Case Information
*2 B ROWN , Circuit Judge
: In 1995, two non-profit hospitals in Pennsylvania consolidated to form Pinnacle Health Hospitals. Pinnacle subsequently submitted a Medicare reimbursement claim for the losses the hospitals had incurred through the sale of their depreciable assets in the consolidation. The Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services denied Pinnacle’s claim, and that order became the final decision of the Secretary of Health and Human Services. On Pinnacle’s Administrative Procedure Act (APA) challenge, the district court upheld the Secretary’s decision in full. See Pinnacle Health Hosps. v. Sebelius , 719 F. Supp. 2d 16 (D.D.C. 2010).
Pinnacle now appeals. We review de novo the district court’s entry of summary judgment for the Secretary, Calhoun v. Johnson , 632 F.3d 1259, 1261 (D.C. Cir. 2011), and will uphold the judgment as long as the Secretary’s ruling was not “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law,” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).
Pinnacle’s primary argument is that the Secretary
impermissibly required it to prove there had been a “bona fide
sale” of depreciable assets to obtain reimbursement. We have
covered much of this ground before. In
St. Luke’s Hospital v.
Sebelius
, 611 F.3d 900 (D.C. Cir. 2010), we considered
whether the Secretary reasonably applied the bona fide sale
requirement to a reimbursement request from a participant in
a “statutory merger.”
See id.
at 903–04 . Our answer was yes
because the Secretary’s interpretation of the relevant
Medicare regulations (42 C.F.R. § 413.134(f) and (
l
)), as
memorialized in a 2000 Memorandum (PM A-00-76), was
“not plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation.”
[1]
Subsection ( l ) by its express terms makes the merged provider “subject to the provisions of paragraph[ ] . . . (f) of this section concerning . . . the realization of gains and losses.” The Secretary reasonably read this unrestricted cross-reference to subsection (f) as incorporating subsection (f)(2)’s requirement that a transaction be “bona fide” if the provider is to revalue the assets it transfers therein. See 42 C.F.R. § 413.134(f)(2) (rules for recognizing gains and losses upon “the bona fide sale . . . of depreciable assets before December 1, 1997”).
Id. at 905.
In that same Memorandum—PM A-00-76—the Secretary
also found the bona fide sale requirement applied to
consolidations involving non-profit Medicare providers, like
the one here. We hold that too was not “plainly erroneous or
inconsistent with the regulation.”
Id.
at 906. 42 C.F.R. §
413.134(
l
)(3)(i) states that in consolidations “between two or
more corporations that are unrelated . . . the assets of the
provider corporation(s) may be revalued in accordance with
paragraph (g) of this section.” Paragraph (g) does not
explicitly or implicitly foreclose the reimbursement of losses
from the sale of depreciable assets, which means the Secretary
could permissibly interpret the regulations to authorize such
reimbursement.
See id.
§ 413.134(g). And “[i]f the Secretary
. . . construe[s] § 413.134(
l
)(3)(i) as permitting depreciation
adjustments for consolidations, then the Secretary is perfectly
reasonable in maintaining consistency and only allowing
depreciation adjustments that comply with § 413.134(f)”—the
subsection that requires a bona fide sale.
Via Christi Reg’l
Med. Ctr., Inc. v. Leavitt
,
Pinnacle is left to argue that the Secretary inaccurately
calculated the value of the relevant assets and liabilities. Its
three claims to that end are unpersuasive. First, the
Secretary’s analysis did “reflect each Consolidating Entity’s
precarious financial situation,” Petitioner’s Br. 29, because
the appraisals on which the Secretary relied expressly
accounted for demographic and structural factors that would
affect the hospital’s future financial health. Second, whether
or not Pinnacle is right that the analysis improperly
considered the “net reproduction costs” rather than the “fair
market value” of the depreciable assets, Pinnacle, which has
the burden, did “not provide[] any evidence of the fair market
value of the facilities determined according to its preferred
methodology.”
Pinnacle Health Hosps.
, 719 F. Supp. 2d at
25 n.12. Finally, though the analysis did not explicitly
consider the hospitals’ contingent and unknown liabilities,
Pinnacle has not “put forth evidence tending to show . . . that
[the hospitals’] unknown liabilities were likely particularly
substantial,” so as to make up the several-million dollar
disparity between the value of the assets and liabilities that
were transferred in the consolidation.
Forsyth Mem’l Hosp.
,
Accordingly, the district court’s order entering judgment for the Secretary is
Affirmed .
Notes
[1] 42 C.F.R. 413.134(
l
) was redesignated without alteration as
subsection (k) in 2000.
See St. Luke’s Hosp.
,
