Alfred Ivan Murciano, M.D. v. State of Florida, Agency for Health Care Administration
No. 3D15-2092
Third District Court of Appeal, State of Florida
August 31, 2016
State of Florida
Opinion filed August 31, 2016.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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No. 3D15-2092
Lower Tribunal No. 13-0795 MPI
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Alfred Ivan Murciano, M.D.,
Appellant,
vs.
State of Florida, Agency for Health Care Administration,
Appellee.
An Administrative Appeal from the State of Florida, Agency for Health
Care Administration.
Akerman LLP and Katherine E. Giddings and Michael J. Larson
(Tallahassee); Holland & Knight and Rodolfo Sorondo, Jr., for appellant.
Tracy Cooper George (Tallahassee), Chief Appellate Counsel, for appellee.
Before LAGOA, EMAS and LOGUE, JJ.
EMAS, J.
BACKGROUND
Dr. Murciano is a physician, licensed to practice medicine in Florida. He specializes in pediatrics, has a subspecialty in infectious diseases, and is an authorized Medicaid provider. Dr. Murciano does not have an office practice, and provides services solely in a hospital setting, specifically in neonatal and pediatric intensive care units in hospitals in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties.
Prior to January 2013, AHCA conducted an audit of Dr. Murciano’s claims for Medicaid reimbursement for the period of September 1, 2008 through August 31, 2010. As part of the audit process, Dr. Murciano was required to submit documentation in support of the services he had provided and billed for during the relevant time period. That documentation was then reviewed preliminarily by a reviewing nurse. Thereafter, AHCA’s peer review coordinator assigned, from a list of physician peer reviewers who contract with AHCA for this purpose, Dr.
AHCA sought repayment of this amount, along with a fine of $210,398.60 and the audit costs of $3,349.86, for a total of $1,265,741.45.
Following AHCA’s determination, Dr. Murciano requested a formal administrative hearing pursuant to
Notes
Pursuant to
“Peer” means a Florida licensed physician who is, to the maximum extent possible, of the same specialty or subspecialty, licensed under the same chapter, and in active practice.
AHCA filed timely exceptions to the ALJ’s Recommended Order, asserting that Dr. O’Hern was a peer of Dr. Murciano as defined by
Thereafter, AHCA’s agency clerk remanded the matter back to the ALJ, finding the ALJ departed from the essential requirements of the law by concluding Dr. O’Hern did not meet the definition of a peer under
On July 24, 2014, and again on August 18, 2014, the ALJ declined the remand, finding that there were no “exceptional circumstances” for remand, and reaffirmed his previous recommendation that AHCA issue a final order dismissing the Final Audit Report.
In response, AHCA filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the First District Court of Appeal (Case No. 1D14-3836), asserting there were exceptional circumstances for AHCA’s remand because the ALJ refused to make necessary factual findings based solely on his erroneous conclusion that Dr. O’Hern did not meet the definition of “peer” under
The First District, treating the petition as one for review of non-final agency action pursuant to
On remand, the ALJ again found that Dr. O’Hern was not a “peer” of Dr. Murciano (this time, the ALJ’s finding was located under “Findings of Fact” rather than under “Conclusions of Law,” where it had been located in its previous order), and accordingly, the ALJ found that an appropriate peer review was not conducted before formal proceedings were initiated, as required by
This appeal followed. Dr. Murciano contends that AHCA erred in finding that Dr. O’Hern was Dr. Murciano’s peer, as statutorily defined, and that AHCA erred in reversing the ALJ’s contrary determination. Dr. Murciano asserts that because this was a question of fact, it was within the sole province of the ALJ. Further, Dr. Murciano argues because the required peer review was not performed by a statutorily-qualified peer, he should not be required to pay the overpayment
AHCA argues that the question of whether Dr. O’Hern was a peer, as statutorily defined, is a question of law and one within its purview as the agency administering the law, and therefore, that it is not required to give any deference to the ALJ’s determination on this issue. Further AHCA argues that the plain language of the statute supports its reasonable interpretation, and that based on this and the ALJ’s other factual findings, this court should affirm the Amended Final Order.
ANALYSIS
The central question raised by this appeal is whether AHCA erred in determining that Dr. O’Hern met the statutory requirements of a “peer” under
Under
We conclude that the question presented—whether Dr. O’Hern is a “peer” of Dr. Murciano—as statutorily defined, is ultimately a legal question. While this ultimate legal determination is informed by underlying facts (which the ALJ would be in the best position to adjudicate), the facts material to the resolution of this issue are not in dispute. It is undisputed that Dr. O’Hern was:
- Of the same specialty (board certified in pediatrics);
- Licensed under the same chapter; and
- In active practice.
It is further undisputed that Dr. O’Hern was not of the same subspecialty as Dr. Murciano: while Dr. Murciano was board certified in the subspecialty of pediatric infectious diseases, Dr. O’Hern was not.4 Dr. O’Hern had no board certification in infectious diseases, although he did complete a one-year fellowship in infectious disease in 1978, during his training at the University of Florida. Dr. O’Hern also treated a number of pediatric patients for infectious diseases during his thirty-seven-year medical career.
As stated above,
“Peer” means a Florida licensed physician who is, to the maximum extent possible, of the same specialty or subspecialty, licensed under the same chapter, and in active practice.
Dr. Murciano contends, in effect, that the only reasonable interpretation of the statute requires a conclusion that Dr. O’Hern is not a “peer” because he is not of the same specialty and subspecialty as Dr. Murciano. We do not agree. To adopt the statutory construction urged by Dr. Murciano would ignore the plain language of the statute, and violate a fundamental principle of statutory construction:
It is a fundamental principle of statutory interpretation that legislative intent is the “polestar” that guides this Court‘s interpretation. We endeavor to construe statutes to effectuate the intent of the Legislature. To discern legislative intent, we look “primarily” to the actual language used in the statute. Further, “[w]hen the statute is clear and unambiguous, courts will not look behind the statute‘s plain language for legislative intent or resort to rules of statutory construction to ascertain intent.” Daniels v. Fla. Dep‘t of Health, 898 So. 2d 61, 64 (Fla. 2005).
Borden v. East-European Ins. Co., 921 So. 2d 587, 595 (Fla. 2006) (internal citations omitted).
We do not ignore Dr. Murciano’s argument that a peer who is both a board certified specialist in pediatrics and a board certified subspecialist in infectious diseases might be more desirable as a peer reviewer for Dr. Murciano. And while the statute would permit the use of a peer reviewer who is of the same specialty and subspecialty, the statute does not require it. If such were a requirement, the Legislature would have utilized different statutory language; for example, it might have provided:
“Peer” means a Florida licensed physician who is, to the maximum extent possible, of the same specialty and, if applicable, of the same subspecialty, licensed under the same chapter, and in active practice.
Given the plain and unambiguous statutory language used, we must presume that the Legislature said what it meant and meant what it said, and conclude that
CONCLUSION
In light of our holding that the determination below was a legal one, and our further holding that the statutory construction was reasonable, ACHA was authorized to reject the ALJ’s legal conclusion that Dr. O’Hern was not a peer under the statute. See
Affirmed.
