Case Information
*1 Before MURNAGHAN and MOTZ, Circuit Judges, and BUTZNER, Senior Circuit Judge. _________________________________________________________________ Dismissed by published opinion. Judge Motz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Murnaghan and Senior Judge Butzner joined. _________________________________________________________________ COUNSEL
ARGUED: Stephen Jay Small, Senior Assistant Attorney General, BUREAU FOR MEDICAL SERVICES, Charleston, West Virginia, *2 for Appellants. Charles Marvin Johnson, Jr., Charlestоn, West Vir- ginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Darrell V. McGraw, Jr., Attorney General, BUREAU FOR MEDICAL SERVICES, Charleston, West Virginia, for Appellants. David R. Bungard, Charleston, West Vir- ginia, for Appellee. _________________________________________________________________ OPINION
DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ, Circuit Judge: Two West Virginia officials attempt to appeal the district court's judgment holding that the Stаte violated Medicaid regulations and the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the United States Consti- tution in handling various Medicaid claims submitted by a Medicaid provider. Subsequent to the district court's decision, the parties entered into a written settlement agreement, which at their request the district court entered as a consent order. Pursuant to the settlement agreement, the parties purported to permit the State to appeal two issues. However, becаuse the settlement agreement renders this case moot, we must dismiss the appeal.
I.
Pressley Ridge Schools, Inc. (Pressley Ridge), a nonprofit corpora- tion providing behavioral health care services to children, entered into an agreement with the Bureau for Medical Services (the Bureau), the state agency responsible for implementing, overseeing and regulating the Medicaid program in West Virginia, authorizing Pressley Ridge to participate as a Medicaid provider. Pressley Ridge thus became eli- gible to receive reimbursement through the Bureau for behavioral health services rendered to Medicaid-eligible clients in West Virginia. As a Medicaid provider, Pressley Ridge agreed to make all of its records аnd documents available and to participate in evaluations and audits authorized by the State Department of Health and Human Resources (the Department) to ensure that Pressley Ridge's services and program complied with the applicable Medicaid regulations. The Department, in turn, agreed to provide an appeal process permitting Pressley Ridge to challenge any adverse decisions by the Department. *3 In August 1995, the Bureau informed Pressley Ridge that all Med- icaid reimbursements to it would be suspended indefinitely. The Bureau conducted an on-site review of Pressley Ridge for all Medic- aid services billed from January 1 through June 20, 1995, and disal- lowed reimbursement to Pressley Ridge for those services due to lack of "quantifiеd baseline data" in Pressley Ridge's behavior manage- ment plans. The Bureau also instituted a prepayment review for Med- icaid claims made by Pressley Ridge for services delivered after October 31, 1995.
Pressley Ridge then brought this action in which it sought various forms of injunctive relief. Specifically, Pressley Ridge asked the dis- trict court to order the State to reimburse Pressley Ridge for behavior management services it had already provided to Medicaid-eligible cli- ents and to prohibit the State frоm adopting the prepayment review procedure without notice or hearing. After a four day bench trial, the district court granted Pressley Ridge the requested injunctive relief. The court reasoned that the Bureau's requirement of"quantified base- line data" did not accord with the requirements set forth in the Bureau's Medicaid Provider Manual and, therefore, violated federal regulations requiring the Bureau to provide for notice and comment of "any significant proposed change in its methods and standards for setting payment rates for services." 42 C.F.R.§ 447.205. In addition, the court ruled that the State's institution of prepayment review of Pressley Ridge's behavior management services, without notice or hearing, violated state and federal regulations. Finally, the court held that these regulatory violations denied Pressley Ridge its constitu- tional Due Process and Equal Protection rights.
The State noted an appeal. While the appeal was pending, but before the case had beеn briefed or argued, the parties entered into a written settlement agreement. The agreement settled"all disputed claims" between the parties with regard to the adequacy of the ser- vices provided by Pressley Ridge for the periods in question, and determined how Pressley Ridge would be compensated for past and future behavior management services provided to Medicaid-eligible clients in West Virginia. The agreement purported to permit the State to maintain an appeal as to whether the Bureau must submit its requirement of "quantitative baseline data" to"notice and comment" before it was utilized, and whether the Bureau must provide an *4 administrative review hearing upon adopting prepayment review. The settlement agreement stated, however, that "[r]egardless of the out- come of any appeal, the financial impact of this agreement shall remain intact."
II.
On appeal, the State attempts to challenge the district court's hold- ing that it violated Pressley Ridge's rights by retroactively applying quantitative baseline data to behavior management plans submitted by Pressley Ridge and by refusing to grant Pressley Ridge an administra- tive hearing to appeal the State's decision to impose prepayment review. Because the parties have entered into a settlement, however, no live dispute between them currently exists. Accordingly, we lack jurisdiction to consider this case.
Article III of the United States Constitution limits the jurisdictiоn
of the federal courts to "actual, ongoing controversies." Honig v. Doe,
(quoting Aetna Life Ins., Co. v. Haworth,
Unlike Hаvens and Reeves Bros., here no party seeks any further concrete relief. No live dispute between the parties exists as to either prepayment review or quantitative baseline data. The settlement agreement expressly states that "[i]n lieu of prepayment review as to claims submitted by Pressley Ridge . . . [the Bureau] agrees to con- duct a technical or post-payment, compliance review." Similarly, the agreement establishes that the parties have totаlly settled their dis- agreement regarding the requirement of quantitative data.
Nor does this appeal involve issues "capable of repetition, yet evading review." In such cases, a court can address issues despite their apparеnt mootness. See Nebraska Press Ass'n v. Stuart, 427 U.S. 539, 546 (1975). Here, prior to trial, the Bureau amended its regula- tions to require that quantitative baseline data be included in behavior management plans in order to qualify for Medicaid reimbursement. This change obviously diminishеs the potential for repetition of the dispute that brought about this litigation. Moreover, as the State quite properly conceded at oral argument, the issues in this case are not the sort that would evade judicial review becausе of their short-lived nature. Cf. id. at 546-47 (since restrictive orders in question were "by nature short-lived," they would evade judicial review if Court declined to address them on mootness grounds).
For these reasons, we lack jurisdiction over this case and must dis- miss the appеal. III.
The State asks that, if we determine that the issues raised on appeal
are moot, we vacate the district court's judgment. It wishes to elimi-
*6
nate the precedent established by the district court. See Brief of
Appellants at 10.
Generally, when a case becomes moot on appeal, an appellate court
vacates the judgment below. See, e.g., Arizonans For Official English,
Where mootness results from settlement . . . the losing party has voluntarily forfeited his legal remedy by the ordinary processes of appeal or certiorari, thereby surrendering his claim to the equitable doctrine of vacatur.
Id. at 25. Thus, barring "exceptional circumstances," an appellate court shоuld not vacate the judgment of a trial court at the behest of a losing party that has mooted a case by agreeing to settle it. Id. at 29. In our view, the case at hand presents no "exceptional circum- stances" and the parties have suggested none. Rather, as in U.S. Bancorp, mootness in this case resulted from the losing party's deci- sion to settle the case. By doing so, that party (the State) "surrender- [ed] [its] claim to the equitable remedy of vacatur." Id. at 25; cf.
Motta v. District Dir. of I.N.S.,
We note, however, that in U.S. Bancorp, the Supreme Court con- cluded with thе following comment:
Of course even in the absence of, or before considering the
existence of, extraordinary circumstances, a court of appeals
presented with a request for vacatur of a district-court judg-
ment may remand the case with instructions that the district
court consider the request, which it may do pursuant to Fed-
eral Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b).
U.S. Bancorp,
