Friedman v. Shalala ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT


    ____________________


    No. 94-1611

    LEONARD R. FRIEDMAN, M.D.,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    DONNA E. SHALALA, SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, ET. AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Edward F. Harrington, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Cyr, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, and ____________________
    Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________



    ____________________

    Leonard R. Friedman, M.D., on brief pro se. _________________________
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, and Suzanne E. Durrell, ________________ __________________
    Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.


    ____________________
    January 27, 1995
    ____________________
















    Per Curiam. Leonard Friedman is appealing the ___________

    district court's decision dismissing his case for mootness.

    We affirm.

    I. Background __________

    We recite only briefly the pertinent facts. In

    1991, Friedman sued various defendants, claiming that the

    revocation of his medical license in Massachusetts in 1987

    and his exclusion from Medicare provider rolls in 1990 had

    been unlawfully effected. The district court stayed

    proceedings pending the results of other state and federal

    court actions involving the same parties. In October 1993,

    the court approved the parties' stipulation of partial

    dismissal. Pursuant to that stipulation, Friedman dismissed

    with prejudice his claims against all defendants except his

    claim against the Department of Health and Human Services

    (HHS) for a declaratory judgment that HHS had wrongfully

    excluded him from Medicare provider rolls in 1990.1



    ____________________

    1. HHS excluded Friedman under 42 U.S.C. 1320a-7(b)(4)(A),
    which permits exclusion of an individual "whose license to
    provide health care has been revoked or suspended by any
    State licensing authority . . . for reasons bearing on the
    individual's . . . professional competence, professional
    performance, or financial integrity." HHS based its
    exclusion on New York's revocation of Friedman's medical
    license. New York had based its revocation on Massachusetts'
    determination that Friedman had engaged in "gross misconduct"
    sufficient to warrant revocation of Friedman's medical
    license in that state. Friedman's period of exclusion was to
    end when either Massachusetts or New York reinstated his
    license.

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    At Friedman's request, HHS reinstated Friedman as a

    Medicare provider in November 1993. When HHS later answered

    Friedman's complaint, it asserted that Friedman's

    reinstatement had mooted his claim for relief and that the

    action should be dismissed. The court agreed and dismissed

    the action sua sponte.2 ___ ______

    II. Discussion __________

    We address two of Friedman's arguments on appeal.3

    First, Friedman says that HHS is reasonably likely to exclude

    him again since California revoked his medical license in

    1990 and that any future exclusion by HHS would likely evade

    judicial review because it would lapse before the court could

    render a decision. Second, Friedman argues that his

    exclusion has continuing collateral consequences that will

    ____________________

    2. Friedman did not immediately appeal the order dismissing
    his case, but filed a motion for relief from judgment under
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b), the denial of which he appealed.
    Because his motion was filed within the time limit for filing
    motions under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e), however, and challenged
    the legal correctness of the court's decision that his action
    was moot, we treat it as a timely Rule 59(e) motion and
    assume, without deciding, that the dismissal of his action
    for mootness is properly before us. See Perez-Perez v. ___ ___________
    Popular Leasing Rental, Inc., 993 F.2d 281, 284-85 (1st Cir. ____________________________
    1993); Mariani-Giron v. Acevedo-Ruiz, 945 F.2d 1, 3 (1st Cir. _____________ ____________
    1991).

    3. Other arguments he makes are without merit, e.g., that
    the stipulation of partial dismissal and the court's failure
    to revoke its stay order prior to Friedman's reinstatement
    waived mootness, that evidence discovered in 1991 before
    Friedman filed his suit qualified as new evidence justifying
    relief from the court's judgment, and that the mootness
    doctrine does not apply to judicial review of agency
    decisions.

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    affect his reputation and his medical and legal careers. For

    those reasons, Friedman claims that his request for

    declaratory relief is not moot.

    A. Capable of Repetition Yet Evading Review ________________________________________

    We conclude that the capable of repetition yet

    evading review exception to mootness does not apply. While a

    one-year exclusion may well evade judicial review, it does

    not seem at all likely that HHS will exclude Friedman on the

    basis of California's revocation of his medical license.

    At the time Friedman applied for reinstatement, the

    California revocation clearly would have been a basis for

    excluding Friedman from the Medicare program. See 42 U.S.C. ___

    1320a-7(b)(4)(A), supra note 1. Yet HHS reinstated _____

    Friedman in 1993, and so it must not have believed that the

    1990 California license revocation would be grounds for

    excluding Friedman. See 42 C.F.R. 1001.3002(a)(3) (HHS ___

    "will" reinstate an excluded individual if, among other

    things, it determines that there is "no additional basis"

    under the statute for continuing the exclusion).4 Thus, the

    fact that Friedman was reinstated shows that HHS would be

    ____________________

    4. Friedman alleges that this regulation and others cited by
    HHS in its brief were not in effect at the time he was
    excluded, but does not allege that this and the other
    regulations embody practices or policies that are different
    from ones prevailing at the time of his exclusion. In
    addition, we note that the regulations relating to the
    reinstatement of excluded individuals became effective on
    January 29, 1992, and so presumably applied to Friedman's
    reinstatement in November 1993.

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    unlikely to use the California revocation to exclude Friedman

    in the future. Moreover, excluding Friedman because of the

    California revocation would arguably be an abuse of

    discretion. California revoked Friedman's license because of

    Massachusetts' revocation of his license; that is, California

    based its license revocation on the same misconduct as had

    New York. Because HHS based Friedman's exclusion on New

    York's revocation of Friedman's license, excluding him

    because of the California revocation would essentially

    penalize Friedman twice for the same misconduct, a course of

    action that we doubt HHS would undertake.

    B. Collateral Consequences _______________________

    The adverse collateral consequences to which

    Friedman points do not suffice to avoid mootness in this

    case. According to Friedman, overturning his exclusion would

    relieve him of the stigma of having been excluded, ease his

    admission to practice law in Massachusetts, and relieve him

    of the obligation to explain the exclusion when he seeks

    hospital staff privileges, affiliation with certain health

    care entities, or licensure in other states.

    Certainly, in some situations, adverse collateral

    consequences such as those advanced here have been found to

    avoid mootness. See, e.g., Kirkland v. National Mortgage _________ ________ _________________

    Network, Inc., 884 F.2d 1367, 1370 (11th Cir. 1989) (the ______________

    dismissal of an action did not moot an attorney's challenge



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    to a court's revocation of his admission pro hac vice for ___ ___ ____

    failure to abide by promises made during settlement

    negotiations; the "brand of disqualification on grounds of

    dishonesty and bad faith could well hang over [plaintiff's]

    name and career for years to come"); Kleiner v. First _______ _____

    National Bank of Atlanta, 751 F.2d 1193, 1200 n.14 (11th Cir. ________________________

    1985) (the settlement of a class action did not moot

    attorneys' challenge to their disqualification by the court

    in part because counsel could be exposed to further sanctions

    by the bar and their disqualification could have adverse

    effects on their careers and public image) (alternative

    holding); Miller v. Washington State Bar Ass'n, 679 F.2d ______ ____________________________

    1313, 1316, 1318 (9th Cir. 1982) (an attorney could sue a

    state bar association to expunge a letter of admonition from

    his file since he would be required to explain the admonition

    if he applied to the bar in other states or for judicial

    appointments).

    Here, however, it is not the HHS exclusion which

    has tarnished Friedman's reputation, but the apparently valid

    New York and Massachusetts licensing board decisions,5 which

    ____________________

    5. Friedman apparently did not challenge the New York
    decision in court. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
    has upheld the Massachusetts decision. See Friedman v. Board ___ ________ _____
    of Registration in Medicine, 561 N.E.2d 859 (Mass. 1990) _____________________________
    (substantial evidence supported the decision to revoke
    Friedman's license for gross misconduct), cert. denied, 498 ____________
    U.S. 1107 (1991); Friedman v. Board of Registration in ________ ___________________________
    Medicine, 609 N.E.2d 1223 (Mass. 1993) (petition for relief ________
    from license revocation was denied).

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    concluded that Friedman had engaged in gross professional

    misconduct sufficient to warrant license revocation.

    Consistent with the applicable statutory basis for exclusion,

    HHS's letter notifying Friedman of his exclusion explained

    that his exclusion was based on "the fact" that New York had

    revoked his license and indicated that the issue in any

    administrative hearing would be "whether your license was

    revoked for reasons relating to your professional competence,

    professional performance, or financial integrity." Since

    Friedman's Medicare exclusion was based solely on the fact

    that his license had been revoked, the exclusion effectively

    signified only that New York had revoked Friedman's license

    for reasons bearing on his professional competence or

    performance. Compare 42 C.F.R. 1001.2007(a)(i) & (ii) (the _______

    only issues before an ALJ in an exclusion hearing are whether

    the basis for the imposition of the sanction exists and

    whether the length of the exclusion is reasonable).6

    ____________________



    6. This regulation became effective January 29, 1992, after
    Friedman was excluded. Nonetheless, it was published as a
    proposed regulation before Friedman's exclusion and
    represents HHS's interpretation of its obligations in
    exclusions such as Friedman's as of the time Friedman was
    excluded. See 55 Fed. Reg. 12,206 (4/2/90) (explaining that ___
    HHS's authority to exclude certain individuals, including
    those whose state medical licenses have been revoked, is
    "derivative" because "our ability to exclude derives from the
    fact that another entity has imposed a sanction on the
    individual or health care entity. [HHS] would not be
    required to reestablish the factual or legal basis for such
    underlying sanction.").

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    Although the exclusion resulted from the license revocation,

    it conferred no additional stigma on Friedman.7

    Moreover, the actual effect of the exclusion was

    exclusively a financial one, as the letter notifying Friedman

    of his exclusion made clear. Because of his exclusion,

    neither Medicare nor certain federally-assisted state health

    care programs (from which Friedman was also excluded) would

    pay for services or items furnished to Friedman's patients.8

    ____________________

    7. HHS's letter to Friedman notifying him of his exclusion
    informed him that HHS would notify certain state agencies and
    the public of his exclusion and of the reasons therefor. A
    copy of the public notice of Friedman's exclusion is not
    included in the record, but it apparently would have stated
    that Friedman's exclusion would end when his license was
    reinstated. See 42 U.S.C. 1320a-7(c)(3)(A) (the notice of ___
    exclusion given to the excluded individual and to the public
    shall specify the minimum period of exclusion). At the time
    Friedman was reinstated, HHS was required to notify "those
    agencies, groups, individuals, and others that were
    originally notified of the exclusion" of Friedman's
    reinstatement. See 42 C.F.R. 1001.3003(a)(4). Presumably, ___
    therefore, public notice of Friedman's reinstatement was
    given, although it is not clear whether the notice would have
    given the reason for his reinstatement. Compare id. _______ ___
    1001.134(a)(2) (a predecessor regulation to 1001.3003(a),
    which provided for notice to the public of an excluded
    individual's reinstatement). Assuming that the original
    public notice of Friedman's exclusion had stigmatized
    Friedman as a person who had lost his medical license for
    reasons bearing on his professional performance or
    competence, that stigma likely would have been erased to the
    extent possible by the reinstatement notice implying, if not
    stating outright, that he had regained his license.

    8. The letter stated:

    The effect of your exclusion from participation in the
    Medicare and State health care programs is that no
    payment will be made for any items or services (other
    than an emergency item or service) furnished, ordered or
    prescribed by you under the above-mentioned programs.

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    Regulations in effect at the time Friedman was reinstated

    indicate that such payments would have resumed once he was

    reinstated. See 42 C.F.R. 1001.1901(b) (payments under ___

    Medicare and applicable state health care programs may not be

    made unless and until an excluded individual is reinstated

    into the Medicare program); id. 1001.3003(b) (with certain ___

    exceptions apparently not applicable here, state health care

    programs must reinstate an individual to such programs upon

    notification by HHS that the individual has been reinstated

    to the Medicare program). There is nothing in the present

    record to suggest that reinstatement did not have this result

    in Friedman's case.

    Thus, if Friedman should seek some future

    affiliation with a hospital or other health care entity, the

    decision to grant or deny him affiliation would not be

    affected by the entity's inability to receive Medicare or

    applicable state program payments for care given to

    Friedman's patients. On the other hand, if hospitals, health

    care entities, state medical licensing boards, or any boards

    of bar examiners are concerned about Friedman's character or

    professional competence or performance, their response to any

    future application of his would be affected predominantly, if

    ____________________

    Furthermore, payment will not be made to any entity in
    which you are serving as an employee, administrator,
    operator, or in any other capacity for any services that
    you furnish, order or prescribe on or after the
    effective date of this exclusion.

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    not exclusively, by the apparently valid state decisions

    revoking his medical license. While Friedman may have

    expected the district court to review the Massachusetts

    license revocation proceedings in this suit, its review was

    of necessity limited to the exclusion decision itself which

    did not encompass the state proceedings. As noted above, the

    parties stipulated to dismissal of Friedman's claims against

    all defendants with the exception of his claim against HHS

    relating to his Medicare exclusion. Presumably, the

    jurisdictional basis for that claim would be 42 U.S.C.

    1320a-7(f)(1), which provides for judicial review of final

    HHS exclusion decisions. Under HHS Departmental Appeals

    Board precedent in effect at the time of Friedman's

    exclusion, excluded individuals could not challenge their

    exclusion by collaterally attacking the underlying state

    license revocation proceedings. Citing that precedent, both

    the administrative law judge and the Departmental Appeals

    Board rejected Friedman's attempt to collaterally attack the

    Massachusetts and New York license revocation proceedings.

    Thus, the validity of the underlying state proceedings was

    never an issue in Friedman's exclusion proceedings. The

    scope of the proceedings below having been confined to the

    determination whether the statute applied to Friedman,9

    ____________________

    9. Friedman had alleged that the statute was being applied
    retroactively to him since Massachusetts had rendered its
    licensing decision before the statute became effective.

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    whether Friedman's license had been revoked by a state

    licensing authority for the statutorily prescribed reasons,

    and whether the period of exclusion was reasonable, the

    district court's review of the decision excluding Friedman

    would be likewise constrained. Cf. Travers v. Sullivan, 801 ___ _______ ________

    F. Supp. 395, 403 (E.D. Wash. 1992) (where HHS excluded an

    individual on the basis of a prior state conviction for a

    program-related offense, it was "not necessary or proper for

    the court to delve into the facts surrounding the

    conviction"; the court's role under 1320a-7(f) was not to

    review the validity of the underlying conviction but to

    review the validity of the exclusion), aff'd, 20 F.3d 993, _____

    998 (1994).10

    Under these circumstances, we conclude that this

    action is moot. See Florida Farmworkers Council, Inc. v. ___ __________________________________

    Marshall, 710 F.2d 721, 731 (11th Cir. 1983) (the court ________

    determined that expiration of plaintiff's debarment had


    ____________________

    10. HHS's policy barring collateral attack on state license
    revocation proceedings and limiting the nature of the issues
    addressed in exclusion proceedings is now codified in
    regulations that have been expressly made binding on federal
    courts. See 42 C.F.R. 1001.2007(d) (prohibiting collateral ___
    attacks on the underlying state determinations which form a
    basis for exclusion); id. 1001.2007(a)(i) & (ii) (the only ___
    issues before an administrative law judge in an exclusion
    hearing are whether the basis for excluding an individual
    exists and whether the length of the exclusion is
    reasonable); id. 1001.1(b) (these regulations are ___
    applicable to and binding on federal courts in reviewing
    exclusions imposed by HHS) (this latter regulation became
    effective January 22, 1993).

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    mooted its action challenging the debarment despite

    plaintiff's claim of stigma because the court had upheld the

    costs disallowances that had caused the debarment; it

    explained that it could not discern any additional stigma

    created by the debarment and that the debarment had not

    prevented plaintiff from receiving substantial federal funds,

    apparently after the debarment had ended).

    Affirmed. _________





































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