709 N.E.2d 574 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1998
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *744 This class action involves a dispute between the plaintiff class (collectively, "plaintiffs"), and defendant, the Ohio Department of Human Services over whether or not defendant properly determined plaintiffs' eligibility for Ohio's General Assistance ("GA") program and accurately computed the amount of plaintiffs' benefits during the 1993 fiscal year. Plaintiffs filed this action in the Court of Claims of Ohio on March 19, 1993, seeking relief on behalf of those similarly situated who had been denied GA benefits, or who had their benefits reduced, as a result of defendant's alleged failure to properly apply former R.C. 5113.081.1 *745
Agreed facts were submitted for the court's consideration, reply and response memoranda were filed, and, on May 26, 1994, the court heard oral argument on the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment. Both motions were subsequently denied, and, on July 22, 1994, the court took the matter under consideration on stipulated facts in lieu of trial.
On August 9, 1995, the court issued an interlocutory judgment entry in which it found that defendant had not computed plaintiffs' GA benefits for the 1993 fiscal year in a manner that conformed with former R.C.
In compliance with the court's instructions, defendant filed the results of its amended study on March 22, 1996. Plaintiffs again objected, and, on May 30, 1996, the court issued an order that contained a detailed formula to be used by defendant when recalculating plaintiffs' benefits. The court also concluded that defendant had been unable to satisfactorily determine which applicants would have been eligible for benefits. Accordingly, the court decided that each class member should be required to reapply. In order to implement its ruling, the court ordered the parties to submit a plan for approval giving each member of the plaintiff; class notice of his or her right to reapply for benefits.
On June 11, 1997, the Court of Claims adopted defendant's proposed order, notice, public assistance letter, and retroactive GA worksheet to be distributed to members of the plaintiff class. At that time, the court also concluded that defendant had complied with former R.C.
As set forth above, the Court of Claims issued two substantive rulings in regard to former R.C.
"The Ohio Court of Claims committed reversible error when it held that the Ohio Department of Human Services complied with Ohio Rev. Code §
Defendant cross-appeals from the court's August 9, 1995 interlocutory entry and asserts the following assignment of error:
"The Court of Claims erred in determining that cross appellant Ohio Department of Human Services violated former R.C.
Ohio's now extinct GA program was designed to provide basic medical benefits and a monthly financial stipend to individuals in need.3 On July 26, 1991, the General Assembly restructured the program when it enacted Am.Sub.H.B. No. 298. Under the revised program, monthly benefits were reduced to six months out of any twelve-month period. At the end of the six-month period, benefits ceased.4 Am.Sub.H.B. No. 298 also reenacted certain statutory provisions granting defendant the authority to adopt rules establishing application and verification procedures, as well as income, resources, citizenship, age, residence, and other eligibility requirements.
According to the stipulations filed with the trial court, defendant determined that the named plaintiffs Taber, Flory, and Bozick were not eligible for GA assistance because in each case, applying defendant's modified eligibility test, plaintiffs' monthly income exceeded a threshold amount known as the "payment standard." As in effect for the 1993 fiscal year, R.C.
"Beginning July 1, 1992, eligibility for assistance under this chapter shall be determined by subtracting an assistance group's countable income from the payment standard. If the assistance group's monthly countable income determined under division (D) of this section is less than the payment standard, the assistance group is eligible for assistance." 144 Ohio Laws Part III, 4373-4374.
Plaintiffs allege that the clear and express language of R.C.
Perhaps the first principle of statutory construction is that the language used in a statute must be given its plain and ordinary meaning. Rocky River v. State Emp. Relations Bd. (1989),
"[A] court must first look to the language of the statute itself to determine the legislative intent. If that inquiry reveals that the statute conveys a meaning which is clear, unequivocal and definite, at that point the interpretative effort is at an end, and the statute must be applied accordingly." Id.
at 218,
Likewise, if a statute is clear and unambiguous on its face, it "may not be restricted, constricted, qualified, narrowed, enlarged or abridged" under the guise of statutory construction.Wachendorf v. Shaver (1948),
As worded, former R.C.
Under former R.C.
1. Multiply the payment standard by two,
2. Subtract the product determined under (1) from the assistance group's gross monthly income,
3. Multiply the difference calculated under (2) by four-tenths,
4. Subtract from the product determined under (3) any child care expenses. 144 Ohio Laws, Part III, 4374.
As stipulated, defendant's modified eligibility determination differed in several respects from the calculation set forth in R.C.
"In order to determine program eligibility for applicant GA and DA assistance groups, total all gross monthly earnings of each employed GA or DA assistance group member * * * The first $75 of the gross income is deducted as a work expense disregard.
"If there are any child care costs paid directly by the assistance group, deduct the determined child care expenses from the gross income.* * *
"The remaining income is then added to the assistance group's other countable income (i.e., unearned income) and compared to the appropriate GA or DA payment standard. * * *
"If the assistance group is a GA assistance group for which program eligibility is determined to exist, the CDHS shall apply the provisions set forth in PAM Section 5444.5 to determine eligibility for GA benefits."
Defendant's manner of computing eligibility can therefore be illustrated by way of the following calculation: *749
1. Gross monthly earned income;
2. Subtract $75 work-expense disregard;
3. Subtract child care costs;
4. Add other countable income (unearned income);
5. Compare to payment standard.
As applied to plaintiff Taber, defendant's method of calculating eligibility produced the following result:
a. Gross monthly earned income $ 0 b. Subtract $75 -75 ____ c. Subtotal $ 0 d. child care costs — 0 ____
e. Subtotal $ 0 _____ f. Add unearned income + 3787
g. Countable Income $378 $378
Because Taber's countable income exceeded the $100 payment standard for a single individual, defendant determined that she was not eligible to participate in the GA program. In contrast, following the method set forth in former R.C.
a. Payment standard for one person $100 $ 100 b. Multiply by two x2 x2 _____ c. Subtotal $200 $ 200 d. Gross. monthly income $378 $ 378 e. Subtract amount of line c. — 200 _____ f. Subtotal $ 178 g. Multiply by four-tenths x.4 _____ h. Subtotal $ 71 i. Subtract child care costs -0 _____ j. Countable Income $ 71
Under the statutory scheme, Taber would have been eligible for a benefit determination because her countable income was less than the applicable payment standard of $100.8
Defendant justifies the use of the modified eligibility test on the basis that the test was adopted pursuant to a valid exercise of the rulemaking authority *750
delegated by R.C. Chapter 5113. In support of this proposition, defendant directs our attention to former R.C.
"The state department of human services shall adopt rules establishing application and verification procedures, and income, resources, citizenship, age, residence, living arrangement, assistance group composition, and other eligibility requirements for general assistance." 144 Ohio Laws, Part III, 4376.
The delegation of rulemaking authority is generally thought to be necessary "because of the infinite detail essential in the consideration of an application and the interpretation of the law to concrete and specific circumstances and situations, the incorporation of which in the statute itself would be impracticable or impossible." Kroger Grocery Baking Co. v.Glander (1948),
"It is not enough that appellee's rule is reasonable in light of the legislative intent if it contradicts express legislative language.`[B]ecause the power delegated is to administer rather than to legislate, the director may not promulgate rules which add to his delegated powers, no matter how laudable or sensible the ends sought to be accomplished.'" Id. at 627,
While courts have frequently recognized the power of administrative agencies to promulgate regulations and rules of procedure in order to operate efficiently, "[t]he basic limitation on this authority is that an administrative agency may not legislate by enacting rules which are in excess of legislative policy, or which conflict with the enabling statute."P.H. English v. Koster (1980),
Having carefully examined the relevant statutory provisions, we find that the modified eligibility formula used by defendant during the 1993 fiscal year was in conflict with the express method of determining eligibility set forth in R.C.
In its cross-assignment of error, defendant claims that the trial court erred in finding that it had failed to comply with former R.C.
As set forth in the stipulated facts, defendant treated earned and unearned income differently when computing the amount of benefits to be awarded pursuant to former R.C.
1. Multiply the payment standard by two,
2. Subtract the amount computed in (1) from the assistance group's monthly earned income,
3. Multiply the amount computed in (2) by four-tenths,
4. Subtract any child care expenses from the amount computed in (3),
5. Add any unearned income to the amount computed in (4).
The trial court accepted plaintiffs' argument that defendant did not have any statutory authority to separate earned and unearned income when calculating plaintiffs' assistance benefits pursuant to former R.C.
Upon review, we find that defendant acted within its discretion when it applied the income disregard provisions of former R.C.
"As provided in Section
Former R.C.
Therefore, for the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs' assignment of error is sustained and defendant's cross-assignment of error is also sustained. The judgment of the Court of Claims of Ohio is reversed, and this cause is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the law and consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
JOHN C. YOUNG and BOWMAN, JJ., concur.
"[E]very person for whom an application for participation in the General Assistance Program ("GA') Program was denied, or monthly GA grant was reduced, or participation in GA was terminated, for any month during the result of the policies of Defendant Ohio Department Human Services concerning R.C 5113.O31(C) and (D), as enacted by Am.Sub.H.B. 298 (1992).