Natalie A. Harves, by Richard E. Harves and Karen Sue Cutter as Co-Personal Representatives v. Daniel Rusyniak, in his Individual Capacity as Secretary of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration, Indiana Family and Social Services Administration, and Decatur County Division of Family Resources. ( 2023 )


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  •                                                                               FILED
    Sep 26 2023, 9:26 am
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                     ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
    Michael T. Foster                                          Theodore E. Rokita
    Greensburg, Indiana                                        Attorney General
    Evan Matthew Comer
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Natalie A. Harves, by Richard E.                           September 26, 2023
    Harves and Karen Sue (Harves)                              Court of Appeals Case No.
    Cutter, as personal                                        23A-PL-671
    representatives,                                           Appeal from the
    Appellant-Petitioner,                                      Decatur Circuit Court
    The Honorable
    v.                                                 David Northam, Special Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    Daniel Rusyniak, in Individual                             16C01-2007-PL-292
    Capacity as Secretary of Indiana
    Family and Social Services
    Administration; Indiana Family
    and Social Services
    Administration; and Decatur
    County Division of Family
    Resources,
    Appellees-Respondents
    Opinion by Judge Vaidik
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023                             Page 1 of 11
    Judges Mathias and Pyle concur.
    Vaidik, Judge.
    Case Summary
    [1]   Natalie A. Harves applied for Medicaid nursing-home benefits. The Indiana
    Family and Social Services Administration (FSSA) denied her application, and
    after an unsuccessful administrative appeal, Harves petitioned for judicial
    review.1 The trial court denied the petition, and Harves appeals. We reverse and
    remand to the trial court with instructions to grant the petition for judicial
    review and return the matter back to FSSA for further proceedings.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [2]   This case concerns several documents that Harves and her children—Karen Sue
    Cutter, Richard E. Harves, and Ann Harves Bildner—signed on January 25,
    2019, when Harves was ninety-one years old. First, Harves appointed Karen as
    her “Health Care Surrogate” and attorney-in-fact and appointed Richard and
    Ann as the successor surrogates and attorneys-in-fact. Second, Harves, Karen,
    and Richard signed a “Personal Service Contract” in which Harves indicated
    her intent to compensate the children for “the time and expenses incurred” by
    1
    Harves died a few days after FSSA’s initial denial of her application, and her family pursued the case on her
    behalf, but for simplicity’s sake, this opinion will refer to Harves as the petitioner and appellant.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023                            Page 2 of 11
    the children “in providing me with assistance and supervision in managing the
    affairs of my estate, or in providing me with financial management, home
    health care, nursing care and escort services as required because of my failing
    health regardless of whether such services were skilled or unskilled[.]”
    Appellant’s App. Vol. II p. 82. According to Harves, the children gave her
    nearly $900,000 in services from January 2011 to January 2019 and continued
    providing services after the Personal Service Contract was signed. The contract
    included the following provision:
    CONSOLIDATE ASSETS. I further agree that I have appointed
    an attorney-in-fact in a Power of Attorney executed by me to
    consolidate my liquid and semi-liquid assets into common
    account(s) held by my living trust or such other trust agreement
    as my health care agent may elect, provided such alternative trust
    has the identical beneficiaries as my living trust[.]
    Id.
    [3]   Third, the children signed an agreement creating an irrevocable trust, the N.
    Harves Family Heirs Trust (“the Trust”), and Harves’s assets—worth $557,240,
    according to Harves—were placed in the Trust. The trust agreement named
    Karen and Richard as the trustees and began with the provisions below tying
    the Trust to the Personal Service Contract:
    A. (TRUST BENEFICIARIES) WHEREAS, the Trust-maker(s)
    desire to establish a trust for the segregation, management and
    distribution of any property transferred as consideration and
    reimbursement to the trust makers by a payor of any and all
    health care and assistance [herein after Healthcare Services
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023      Page 3 of 11
    Recipient], either skilled or unskilled, provided by any one or
    more of the trust makers; and
    B. (TRUST ASSETS) WHEREAS, concurrently with the
    execution of this Trust Agreement, or as soon as possible
    thereafter, all of the right, title and interest in and to the property
    described in the annexed Schedule A shall be transferred to the
    Trustee as the property belonging to this trust estate; and
    C. (TRUST PURPOSE) WHEREAS, the intent of the Trust is
    curtail [sic] any and all interest of any health care recipient in the
    assets transferred to the Trust estate; and to avoid any
    constructive receipt of the trust assets to the trust makers during
    the life of any payor of the health care services provided by any
    one of the trust makers. . . .
    Id. at 52.
    [4]   Four months later, in May 2019, Harves applied for Medicaid nursing-home
    benefits. FSSA denied the application, finding that the assets of the Trust are
    available to Harves and that as a result her resources exceed the threshold for
    Medicaid eligibility. Harves filed an administrative appeal, and an
    administrative law judge (ALJ) affirmed the denial. After FSSA issued a Notice
    of Final Agency Action affirming the ALJ’s order, Harves petitioned for
    judicial review. The trial court denied the petition and affirmed the ALJ’s
    determination.
    [5]   Harves now appeals.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023         Page 4 of 11
    Discussion and Decision
    [6]   Harves argues the ALJ and trial court erred by finding that the assets of the
    Trust are resources available to her, making her ineligible for Medicaid nursing-
    home benefits.2 In an appeal following a trial court’s review of an agency
    decision, we stand in the shoes of the trial court and owe no deference to its
    determination. Baliga v. Ind. Horse Racing Comm’n, 
    112 N.E.3d 731
    , 736 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 2018), reh’g denied, trans. denied. The burden of demonstrating the
    invalidity of agency action is on the party asserting invalidity, and we will
    reverse only if the agency action was
    (1) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not
    in accordance with law; (2) contrary to constitutional right,
    power, privilege, or immunity; (3) in excess of statutory
    jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right;
    (4) without observance of procedure required by law; or (5)
    unsupported by substantial evidence.
    
    Ind. Code § 4-21.5-5
    -14. We defer to the expertise of the administrative body,
    we may not try the case de novo or substitute our judgment for that of the
    2
    FSSA found Harves ineligible for three reasons: “VALUE OF RESOURCES EXCEEDS PROGRAM
    ELIGIBILITY STANDARD”; “INCOME EXCEEDS ELIGIBILITY STANDARDS”; “REFUSAL TO
    AGREE TO SELL OR RENT NON-EXEMPT REAL PROPERTY.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II p. 213.
    FSSA contends that Harves doesn’t challenge the second and third grounds, that those grounds are
    independent bases for the denial, that Harves will therefore be ineligible for Medicaid even if she is correct on
    the available-resources issue, and that as a result we can affirm without addressing this issue. Harves
    responds that the real property and the income from the real property belong to the Trust and that as a result
    “inclusion of the [Trust] caused the denial on these other two grounds.” Appellant’s Reply Br. p. 7. FSSA
    gives us no reason to question that assertion, so we will address the merits of Harves’s appeal.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023                               Page 5 of 11
    agency, and we will not reweigh the evidence. Brown v. Ind. Fam. & Soc. Servs.
    Admin., 
    45 N.E.3d 1233
    , 1235-36 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015).
    [7]   The Medicaid program, 
    42 U.S.C. § 1396
     et seq., was established by Congress
    in 1965. As we have explained:
    Its purpose is to provide medical assistance to needy persons
    whose income and resources are insufficient to meet the expenses
    of health care. The program operates through a combined
    scheme of state and federal statutory and regulatory authority.
    States participating in the Medicaid program must establish
    reasonable standards for determining eligibility, including the
    reasonable evaluation of an applicant’s income and resources. To
    qualify for Medicaid, an applicant must meet both an income-
    eligibility test and a resources-eligibility test. If either the
    applicant’s income or the value of the applicant’s resources is too
    high, the applicant does not qualify for Medicaid.
    
    Id. at 1236
     (citations omitted).
    [8]   “Medicaid is a rocky terrain and that terrain is even more treacherous” where,
    as here, an irrevocable trust is involved. 
    Id. at 1237
    .
    For the first two decades of Medicaid, an irrevocable trust was
    not considered an asset in determining whether an applicant was
    sufficiently needy to qualify for Medicaid benefits. During this
    time, financial advisors and attorneys advised their clients to
    shelter their assets in irrevocable trusts because a trust settlor was
    able to qualify for public assistance without depleting his assets.
    He could therefore once more enjoy those assets if he no longer
    needed public assistance; and, if such a happy time did not come,
    could let them pass intact pursuant to the terms of the trust to his
    heirs. In other words, the settlor “was able to have his cake and
    eat it too.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023        Page 6 of 11
    In 1986, Congress closed this “loophole” in the Medicaid act so
    that assets in certain trusts would be considered in determining
    whether a Medicaid applicant satisfied the maximum asset
    requirement. Seven years later, Congress enacted even tighter
    restrictions, which expanded the types of trusts that could be
    considered to preclude applicants from Medicaid eligibility.
    
    Id. at 1236-37
     (cleaned up).
    [9]    Here, in finding that the assets of the Trust are available resources for Harves,
    the ALJ relied on subsection (d) of 42 U.S.C. § 1396p, titled “Treatment of trust
    amounts.” That provision states, in relevant part, that the corpus of an
    irrevocable trust “shall be considered resources available to the individual” if
    (1) assets of the individual were used to form all or part of the
    corpus of the trust;
    (2) any of the following individuals established such trust other
    than by will: the individual; the individual’s spouse; a person,
    including a court or administrative body, with legal authority to
    act in place of or on behalf of the individual or the individual’s
    spouse; or a person, including any court or administrative body,
    acting at the direction or upon the request of the individual or the
    individual’s spouse; and
    (3) there are any circumstances under which payment from the
    trust could be made to or for the benefit of the individual[.]
    42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(1), (2)(A), (3)(B)(i).
    [10]   Harves argues the ALJ should have instead analyzed the Trust under subsection
    (c) of the statute, entitled “Taking into account certain transfers of assets.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023       Page 7 of 11
    Paragraph (c)(1) provides, in relevant part, that if an institutionalized individual
    disposed of assets for less than fair market value on or after the statutory “look-
    back date” (generally, five years before applying for Medicaid), the individual
    will be ineligible for Medicaid nursing-home benefits for a certain number of
    months. 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(c)(1)(A)-(E). However, subparagraph (c)(2)(C)
    provides that an individual is not ineligible under paragraph (c)(1) if a
    satisfactory showing is made that
    (i) the individual intended to dispose of the assets either at fair
    market value, or for other valuable consideration, (ii) the assets
    were transferred exclusively for a purpose other than to qualify
    for medical assistance, or (iii) all assets transferred for less than
    fair market value have been returned to the individual[.]
    Id. at (c)(2)(C). Harves contends that clause (i) applies. Specifically, she asserts
    that her assets were placed in the Trust to compensate her children for the
    services they provided her over the years, as envisioned by the Personal Service
    Contract, and that therefore she disposed of the assets “for other valuable
    consideration.”
    [11]   This puts the cart before the horse. Only if a Medicaid applicant is otherwise
    eligible does subsection (c) require FSSA to look back “to determine if any
    uncompensated or undercompensated transfers of assets were made.” Brown, 
    45 N.E.3d at 1236
    . In other words:
    FSSA makes two decisions when deciding the amount of medical
    assistance an individual receives to meet the expenses of health
    care. First FSSA determines eligibility based on the available
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023           Page 8 of 11
    resources of the individual. . . . Second, if an individual is found
    eligible for Medicaid benefits, the FSSA may impose a transfer
    penalty if any uncompensated or under-compensated transfers of
    assets were made.
    
    Id. at 1237
     (footnote omitted). Applied to Harves’s situation, this means that
    before determining whether the transfer of her assets to the Trust made her
    ineligible under subsection (c), it must first be determined whether the transfer
    made the assets unavailable to her. If it didn’t, she is already ineligible, and
    ineligibility under the look-back provisions of subsection (c) is a nonissue.
    [12]   That brings us back to subsection (d) of the statute, and here we find a
    significant error in the ALJ’s analysis. The ALJ concluded that the corpus of
    the Trust must be considered resources available to Harves after finding that (1)
    Harves’s assets were used to form the corpus of the Trust and (2) the Trust was
    established by a person with legal authority to act on behalf of Harves.
    Appellant’s App. Vol. II pp. 25-26. Those two findings were correct. Harves
    acknowledges that “[a]ll of [her] assets were transferred to the [Trust],”
    Appellant’s Br. p. 15, and Karen—Harves’s daughter and attorney-in-fact—
    established the Trust along with Harves’s other children. But as noted above, a
    third element must be satisfied before the corpus of an irrevocable trust can be
    counted as available resources. That is, there must be circumstances under
    which payment from the trust could be made to or for the benefit of the
    individual. 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(3)(B)(i). In her order, the ALJ did not mention
    that element or discuss any language from the trust agreement that might satisfy
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023        Page 9 of 11
    it. Appellant’s App. Vol. II pp. 16-28.3 Similarly, the trial court did not address
    the element in denying Harves’s petition for judicial review. Id. at 34-42.
    [13]   The parties address this third element in their appellate briefs, disputing
    whether certain provisions in the trust agreement mean that payment from the
    Trust could be made to Harves or for her benefit. But the agency, not this
    Court, must adjudicate this issue in the first instance.
    A simple but fundamental rule of administrative law is to the
    effect that a reviewing court, in dealing with a determination or
    judgment which an administrative agency alone is authorized to
    make, must judge the propriety of such action solely by the
    grounds invoked by the agency. If those grounds are inadequate
    or improper, the court is powerless to affirm the administrative
    action by substituting what it considers to be a more adequate or
    proper basis.
    Dev. Servs. Alternatives, Inc. v. Ind. Fam. & Soc. Servs. Admin., 
    915 N.E.2d 169
    , 187
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (quoting SEC v. Chenery Corp., 
    332 U.S. 194
    , 196 (1948)),
    trans. denied. “Remanding the case to the administrative body gives it an
    opportunity to correct the irregularities in its proceedings as determined by the
    court. At the same time, it avoids the court’s encroachment upon the agency’s
    administrative functions.” Ind. Alcoholic Beverage Comm’n v. Edwards, 
    659 N.E.2d 631
    , 636 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995) (cleaned up); see also Shoot v. Ind. Fam. & Soc.
    3
    At one point in her order, the ALJ stated, “The N. Harves Family Heirs Trust was created for the sole
    benefit of a Disabled Appointee.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II p. 25. In the trial court, FSSA acknowledged that
    the Trust “does not appear to say anything about a disabled appointee” and argued that the court “should
    disregard this portion of the ALJ’s conclusion of law as harmless error.” Appellant’s App. Vol. III p. 172.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023                          Page 10 of 11
    Servs. Admin., 
    691 N.E.2d 1290
    , 1293 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998) (“[T]he sole relief
    either the trial court or the appellate court may grant if an administrative
    decision is found to be unlawful is to vacate the decision and remand for further
    determination by the agency.”). Therefore, we must reverse the denial of the
    petition for judicial review and remand to the trial court with instructions to
    grant the petition and return the matter back to FSSA for further proceedings on
    the third element.4
    [14]   Reversed and remanded.
    Mathias, J., and Pyle, J., concur.
    4
    Harves’s petition for judicial review also included a claim for “
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     Civil Rights Relief” and a
    corresponding request for attorney’s fees under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1988
    . Appellant’s App. Vol. III pp. 22-26. The
    trial court granted summary judgment to FSSA on those issues. On appeal, Harves makes a three-sentence
    argument that she is entitled to attorney’s fees under Section 1988 but doesn’t address the merits of the trial
    court’s summary-judgment order on the underlying Section 1983 claim. We therefore affirm the trial court on
    these issues.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-PL-671 | September 26, 2023                            Page 11 of 11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 23A-PL-00671

Filed Date: 9/26/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2023