Robert Pfoser, as special administrator of the Estate of David Pfoser, Respondent, vs. Jodi Harpstead, Commissioner Minnesota Department of Human Services, Appellant, and Dakota County Human Services, Respondent Below.
A19-0853
STATE OF MINNESOTA IN SUPREME COURT
January 20, 2021
Chutich, J. Took no part, Anderson, J.
Keith Ellison, Attorney General, Michael N. Leonard, Assistant Attorney General, Saint Paul, Minnesota, for appellant.
Margaret M. Grathwol, Chestnut Cambronne PA, Minneapolis, Minnesota, for amicus curiae Minnesota Chapter of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys.
Brenna M. Galvin, Maser, Amundson & Boggio, P.A., Richfield, Minnesota; and David L. Shaltz, Chalgian & Tripp Law Offices, East Lansing, Michigan, for amicus curiae Special Needs Alliance.
S Y L L A B U S
A disabled recipient of Medical Assistance for Lоng-Term Care benefits who is age 65 or older is not subject to a penalty for transferring assets into a pooled special-needs trust when he made a satisfactory showing that he intended to receive “valuable consideration” under
Affirmed.
O P I N I O N
CHUTICH, Justice.
This case requires us to decide whether the Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Human Services correctly imposed a transfer penalty on David Pfoser, a disabled Medicaid recipient who resided in a long-term care facility, after he transferred, at age 65, partial proceeds from the sale of a house into a pooled special-needs trust. State and federal law impose a penalty on recipients of Medical Assistance for Long-Term Care benefits if they transfer assets for less than fair market valuе.
FACTS
David Pfoser had Parkinson‘s disease and other mental and physical disabilities.1 Following an injury in 2014, Pfoser moved into a long-term care facility and applied for Medical Assistance for Long-Term Care benefits, which is part of Minnesota‘s Medicaid program. Fiduciary Services of Minnesota, Inc., served as Pfoser‘s guardian and conservator.2
In 2016, Pfoser‘s siblings sold the home that Pfoser had been living in, which had been their parents’ home, when it was clear that he would not be able to return there. Pfoser‘s share of the proceeds was $28,010.
In 2017, Pfoser petitioned the district court to transfer the proceeds into a pooled special-needs trust operated by the non-profit Lutheran Social Service of Minnesota (Lutheran Social Service). A pooled special-needs trust is a trust funded by the assets of disabled beneficiaries, with individual sub-accounts, to pаy for Medicaid-ineligible goods and services that will improve the quality of the beneficiaries’ lives. Ctr. for Special Needs Tr. Admin., Inc. v. Olson, 676 F.3d 688, 695 (8th Cir. 2012). “Pooled special needs trusts allow disabled individuals with relatively small amounts of money to pool their resources for investment and management purposes.” Me. Pooled Disability Tr. v. Hamilton, 927 F.3d 52, 54 (1st Cir. 2019).
The district court granted Pfoser‘s petition for permission to transfer the funds. Pfoser and Lutheran Social Service executed
The Trust Agreement named Lutheran Social Service as trustee and required that trust assets be “managed, invested, and disbursed to promote the comfort and well-being of each Beneficiary.” All disbursements from the trust were limited to the “sole and absolute discretion” of Lutheran Social Service as trustee to make distributions as “necessary or advisable to provide for the supplemental care or supplemental needs of the beneficiary.” Such needs could include medical, dental, and diagnostic work; supplemental nursing care; and expenditures for travel or a personal care attendant, which are not covered by Medicaid.
In the Trust Agreement, Pfoser acknowledged that he had no “further interest, rights in, or control over” the funds and that Lutheran Sоcial Service had no obligation to support him. The trust was irrevocable. Notably, the Trust Agreement also provided that up to 90 percent of any funds remaining in the sub-account at the time of Pfoser‘s death must be paid to the State to reimburse the Medical Assistance program for the costs paid on behalf of Pfoser. Lutheran Social Service would retain the other 10 percent in a charitable trust for the benefit of indigent pooled trust beneficiaries who had exhausted the funds in their sub-accounts. By enrolling in the trust, Pfoser would be eligible to receive benefits from the charitable trust if he exhausted the funds in his sub-account.
In accordance with the agreements, Pfoser transferred the funds, which were credited to his sub-account. He was 65 years old at the time of the transfer.
Two months later, Dakota County Human Services (Dakota County) notified Pfoser that it was investigating whether the establishment of his trust sub-account may have been an improper transfer under the statutes governing Medical Assistance for Long-Term Care. Under those statutes, a recipient “may not give away, sell, or dispose of” any asset for less than fair market value.
Pfoser appealed the penalty, and a hearing was held befоre a human services judge. Pfoser claimed that he had received fair market value for the transfer in the form of future goods and services that the trust would provide. In support of his position, Pfoser submitted copies of the joinder agreement and Trust Agreement. He also submitted an affidavit by the director of the pooled trusts operated by Lutheran Social Service, which included an assessment of the fair market value of Pfoser‘s sub-account.
In her affidavit, the director stated that Lutheran Social Service operates two pooled trusts containing about 420 sub-accounts. The sub-accounts of the trust in which Pfoser participated are for clients who are disabled as defined by the Social
The fair-market-value assessment of Pfoser‘s sub-account estimated that his sub-account would be depleted in less than 2 years. This assessment reflected specific one-time expenditures for expensive items like an adaptive recliner, equipment for his wheelchair, and restorative dental work, which are not covered by Medicaid. It also budgeted for annual expenses like STEM activity boxes,3 over-the-counter medications nоt covered by Medical Assistance, wheelchair cushions, household goods and personal expenses, and fees for guardian services. The assessment also calculated Pfoser‘s life expectancy at 14.86 years.
Dakota County did not present any evidence in response to Pfoser‘s expected expenditures and fair-market-value assessment. At the hearing, the county financial worker assigned to Pfoser‘s case testified that, according to the policy of the Minnesota Department of Human Services, “the addition to a pool[ed] trust by a beneficiary . . . after the beneficiary . . . reaches age 65 is evaluated as an uncompensated transfer.” She also testified, “And that‘s where I stopped with my calculation,” after determining that Pfoser was age 65 at the time of the transfer.
The human services judge found in favor of Dakota County. Because Pfoser had transferred the cash into an irrevocable trust from which any distributions were discretionary, the judge concluded that no “reasonable seller/buyer or objective observer” would consider this exchange to be a transfer for fair market value. Accordingly, the judge found that Pfoser did not receive “adequate compensation or fair market value” at the time the transfer was made. The judge also found that there was insufficient evidence of Pfoser‘s intent to receive fair market value under an existing penalty exception. The judge therefore recommended that the Commissioner of the Department of Human Services affirm the penalty. The Commissioner adopted the rеcommendation without change.
Pfoser appealed the agency decision to the district court. The district court reversed, concluding that Pfoser received “adequate compensation” in the form of his vested equitable interest in the trust assets.
The Commissioner appealed, and the court of appeals affirmed the district court‘s decision. Pfoser v. Harpstead, 939 N.W.2d 298 (Minn. App. 2020). The court of appeals determined that the Commissioner‘s decision was “legally erroneous, arbitrary and capricious, and unsupported by substantial evidence.” Id. at 320.
We granted the Commissioner‘s petition for review.
ANALYSIS
The issue before us is whether the Commissioner properly imposed a 3.94 month penalty based on her findings that Pfoser did not receive adequate compensation or fair market value when he transferred $28,010 into the pooled special-needs
Judicial review of a decision by the Commissioner of Human Services is authorized by
A.
This appeal concerns the consequences of Pfoser‘s transfer of funds into the pooled special-needs trust in determining his financial eligibility for Medicaid benefits. We begin with аn overview of the Medicaid program and the asset-transfer rules. Medicaid is “a cooperative federal-state program.” In re Schmalz, 945 N.W.2d 46, 50 (Minn. 2020). Known as Medical Assistance in Minnesota, the program “is designed to provide medical assistance to individuals whose income and resources are not sufficient to meet the costs of their necessary care and services.” Estate of Atkinson, 564 N.W.2d at 210; see
Persons qualify for Medical Assistance if they are blind, disabled, or age 65 or older.
Minnesota‘s Medicaid program must comply with federal law. See
A disabled person of any age can establish an account in a pooled special-needs trust. See
Although the assets in an exempt trust are not considered available for determining whether a person is eligible for benefits, transfers into the trust may be penalized with a period of ineligibility for benefits.
Several exceptions to the transfer penalty exist and preclude application of any penalty. For example, transfers into pooled special-needs trusts for the benefit of a disabled person under age 65 are automatically exempt from a transfer penalty.
As relevant here, a person of any age, including those age 65 or older, can avoid a transfer penalty if the person makes a “satisfactory showing” that the person “intended to dispose of the assets either at fair market value or for other valuable consideration” (the intent exception).5
the trust, he is subject to a transfer penalty unless he makes one of two showings: that he actually received fair market value for the transfer, or that he intended to receive fair market value or other valuable
B.
To determine whether Pfoser met the intent exception, we consider the meaning of “valuable consideration” under
applied the definition in the State Medicaid Manual and held that Pfoser satisfied it. Pfoser v. Harpstead, 939 N.W.2d at 314, 318; see Ctrs. for Medicare & Medicaid Servs., State Medicaid Manual § 3258.1.A.2 (defining valuable consideration as “some act, object, service, or other benefit which has a tangible and/or intrinsic value to the individual that is roughly equivalent to or greater than the value of the transferred asset“). The Commissioner argues that valuable consideration unambiguously means something of equivalent cash value to the transferred asset, or alternatively, that this court should defer to agency interpretations, including the State Medicaid Manual. Pfoser responds that the transfer was adequatеly compensated under any standard.
We review matters of statutory interpretation de novo. In re Schmalz, 945 N.W.2d 46, 49 n.3 (Minn. 2020). The goal of statutory interpretation is to effectuate the intent of the Legislature.
The first step is to determine whether the language of the statute is ambiguous. Olson v. Lesch, 943 N.W.2d 648, 656–57 (Minn. 2020). “A statute is unambiguous if it has only one reasonable interpretation.” In re Welfare of Children of J.D.T., 946 N.W.2d 321, 327 (Minn. 2020). When interpreting a statute, we read “words and phrases . . . according to rules of grammar and according to their common and approved usage.”
We also read “[m]ultiple parts of a statute . . . together so аs to ascertain whether the statute is ambiguous.” Christianson v. Henke, 831 N.W.2d 532, 537 (Minn. 2013). “Whenever it is possible, no word, phrase, or sentence should be deemed superfluous, void, or insignificant.” Amaral v. Saint Cloud Hosp., 598 N.W.2d 379, 384 (Minn. 1999).
We have stated that ” ‘valuable consideration, in the sense of the law, may consist either of some right, interest, profit, or benefit accruing to the one party, or some forbearance, detriment, loss, or responsibility given, suffered, or undertaken by the other.’ ” Ketterer v. Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 1, 79 N.W.2d 428, 436 (Minn. 1956) (quoting 44 Words and Phrases, Valuable Consideration 25). Technical and lay dictionaries offer similarly broad definitions. See Valuable Consideration, Black‘s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (“[C]onsideration that either confers a pecuniarily measurable benefit on one party or imposes a pecuniarily measurable detriment on the other.“); Valuable Consideration, Webster‘s Third International Dictionary Unabridged 2530 (2002) (“An equivalent or compensation having value that is givеn for something (as money, marriage, services) acquired or promised and that may consist either in some right, interest, profit, or benefit accruing to one party or some responsibility, forbearance, detriment, or loss exercised by or falling upon the other party . . . .“).
The Commissioner‘s position that the benefit received must be equal to the value of the transferred asset is not reasonable in context. The statute allows for a showing under either the fair-market-value standard “or” the valuable-consideration standard.
The Commissiоner distinguishes fair market value from other valuable consideration in section 256B.0595, subdivision 4(a)(4), based on the form of the compensation. She equates fair market value to cash and valuable consideration to something other than cash but of “equivalent market value.” This premise is incorrect because fair market value and valuable consideration can take the same form. For instance, like valuable consideration, which may consist of “some right, interest, profit, or benefit,” see Ketterer, 79 N.W.2d at 436, fair market value need not be money. Dictionaries define fair market value in relation to “price.” See, e.g., Fair Market Value, Black‘s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (“The price that a seller is willing to accept and a buyer is willing to pay on the open market and in an arm‘s-length transaction . . . .“); Fair Market Value, The American Heritage Dictionary 635 (5th ed. 2011) (“The price, as of a commodity or service,
“Price,” in turn, can mean money or other goods. See Price, Black‘s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (“The amount of money or other consideration asked for or given in exchange for something else; the cost at which something is bought or sold.“); Price, The American Heritage Dictionary 1397 (5th ed. 2011) (“The amount as of money or goods, asked for or given in exchange for something else.“). Fair market value and valuable consideration can therefore each take the form of goods and services. Consequently, the form of compensation—cash versus non-cash—cannot be the critical distinction.8
We conclude instead that the relevant distinction is the measure of compensation: “valuable consideration” under section 256B.0595, subdivision 4(a)(4), is compensation that is approximately equal to the value of the transferred asset, but may be something less than fair market value. Intеrpreting valuable consideration to mean something equal to fair market value eliminates this distinction and makes the valuable-consideration standard meaningless. This we cannot do. See Amaral, 598 N.W.2d at 384 (“[N]o word, phrase, or sentence should be deemed superfluous . . . .“).
In context, then, “valuable consideration” under section 256B.0595, subdivision 4(a)(4), unambiguously means compensation that is approximately equal to the value of the transferred asset. This interpretation reflects that valuable consideration is distinct from, and a less stringent standard than, fair market value. It also preserves the force of the fair-market-value requirement by requiring a penalty when an asset is transferred for something of substantially less value. See
The Commissioner would add another element to the plain meaning of “valuable consideration” in section 256B.0595, subdivision 4(a)(4). She asserts that valuable consideration includes only assets that are themselves countable for purposes of determining Medical Assistance eligibility. Otherwise, she argues, an “asymmetry” occurs if persons can exchange a countable asset for a non-countable asset while avoiding a penalty and maintaining eligibility for their benefits. Even so, the statute contradicts the Commissioner‘s position. The statute does not require the compensation received to be itself a countable asset. See
Accordingly, under the intent exception to the asset-transfer rules,
C.
Having defined “valuable consideration” under
We note first that the Commissioner erred legally by requiring Pfoser to offer “convincing evidence of intent to receive fair market value.” (Emphasis added.) The convincing-evidence standard applies when a person transferring assets seeks to show that the transfer was not “for the purpose of establishing or maintaining medical assistance eligibility.”
The evidence shows that Pfoser intended to receive approximately $28,010 in the form of his equitable interest in the pooled special-needs trust. Pfoser‘s sub-account was credited with $28,010, subject to enrollment and management fees, and he became entitled to the professional investment and management of his trust assets. The record also shows that Lutheran Social Service carefully designed a plan to use the funds in Pfoser‘s trust sub-account (1) solely for his benefit, (2) on necessary and specific goods and services that would not be covered by Medical Assistance but were designed to meet his needs as a resident of a long-term care facility with Parkinson‘s disease, and (3) over a period of 2 years, well within Pfoser‘s life expectancy of almost 15 years. Moreover, the record contains no evidence that contests the value of the goods and services that Pfoser intended and expected to receive. Consequently, Pfoser was likely to receive the approximate value of the funds deposited into his sub-account.
The Commissioner cites various authorities to show that transfers into a рooled special-needs trust are not for fair market value. For example, the State Medicaid Manual states that, when a person transfers a non-excluded asset into a trust, a “transfer of assets for less than fair market
These authorities are not determinative because they apply the fair-market-value standard rather than the valuable-consideration standard, which we conclude is less stringent.10 Further, the agency statements establish only a presumption that a transfer into a pooled trust is not for fair market value—a presumption that a disabled person may rebut with evidence. Given Pfoser‘s showing, if we were to accept the Commissioner‘s position
that Pfoser had not met his burden, it is unclear whether a disabled person age 65 or over could ever rebut the presumption.
The Commissioner also contends that the value of future goods and services should not be considered because Pfoser did not have a “binding agreement” that allowed him to enforce specific distributions. She asserts that the court of appeals erred by requiring her to consider evidence of “valuable consideration received by the recipient before, during, and after transferring assets to the pooled trust.” Pfoser v. Harpstead, 939 N.W.2d at 313.
Although the Commissioner is correct that Pfoser could not enforce specific distributions because the trust was discretionary and irrevocable, Pfoser‘s equitable interest was still legally enforceable under principles of trust law. Under the Minnesota Trust Code, a trustee has a duty to administer a trust “in good faith, in accordance with its terms and purposes and the interests of the beneficiaries.”
Further, the court of appeals did not err in requiring the Commissioner to consider evidence of valuable consideration that Pfoser would receive in the future because the goods and services that Pfoser expected to receive were based on a legally enforceable agreement that existed at the time of the transfer. Pfoser v. Harpstead, 939 N.W.2d at 313. Under the statute, a transfer is not penalized merely because the transferor will not receive the full benefit of the compensation until a later point. See
Finally, the Commissioner contends that exempting Pfoser‘s transfer “subverts the purposе” of the Medicaid Act by permitting him to preserve assets for his own use and providing a “roadmap” for others to follow. She also claims that exempting Pfoser‘s transfer under the intent exception nullifies the automatic exemption for transfers into a trust established for a beneficiary under age 65. See
We acknowledge that Medicaid is intended to be the payor of last resort. In re Estate of Barg, 752 N.W.2d 52, 58 (Minn. 2008). Similarly, “[i]t is the public policy of this state that individuals use all available resources to pay for the cost of long-term care services . . . before turning to Minnesota health care program funds, and that trust instruments should not be permitted to shield available resources of an individual.”
In any case, we think that the Commissioner‘s fears are overstated. Pooled special-needs trusts are unlikely to be used to hide great wealth while creating eligibility for Medical Assistance because of the inherent limitations of these trusts: pooled special-needs trusts are available only to disabled persons,
Lastly, exempting Pfoser‘s transfer of funds into the pooled special-needs trust does not nullify the automatic exception in
In sum, we conclude that Pfoser has demonstrated that his equitable interest in the poоled special-needs trust was approximately equal to the value of the $28,010 transferred into the trust sub-account. Accordingly, we hold that Pfoser made a satisfactory showing that he intended to receive valuable consideration and was not subject to a transfer penalty. See
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
Notes
Pfoser did not specifically contend in his agency appeal that he received valuable consideration, but the Commissioner determined that Pfoser failed to prove that he had received “adequate compensation or fair market value.” “Valuable consideration” is closely related to “adequate compensation.” The statute does not use the term “adequate compensation“; it uses “fair market value or other valuable consideration.”
Because the relevant legal standards are closely related, the underlying facts are not in dispute, and the parties have had an opportunity to fully brief the issue, we address the valuable-consideration standard on the merits. See State v. Hill, 871 N.W.2d 900, 905 n.4 (Minn. 2015) (reaching an argument not raised below when the question involved a purely legal issue, the State had briefed the issue, and consideration of the issue did not prejudice the State).
In the South Dakota case, an elderly couple transferred $115,000 into a pooled special-needs trust. In re Pooled Advocate Tr., 813 N.W.2d 130, 136 (S.D. 2012). The South Dakota Supreme Court concluded that the beneficiaries did not receive fair market value because the trustee had sole discretion over disbursement of the funds and because the beneficiaries had identified “no items or services purchased for them by the trust” that would demonstrate that their interest had “tangible” and “intrinsic” value. Id. at 147. The court did not consider whether the couple was exempt from a transfer penalty under the valuable-consideration standard.
