Case Information
*1
[Cite as
OMG MSTR LSCO, L.L.C. v. Dept. of Medicaid
,
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OMG MSTR LSCO, LLC, successor by :
merger to CSC MSTR LSCO, LLC,
individually and as agent of Cleveland :
SeniorCare Corp., the former operator
of Greenbrier Health Care Center, :
Lake Pointe Health Care, Grande Pointe
Healthcare Community, Candlewood : (C.P.C. No. 17CV-11210) Park Healthcare Center, and Pine
Valley Care Center et al., : (REGULAR CALENDAR)
Plaintiffs-Appellants, :
v. :
Ohio Department of Medicaid et al., :
Defendants-Appellees. :
D E C I S I O N
Rendered on December 6, 2018 On brief: Benesch, Friedlander, Coplan & Aronoff LLP, Ronald L. House , and Jennifer M. Turk , for appellants.
Argued: Jennifer M. Turk .
On brief: Michael DeWine , Attorney General, Justin T.
Radic , and Cheryl R. Hawkinson , for appellees. Argued: Justin T. Radic .
APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas
DORRIAN, J. This is an appeal from the judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common
Pleas granting a motion to dismiss filed by defendants-appellees Ohio Department of Medicaid ("the Department") and Barbara Sears, in her official capacity as Director of the Department.
I. Facts and Procedural History
{¶ 2} Plaintiff-appellants, OMG MSTR LSCO, LLC ("OMG"); Pearl Leasing Co., LLC; Kolbe Leasing Co., LLC; Merit Leasing Co., LLC; Belmore Leasing Co., LLC; and Brecksville Leasing Co., LLC are related entities that currently or previously operated long- term care facilities in Ohio and received Medicaid reimbursement. OMG is the successor by merger to CSC MSTR LSCO, LLC (together referred to here as "CSC/OMG") and the agent of Cleveland SeniorCare Corp., which is not a party to this appeal. Prior to December 16, 2005, Cleveland SeniorCare Corp. operated five long-term care facilities in Ohio. The five other appellants are the current operators of the former Cleveland SeniorCare Corp. facilities. In 2017, the Department issued to the current care facility operators notices
that the Department intended to seek recovery of alleged Medicaid overpayments made during fiscal years 2002 to 2006. The five separate notices announced commencement of proceedings under R.C. Chapter 119, with administrative hearings to be conducted in accordance with Ohio Adm.Code Sections 5160-70-01 et seq. Appellants filed their complaint in the common pleas court seeking a
declaratory judgment establishing that the Department was time-barred from collecting the alleged Medicaid overpayments for the 2002 to 2006 fiscal years. The complaint alleges the administrative proceedings are time-barred under statutes governing Medicaid accounting in case of a change of operator and setting the statute of limitations for the Department under such actions. [1] The complaint describes the series of transactions through which Cleveland
SeniorCare Corp. transferred the nursing homes to the current providers and asserts that, pursuant to R.C. 5111.67, CSC/OMG, as agent of the "exiting provider" (Cleveland SeniorCare Corp.), provided required notice to the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services ("ODJFS") of the change of operator. The complaint then alleges that, pursuant to R.C. 5111.685, ODJFS was statutorily required to determine the actual debt owed by CSC/OMG within 90 days under R.C. 5111.682. The complaint states the triggering event was a March 1, 2006 letter enclosing the final cost reports for the CSC/OMG facilities, and that ODJFS was therefore statutorily mandated to issue its debt summary report by May 31, 2006. The complaint then states that, under R.C. 5111.061, ODJFS was limited to a five- year period following the end of the state fiscal year in which the overpayment was made to seek recovery. Because the Department did not issue the current notices until 2017, the complaint alleges the Department is time-barred from recovering the alleged overpayments. The complaint further alleges that, although the recovery efforts by the
Department are indisputably time-barred, the Department hearing examiner has no authority to rule on a motion to dismiss brought on that basis, and appellants will incur unreasonable expenses in defending against the administrative action. The complaint states such administrative proceedings may cost each current provider in excess of $80,000. Without specifying the cost of a single, collective declaratory judgment action, the complaint asserts this will be lower than the multiple administrative cases. The Department moved pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6) to dismiss the complaint
in the common pleas court on the basis the complaint failed to state a claim for which relief could be granted. The basis for the motion was that appellants had failed to exhaust their administrative remedies and should not be allowed to circumvent the administrative process by resorting to a declaratory judgment action in the courts. The trial court granted the Department's motion to dismiss, finding that "[p]laintiffs have failed to demonstrate that prosecuting an administrative action would be any more expensive than the instant action. Plaintiffs' Complaint merely alleges that administrative proceedings ' can cost a provider in excess of $80,000 each.' " (Emphasis sic.) (Decision at 2.) II. Assignments of Error Appellants bring the following two assignments of error for our review:
[I.] The Trial Court erred in dismissing Appellants' Complaint under Civ.R. 12(B)(6) on the grounds that Appellants were required to exhaust their administrative remedies and failed to demonstrate that prosecuting five separate administrative proceedings would be far more onerous and unusually expensive than prosecuting one declaratory judgment action regarding a dispositive issue.
[II.] The Trial Court erred in failing to presume, on a Civ.R.
12(B)(6) motion, that all factual allegations of the Complaint were true and failed to make all reasonable inferences in favor of Appellants.
Appellants' two assignments of error present related issues and will be addressed together. III. Standard of Review and Failure to State a Claim This case presents two issues to address in sequence: first, whether the
posture of the underlying administrative action supports appellants' right to cut short the administrative process by obtaining a preemptive declaratory judgment from the common pleas court without exhausting their administrative remedies, and second, whether the common pleas court could make a determination regarding the exhaustion of administrative remedies when addressing the issue in the context of a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss. When reviewing a judgment rendered on a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss
for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, ordinarily an appellate court's
standard of review is de novo.
Perrysburg Twp. v. Rossford
,
to be true and must make all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party.
Jones
v. Greyhound Lines, Inc.
, 10th Dist. No. 11AP-518,
IV. Exhaustion of Remedies as an Affirmative Defense
Ordinarily, where the legislature has enacted a comprehensive statutory and
regulatory scheme governing regulation and review by an administrative agency, the intent
is to vest the agency with exclusive jurisdiction.
Nielsen v. Ford Motor Co.,
113 Ohio App.3d
495, 500 (9th Dist.1996). From this springs the exhaustion of administrative remedies
doctrine, pursuant to which a litigant must exhaust all recourse available through
administrative remedies before seeking redress from the judicial system.
Jain v. Ohio State
Medical Bd.
, 10th Dist. No. 09AP-1180,
remedies doctrine that allow a plaintiff to go forward with a declaratory judgment action.
The first is if there is no administrative remedy available that can provide the relief sought.
The second is when the exhaustion of administrative remedies would be unusually onerous
or expensive.
Karches v. Cincinnati
,
to a declaratory judgment action. It is, rather, an affirmative defense to be pled by the
defendant, who bears the burden of proving the failure to exhaust the administrative
remedies by a preponderance of the evidence.
Jones v. Chagrin Falls
,
complaint and, therefore, cannot be raised by means of a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to
dismiss."
Mankins v. Paxton
, 142 Ohio App.3d 1, 9 (10th Dist.2001), citing
Loyer v.
Turner,
complaint that they have not exhausted their administrative remedies; the averments of the
complaint explicitly admit as much, since the averred object of the complaint is to avoid
those very remedies. The question before us is whether, from the face of the complaint, it
was an abuse of discretion of the trial court to conclude that the affirmative defense, once
established, was not countered by the limited exception set forth in
Karches
, on the basis
that challenged administrative remedy was exceptionally onerous or expensive.
Ohio cases on this issue have not always clearly discussed whether this is a
pleading burden placed on the plaintiff; i.e., whether, once the affirmative defense of
exhaustion of administrative remedies is established on the face of the complaint, this
places the burden on the plaintiff in a declaratory judgment action to plead on the face of
the complaint that declaratory judgment will lie based on the burdensome nature of the
ongoing administrative proceedings. Although plaintiffs are generally not required to
anticipate affirmative defenses in their complaint, at least one case from this court suggests
the burden so shifts in exhaustion of remedies cases.
Savoy v. Univ. of Akron
, 10th Dist.
No. 11AP-183,
viewed, cannot mean merely that the pending administrative proceedings are expensive and inconvenient—regulated entities would generally adjudge that to be the case with any enforcement or recoupment action. The question is whether the pending administrative action is unusually burdensome in comparison with other administrative or judicial proceedings. In the present case, the complaint states only the administrative proceedings might cost in excess of $80,000 per care giver. There is no frame of reference to establish whether this is an exceptional or burdensome amount, particularly since no comparison with cost of other administrative proceedings in the industry or the cost of the current declaratory judgment action is advanced. We see no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court in concluding that the Karches exception does not apply to the case, and the declaratory judgment action must be dismissed due to appellants' failure to exhaust their administrative remedies. We accordingly overrule appellants' two assignments of error.
V. Conclusion Having overruled appellants' two assignments of error, we affirm the
judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas.
Judgment affirmed. BROWN, P.J., and LUPER SCHUSTER, J., concur.
Notes
[1] The cited Medicaid statutes, R.C. 5111.67, 5111.682, 5111.685, and 5111.061, are those in effect during the fiscal years for which repayment is sought. During those periods, the regulatory authority lay with the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services ("ODJFS") and transferred in 2013 with the creation of the Department. All statutory references in this decision are to the former numbering system that existed prior to 2013, and references to the Department may include actions taken by ODJFS prior to 2013.
[2] Ohio's exception to the exhaustion of remedies doctrine is generally broader than in other jurisdictions,
which essentially limit the exception to such constitutional issues.
See generally Malecon Tobacco, LLC v.
State ex rel. Dept. of Taxation
,
