Phyllis A. TANNLER, Petitioner-Respondent-Petitioner, v. WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL SERVICES, Respondent-Appellant.
No. 96-0118
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
Oral argument May 30, 1997.—Decided June 24, 1997.
564 N.W.2d 735 | 211 Wis. 2d 179
For the petitioner-respondent-petitioner, there was a brief by Scott Thompson and Kittelsen, Barry, Ross, Wellington and Thompson, Monroe and oral argument by Scott Thompson.
For the respondent-appellant the cause was argued by Maryann Sumi, assistant attorney general, with whom on the brief was Steven E. Tinker, assistant attorney general and James E. Doyle, attorney general.
¶ 1. DONALD W. STEINMETZ, J. The issue in this case is whether an institutionalized person‘s fail
¶ 3. Tannler continued to receive MA benefits until 1995 when the respondent, Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS), informed Tannler that it was terminating her eligibility. DHSS asserted that Tannler‘s failure to contest, select, or elect against the will constituted a divestment of assets which rendered her ineligible for MA. A hearing on the matter was held April 12, 1995, and the hearing examiner issued a proposed decision that Tannler remain eligible for MA.
- The petitioner‘s acceptance of her husband‘s will transferring to a third person assets to which she was entitled under law was a disposal or a transfer of an asset.
- The petitioner divested herself of an asset.
The Matter of Phyllis A. Tannler, DHSS Decision, August 17, 1995.
¶ 4. Tannler appealed. The Green County Circuit Court, Judge David G. Deininger, ordered that DHSS‘s action terminating Tannler‘s MA be set aside. The circuit court found that DHSS erroneously interpreted
¶ 5. DHSS appealed from the circuit court order. The court of appeals reversed. According due weight to DHSS‘s interpretation, the court held that the failure to make a spousal election was an “action” constituting divestment that resulted in MA ineligibility. Tannler v. Department of Health and Social Servs., 206 Wis. 2d 385, 557 N.W.2d 434 (Ct. App. 1996).
¶ 6. This case involves the interpretation of
¶ 8. If an agency conclusion does not meet all of the criteria necessary to accord it great weight deference, this court may give “due weight” deference to the agency conclusions. Jicha, 169 Wis. 2d at 290–91. Due weight deference, the middle level of review, is appropriate “if the agency decision is ‘very nearly’ one of first impression.” Id. at 291. However, if the case is one of first impression for the agency and the agency lacks any special expertise, then the court must review the agency‘s conclusion de novo. Id.
¶ 9. As the court of appeals noted, the Medical Assistance Handbook produced by DHSS provides guidance on the issue presented by this case. The court stated that “[b]ecause the MA Handbook is designed to assist state and local agencies to implement the federal-state MA program, we conclude that its provisions are persuasive in resolving disputes such as the one before the court.” Tannler, 206 Wis. 2d at 391. Tannler claims that this case presents an issue of first impression that should be subject to de novo review by this
¶ 10.
¶ 11. In rendering its decision in this case, DHSS considered the language, purposes, and policies of the federal and state legislation regarding the MA program. It also looked to language found in the MA Handbook for guidance. Specifically, DHSS relied on an example found in the section of the Handbook covering divestment. The example provides as follows:
It is also divestment if a person takes an action to avoid receiving income or assets s/he is entitled to. Actions which would cause income or assets not to be received include:
. . . .
6) Refusing to take action to claim the statutorily required portion of a deceased spouse‘s or parent‘s estate. Count the action as a divestment only if:
a. The value of the abandoned portion is clearly identified, and
b. There is certainty that a legal claim action will be successful.
This includes situations in which the will of the institutionalized person‘s spouse precludes any inheritance for the institutionalized person. Under Wisconsin law, a person is entitled to a portion of his/her spouse‘s estate. If the institutionalized person does not contest his/her spouse‘s will in this instance, the inaction may be divestment.
MA Handbook, Section 14.2.1 (emphasis added).
¶ 12. DHSS explains in its decision that even though the statutes speak in terms of “action” while the Handbook refers to “refusal to take action,” the distinction is one without a difference. DHSS concludes that the statutes and the Handbook are consistent because both seek to terminate MA eligibility where a recipient or spouse somehow dispose of or avoid acceptance of an available asset. In accepting the will, DHSS concludes, Tannler acted in concert with her deceased husband in completing the divestment, and, therefore, she is ineligible for further MA benefits according to
¶ 13. Tannler asserts that reliance on the MA Handbook is misplaced. Tannler claims that the rele
¶ 14. We reject Tannler‘s arguments. This court concludes that the MA Handbook used by DHSS is consistent with the federal and state legislation regarding medical assistance. We further conclude that the term “action” as it is used in
¶ 15. The Department may use policies and guidelines to assist in the implementation of administrative rules provided they are consistent with state and federal legislation governing MA. As long as the document simply recites policies and guidelines, without attempting to establish rules or regulations, use of the document is permissible. DHSS‘s MA Handbook is a policy manual that is consistent with controlling leg
The following are examples of actions which could cause income or resources not to be received:
• Irrevocably waiving pension income;
• Waiving the right to receive an inheritance;
• Not accepting or accessing injury settlements;
• Tort settlements which are diverted by the defendant into a trust or similar device to be held for the benefit of an individual who is a plaintiff; and
• Refusal to take legal action to obtain a court ordered payment that is not being paid, such as child support or alimony.
State Medicaid Manual, Section 3257(3) (emphasis added). Both the federal and state handbooks conclude that it is an “action” to refuse to take action to receive income to which one is entitled even if the refusal is merely a failure to act.
¶ 16. This court is satisfied that DHSS‘s reliance on the MA Handbook in this situation is authorized by the statutes and that the Handbook is consistent with both state and federal legislation regarding medical assistance. As demonstrated, the handbook used by the state is actually based on the federal model provided by the United States DHHS manual. As such, we conclude that the use of the MA Handbook for guidance on the issue involved in this case is appropriate.
¶ 17. Under Wisconsin law, a person is entitled by statute to a portion of his or her spouse‘s estate. See
¶ 18. Phyllis Tannler is an institutionalized person. Her husband died in 1994 leaving her nothing in his will. Nonetheless, pursuant to Wisconsin law, Tannler is entitled to a portion of her husband‘s estate. Through her guardian, Tannler could have contested the will of her husband or affirmatively elected or selected certain property to which she is entitled. Through her guardian, Tannler made no claims
¶ 19. When interpreting a statute with an ambiguous term like “action” in this instance, this court looks to the purpose of the statute. Medical assistance is a joint federal and state program aimed at ensuring medical care for the poor and needy. See
¶ 20. The practical effect of Tannler‘s inaction is that persons other than the community spouse or the institutionalized spouse will receive the financial benefits of the conscious act to reject her share of the estate. The result will be that the taxpayers of this state will bear the burden of supporting Tannler while she resides in the nursing home and receives medical assistance. If Tannler had not rejected her share of her spouse‘s estate, then those assets would have been
¶ 21. Giving due weight to DHSS‘s final decision and order, we conclude that Tannler‘s failure to file a claim against her deceased husband‘s estate is an “action” within the meaning of
By the Court.—The decision of the court of appeals is affirmed.
¶ 22. SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, CHIEF JUSTICE (concurring). I join the majority opinion. I write to address the underlying policy of the statutes.
¶ 23. Anyone who works with medical assistance statutes begins by appreciating that the federal and state statutes are extremely complex and may fairly be described as incomprehensible.1 The statutes are characterized by ambivalence and ambiguity, by a confusing mix of means-tested programs and entitlements, and by uneasy compromises among different and often conflicting policies. This case illustrates the difficulties posed by the legislative compromises made in this difficult field.
¶ 24. To be eligible for medical assistance an institutionalized person must have limited assets.
¶ 25. Although Congress requires divestment, it has recognized that elderly persons should not be forced into impoverishment in order to qualify an institutionalized spouse for medical assistance. Thus Congress has determined that spouses of those who need long-term care should not be driven by the government into poverty. The Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988 addressed the issue of spousal impoverishment by protecting some resources of the non-institutionalized spouse (referred to as the community spouse) from the debts of the institutionalized spouse.2
¶ 26. The case at bar involves the interplay of the divestment and spousal impoverishment provisions. Under the court‘s interpretation the community spouse retains the freedom to make testamentary gifts; yet at the community spouse‘s death the assets available by law to the institutionalized spouse are used for the care of that spouse. The court‘s interpretation of the statutes attempts to fit the congressional plan of enabling the community spouse to keep and dispose of his or her
¶ 27. I join the opinion of the court for the reasons stated.
Notes
[I]f an institutionalized individual or his or her spouse, or another person acting on behalf of the institutionalized individual or his or her spouse, transfers assets for less than fair market value on or after the institutionalized individual‘s look-back date, the institutionalized individual is ineligible for medical assistance. . . .
The term “assets“, with respect to an individual, includes all income and resources of the individual and of the individual‘s spouse, including any income or resources which the individual or such individual‘s spouse is entitled to but does not receive because of action—
(A) by the individual or the individual‘s spouse
(B) by a person, including a court or administrative body, with legal authority to act in place of or on behalf of the individual or such individual‘s spouse, . . . .
Justice Crooks: What does the Department base that handbook on? Do they have a model from the federal government?
Attorney Sumi: There is a federal model. And perhaps this is a good time to inform the court that the federal manual does provide for this situation. It does say that waiver of an inheritance is an example of an action that could constitute divestment.
