Aрpellant Stella Stewart is a Medicaid recipient who, from May of 1979 to November of 1980, resided at the Kilgore Nursing Center (KNC), a private nursing home located in Texas. On November 18,1980, the administrator of KNC, Steve Vaughn, notified appellant by letter that she would have to leave the facility within three days. Ms. Stewart maintains that on the third day, she was involuntarily taken from the Center and deposited at the Henderson Memorial Hospital, where no one had arranged in advance for her admission. When appellant’s husband and daughter later returned to the Center seeking information about the transfer, they discovered that appellant’s room had been rented out to another resident, her belongings removed.
This appeal arises from appellant’s clаss action suit filed in federal court pursuant to title XIX of the Social Security Act (“Medicaid Act”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396-1396q, the Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and a number of pendent state law theories. Stewart sought damages and declaratory and injunctive relief against the H.H. Holding Co., Inc., d/b/a Kilgore Nursing Center, Steve Vaughn, and the Commissioners of the Texas Department of Human Resources and the Texas Department of Health, alleging that she had been involuntarily discharged from the Center in violation of her federal equal protection, due process, and statutory rights.
In a series of written orders, the district сourt dismissed each of appellant’s federal claims under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) for fail-
I
Medicaid is a program whereby participating states work with the federal government to provide medical assistance to qualified recipients. As we previously described the system,
Participating states receive a proportional reimbursement from the federal government for expenses incurred in providing medical services for eligible medicaid patients. In order to participate in the Medicaid program, a state must submit a plаn to the Secretary of [Health and Human Services (HHS) ] for approval, and the plan must comply with all requirements of 42 U.S.C. § 1396a. The state must also provide for a system under which the single state agency responsible for the program shall be responsible for fulfillment of hearing provisions. Once a state plan is approved, the state agency responsible for the prоgram is authorized to contract with public and private institutions for the rendering of medical services to eligible recipients.
Taylor v. St. Clair,
Texas has a federally approved state Medicaid plan, which is administered by the Texas Department of Human Resources (TDHR). Under the state plan, individuals reside in either “skilled nursing facilities” or “intermediate care facilities.” By contract with TDHR, the Tеxas Department of Health receives and investigates the complaints of Medicaid recipients concerning their nursing home care.
In seeking to hold the state defendants liable for her transfer out of KNC, appellant must establish that she was deprived of a federal constitutional or statutory right under color of state law. E.g., Flagg Brothers, Inc. v. Brooks,
Appellant attempts to avoid this result by asserting that the state lacks regulations sufficient to protect Medicaid recipients from having their federal statutory and regulatory “rights”
Plaintiff does not seek to hold the state defendants responsible for the nursing home’s eviction of Stella Stewart, but does seek to hold them responsible for failure to have policies and procedures for prоtecting the specific rights set out in the federal regulations for the benefit of transferred nursing home patients. [TDHR] has abdicated its responsibility for enforcing those portions of the Medicaid regulations designated as “Patients’ Rights” and has neglected to monitor compliance.
Brief for Appellant at 18. Since in Blum the Supreme Court expressly pretermitted
The theory is creative but flawed. While the federal Medicaid regulations do provide that patients be given “reasonable advance notice to ensure orderly transfer or discharge,” 42 C.F.R. § 405.1121(k)(4), our holding that there was no state action in Taylor covered a plaintiff class comprising “all Medicaid patients who have been or are being or will in the future be terminated from nursing home service without the benefit of prior written notice and an evidentiary hearing to determine whether just cause exists under the Patient’s Bill of Rights [42 C.F.R. § 405.1121] for such termination.”
Appellant faces another predicament in her claim against the state appellees: article III standing. A plaintiff must “ ‘shоw that he personally has suffered some actual or threatened injury as a result of the putatively illegal conduct of the defendant,’ Gladstone, Realtors v. Village of Bellwood,
Plaintiffs’ argument ... does not allege that the state defendants caused in any way her eviction from KNC. It does not allege that the state defendants failed to perform any existing duty, or that [they] failed to enforce any existing laws or regulations that they were authorizеd to enforce. Furthermore, plaintiffs concede that, even if this court ordered the state defendants to adopt all the procedures plaintiffs propose, future illegal discharges would still occur if the private*1092 nursing home ignored those procedures, just as, it is alleged, KNC ignored its existing responsibilities under 42 C.F.R. § 405.1121(k)(4)-(5) in November of 1980. If private nursing facilities were to illegally dischargе members of the plaintiff class in the future, after adoption of the regulations plaintiffs seek, plaintiffs concede that the state defendants could not be held responsible for such “isolated incidents.” By acknowledging the fact that the plaintiffs might still suffer precisely the same injuries even if all the relief they seek were granted, plaintiffs establish that they have “failed to allegе a sufficient nexus between [their] injury and the government action which [they] attack[].” Linda R.S. v. Richard D.,410 U.S. 614 , 617-18 [93 S.Ct. 1146 , 1148-49,35 L.Ed.2d 536 ] (1973).
Order Upon Plaintiffs’ Motion for Reconsideration, slip op. at 11-12, Record vol. 2 at 164-65. Appellant’s inability to demonstrate state action thus reflects a similar absence of standing to assert her claims against the state appellees.
II
Appellant claims in addition that the Medicaid Act affords her an implied cause of action against the private appellees, KNC and its administrator, Steven Vaughn. On this view, the Act and its implementing regulations confer substantive rights, such as pre-transfer notice and hearing, that are enforceable in a civil action against private facilities. We again disagree.
The threshold question is whether Congress intended to create a judicially enforceable cause of action between Medicaid residents and their private nursing homes.
We need not address the many troubling issues raised by appellant’s ipso facto reasoning. Suffice it to say that the theory is nothing more than an imprecise bootstrap for the argument that Congress intended to creаte a private cause of action under the Act enforceable by residents against their private nursing homes. Absent any direct evidence of this intent, appellant has no federal cause of action against-the private appellees.
In a related vein, appellant also contends that if we do not construe the Act to allow private suits such as hers, then the Act will have created rights with no remedies — a result Congress clearly could not have intended. Even if we acknowledge, however, that the Act creates some substantive rights, see generally O’Bannon v. Town Court Nursing Center,
"The present situation is typical of congressional plans in which the primary financial and regulatory relationship is between the federal government and participating states; in such cases, the states retain chief enforcement responsibilities, while the federal agency oversees the sufficiency and efficacy of the states’ efforts. See, e.g., Pennhurst,
Ill
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Appellant also sued several other state officials as well as the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services. She does not, however, contest the dismissal of her claims against these defеndants.
. Because our holding rests on the absence of action under color of state law, we need not address the nature of the substantive rights available through the Social Security Act that are enforceable against the state under § 1983. See Taylor,
. Appellant asserts that Blum concerned state action solely for purposes of the fourteenth amendment, without regard to a state’s denial of federal statutory rights under § 1983. Brief for Appellant at 18; see Blum,
. Since appеllant's transfer was not occasioned by any acts or omissions of the state appellees, we need not consider the adequacy or inadequacy of state administrative procedures regarding such transfers.
. The district court misapplied our holding in Taylor to dismiss plaintiffs Medicaid Act claims against the private defendants. In Taylor, we affirmed the dismissal of similar claims against state defendants because there was nо state action for purposes of § 1983.
. Indeed, appellant concedes thаt "the legislative history of the Medicaid Act does not explicitly state the Congressional intent with regard to a private cause of action.” Reply Brief for Appellant at 10. While a silent legislative history does not necessarily preclude the existence of an implied remedy, Cannon v. University of Chicago,
The only “rights” cited by appellant appear in the federal regulations and protect, among other things, a patient's ability to refuse medication, to be transferred for good cause, and to receive adequate notice and pre-transfer preparation. 42 C.F.R. § 405.1121(k); see also id. § 442.311 (ICF patients' bill of rights). As we note below, these regulatory rights are enforceable by means other than a сivil suit under the Medicaid Act against a private provider of ser
. Although we sympathize with the concern over “transfer trauma” that often accompanies the displacement of elderly and infirm nursing home residents, title XIX simply does not contain the sort of substantive protection appellant seeks. The most nearly applicable statutory provision appears at 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(19), which requires that a state plan for medical assistance
provide such safeguards as may be necessary to assure that eligibility for care and services under the plan will be determined, and such care and services will be provided, in a manner consistent with simplicity of administration and the best interests of the recipients!!]
See also id. § 1396a(a)(33) (providing that state hеalth agency must establish plan consistent with federal regulations for reviewing quality of funded care and services). As the Ninth Circuit has observed, however,
Section I396a(a)(19) is not the sort of specific condition for receipt of federal funds which can be said to create substantive rights in
Medicaid recipients____
Section 1396a(a)(19) speaks to two sometimes conflicting goals: simplicity of administration and thе best interests of the recipients. Whether a state plan strikes a proper balance between the two is a decision better left to the Department of Health and Human Services and the state agencies responsible for implementing Title XIX.
Bumpus v. Clark,
. We note that appellant has specifically abjured some of these avenues. Appellant stated belоw that she did not seek cancellation of KNC's contract, Record vol. 2, at 205, nor did she seek cancellation of the state's Medicaid certification. Moreover, appellant does not raise on appeal the dismissal of her claim against HHS.
. In light of our decision today, we further hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion by dismissing without prejudice appellant’s pendent state claims.
