Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1998 )


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    DAN MORALES                                           May 29,1998
    ATTORNEY
    GENERAL
    William R. Archer III, M.D.                                 Opinion No. DM-477
    Commissioner of Health
    Texas Department of Health                                  Re: Whether the Texas Department of Health
    1100 West 49th Street                                       may allocate medicaid provider payments to
    Austin, Texas 78756-3199                                    satisfy a medicaid provider’s child-support
    obligation (RQ- 1046)
    Dear Commissioner Archer:
    Human Resources Code section 32.036 stipulates that a medical assistance (medicaid)
    provider payment may be paid only to the service provider unless the provider has assigned the
    payment consistently with 42 U.S.C. $ 1396a(a)(32). Under the federal law, a state may pay a
    medicaid provider’s assignee if the assignee is a governmental agency or if the assignment was
    established in accordance with a court order. You ask whether the Texas Department of Health
    (“TDH”) may “garnish” a service provider’s medicaid payment to satisfy the provider’s child-
    support obligation. By “garnish,” we understand you to mean “allocate”~the payment in accordance
    with an assignment authorized by 42 USC. 5 1396a(a)(32). We conclude the Department of Health
    may withhold all or part of the payment if the provider has assigned medicaid payments to
    a governmental agency or if the assignment is established by or in accordance with a court order
    issued by a court of competent jurisdiction.’ We do not determine in any particular case whether
    payments have been assigned as Human Resources Code section 32.036(c) and 42 U.S.C.
    9 1396a(a)(32)(B) require.
    We understand the TDH is the operating agency for the State’s medical assistance program?
    As such, the TDH pays service providers for medical assistance services rendered to medicaid
    recipients.3
    We conclude, in answer to your question, that Human Resources Code section 32.036
    permits the TDH to withhold some or all of a medical assistance payment due a service provider
    ‘Your question doesfiot implicate article XVI, section 28 of the Texas Constitution, which generally prohibits
    garnishing wages. Even assuming medicaid provider payments are “wages” for purposes of article XVI, section 28,
    that section excepts garnishment “for the enforcement of court-ordered child support payments.”
    *See generally Hum. Res. Code ch. 32 (creating program to provide medical assistance      on behalf of needy
    individuals).   The medical assistance program is commonly known as “Medicaid.”
    ‘See 
    id. 5 32.029.
    William R. Archer, M.D. - Page 2                       (DM-477)
    to satisfy the provider’s child-support obligation if the assignment satisfies 42 U.S.C.
    $ 1396a(a)(32)(B). Human Resources Code section 32.036 generally prohibits the assignment or
    garnishment of payments to medicaid providers, unless the assignment is permitted under 42 U.S.C.
    § 1396a(a)(32):
    (a) Neither medical assistance nor payments to providers of medical
    assistance under this chapter are transferable or assignable at law or in equity.
    (b) No money paid or payable under the provisions of this chapter is
    subject to   garnishment. . .
    (c) This section does not apply to the extent that it conflicts with the
    Social Security Act (42 USC. Section 1396a(a)(32)).
    The United States Code requires a state plan for medical assistance to permit the assignment
    of medicaid provider payments if the assigmnent is to a governmental agency or if a court order
    establishes or orders the assignment (or in other specific circumstances not relevant here):
    A State plan for medical assistance must-
    (32) provide that no payment under the plan for any care or service
    provided to an individual shah be made to anyone other than such individual
    or the person or institution providing such care or service, under an
    assignment or power or attorney or otherwise; except that-
    (A)        ..
    (B) nothing in this paragraph shall be construed (i) to prevent the
    making of such a payment in accordance with an assigmnent from the person
    or institution providing the care or service involved if such assignment is
    made to a governmental agency or entity or is established by or pursuant to
    the order of a court of competent jurisdiction, or (ii) . .4
    A state’s failure to permit assigmnents allowed by federal law may lead to the loss of federal
    funding.5
    ..
    ‘42 USC.    $ 1396a(a)(32).
    ‘See 42 USC. 5 1396 (authorizing federal government to appropriate funds for state medical assistance plans
    that United States Secretary of Health and Human Services has approved); Connecticut Hosp. Ass’n Y. O’NeiN, 793 F.
    (continued...)
    p.   2700
    William R. Archer, M.D. - Page 3                          (DM-477)
    The legislature added subsection(c) in 1997 to clear up an apparent conflict with 42 U.S.C.
    5 1396a(a)(32).6 Prior to the 1997 amendment, a court might apply section 32.036 and 42 U.S.C.
    8 1396a(a)(32) and reach conflicting results. In In re Missionary Baptist Foundation of America,
    Inc. v. First National Bank’the United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, compared the pre-1997
    version of Human Resources Code section 32.036 with 42 U.S.C. 8 1396a(a)(32) and concluded that
    “cases decided under them could . . come out differently, depending upon which applied.“*
    According to the court, the state statute “is broader and more rigid in its prohibitions.‘* Arguably,
    before the 1997 amendment, Human Resources Code section 32.036 absolutely prohibited paying
    medicaid service provider payments to any assignee of the service provider. By contrast, 42 U.S.C.
    5 1396a(a)(32) permits payments to certain assignees. Since the 1997 amendment became effective,
    however, the state law comports with 42 USC. 5 1396a(a)(32).
    Whether a particular transfer is an assignment that satisfies 42 U.S.C. $ 1396a(a)(32)(B) is,
    of course, a fact question that cannot be resolved in the opinion process.“’ The transfer first must
    be a valid assigmnent. ” If it is , the assigmnent must be either made to a governmental agency or
    entity or established by or in accordance with the order of a court of competent jurisdiction. In the
    case of child-support payments, for instance, the assignment may be to a governmental entity (the
    Supp. 47,49 (D. CQM. 1992) (stating that state my choose whether to participate in Medicaid program under Social
    Security Act, 42 U.S.C. $5 1396-1396v. but if state chooses to participate, it must comply with all federal statutory and
    regulatory requirements); see also Team Dep’t ofHuman Servs. v. Christian Care Cm., Inc., 826 S.W.2d 715,711 (Tex.
    App.--Austin   1992, writ denied) (stating that Medicaid program requires state and federal governments to cooperate
    to ensure that Texas qualifies for federal matching funds).
    %See Act of May 7, 1997,7Sth Leg., R.S., ch. 216,s 1, 1997 Tcx. Gen. Laws 1086, 1086; see also Senate
    Comm. on Health & Human Servs., Bill Analysis, S.B. 614,75th Leg., R.S. (1997); House Comm. cm Public Health,
    Bill Analysis, H.B. 1634,75th Leg., R.S. (1997) (companion bill to S.B. 614).
    ‘796 F.2d 752 (5th Cir. 1986).
    *Id. at 758; see also Senate Comm. on Health&Human         Servs., Bill Analysis, S.B. 614,75th Leg., R.S. (1997)
    (noting Fifth Circuit decision that conflict between state law and federal law could result in different outcomes); House
    Comm. on Public Health, Bill Analysis, H.B. 1634,75th Leg., R.S. (1997) (companion bill to S.B. 614) (same).
    ‘In re Missionary   Baptist Found. 
    ofAmerica, 796 F.2d at 758
    .
    .I
    ?%e, e.g., Attorney General Opinions DM-98 (1992) at 3, H-56 (1973) at 3, M-18; (1968) at 3.0-2911         (1940)
    at 2.
    “An assignment is a contract between two parties to transfer a property, right, 01 interest from one party, the
    assignor, to the other party, the assignee. See University of Tex. Med. Branch Y. Allan, 
    777 S.W.2d 450
    .452-53       (Tex.
    App.--Houston     [14th Dist.] 1989, no writ). See generoNy 7 TEX. JUR. 30 Assignments $5 23-31 (1997) (discussing
    requisites and validity of assignments).
    p.   2701
    William R. Archer, M.D. - Page 4                            (DM-477)
    state’s Title IV-D agency or the “local registry”)‘2 or it may be established by or in accordance with
    an order of the court with jurisdiction over the child-support matter.”
    This result is entirely consistent with the purpose of the federal law. The United States
    Congress adopted what is now subdivision (32)(A) of 42 U.S.C. 8 1396a(a) in 197214and adopted
    the substance of what is now subdivision (32)(B) five years later.” The House Interstate and Foreign
    Commerce Committee explained that the purpose of both the 1972 and 1977 amendments to the
    Social Security Act was to stop the assignment of medicaid receivables to “factoring” agencies,
    which purchased medicaid accounts receivable at a discount and allegedly sent the government
    inflated bills:
    In 1972, the Congress took action to stop a practice under which some
    physicians and other persons providing services under medicare and medicaid
    reassigned their medicare and medicaid receivables to other organizations or
    groups. Under the conditions of these reassignments, the organizations or
    groups purchased the receivables for a percentage of their face value,
    submitted claims and received payments in their name. By 1972, it had
    become apparent that such reassignments were a significant source of
    incorrect and inflated claims for services paid by medicsre and medicaid. In
    addition, cases of fraudulent billings by collection agencies and substantial
    overpayments to these so-called “factoring” agencies were also found.
    Congress concluded that such arrangements were not in the best interest
    of the government or the beneficiaries served by the medicare and medicaid
    programs. The Social Security Amendments of 1972, . . therefore, included
    a prohibition against the payment for covered services to anyone other than
    the patient, his physician, or other person who provided the service, unless
    the physician or other person is required as a condition of his employment to
    turn his fees over to his employer, or unless the physician or other person has
    an arrangement with a facility under which the facility bills for such services.
    Despite these efforts to stop factoring of medicare and medicaid bills,
    some practitioners and other persons have circumvented the intent of the law
    by use of a power of attorney. The use of a power of attorney allows the
    factoring company to receive the medicare or medicaid payment in the name
    ‘%ze Fan.   Code $§.158.103(7),     .203(a).
    “Seeid.   $5 158.001, .011, ,105.
    “See Social Security Amendments         of 1972, Pub. L. No. 92-603, $236(b),   86 Stat. 1329,1415   (1972).
    “See Medicare-Medicaid      Antifraud    and Abuse Amendments,     Pub. L. No. 95-142, 5 2(a)(3), 91 Stat. 1176
    (1977).
    p.   2702
    William R. Archer, M.D. - Page 5                       (DM-477)
    of the physician thus allowing the continuation of program abuses which
    factoring activities were shown to produce in the past.
    The bill would modify existing law to preclude the use of a power of
    attorney as a device for reassignments of benefits under medicare and
    medicaid, other than an assignment to a governmental entity or
    establishment, or an assigmnent established by or pursuant to the order of a
    court of competent jurisdiction.   .I6
    Assigning all or part of a medical assistance payment to pay a child-support obligation or arrearage
    is, in our opinion, vastly different from the factoring arrangements the federal law is designed to
    preclude.
    Although you ask only about the TDH’s authority to withhold some or all of the medical
    assistance payment under Human Resources Code section 32.036, we believe your question raises
    a second issue. Assuming that a court of competent jurisdiction has issued an order under Family
    Code section 154.007 or 158.001 directing an “employer” to withhold a percentage of a child-
    support payor’s disposable “earnings, ” is the TDH subject to it when paying medical assistance
    payments to service providers? We conclude that it is.
    First, we conclude that TDH is an employer in the context of Family Code chapter 158.
    Family Code sections 154.007 and 158.001 require a court, in any proceeding ordering, modifying,
    or enforcing child-support payments, to direct a child-support obligor’s employer to withhold up to
    fifty percent of the obligor’s disposable earnings to pay child-support obligations and any
    arrearage.17 Family Code section 101.012 defines employer for chapter 158, and the definition
    encompasses relationships other than a typical “employment” relationship: “‘Employer’ means a
    person, corporation, partnership, workers’ compensation insurance carrier, governmental entity, the
    United States, or any other entity that pays or owes earnings to an individual. . . .” Assuming for the
    moment that medicaid payments to a service provider are earnings, the TDH is a governmental entity
    that pays earnings to an individual.
    Second, we conclude that medicaid payments to service providers are earnings in the context
    of Family Code chapter 158. The term earnings is defined, for purposes of chapter 158, in Family
    16HR REP. NO. 393(11), 95th Gong., 1st Sess. 48-49 (1977), reprinted in 1977 U.S.C. 3039, 3051-52; see also
    
    id. at 1,
    reprinled in 1977 U.k.  3039, 3040; In re Missionary Baptist Found. ofAmerica u First Nat? Bank, 796 F.2d
    752,757 1x.6 (5th Cir. 1986).
    “See ako Fam. Code 5 158.009 (establishing maximum amount that may be withheld from earnings). Family
    Code sections 154.007 and 158.001 authorize the state’s “Title N-D agency,” which is the Offkx of the Attorney
    General, see 
    id. $ 231.001;
    see also 
    id. 5 231.0011,
    to issue orders directing an employer to withhold a percentage of
    a child-support obliger’s earnings. We do not consider in this opinion whether an order of the state’s Title N-D agency
    is a court order for purposes of 42 USC. 5 1396a(a)(32)(B).
    p.   2703
    William   R. Archer, M.D. - Page 6             (DM-477)
    Code section 101.011. Like the applicable definition of employer, the definition of earnings    is
    broad, encompassing more than hourly wages or annual salary:
    “Earnings” means a payment to or due an individual, regardless of source
    and how denominated. The term includes a periodic or lump-sum payment
    for:
    (1) wages, salary, compensation received as an independent contractor,
    overtime pay, severance pay, commission, bonus, and interest income;
    (2) payments made under a pension, an annuity, workers’ compensation,
    and a disability or retirement program; and
    (3) unemployment benefits.
    Certainly, a payment to a medical assistance provider for professional services he or she rendered
    to a medicaid recipient is “a payment to or due” the provider.
    p.   2704
    William R. Archer, M.D. - Page 7              (DM-477)
    SUMMARY
    Consistent with Human Resources Code section 32.036, the Texas
    Department of Health may allocate all or part of a service provider’s medical
    assistance payments to satisfy the provider’s child-support obligation if the
    service provider has assigned the payment to a government ~agency or if the
    assigmnent was established by or in compliance with a court order issued by
    a court of competent jurisdiction.
    The Department of Health is an “employer” subject to a court order
    issued under Family Code section 154.007 or 158.001 when it pays medical
    assistance payments to a service provider. Additionally, medicaid payments
    are “earnings” subject to such a court order.
    DAN MORALES
    Attorney General of Texas
    JORGE VEGA
    First Assistant Attorney General
    SARAH J. SHIRLEY
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    Prepared by Kymberly K. Oltrogge
    Assistant Attorney General
    p.   2705
    

Document Info

Docket Number: DM-477

Judges: Dan Morales

Filed Date: 7/2/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017