ 16 1. Statutes and Regulations Governing Transfer or Discharge
¶ 17 As part of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987, Congress enacted amendments to the Social Security Act that comprehensively revised and strengthened the statutory provisions applicable to nursing facilities that participate in Medicare or Medicaid. Pub. L. No. 100-203, §§ 4201-4218, 101 Stat. 1330 (1987) (codified as amended in scattered sections of
¶ 18 Pertinent here, FNHRA requires each state participating in the Medicaid program to ensure that Medicaid-certified nursing facilities in the state comply with certain federal statutory requirements.
¶ 19 FNHRA further provides that, as a condition of participating in Medicaid, a state must provide an appeals process for transfers or discharges of residents from nursing facilities.
transferred or discharged.”
¶ 20 Although FNHRA does not define “transfer” or “discharge,” CMS has defined the terms in its regulations. “Transfer” is defined, in pertinent part, as “movement from an entity that participates *** in Medicaid as a nursing facility *** to another institutional setting when the legal responsibility for the care of the resident changes from the transferring facility to the receiving facility.”
¶ 21 By enacting the Nursing Home Care Act, Illinois has implemented standards for nursing facilities, consistent with FNHRA. The Act provides that “[a] facility may involuntarily transfer or discharge a resident only for one or more of the following reasons: (a) for medical reasons; (b) for the resident’s physical safety; (c) for the physical safety of other residents, the facility staff or facility visitors; or (d) for either late payment or nonpayment for the resident’s stay.”
¶ 22 Consistent with the federal statute, the Act requires a nursing facility to give written notice to a resident prior to an involuntary transfer or discharge.
¶ 23 The written notice required under section 3-403 of the Act must contain, among other things, a notification of the resident’s right to request a hearing before the Department on the issue of transfer or discharge.
filing of the hearing request.2
¶ 24 The Department’s administrative regulations implementing the transfer and discharge provisions of the Act are found in section 300.330 of Title 77 of the Illinois Administrative Code (77 Ill. Adm. Code 300.330 (2011)) and are consistent with the Act’s provisions. Likewise, the Department’s definitions of “transfer” and “discharge” are identical to the Act’s definitions. 77 Ill. Adm. Code 300.330 (2011).
¶ 25 2. Statutes and Regulations Governing Bed Holds
¶ 26 FNHRA also requires any nursing facility participating in Medicaid to provide a written notice of its bed-hold policy to a resident who is transferred to a hospital.
¶ 27 The only provision under Illinois law regarding readmission of nursing-facility residents following hospitalizations is contained in section 3-401.1 of the Act. That section provides that a nursing facility participating in Medicaid “is prohibited from failing or refusing to retain as a resident any person because he or she is a recipient of or an applicant for [Medicaid].”
¶ 28 C. Plaintiff’s Right to an Involuntary Transfer or Discharge Hearing
¶ 29 With the applicable statutory and regulatory background in place, we now turn to the merits. Plaintiff argues that the Department erred in declining to complete the hearing on his involuntary transfer or discharge from Manorcare. He contends that, even after Manorcare withdrew its notice of involuntary transfer
section 3-401.1(a-10) of the Act. He further contends that the Department’s failure to conduct a full administrative hearing violated his right to procedural due process.
¶ 30 The Department responds that a hearing on a planned involuntary transfer or discharge provides a facility with an opportunity to prove to the Department that the transfer or discharge is authorized under the Act. The Department contends that, following Manorcare’s withdrawal of its notice, Manorcare was no longer seeking the Department’s approval of an involuntary transfer or discharge. Thus, the Department argues, it no longer had the statutory authority to conduct a hearing. The Department further points out that, if plaintiff believed that Manorcare violated the Act when it failed to readmit him to the facility, he could have filed a complaint pursuant to section 3-702 of the Act (
¶ 31 As noted above, in an administrative review action, this court reviews the agency’s decision, not the trial court’s decision. Lambert, 2013 IL App (2d) 110824, ¶ 23. The applicable standard of review depends upon whether the issue presents a question of law, a question of fact, or a mixed question of fact and law. American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees, Council 31 v. Illinois State Labor Relations Board, State Panel, 216 Ill. 2d 569, 577 (2005). When an appeal presents a question of law, as this appeal does, our review is de novo. American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees, Council 31, 216 Ill. 2d at 577; see also Slepicka v. Illinois Department of Public Health, 2014 IL 116927, ¶ 13 (an issue of statutory construction presents a question of law, reviewed de novo).
¶ 32 In construing a statute, our primary aim is to ascertain and give effect to the legislature’s intent. Slepicka, 2014 IL 116927, ¶ 14. The best indicator of legislative intent is the language of the statute, which must be given its plain, ordinary, and popularly understood meaning. Slepicka, 2014 IL 116927, ¶ 14. A court should not read language in isolation but must consider it in the context of the entire statute. Slepicka, 2014 IL 116927, ¶ 14. “Each word, clause and sentence of a statute must be given a reasonable construction, if possible, and should not be rendered superfluous.” Slepicka, 2014 IL 116927, ¶ 14. “Clear and unambiguous language will be enforced as written.” Slepicka, 2014 IL 116927, ¶ 14.
¶ 33 The parties frame the issue on appeal as pertaining to the Department’s statutory authority to conduct a hearing after Manorcare withdrew its notice of involuntary transfer or discharge. Plaintiff contends that the Department had the authority to conduct a hearing as long as Manorcare planned to transfer or discharge him, regardless of whether Manorcare had withdrawn its notice. The Department contends that a notice of transfer or discharge is akin to a complaint in a civil suit, such that Manorcare’s withdrawal of the notice deprived the Department of the authority to conduct a hearing.
¶ 34 Plaintiff’s claim of error on appeal depends upon the proposition that, when Manorcare informed him that it would not readmit him to the facility following his hospitalization, he was entitled to the continuation of his discharge hearing to address this matter. However, after reviewing the language of FNHRA and the Act, we conclude that this proposition is incorrect.
¶ 35 We first address the language of FNHRA and the federal regulations promulgated to implement it. FNHRA provides that any resident who is the subject of a planned transfer or
discharge is entitled to notice and a hearing.
¶ 36 Rather, a resident’s readmission to a nursing facility following a hospitalization is governed by separate provisions of FNHRA. Specifically, again, when a resident is transferred to a hospital, a nursing facility must provide written notice to the resident and an immediate family member or legal representative of any applicable state provisions and of the facility’s written policy regarding readmission following a hospitalization.
¶ 37 Reading the language of FNHRA’s provisions together, the clear and unambiguous meaning is that a nursing-facility resident is entitled to notice of and a hearing on a transfer or discharge, but not on a refusal of readmission following a hospitalization. Although FNHRA requires a nursing facility to readmit a resident upon the first availability of a bed, it does not contemplate a hearing if a resident is denied readmission. Indeed, FNHRA requires each state participating in Medicaid to provide an appeals process for “transfers and discharges” of residents from nursing facilities.
discharge from a facility” is entitled to a hearing before the Department (
¶ 39 Based on the foregoing, we reject plaintiff’s contention that the Department erred in failing to complete the hearing on his involuntary transfer or discharge. The hearing commenced after Manorcare provided plaintiff with a notice of involuntary transfer or discharge and plaintiff requested a hearing before the Department. However, plaintiff then voluntarily left Manorcare for a preplanned surgical procedure at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. According to plaintiff, he remained a resident of Manorcare during this time, such that its refusal to readmit him constituted an involuntary discharge from the facility. As explained above, however, plaintiff was considered to be a resident during his hospitalization only for purposes of section 3-401.1 of the Act. Accordingly, when Manorcare withdrew its notice, there was no longer a planned transfer or discharge—as those terms are defined in the Act—requiring the Department’s authorization. Likewise, for the reasons explained above, Manorcare’s refusal to readmit plaintiff following his hospitalization did not trigger any right to a hearing under FNHRA or the CMS regulations.
¶ 40 Our conclusion in this case is not unprecedented. A similar issue arose in Massachusetts, and the Medicaid agency of that state ultimately revised the applicable state regulations to provide a right to a hearing for any resident who is denied readmission to a nursing facility following a brief hospitalization. Although both are unpublished cases, Short v. Department of Public Health, No. CA922568B, 1995 WL 809557 (Mass. Super. Ct. Mar. 13, 1995), and Brunelle v. Commissioner of the Division of Medical Assistance, No. 01-P-1113, 2003 WL 21556941 (Mass. App. Ct. July 10, 2003), are helpful because they outline this background. See Nulle v. Krewer, 374 Ill. App. 3d 802, 806 n.2 (2007) (this court is free to use the reasoning in an unpublished opinion from another state).
¶ 41 In Short, a group of nursing-home residents brought a class action suit against the Massachusetts Medicaid agency, seeking to compel it to comply with FNHRA’s transfer and discharge notice
¶ 42 A similar issue arose in Brunelle. In that case, the Medicaid agency ruled that a resident who had been denied readmission to a nursing facility following a hospitalization was not entitled to a hearing, because the facility’s refusal to readmit the resident was neither a “transfer” nor a “discharge.” Brunelle, 2003 WL 21556941, at *1. The resident appealed the decision, and, while the appeal was pending, the agency acknowledged the “gap” in the law and amended its regulations to close the gap. Brunelle, 2003 WL 21556941, at *1. As the court explained:
“The [agency] *** recognized that the lack of any procedural mechanism in the then-applicable Federal regulations to grant a hearing where a nursing facility denied a patient readmission following a brief hospitalization was a gap in the law that could adversely affect nursing facility patients, and it amended the Massachusetts regulations, effective April 1, 2002. The amendment created a right to a hearing in circumstances where a patient, such as Brunelle, is hospitalized on a short-term basis and, upon discharge, is later denied readmittance to a nursing facility.” Brunelle, 2003 WL 21556941, at *1.
Acknowledging that the new regulations resolved the controversy before it, the court then dismissed the appeal as moot. Brunelle, 2003 WL 21556941, at *1-2.
¶ 43 The experience of Massachusetts provides helpful guidance. It supports our conclusion that neither FNHRA nor CMS’s regulations provide a right to a hearing for an individual who is denied readmission to a nursing facility following a hospitalization. In addition, it shows that the responsibility for effecting any change in the law falls to the legislature or the Department, not this court. The amended regulations in Massachusetts explicitly define a nursing facility’s failure to readmit a resident following a hospitalization as both a “transfer” and a “discharge.” Brunelle, 2003 WL 21556941, at *1 n.1. It is up to the legislature or the Department to determine if a similar revision to the Act or to the Department’s regulations is appropriate in Illinois.
¶ 44 D. Plaintiff’s Right to Procedural Due Process
¶ 45 Plaintiff also contends that the Department’s failure to conduct a full administrative hearing violated his right to procedural due process. However, the only argument plaintiff offers in support of this contention is that, when an agency
¶ 46 As we determined above, the Department did not violate FNHRA, the federal regulations, the Act, or the Department’s regulations when it declined to complete plaintiff’s hearing. Accordingly, plaintiff’s argument that the Department failed to follow established internal guidelines requiring notice and a hearing fails.
¶ 47 We further point out, as the Department does, that plaintiff could have submitted to the Department a request for an investigation pursuant to section 3-702 of the Act. That section permits any person who believes that the Act or a rule promulgated under the Act has been violated to request an investigation.
¶ 48 III. PETITION FOR REHEARING
¶ 49 After we filed our original opinion on March 26, 2015, plaintiff filed a petition for rehearing pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 367 (eff. Jan. 1, 2015). In his petition, he indicates that, on March 1, 2015, he was discharged from his nursing facility into the community and no longer requires skilled nursing care. He states that this appeal “may be moot,” citing In re Tekela, 202 Ill. 2d 282 (2002).
¶ 50 In Tekela, which was a termination-of-parental-rights case, the supreme court held that the appellate court should have vacated its opinion when it learned, after filing its opinion, that the children had been adopted while the appeal was pending. Tekela, 202 Ill. 2d at 292. The court explained that, even though the appellate court was unaware of the adoption when it filed its opinion, the adoption rendered the appeal moot. Tekela, 202 Ill. 2d at 292, 297.
¶ 51 Notably, in the section of his original appellant’s brief addressing the trial court’s determination that the matter became moot when Manorcare withdrew its notice of involuntary transfer or discharge, plaintiff argued that the public-interest exception to the mootness doctrine applied to this case. We agree. Thus, even assuming arguendo that this appeal became moot on March 1, 2015, we need not vacate our opinion.
¶ 52 The public-interest exception applies when: (1) the question presented is of a substantial public nature; (2) there is a need for an authoritative determination for the future guidance of public officers; and (3) the question is likely to recur. Felzak v. Hruby, 226 Ill. 2d 382, 393 (2007). The first criterion “is only satisfied when it has been clearly established that the issue is of ‘sufficient breadth, or has a significant effect on the public as a whole.’ ” In re Marriage of Eckersall, 2015 IL 117922, ¶ 15 (quoting Felzak, 226 Ill. 2d at 393). Our legislature considers compliance with the Act to be of such public significance that it has deemed the operation of a nursing facility in violation of the Act to be “a public nuisance inimical to the public welfare.”
¶ 54 Also in his petition for rehearing, plaintiff contends that we ignored that FNHRA and the Act provided him the right to readmission to Manorcare following his hospitalization. We clarify that nothing in this opinion addresses plaintiff’s right to readmission following his hospitalization. Our holding is limited to the conclusion that plaintiff did not have the right to a hearing upon Manorcare’s refusal to readmit him following his hospitalization. As we said,
in order to challenge Manorcare’s failure to readmit him, plaintiff needed to file a complaint with IDHP, as section 3-702 of the Act permitted him to do.
¶ 55 IV. CONCLUSION
¶ 56 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Department’s decision and the judgment of the circuit court of Lake County.
¶ 57 Affirmed.
