Opinion
Plaintiffs and appellants, a proposed class of individuals representing developmentally disabled foster children and their foster families throughout California, appeal from a judgment entered following the trial court’s order sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend filed by defendants and respondents the State Department of Social Services and its director, John A. Wagner (collectively the DSS). Appellants sought reimbursement of additional foster care benefits allegedly available for the children. The trial court ruled that appellants failed to state a claim, as the additional rates are available only to facilities that have been “vendorized,” or approved to
We affirm. The language of the statutory and regulatory scheme governing developmentally disabled foster children and the policy considerations underlying that scheme require that the facilities into which developmentally disabled foster children are placed be vendorized in order to receive the additional rates referenced in Welfare and Institutions Code sections 4684 and 11464. 1
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In reviewing a trial court’s order sustaining a demurrer, we assume the truth of all facts properly pleaded in the complaint, but we do not assume the truth of contentions, deductions or conclusions of law.
(Moore v. Regents of University of California
(1990)
The Statutory Scheme.
Appellants’ allegations are premised on the applicable statutory and regulatory scheme governing the public benefits provided to foster children with developmental disabilities. California provides foster care benefits to eligible children under a program funded by the state and federal governments. Title IV-E of the Social Security Act, title 42 United States Code section 601 et seq., authorizes the Aid to Families with Dependent Children-Foster Care (AFDC-FC) program. (See generally
State of Cal. Dept. of Social Servs.
v.
Thompson
(9th Cir. 2003)
One requisite element of the state plan is the designation of a “single State agency with authority to administer or supervise the administration of the plan.” (45 C.F.R. § 205.100(a)(l)(i) (2007); see also 45 C.F.R. § 1355.30(p)(4) (2007).) The designated single state agency must have authority to make rules and regulations governing the administration of the plan and may not delegate its authority to exercise discretion in the administration and supervision of the plan. (45 C.F.R. § 205.100(a)(l)(ii), (b)(1).) Though other state
Having elected to participate in the AFDC-FC program, California has submitted a state plan and enacted a statutory scheme designed to comply with the federal requirements. (See § 10000 et seq.; see also
County of Alameda v. Carleson
(1971)
The Legislature has determined that the provision of public social services, including foster care, is a county function and responsibility subject to any applicable state and federal statutes and regulations. (§ 10800.) Counties are responsible for a public system of statewide child welfare services, which includes providing for the investigation of possible abuse or neglect of a child warranting removal from parental custody. (§§ 300 et seq., 16500 et seq.) A child removed from his or her home pursuant to the dependency statutes and placed in foster care becomes eligible to receive AFDC-FC benefits. (§§ 11400, subd. (a), 11401, 11460.) According to section 11404, subdivision (a), “a child is not eligible for AFDC-FC unless responsibility for placement and care of the child is with the county welfare department Eligibility for AFDC-FC is also dependent on the agency with the responsibility for the child’s placement and care developing a case plan for the child, defined in pertinent part as a “written document that, at a minimum, specifies the type of home in which the child shall be placed, the safety of that home, and the appropriateness of that home to meet the child’s needs. It shall also include the agency’s plan for ensuring that the child receive proper care and protection in a safe environment, and shall set forth the appropriate services to be provided to the child, the child’s family, and the foster parents, in order to meet the child’s needs while in foster care, and to reunify the child with the child’s family.” (§ 11400, subd. (b); see § 11404, subd. (b).)
“Foster care providers shall be paid a per child per month rate in return for the care and supervision of the AFDC-FC child placed with them.” (§ 11460, subd. (a).) Section 11460 further defines “care and supervision” to include
The State Department of Developmental Services (DDS) is responsible for the execution of laws and the establishment of rules and regulations relating to the care, custody and treatment of developmentally disabled persons. (§§ 4416, 4417.) The Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act (Lanterman Act; § 4500 et seq.), contains provisions affording assistance to developmentally disabled individuals; such services are governed by a separate state plan. (§§ 4561-4568, 4675.) For purposes of the Lanterman Act, a developmental disability is one that originates before an individual is 18 years old, continues or can be expected to continue indefinitely, constitutes a substantial disability, and includes “mental retardation, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, and autism. This term shall also include disabling conditions found to be closely related to mental retardation or to require treatment similar to that required for individuals with mental retardation, but shall not include other handicapping conditions that are solely physical in nature.” (§4512, subd. (a); see also Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, §54000, subds. (a), (b).)
A county social worker may refer a foster child believed to have developmental disabilities to a “regional center” for evaluation. Established by the Lanterman Act, regional centers are private, nonprofit corporations that contract with the DDS to help the state carry out its responsibilities to developmentally disabled persons and their families. (§§ 4620-4622, 4629.) To be eligible for regional center services, an individual must have a developmental disability that falls within the definition provided by section 4512, subdivision (a). (§§ 4643, subd. (b), 4643.5; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 54010, subd. (b).) Regional centers develop individual program plans for eligible individuals that are designed to address identified goals and objectives through the provision of specified services and supports. (§§ 4646, 4646.5, 4648.)
As directed by statute, the DDS has “adopt[ed] regulations that specify rates for community care facilities serving persons with developmental disabilities.” (§ 4681.1, subd. (a).) According to the regulations, a “ ‘[f]aridity’ means a licensed community care facility as defined in Health and Safety Code Section 1502(a)(1), (4), (5) or (6)... , which has been vendorized as a residential facility by a regional center . . . .” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17,
The facility rates specified in section 4681.1 are referred to as “ARM rates” because they are premised on the model identified in the DDS’s April 1987 report entitled “Alternative Residential Model.” (See former § 4681.1, subd. (c), added by Stats. 1988, ch. 85, § 2, p. 384, eff. Apr. 22, 1988.) The ARM rates correspond to a facility’s service level. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, §§ 56902, 56910-56915.) A facility’s “ ‘[s]ervice [l]evel’ means one of a series of 4 levels which has been approved for each facility by a regional center. Service Levels 2, 3 and 4 have a specified set of requirements that a facility must meet which addresses the direct supervision and special services for consumers within that facility.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 56002, subd. (a)(44).) Service level 1 through 4 facilities must possess a valid community care facility license issued by the DSS and “shall be vendorized by a regional center pursuant to the requirements of Title 17, California Code of Regulations, Chapter 3, Subchapter 2.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 56004, subds. (a), (b).)
A foster child who is eligible to receive regional center services is commonly referred to as a “dual agency child.” Section 4684 addresses funding for out-of-home nonmedical care and supervision of dual agency children and, prior to its 2007 amendments, provided: “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the cost of providing 24-hour out-of-home nonmedical care and supervision in licensed community care facilities shall be funded by the Aid to Families with Dependent Children-Foster Care (AFDC-FC) program pursuant to Section 11464, for children who are both AFDC-FC recipients and regional center clients. [][] Regional centers shall pay the cost of services which they authorize for AFDC-FC recipients but which are not allowable under state or federal AFDC-FC program requirements. Regional centers shall accept referrals for evaluations of AFDC-FC eligible children
In turn, prior to its repeal in 2007, former section 11464 addressed the rates for dual agency children, stating: “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the State Department of Social Services shall use the residential facility rates established by the State Department of Developmental Services to determine rates to be paid for 24-hour out-of-home nonmedical care and supervision of children who are both regional center clients pursuant to Section 4684 and AFDC-FC recipients under the provisions of this chapter and placed in licensed community care facilities, [f] Any services authorized by a regional center for AFDC-FC recipients that are not allowable under state or federal AFDC-FC program requirements shall be paid pursuant to Section 4684.”
The Trial Court Proceedings.
Appellants are an uncertified class comprised of current and former foster children and their foster families who contend that they were entitled to receive additional benefits in the form of payment of the ARM rates because of the children’s developmental disabilities. Appellants fall into one of three subclasses: (1) dual agency children under age 18 who at any time since 1987 were placed in licensed community care facilities that did not receive the ARM rates; (2) dual agency children over age 18 who were placed in licensed community care facilities that did not receive the ARM rates at any point within the applicable limitations period; and (3) persons who were foster parents of the children identified within the foregoing groups at any point within the applicable limitations period.
In 2005, appellants filed approximately 10 identical class action lawsuits in various counties throughout California, alleging an underpayment of foster care benefits to dual agency children. They contended the statutory scheme did not require a licensed community care facility into which a dual agency child had been placed to be vendorized by a regional center in order to receive the ARM rates. The Judicial Council of California coordinated the actions pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 3.550, assigning a single judge, the caption “Social Services Payment Cases” and case
In April 2006, appellants filed their master complaint against the DSS and its director, and the Counties, including Los Angeles County (County). They alleged causes of action for underpayment of social services, declaratory relief, injunctive relief and writ of mandate on the ground that the DSS had improperly denied payment of the ARM rates to licensed community care facilities providing nonmedical care and supervision for dual agency children. The DSS demurred, as did the Counties. The County also filed a supplemental demurrer in which several other Counties joined. They argued that the applicable statutes and regulations, when read together, demonstrated vendorization was a prerequisite for a licensed community care facility’s receipt of the ARM rates and that, therefore, nonvendorized facilities were ineligible to receive the ARM rates.
Appellants opposed, asserting that no statute or regulation required that the ARM rates be paid only to a vendorized provider and that imposing such a requirement improperly delegated placement authority to the regional centers in violation of the “single state agency” rule.
Following an August 2006 hearing, the trial court filed an order on November 1, 2006, which sustained the demurrers with leave to amend as to the DSS and without leave to amend as to the Counties. It ruled: “Just as foster parents and foster homes must be licensed in order to receive AFDC-FC benefits, state regulations require foster parents and foster homes to be ‘vendorized’ in order to receive the additional benefits for care of developmentally disabled children authorized by Welfare and Institutions Code sections 4684 and 11464. These regulations are not contrary to statute and must be given deference by the court.” Finding ambiguity in the statutory scheme as to whether a licensed community care facility, including an individual foster home, must be vendorized in order to qualify for receipt of the ARM rates, the trial court turned to agency regulations for guidance and reasoned that the applicable regulations supported a vendorization requirement. It further found that its interpretation of the statutory scheme did not violate the single state agency rule, as the vendorization requirement did not interfere with a county’s placement decisions. With respect to the Counties, the trial court concluded they were not proper parties to the litigation because their administration of foster care benefits depended on a delegation from the DSS and they were not permitted to act independently of or contrary to the DSS’s instructions. With respect to the DSS, the trial court granted
Thereafter, in January 2007 appellants filed a first amended master complaint (FAMC). Appellants did not comply with the trial court’s prior order by alleging more limited claims or alleging claims on behalf of a more limited group of caregivers. Rather, they continued to challenge the vendorization requirement through allegations such as: “Interpreting sections 4684 and 11464 of the Welfare and Institutions Code to mean that a regional center must approve a county’s placement decision before a given rate of AFDC-FC funding can be paid to a dual agency child would be inconsistent with the Legislature’s intent to comply with federal funding requirements”; “[Requiring regional centers to approve or disapprove foster care providers or the eligibility for benefits (through vendorization) would be inconsistent with the requirement that a ‘single state agency’ be in charge of foster care”; and “[n]o California statute or regulation expressly states that a licensed community care facility in which a dual agency child has been placed must be vendorized before the foster care rate specified in Welfare and Institutions Code section 11464 can be paid on behalf of the child.” Their only new allegation was that the DSS had acted inconsistently with its current interpretation of the vendorization requirement by placing “hundreds of dual agency children” in nonvendorized placements, paying the ARM rates to numerous dual agency children in those placements, and failing to notify other dual agency children in those placements of the availability of the ARM rates. Appellants sought payment of rates equal to the ARM rates for care and supervision provided by licensed community care facilities to dual agency children since July 1987.
The DSS again demurred. It asserted that appellants were not entitled to any relief as a matter of law because they failed to allege they were placed in or operated a licensed community care facility that was vendorized by or contracted with a regional center. For the most part, its arguments mirrored the bases for the trial court’s previous order sustaining the demurrer. In support of its demurrer, the DSS requested the trial court to take judicial notice of two “all county letters,” as well as the memorandum of points and authorities filed by the Counties in support of the previous demurrer. The DSS issued All County Letter No. 87-64 (ACL 87-64) on April 30, 1987, “to provide further information and instructions to counties regarding the implementation of AB 2520 (Chapter 355, Statutes of 1986).” Under the heading “Eligible Population and Eligible Facilities,” ACL 87-64 provided: “All AFDC-FC recipients who are also receiving services as regional center clients shall be eligible for the rate of payment established by SDDS for 24-hour out-of-home nonmedical care and supervision. The majority of regional center placements are made into facilities of the small family home category,
This time, the trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend. To the extent the FAMC reiterated the allegations in the master complaint that were previously found to be deficient, the trial court adopted the reasoning of its prior order sustaining the DSS’s demurrer. Assuming the truth of the new allegations that the DSS had previously not enforced the vendorization requirement, the trial court found that those allegations did not undermine the DSS’s reliance on its policy requiring vendorization nor did they create any basis for an estoppel to deny the policy.
The trial court thereafter entered judgment in favor of the DSS and this appeal followed. 4
DISCUSSION
Appellants maintain that the trial court erred in sustaining the DSS’s demurrer without leave to amend, asserting that the trial court’s reasoning finds no support in the statutory scheme. They contend that the imposition of a vendorization requirement violates the single state agency rule by improperly delegating authority to the regional centers, that the provisions of the
I. Standard of Review.
A demurrer tests the legal sufficiency of the complaint.
(Hernandez v. City of Pomona
(1996)
We review the trial court’s denial of leave to amend for an abuse of discretion.
(Blank v. Kirwan, supra,
II. The Trial Court Properly Sustained the Demurrer Without Leave to Amend.
The trial court’s order sustaining the DSS’s demurrer without leave to amend incorporated the reasoning of its prior order sustaining the demurrer
A. Statutory Interpretation Principles.
The objective of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the Legislature.
(Hughes v. Board of Architectural Examiners
(1998)
“When the plain meaning of the statutory text is insufficient to resolve the question of its interpretation, the courts may turn to rules or maxims of construction ‘which serve as aids in the sense that they express familiar insights about conventional language usage.’ [Citation.]”
(Mejia v. Reed
(2003)
B. The Statutory Scheme Governing Dual Agency Children Must Be Construed to Require Vendorization for a Licensed Community Care Facility to Receive the ARM Rates.
Separate parts of the Welfare and Institutions Code address services for the developmentally disabled (§ 4500 et seq.) and the provision of AFDC-FC (§ 11400 et seq.). One statute in each of those sections intersects with and cross-references the other to address payment for services provided to developmentally disabled foster children. Former section 4684 provided that “the cost of providing 24-hour out-of-home nonmedical care and supervision in licensed community care facilities shall be funded by the Aid to Families with Dependent Children-Foster Care (AFDC-FC) program pursuant to Section 11464, for children who are both AFDC-FC recipients and regional center clients.” Former section 11464 required that “the State Department of Social Services shall use the residential facility rates established by the State Department of Developmental Services to determine rates to be paid for 24-hour out-of-home nonmedical care and supervision of children who are both regional center clients pursuant to Section 4684 and AFDC-FC recipients under the provisions of this chapter and placed in licensed community care facilities.” To the extent that a regional center authorizes services for a dual agency child that are not payable by AFDC-FC, the regional centers are responsible to pay the cost of those services. (§ 4684.) Both provisions applied “[notwithstanding any other provision of law . . . .” (Former §§ 4684, 11464.)
The question before us is whether a licensed community care facility’s receipt of the ARM rates specified in section 11464 is contingent upon a regional center vendorizing the facility, notwithstanding that payment for “care and supervision” is funded through the AFDC-FC program as opposed to the regional centers. To answer this question, we are guided by
DeVita v. County of Napa
(1995)
Dual agency children fall within the Lanterman Act; they are defined as “regional center clients,” which means they have been determined to suffer from a developmental disability that makes them eligible for regional center services. (§§ 4643, subd. (b), 4643.5, 4684, 11464; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, §§ 54000, subd. (a), 54010, subd. (b).) Under the Lanterman Act, the state has accepted responsibility for these individuals, declaring that it has an obligation to provide an “array of services and supports ... to meet the needs and choices” of the developmentally disabled. (§ 4501.) To fulfill the state’s obligation, the Legislature has directed the regional centers to conduct a number of specified activities for the developmentally disabled—primary among those is “[sjecuring needed services and supports.” (§ 4648, subd. (a).) In order to “secure services and supports that meet the needs of the consumer, as determined in the consumer’s individual program plan,” a regional center may purchase services “pursuant to vendorization or a contract. . . .” (§ 4648, subd. (a)(1), (3); see also
Morohoshi v. Pacific Home
(2004)
With respect to payment for services and supports provided to individuals in out-of-home placements, the Legislature’s expressed goal was to develop a payment system consistent with its obligation to meet the needs of the developmentally disabled: “In order to assure the availability of a continuum of community living facilities of good quality for persons with developmental disabilities, and to ensure that persons placed out of home are in the most appropriate, least restrictive living arrangement, the department shall establish and maintain an equitable system of payment to providers of such services. The system of payment shall include provision for a rate to ensure that the provider can meet the special needs of persons with developmental disabilities and provide quality programs required by this article.” (§ 4680; see also § 4648, subd. (a)(5).)
By statute, rates for licensed community care facilities serving persons with a developmental disability—the ARM rates—are “calculated on the basis of a cost model designed by the [DDS] which ensures that aggregate facility payments support the provision of services to each person in accordance with his or her individual program plan and applicable program
The statutorily mandated regulations unambiguously make vendorization an inextricable element of the cost model. California Code of Regulations, title 17, section 56001 et seq. describes the facility service levels and approval process for a licensed community care facility to provide services at the specified 1 through 4 levels. According to California Code of Regulations, title 17, section 56004, subdivision (b): “Service Level 1 through 4 facilities shall be vendorized by a regional center pursuant to the requirements of Title 17, California Code of Regulations, Chapter 3, Subchapter 2.” (See also Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 56001 [“Use of the word ‘shall’ denotes mandatory conduct . . . .”].) The regulations provide a “ ‘[facility’ means a licensed community care facility as defined in Health and Safety Code Section 1502(a)(1), (4), (5) or (6) . . . which has been vendorized as a residential facility by a regional center pursuant to the requirements of Title 17, California Code of Regulations, Division 2, Chapter 3, Subchapter 2.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 56002, subd. (a)(15).) Likewise, a “residential service provider” is defined as “an individual or entity which has been licensed by the Department of Social Services as a community care facility pursuant to Health and Safety Code Section 1502(a)(1), (4), (5) or (6);. . . has completed the vendorization process pursuant to Title 17, California Code of Regulations, Division 2, Subchapter 2; and has been assigned a vendor identification number beginning with the letter ‘H’ pursuant to Title 17, California Code of Regulations, Section 54340(a)(1).” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 56002, subd. (a)(41).) Only a “residential service provider” is eligible to receive the ARM rates developed by the DDS pursuant to California Code of Regulations, title 17, section 56900 et seq. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 56917.)
“We adhere to ‘the well-established principle that contemporaneous administrative construction of a statute by the agency charged with its enforcement and interpretation, while not necessarily controlling, is of great weight; and courts will not depart from such construction unless it is clearly erroneous or unauthorized.’ [Citation.]”
(State Compensation Ins. Fund
v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1995)
Public policy considerations further warrant construing the reference in former section 11464 to the residential facility rate to incorporate a vendorization requirement. (See
Behan v. Alexis
(1981)
The applicable regulations specify the program design and staffing ratios that service level 1 through 4 facilities must possess in order to be approved to provide direct supervision and special services at a specified level. (Cal. Code Regs, tit. 17, §§ 56002, subds. (a)(14), (44), (48), 56004-56005.) The ARM rates paid to these facilities are calculated on the basis of multiple factors relating to the services provided by, and the service level of, the facility. (Cal. Code Regs, tit. 17, §§ 56910-56915.) Service level 1 through 4 facilities must be vendorized by a regional center. (Cal. Code Regs, tit. 17, § 56004, subd. (b).) One purpose of the vendor application is to confirm that the facility is capable of providing, and certified or licensed to perform, the services it seeks to provide. (Cal. Code Regs, tit. 17, § 54310.) A regional center’s review of the vendor application, approval or denial of the application, and subsequent quality assurance monitoring and evaluation of the vendor serve as safeguards to help assure that the developmentally disabled are receiving appropriate services and supports from qualified vendors. (Cal. Code Regs, tit. 17, §§ 54320, 54322, 56046-56056.) Dispensing with the vendorization requirement would eliminate these safeguards, to the detriment of developmentally disabled individuals for whom the state is responsible.
Appellants’ authority, however, serves only to highlight that the vendorization requirement does nothing to usurp the DSS’s role as the single state agency responsible for administering foster care. Vendorization does not interfere with the DSS’s placement decisions. As the trial court noted in its prior order sustaining the DSS’s demurrer with leave to amend, county welfare departments retain discretion to place a dual agency child in a licensed community care facility that has not been vendorized; the consequence of doing so is not that the child is removed but simply that the facility does not receive the ARM rates. Indeed, nothing about the vendorization requirement precludes a county social worker from developing a case plan that specifies a nonvendorized placement for a dual agency child. (See § 11400, subd. (b).) Correspondingly, nothing precludes a licensed community care facility where a dual agency child is placed from seeking vendorization. (See Cal. Code Regs., tit. 17, § 56003, subd. (a) [regional center is mandated to provide periodic residential services orientations “for all persons who wish to become vendorized to provide services pursuant to Subchapter 4”].)
Moreover, the DSS continues to be the department “designated the single organizational unit whose duty it shall be to administer a state system for establishing rates in the AFDC-FC program.” (§ 11460, subd. (a).) Foster care rates are designed to cover the “care and supervision” of a foster child, which “includes food, clothing, shelter, daily supervision, school supplies, a child’s personal incidentals, liability insurance with respect to a child, and reasonable
Indeed, the single state agency requirement does not prohibit various state agencies from working in tandem and utilizing each other’s expertise. For example, in
Giles
v.
Horn
(2002)
We likewise reject appellants’ related contention that the trial court improperly relied on provisions of the Lanterman Act to require vendorization
Finally, the trial court’s reliance on the all county letters affords no basis for reversal of the order sustaining the demurrer. In taking judicial notice of ACL 87-64 and ACL 98-28, the trial court concluded they were relevant because they disclosed a consistent, long-standing practice by the DSS to require that licensed community care facilities be vendorized to receive the ARM rates. It expressly ruled that the letters were not independently entitled to judicial deference because they were not issued in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (Gov. Code, § 11340 et seq.). (See
Tidewater Marine Western, Inc. v. Bradshaw
(1996)
Moreover, the trial court was entitled to “accord ‘great weight and respect’ ” to the DSS’s interpretation of sections 4684 and 11464, as the DSS possessed expertise in dealing with the needs of dual agency children and the All County Letters indicated that senior officials had carefully considered how responsibility for addressing those needs should be handled by the county welfare departments in coordination with the regional centers.
(Sharon S.
v.
Superior Court
(2003)
In any event, the trial court’s reliance on the All County Letters was unnecessary to its conclusion that the statutory scheme governing dual agency children requires that the licensed community care facilities into which those children are placed by the DSS through the county welfare departments must be vendorized by a regional center to receive the ARM rates created by the Lanterman Act. The All County Letters merely confirmed that the DSS has acted in conformity with the applicable statutory and regulatory scheme.
C. Appellant’s Allegations Failed to Establish That the DSS Was Estopped to Rely on the Statutory Scheme.
In the FAMC, appellants sought to establish that the DSS was estopped to deny payment of the ARM rates. They alleged that, despite the DSS’s asserted policy and practice of requiring vendorization for receipt of the ARM rates, “over the years” the DSS had placed “hundreds of dual agency children” in nonvendorized licensed community care facilities; it had paid the ARM rates on behalf of dual agency children placed in nonvendorized licensed community care facilities; and it had failed to notify other nonvendorized facilities of the availability of the ARM rates or how to obtain them. The trial court summarily rejected appellants’ contention that these facts formed the basis for an argument that the DSS was estopped to deny payment of the ARM rates to nonvendorized facilities. The trial court ruled: “Plaintiffs’ ‘estoppel’ argument really is nothing more than a restatement of their contention that, when a county welfare department decides to place a dual agency child in a foster family home, DSS is required to pay the additional section 11464 rates automatically because the placement has been determined
While the doctrine of equitable estoppel may be applied against the government where justice and right require, it will not be applied if doing so would effectively nullify a strong rule of policy adopted for the benefit of the public.
(City of Long Beach v. Mansell
(1970)
Appellants’ allegations satisfied none of the requisite elements. With respect to the DSS’s knowledge of the facts, appellants alleged that the DSS placed dual agency children into nonvendorized facilities. But the vendorization requirement dictates whether the licensed community care facility is eligible to receive the ARM rates, not whether the DSS may place a dual agency child in the facility. Second, appellants did not allege how the DSS intended for any conduct in which it engaged to be acted upon by them. Third, appellants failed to allege they were ignorant of the ARM rates or of the vendorization requirement. Finally, appellants failed to allege that they relied on any action or inaction on the part of the DSS in accepting placement of dual agency children. Appellants’ allegations stand in sharp contrast to the undisputed facts in
Canfield
v.
Prod
(1977)
Even if there were some manner in which we could construe appellants’ allegations to satisfy the elements of equitable estoppel, we would conclude the trial court properly declined to apply the doctrine to save the FAMC because its application would thwart the public policy considerations served by requiring vendorization.
Lentz
v.
McMahon, supra,
49 Cal.3d at pages 401 to 402 does not compel a different result. There, the court concluded that
The trial court correctly determined that appellants failed to allege the elements of estoppel and that, in any event, their estoppel argument was contrary to the statutory and regulatory scheme.
D. The Trial Court Properly Exercised Its Discretion in Denying Leave to Amend.
In its order sustaining the demurrer to the FAMC without leave to amend, the trial court reiterated the limitation of its prior order, explaining that it had permitted appellants “to ‘amend their complaint to limit this action to a class of dual agency children who have been placed in vendorized licensed community care facilities ....’” Appellants did not amend their complaint so as to limit the class of individuals and facilities seeking relief; instead they added allegations to support their equitable estoppel theory.
Appellants have the burden to demonstrate that the trial court abused its discretion in denying leave to amend.
(Goodman v. Kennedy
(1976)
The judgment of dismissal is affirmed. The DSS is entitled to its costs on appeal.
Boren, P. J., and Ashmann-Gerst, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied December 12, 2008, S167824.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
A “ ‘[Community care facility’ means any facility, place, or building that is maintained and operated to provide nonmedical residential care, day treatment, adult day care, or foster family agency services for children, adults, or children and adults, including, but not limited to, the physically handicapped, mentally impaired, incompetent persons, and abused or neglected children, and includes” a residential facility, foster family agency, foster family home and small family home. (Health & Saf. Code, § 1502, subd. (a)(1), (4), (5), (6).)
Section 4684 was amended and section 11464 was repealed and reenacted in 2007 to provide specified rates for care and supervision provided to dual agency children in nonvendorized placements and to unambiguously establish the requirement of vendorization for a facility seeking receipt of the ARM rates. (See §§ 4684, 11464, amended by Stats. 2007, ch. 177, eff. Aug. 24, 2007.) Appellants’ claims are based on the prior versions of the statutes and are not affected by the amendment or repeal.
Although the appeal was taken from the nonappealable order sustaining the demurrer, we treat the notice of appeal as a premature but valid notice of appeal from the subsequently entered judgment. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.104(e)(2).)
Notwithstanding the statutes governing dual agency children, the DSS retains discretion to pay a “ ‘specialized care increment,’ ” which “means an approved amount paid with state participation on behalf of an AFDC-FC child requiring specialized care to a home listed in subdivision (a) in addition to the basic rate.” (§ 11461, subd. (e)(1).)
