SWINOMISH INDIAN TRIBAL COMMUNITY, Plaintiff, v. ALEX M. AZAR, et al., Defendants.
No. 18-cv-1156 (DLF)
September 9, 2019
DABNEY L. FRIEDRICH
MEMORANDUM OPINION
The plaintiff Swinomish Indian Tribal Community brings this action under the Contract Disputes Act,
I. BACKGROUND
A. Statutory Background
The Indian Health Service (IHS), an agency in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), delivers health-related programs, services, and activities to American Indians. See Compl. ¶ 11–12, Dkt. 1. When it delivers these services directly to tribal beneficiaries, it operates its own service unit facilities. See id. ¶ 18; see also Pl.’s Mem. at 8, Dkt. 21-2. Alternatively, the Indian Self Determination and Education Assistance Act (ISDEAA),
Title V of the ISDEAA,
The first type of funding, an amount for “direct program costs,”
The second type of funding, an amount for contract support costs (CSC), “shall be added” to the Secretarial amount for:
reasonable costs for activities which must be carried on by a tribal organization as a contractor to ensure compliance with the terms of the contract and prudent management, but which—
(A) normally are not carried on by the respective Secretary in his direct operation of the program; or
(B) are provided by the Secretary in support of the contracted program from resources other than those under contract.
(i) direct program expenses for the operation of the Federal program that is the subject of the contract, and
(ii) any additional administrative or other expense related to the overhead incurred by the tribal contractor in connection with the operation of the Federal program, function, service, or activity pursuant to the contract[.]
When the IHS provides direct services to beneficiaries, the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (IHCIA) authorizes it to bill and collect reimbursements from Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and private insurers (third parties) for services it provided to eligible individuals. Compl. ¶ 18. These collections, called program income or third-party revenue,2 are placed in a “special fund” that is passed through “100 percent” to the IHS service unit entitled to the reimbursement.
Alternatively, tribes may opt to bill and receive payments from third parties directly.
All Medicare, Medicaid, or other program income earned by an Indian tribe shall be treated as supplemental funding to that negotiated in the funding agreement. The Indian tribe may retain all such income and expend such funds in the current year or in future years except to the extent that the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (25 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.) provides otherwise for Medicare and Medicaid receipts. Such funds shall not result in any offset or reduction in the amount of funds the Indian tribe is authorized to receive under its funding agreement in the year the program income is received or for any subsequent fiscal year.
The question in this case is whether, when a tribe collects its own third-party revenue pursuant to
B. Factual Background
The Swinomish Indian Tribal Community is a federally recognized Indian tribe whose reservation is in Skagit County, Washington. Compl. ¶ 10.3 In 1997, the it entered into a Compact of Self Governance Between the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community and the United States of America (Compact), Pl.’s Mot. Ex. A, Dkt. 21-3, under Title V of the ISDEAA. Since then, the Tribe has been carrying out “a range of health care programs, functions, services, and
activities at its medical and dental clinics on the Swinomish Reservation.” Compl. ¶ 10. Like ISDEAA Title V, the Tribe’s Compact addresses third-party revenue with the following provision:
All Medicare, Medicaid and other program income earned by the Tribe shall be treated as additional supplemental funding to that negotiated in the [funding agreement]. The Tribe may retain all such income and expend such funds in the current year or in future years except to the extent that the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (25 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.) provides otherwise for Medicare and Medicaid receipts. Such funds shall not result in any offset or reduction in the amount of funds the Tribe is authorized to receive under its [funding agreement] in the year the program income is received or for any subsequent fiscal year.
Compact, Art. III, § 5.
On November 2, 2009, the parties entered into a Funding Agreement for Calendar Year (CY) 2010–2014 (Funding Agreement), Pl.’s Mot. Ex. B, Dkt. 21-4. In accordance with Title V, the Funding Agreement included both the Secretarial amount for direct program costs and CSC funding for direct and indirect administrative costs. See id. § 4. For CY 2010, the Tribe’s negotiated indirect cost rate was 31.91%. Compl. ¶ 24; see also Indirect Cost Negotiation Agreement, Pl.’s Mot. Ex. C at 4, Dkt. 21-5. Thus, under the Agreement, the amount of indirect CSC funds that the Tribe received was calculated by multiplying the indirect cost rate by the direct cost base. See Funding Agreement § 6. The CY 2010 award totaled over $3,000,000, including $755,965 for indirect CSC and $153,374 for direct CSC. Defs.’ Am. Answer ¶ 27, Dkt. 26-1.4
On December 20, 2016, the Tribe submitted a certified claim to the IHS contracting officer for $245,867 in CSC funding, which was on top of the $909,339 in CSC funding that it received under its CY 2010 Funding Agreement. See Pl.’s Mot. Ex. E at 3, Dkt. 21-7.5 The Tribe claimed that the ISDEAA, the Compact, and the Funding Agreement entitle it to the additional CSC because the IHS had “failed to pay CSC associated with the portion of the Tribe’s federal health care program funded by third-party revenues, such as payments from
Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance.” Id. at 2. On May 22, 2017, the IHS contracting officer denied the Tribe’s claim because “Swinomish did not provide any documentation to support its claims” and “has not demonstrated that the claimed costs are for activities that are eligible for CSC pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 5325(a).” Pl.’s Mot. Ex. F at 2, Dkt. 21-8.
The Tribe filed its complaint in this action on May 17, 2018 to compel the IHS to pay the additional CSC funds for CY 2010. Compl. ¶ 46(2)(A).6 It brings the complaint under the Contract Disputes Act,
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A court must grant summary judgment “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A fact is “material” if it “might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986); Holcomb v. Powell, 433 F.3d 889, 895 (D.C. Cir. 2006). And a dispute is “genuine” if “the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248; Holcomb, 433 F.3d at 895. “If there are no genuine issues of material fact, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law if the nonmoving party fails to make a showing sufficient
to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.” Holcomb, 433 F.3d at 895 (internal quotation marks omitted).
III. ANALYSIS
The question in this case is purely legal: Should the Tribe have received CSC funding based on third-party revenue from Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurers that the Tribe collected and then spent on health care services? The parties agree about the relevant material facts but offer competing interpretations of the relevant statutory provisions, including
A. Jurisdiction and Statute of Limitations
As a threshold matter, the Court must determine whether it has subject matter jurisdiction. See Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 523 U.S. 83, 94–95 (1998); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. Rule 12(h)(3) (“If the court determines at any time that it lacks subject-matter jurisdiction, the court must dismiss the action.”).
The CDA and the ISDEAA confer subject-matter jurisdiction on this Court. Under the CDA, a tribe seeking underpaid CSC must first “make a claim in writing to a contracting officer at the relevant agency before it may sue in court,” Menominee Indian Tribe of Wis. v. United States, 764 F.3d 51, 55 (D.C. Cir. 2014), aff’d, 136 S. Ct. 750 (2016) (citing
The claim is also not barred by the six-year time limit in the CDA. See
The IHS did not sufficiently raise the statute of limitations defense in its Amended Answer. The defense “need not be articulated with any rigorous degree
B. Third-Party Income Under the ISDEAA
“As in all statutory construction cases,” the Court must “begin with the language of the statute.” Barnhart v. Sigmon Coal Co., 534 U.S. 438, 450 (2002); Bullcreek v. Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n, 359 F.3d 536, 541 (D.C. Cir. 2004). “The first step is to determine whether the language at issue has a plain and unambiguous meaning with regard to the particular dispute in the case.” Sigmon Coal Co., 534 U.S. at 450 (internal quotation marks omitted). “The structure of the statute is also relevant in understanding” its meaning. Bullcreek, 359 F.3d at 541. “The inquiry ceases if the statutory language is unambiguous and the statutory scheme is coherent and consistent.” Sigmon Coal Co., 534 U.S. at 450 (internal quotation marks omitted).
When interpreting the ISDEAA, courts must heed the Indian canon of construction. The ISDEAA specifies that it “shall be liberally construed for the benefit of the Indian tribe participating in self-governance and any ambiguity shall be resolved in favor of the Indian tribe.”
The Tribe argues that it is entitled to CSC for third-party expenditures on the basis of two provisions of the ISDEAA. First, the Tribe interprets
1. Section 5388(j)
The Court agrees with IHS that
All Medicare, Medicaid, or other program income earned by an Indian tribe shall be treated as supplemental funding to that negotiated in the funding agreement. The Indian tribe may retain all such income and expend such funds in the current year or in future years except to the extent that the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (25 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.) provides otherwise for Medicare and Medicaid receipts. Such funds shall not result in any offset or reduction in the amount of funds the Indian tribe is authorized to receive under its funding agreement in the year the program income is received or for any subsequent fiscal year.
Section 5388(j)’s text explicitly separates third-party revenue from the funding agreement. It clarifies that third-party revenue “shall be treated as supplemental funding to that negotiated in the funding agreement.” Id. (emphasis added). And the Tribe’s Compact likewise calls third-party revenue “additional supplemental funding to that negotiated in the [funding
agreement].” Compact, Art. III, § 5 (emphasis added). A “supplement” is: “[a] thing . . . added to make good a deficiency or as an enhancement” or “an extra payment or charge . . . a sum of money paid to increase a person’s income.” Oxford English Dictionary (3d ed. 2012).7 And the word “additional” means: “in addition to something else; added, extra, supplementary.” Oxford English Dictionary (3d ed. 2010). Thus, under
Yet the statute makes clear that CSC is negotiated and calculated within the funding agreement. Subsection (c) defines the “[a]mount of funding” provided under a funding agreement, and it explicitly includes “amounts for contract support costs specified under section 5325(a)(2), (3), (5), and (6) of this title.”
provided in a funding agreement, and those include the Secretarial amount and CSC. Subsequent subsections then outline various other tribal resources that are not included in the funding agreements, including third-party revenue (subsection (j)), reimbursements for goods and services (subsection (f)), interest on transfers (subsection (h)), and carryover funds (subsection (i)). The Court reads the ISDEAA’s separation of subsection (c), where the funding agreement is provided, from subsections (f)-(j), where other resources are provided, as intentional. And only subsection (c), not the following subsections, provides for CSC. See Russello v. United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983) (“Where Congress includes particular language in one section of a statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion.” (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted)).
Although
Rather than requiring extra CSC payment on third-party revenue,
For these reasons, the Court reads
2. Sections 5325(a)(1)–(3)
The Court also agrees with the IHS that
amount for direct program costs “not . . . less than the [IHS] Secretary would have otherwise provided for the operation of the programs.”
The Tribe’s arguments to the contrary fail. To start,
In addition, “[w]here Congress includes particular language in one section of a statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion.” Russello, 464 U.S. at 23 (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted).
Jones v. Bock, 549 U.S. 199, 222 (2007). Here, Congress has “described with some care the various situations” in which CSC is available in
The statutory context as a whole further clarifies that the Secretarial amount in
Read together, the ISDEAA’s various provisions clearly limit the Secretarial amount to funds that the IHS appropriates and exclude from that amount any third-party revenue that the Tribe collects on its own. Title V clarifies that “the [IHS] Secretary shall transfer to the Indian tribe all funds provided for in the funding agreement, pursuant to subsection (c) of this section,”
Moreover, additional CSC for third-party expenditures would violate
recovery of past costs is irrelevant, for it is future services that matter. See Pl.’s Mot. at 19 (“[E]xpenditures of
First of all, providing CSC for additional future services would duplicate reimbursements for past services. Under Title V of the ISDEAA, the IHS compensates a tribe for both direct and indirect costs associated with the health-related programs it provides. The IHCIA requires the tribe to use the revenue it collects from third-party insurers for health care services, and it permits the third-party revenue to be used to cover indirect as well as direct costs. Interpreting Title V to require the IHS to provide a tribe additional CSC for future expenditures financed by third-party revenue thus would result in duplicative payments. A tribe could use the initial CSC provided under its funding agreement to cover the indirect costs of its past services and then use the third-party revenue to cover the indirect costs of future health-related expenditures.10 In this example, providing the tribe with added CSC for indirect costs associated with future health
services that were funded by third-party reimbursements would be duplicative and result in the over-recovery of indirect costs.
In addition, the very nature of indirect CSC is that it does not necessarily create meaningful new overhead costs for pooled resources, such as information technology or human resources departments and audits.11 See Sage Memorial, 263 F. Supp. 3d at 1112 (quoting testimony from the tribe that “were [it] to raise as much in third-party collections as it receives from the Secretarial amount, it could double its programmatic budget without meaningful new overhead.”); Oxford English Dictionary (3d ed. 2004) (defining overhead costs as those “incurred in the upkeep or running of a plant, premises, or business, and not attributable to individual products or items” (emphasis added)). Any new CSC generated is incremental at most, and the Tribe’s requested relief of the full 31.91% indirect cost rate would largely, if not totally, duplicate the indirect cost reimbursement built into third-party revenue.
3. The Tribe’s remaining arguments
The Tribe principally relies on two district court cases to support its statutory arguments that the Tribe’s collection and expenditure of third-party revenue should be considered part of the federal program for purposes of calculating CSC. They are inapposite.
The first, Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe v. Burwell, 70 F. Supp. 3d 534 (D.D.C. 2014), addressed a narrower issue than the one before this Court. There the district court considered only whether a tribe was entitled to an IHS Secretarial appropriation to run a certain program; it addressed neither the source of funds nor CSC. The court held that the IHS Secretary could
that program and had previously operated it with redirected funds. Id. at 544. Instead, the Secretary had to appropriate to the tribe the funds the Secretary would have spent, regardless of where he would have obtained the funds. Id. Contrary to the Tribe’s claim, this case cannot be fairly read as “holding that [the] Secretarial amount includes third-party funding.” See Pl.’s Mot. at 4–5.
The Tribe’s other main case, Navajo Health Foundation—Sage Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Burwell, 263 F. Supp. 3d 1083 (D.N.M. 2016), is also distinguishable on several grounds. There the IHS reduced otherwise allocable CSC based on third-party revenue using an “allocation ratio.” See id. at 1092. For example, if the tribe was otherwise entitled to $25 for CSC to support a $100 Secretarial amount, and the tribe raised and expended $100 more in third-party revenue, then IHS would reduce the previously allocated CSC to $12.50 because 50% of expenditures were now attributable to the third-parties. Id. at 1113 n.32. The Sage Memorial court held that the allocation ratio violated the ISDEAA when applied to third-party revenue because it directly contravened the provision that “program income . . . shall not be a basis for reducing the amount of funds otherwise obligated to the contract.” Id. at 1167–68 (citing
In addition, what the Sage Memorial tribe sought, the Swinomish Tribe already receives. The tribe in Sage Memorial argued that “the IHS needs to pay the full contracted CSC amount regardless how much [the tribe] is able to expand its programmatic budget via third party
collections.” Id. at 1113. In other words, it “should receive $25.00 for CSC whether [it] only has a $100.00 programmatic budget from the Secretarial amount or a $200.00 programmatic budget from adding $100.00 in third-party revenues to the $100.00 Secretarial amount.” Id. at 1113 n.33. But the Tribe would have this Court go further, seeking in effect $50 in CSC (an added $25) because of its added $100 expenditure of third-party revenue. The Sage Memorial court’s ultimate conclusion that third-party expenditures were “eligible to be reimbursed as CSC without use of an allocation ratio,” id. at 1162 (emphasis added), does not apply here.
Also, the Sage Memorial decision was under Title I of the ISDEAA, while this decision is under Title V. Though this fact is not dispositive, it means that the Sage Memorial court did not address the specific textual and structural implications of
CONCLUSION
In sum, the text, structure, and logic of
For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and denies the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. A separate order consistent with this decision accompanies this memorandum opinion.
DABNEY L. FRIEDRICH
United States District Judge
September 9, 2019
