Case Information
*1 ================================================================= This оpinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports. ----------------------------------------------------------------- No. 80 In the Matter of Edna Shannon, &c. Family Service Society of Yonkers, Petitioner, v. Westchester County Department of Social Services, Appellant, Eastchester Rehabilitation & Health Center, Respondent.
Eileen Campbell O'Brien, for appellant. Sаrah C. Lichtenstein, for respondent.
FAHEY, J.:
On this appeal we are called upon to determine whether Mental Hygiene Law § 81.44 permits a guardian to retain property of an incapacitated person after the incapacitated person has died for the purpose of paying a claim against the incapacitated person that arose before such person’s death. We conclude that it does not.
I.
Respondent Eastchester Rehabilitation & Health Care Center (Eastchester), a skilled nursing facility, began to care for Edna Shannon in December 2005. Approximately three years later, respondent Westchester County Department of Social Services (DSS) determined that Shannon was eligible for Medicaid benefits as of September 1, 2008. In April 2009, and pursuant to Eastchester’s request, Supreme Court appointed petitioner, Family Service Society of Yonkers (FSS Yonkers), as guardian of Shannon’s person and property. Shannon was discharged from Eastchester to another skilled nursing facility in November 2009.
In June 2010, Eastchester made a claim with FSS Yonkers seeking compensation for approximately $164,000 in services it rendered to Shannon that were not covered by Medicaid. Some three months later, DSS advised FSS Yonkers that Shannon was indebted to DSS in the approximate amount of $166,000 for medical assistance paid оn her behalf. Supreme Court approved the sale of Shannon’s real property for $308,000 in January 2011, and Shannon died at age 87 in December 2011. In the meantime, Shannon’s debts to Eastchester and DSS had grown such that by summer 2012 more than $200,000 was owed to each of those entities. By then, slightly less than $190,000 of Shannon’s property remained. The question whether that property, which consisted of cash and securities, remained in Shannon’s guardianship account or became the property of her estate lies at the core of this appeal.
In August 2012 FSS Yonkers commenced this proceeding to
settle its final account as to the guardianship seeking a
determination whеther it was required to pay Shannon’s remaining
property in equal amounts to DSS and Eastchester in satisfaction
of their claims, or whether it should disburse the property in
some other manner. By order entered in February 2013, Supreme
Court held that the balance of Shannon’s remaining property (save
for $9,000 that the court instructed FSS Yonkers to pay to its
attorneys and to the court examiner for services rendered in
connection with the guardianship estate) should be paid to DSS in
satisfaction of DSS’s claim (see Social Services Law § 369 [2]
[b] [i] [B] [permitting recovery for medical assistance correctly
paid “from the estate of an individual who was (55) years of age
or older when he or she received such assistance,” subject to
certain qualifications immaterial here]). On appeal, the
Appellate Division reversed insofar as appealed from, with the
majority holding “that since Eastchester’s claim arose before
Shannon’s death, and [Mental Hygiene Law §] 81.44 (d) allows [FSS
Yonkers] to retain assets to secure known claims, Eastchester’s
claim has priority over that of DSS, which arose after Shannon’s
death” (
The dissenter, however, “would [have] affirm[ed] Supreme Court’s determination that the Medicaid lien imposed by Social Services Law § 104 (1) takes precedence over a claim by the general crеditor, . . . Eastchester” (id. at 133-134 [Freedman, J., dissenting]). The dissenter concluded that “[o]nce . . . Shannon died, all funds other than those reserved for the administration of her guardianship in accordance with Mental Hygiene Law § 81.44 passed to her estate” (id. at 134), and that DSS thus had a claim superior to that of Eastchester against Shannon’s property (sеe id. at 136, citing Social Services Law § 104 [1]). We subsequently granted DSS leave to appeal (24 NY3d 904, 905 [2014]) and, for the reasons that follow, we now reverse the order of the Appellate Division insofar as appealed from. [1]
II.
The Medicaid program is designed “to pay for necessary
medical care for those eligible individuals whоse income and
resources do not allow them to meet the costs of their medical
needs” (Matter of Golf v New York State Dept. of Social Servs
.
,
Given the pertinent language of Social Services Law § 104 (1), to the extent that both DSS and Eastchester seek to recover from Shannon’s estate, DSS’s claim against property that passed to the estate would have priority over a competing claim brought by Eastchester because Eastchester did not take a judgment against Shannon before she died. Indeed, absent a judgment, Eastchester would be a gеneral creditor, that is, “[a] creditor [that], upon giving credit, takes no rights against specific property of the debtor” (Black’s Law Dictionary 449, 450 [10th ed 2014]), and, in theory, a claim it made against property in Shannon’s estate would be subservient to any claim of DSS against such property. However, this appeal does not present а question of competing claims against property in Shannon’s estate. Rather, the issue is whether property held by FSS Yonkers as Shannon’s guardian at the time of Shannon’s death automatically became the property of her estate or could be withheld by FSS Yonkers for the purpose of paying the claim, out of the guardianshiр account, that Eastchester had noticed before Shannon died.
As the dissenter at the Appellate Division noted, FSS
Yonkers’s authority as Shannon’s guardian expired with Shannon’s
death (see
“Within [150] days of the death of the incapacitated person, the guardian shall serve upon the personal representative of the decedent's estate or where there is no personal representative, upon the public administrator or chief fiscal officer, a
statement of assets and notice of claim, and, except for property retained to secure any known claim, lien or administrative costs of the guardianship pursuant to subdivision (e) of this section , shall deliver all guardianship property to: “1. the duly appointed personal representative of the deceased incapacitated person's estate, or “2. the public administrator or chief fiscal officer given notice of the filing оf the statement of death, where there is no personal representative. . . .” (emphasis added).
Subdivision (e) of section 81.44, in turn, states that,
“[u]nless otherwise ordered by the court . . ., the guardian may retain , pending the settlement of the guardian's final account, guardianship property equal in value to the claim for administrative costs, liens and debts ”(emphasis added).
III.
“It is fundamental that a court, in interpreting a statute,
should attempt to effectuate the intent of the Legislature”
(Mаjewski v Broadalbin-Perth Cent. School Dist.,
This is one of those instances in which the statutory
language is unclear. In reciting in Mental Hygiene Law § 81.44
(d) the purposes for which a guardian may retain the property of
an inсapacitated person following such person’s death, the
Legislature listed the security of “claim[s]” and “lien[s]”
before reaching “administrative costs.” If our analysis was
limited to the examination of subdivision (d), a reasonable mind
could conceivably side with Eastchester. Indeed, had the
Legislature meant in that subdivision to permit the retention of
property needed to secure only
administrative
claims and
administrative
liens, it would have said as much. Stated
differently, the Legislature could have placed the modifier
“administrative” next to the nouns “lien” and “claim,”; that is,
it could have explicitly provided for the retention of property
for the narrow purpose of satisfying
administrative
liens and
administrative
claims (see Matter of Raynor v Landmark Chrysler,
Our review, however, is not thаt constrained. The plain
language of subdivision (d) of Mental Hygiene Law § 81.44
requires that it is to be read in conjunction with subdivision
(e) of the same section, which considers the property a guardian
may retain following the death of an incapacitated person.
Further, our precedent requires such a review (see New York
County Lаwyers’ Assn.,
Given the discord between subdivisions (d) and (e) of Mental
Hygiene Law § 81.44, our analysis turns to the legislative
history of that section (see Ballman,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division, insofar as appealed from, should be reversed, with costs, and the order of Supreme Court reinstated.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Order, insofar as appealed from, reversed, with costs, and order of Supreme Court, Bronx County, reinstated. Opinion by Judge Fahey. Chief Judge Lippman and Judges Read, Pigott, Rivera, Abdus-Salaam and Stein concur. Decided June 10, 2015
Notes
[1] The aforementioned order of Supreme Court was not the
only order of that court at issue in this appellate practice.
Indeed, Eastchester moved before Supreme Court for leave to
reargue the order of that court entered in February 2013. The
court denied that motion, and Eastchester also appealed to the
Appellate Division from the order denying reargument (see 120
AD3d at 133). The Appellate Division subsequently dismissed that
appeal (see
[2] New York County Lawyers’ Assn. also requires that we consider subdivision (a) (4) of Mental Hygiene Law § 81.44 in conjunction with subdivisions (d) and (e) of that section. In subdivision 81.44 (a) (4) the Legislature defined the phrase “[s]tatement of assets and notice of claim” аs “a written statement under oath containing,” among other things, “a description of the nature and approximate value of guardianship property at the time of the incapacitated person's death; with the approximate amount of any claims, debts or liens against the guardianship property, including but not limited to mеdicaid liens, tax liens and administrative costs, with an itemization and approximate amount of such costs and claims or liens.” As the Appellate Division majority noted, subdivision (a) (4)can be read to provide that an administrative cost is but one type of claim or lien. Inasmuch as the phrase “statement of assets and notice of claim” is used in subdivision (d), the majority found in subdivision (a) (4) support for its interpretation of subdivision (d) as providing that an administrative cost is a type of claim or lien (see Shannon, 120 AD3d at 133). However, while the language of subdivision (a) (4) supports the Appellate Division majority’s interpretation of section 81.44 (d), it does not ultimately speak to the question
