93-004262 Americare Corporation, D/B/A Cedar Hills Nursing Center vs. Agency For Health Care Administration
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, May 3, 1994.


View Dockets  
Summary: Fair Rental Value System under post-1985 medicaid reimbursement provisions for nursing homes is construed in lessee-provider's favor upon limited law and facts presented

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8AMERICARE CORPORATION d/b/a )

12CEDAR HILLS NURSING CENTER, )

17)

18Petitioner, )

20)

21vs. ) CASE NO. 93-4262

26)

27)

28AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE )

33ADMINISTRATION, )

35)

36Respondent. )

38________________________________)

39RECOMMENDED ORDER

41Upon due notice, this cause came on for formal hearing on December 20, 1993

55in Tallahassee, Florida, before Ella Jane P. Davis, a duly assigned hearing

67officer of the Division of Administrative Hearings.

74APPEARANCES

75For Petitioner: Alfred W. Clark, Esquire

81Post Office Box 623

85Tallahassee, Florida 32302

88For Respondent: Harold M. Knowles, Esquire

94Knowles & Randolph

97528 East Park Avenue

101Tallahassee, Florida 32301

104STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

108Whether or not Petitioner's lease acquisition costs should be included in

119its asset cost basis for establishment of a Fair Rental Value reimbursement rate

132in accordance with the Florida Title XIX Long Term Care Reimbursement Plan (the

145Medicaid Plan).

147PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

149The style of this cause has been amended as set out above to reflect the

164new agency nomenclature and statutory responsibilities.

170By letter dated May 17, 1993, the Department of Health and Rehabilitative

182Services (HRS), now the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA), notified

193Cedar Hills that it had reviewed the asset cost basis used to calculate Cedar

207Hills' initial Fair Rental Value (FRV) rate as of October 1, 1985, and

220determined that the $448,659.00 paid by Americare d/b/a Cedar Hills to lease the

234Cedar Hills facility under a 1980 lease-purchase agreement was not includable in

246its FRV cost basis, and that the agency intended to establish a specific dollar

260cost basis (asset cost) for its calculations.

267Upon appropriate petition and agency referral, this cause appeared before

277the Division of Administrative Hearings.

282At formal hearing, Petitioner presented the oral testimony of David Trimble

293and Douglas Palmer, each of whom was accepted as an expert in health care

307accounting and reimbursement. Petitioner's Exhibits 1 through 9 were received

317into evidence. Respondent presented the oral testimony of Charles Patrick

327Patterson, who also was accepted as an expert in the field of health care

341accounting and reimbursement. Respondent's Exhibit 1 was received in evidence.

351Six items representing federal and state statutes, rules, and publications

361were officially recognized.

364A transcript was filed in due course as were the parties' respective

376proposed recommended orders. In response to Petitioner's motion to strike

386Respondent's late-filed proposed recommended order, an order was entered denying

396the motion to strike but permitting Petitioner to elect one of several ways of

410curing any potential prejudice occasioned by Respondent's late-filed proposal.

419Petitioner elected to file a responsive and clarifying supplemental memorandum

429of law. Accordingly, any prejudice to Petitioner's position occasioned by

439Respondent's delayed filing of its proposals is deemed cured, and all proposed

451findings of fact of both parties have been ruled upon in the appendix to this

466recommended order, pursuant to Section 120.59(2) F.S.

473FINDINGS OF FACT

4761. Respondent Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) is the state

487agency responsible for implementation and administration of the Florida Medicaid

497Program. Its predecessor agency was the Department of Health and Rehabilitative

508Services (HRS), and HRS' acts with regard to Petitioner and Medicaid

519reimbursement may be attributed to AHCA for purposes of this proceeding.

5302. Cedar Hills Nursing Center, owned by Americare Corporation, is a

541licensed 180-bed nursing home located in Jacksonville, Florida.

5493. Cedar Hills participates in the Florida Medicaid Program and provides

560inpatient nursing home services to Medicaid eligible persons.

5684. Cedar Hills is entitled to reimbursement for certain approved property

579related costs in accordance with the Florida Title XIX Long Term Care

591Reimbursement Plan (Medicaid Plan), which was adopted and incorporated by

601reference in Rule 10C-7.0482 F.A.C.

6065. One of the methods of property cost reimbursement under the Medicaid

618Plan is the Fair Rental Value System (FRVS). FRVS reimbursement requires the

630establishment of a basis for computation and indexing of the FRV rate. Cedar

643Hills, as an existing facility at October 1, 1985, is entitled to have an FRVS

658rate established for capitalized tangible assets based upon the assets'

668acquisition costs at the last dates of acquisition prior to July 18, 1984. (See

682Conclusions of Law 36, 39)

6876. Essentially, FRVS determines the historic allowable costs for assets

697related to a facility (nursing home) as of the last acquisition cost prior to

711July 18, 1984, and establishes a base cost or value. This base cost, or value,

726is indexed (inflated) forward and becomes the basis for computing FRVS

737reimbursement.

7387. The computation is "facility-specific," since a particular provider-

747chain may own multiple facilities. Thus, no rate is assigned a chain (Americare

760herein), but rather, the rate is assigned to the facility, in this instance,

773Cedar Hills Nursing Center.

7778. AHCA refused to include in Cedar Hills' asset cost for FRVS the lease

791and option acquisition costs relating to Cedar Hills which were paid by

803Americare Corporation in 1980 as a part of a purchase of a group of Florida

818nursing homes, including Cedar Hills.

8239. Effective March 1, 1980, Americare Corporation purchased from Chelsea

833Park Corporation and Hyde Park Nursing Home Partnership (HPNH, Inc.), a

844subsidiary of Chelsea Park Corporation, all business assets of the sellers

855relating to six Florida nursing homes. Cedar Hills was one of the six nursing

869homes. The total purchase price was $5.7 million. This asset acquisition

880included the sellers' interest in a lease of the Cedar Hills facility.

892Americare did not purchase the Cedar Hills facility outright, and title did not

905pass to Americare d/b/a Cedar Hills in 1980.

91310. At the time of the 1980 asset acquisition, title to the land and

927building at Cedar Hills was held by HPNH, Inc..

93611. Prior to March 1, 1980, HPNH, Inc. was the licensed operator and

949Medicaid provider at Cedar Hills pursuant to an assignment of lease rights from

962its parent, Chelsea Park Corporation. After March 1, 1980, Americare

972Corporation became the licensed operator and Medicaid provider at Cedar Hills.

98312. The license issued by the Department of Health and Rehabilitative

994Services, Office of Licensure and Certification, to HPNH, Inc., prior to March

10061, 1980, shows "HPNH, Inc., owner", as the licensed operator.

101613. The official license issued by the Department of Health and

1027Rehabilitative Services, Office of Licensure and Certification, effective March

10361, 1980, shows "Americare Corporation, Owner" as the licensed operator.

104614. The 1980 asset acquisition included the acquisition by Americare of

1057tangible assets at Cedar Hills.

106215. The Chelsea Park Corporation accounting records prior to the Americare

1073asset acquisition reveal tangible assets relating to Cedar Hills which were

1084being depreciated.

108616. Americare's Medicaid Cost Reports for Cedar Hills for the period

1097immediately following the 1980 transaction show tangible assets relating to

1107Cedar Hills which were being depreciated by Americare.

111517. The transaction Agreement between Americare and Chelsea Park expressly

1125provided for Americare to acquire "business assets" of Chelsea Park, which

1136assets included not only the lease agreement for Cedar Hills but also operating

1149assets specified as "all fixtures attached to either real estate or leasehold

1161property, all machinery, linen, personal property, equipment, handling

1169equipment, furniture, furnishings and accessories thereto, . . ." These

"1179operating assets" are listed on Exhibit 4 to the Agreement (Petitioner's

1190Exhibit 3) and clearly include tangible assets relating to Cedar Hills. The

1202expert witness testimony is consistent that the lease-option (Lease is

1212Respondent's Exhibit R-1) constituted "the moral equivalent of a virtual

1222purchase" of the facility.

122618. Acquisition costs are determined from the most current depreciation

1236schedules for the facility. In this case, the facility is Cedar Hills. Cedar

1249Hills properly capitalized the aforesaid lease and option acquisition costs and

1260reflected them on its depreciation tables.

126619. The parties' dispute herein hinges upon interpretation of Section V.

1277E. (1) (a) of the Medicaid Plan, and whether or not the lease rights purchased

1292in 1980 by Americare constituted a tangible or an intangible asset, and whether

1305or not the lease and option constituted an "acquisition," as Petitioner

1316contends, or whether, as Respondent contends, only passage of title by purchase

1328can constitute an "acquisition," as that term is contemplated by that section of

1341the Medicaid Plan. That section of the Medicaid Plan incorporates by reference

1353HCFA-PUB.15-1 (the Medicaid Provider Reimbursement Manual), and all testifying

1362experts agreed that if there is a conflict, the Medicaid Provider Reimbursement

1374Manual takes precedence over generally accepted accounting principles and

1383standards (GAAP and GAAS) for purposes of Medicaid accounting.

139220. The parties stipulated that, "The costs of land, buildings, equipment,

1403and other capital items allowable for Medicaid reimbursement by HCFA-PUB.15-1

1413such as construction loan interest expense capitalized, financing points paid,

1423attorneys fees, and other amortized "soft" costs associated with financing or

1434acquisition are included in determining allowable acquisition costs in

1443establishing the FRVS rate. (See, Conclusions of Law 39, 46-47)

145321. Cedar Hills contended that lease and option acquisition costs are

"1464soft costs." AHCA's expert agreed that lease and option acquisition costs may

1476be considered "soft" costs in certain instances and that financing and

1487refinancing costs are "soft costs".

149322. Respondent AHCA contended that the lease rights purchased by Americare

1504constituted an intangible asset and could not be included as part of the FRVS

1518base unless those rights related to the acquisition of a capitalized tangible

1530asset. The Medicaid reimbursement for Cedar Hills will be lower if the lease

1543acquisition costs are not included in the asset cost basis.

155323. As a part of a Medicaid audit report in 1981 after the 1980 asset

1568acquisition, HRS allocated $619,224.88 to that portion of the transaction

1579relating to Cedar Hills. The cost allocated by HRS to Cedar Hills included an

1593allocation for tangible assets and soft costs. The soft costs allocated to

1605Cedar Hills are $448,659.00, which are the costs allocated to the acquisition of

1619the lease and option rights relating to Cedar Hills.

162824. Over the 1980-1993 period, Cedar Hills amortized the $448,659.00 of

1640lease rights costs on its books and on its cost reports. (See J-3 of

1654Petitioner's Exhibit 7). This treatment was permissible under pre-FRVS cost

1664reimbursement principles which allowed costs of a lease to be covered in

1676property costs. HRS (Medicaid) reimbursed Cedar Hills for its amortization of

1687lease rights costs and, in addition, reimbursed a return on equity payment on

1700the unamortized portion of these costs. HRS never indicated any disagreement

1711with Americare's treatment of the lease acquisition costs as capital items.

172225. Americare possessed only a lease with an option to purchase from 1980

1735to 1993. Legal title to the Cedar Hills facility was not conveyed by its owner,

1750HPNC, Inc., to Americare Corporation until April, 1993.

175826. After amortizing the lease costs of $448,659.00 over the 13-year

1770period that Cedar Hills leased the Cedar Hills facility, Cedar Hills requested

1782that such costs be included in its FRVS basis. Cedar Hills is not seeking any

1797costs in excess of the actual costs it paid to acquire the lease and option. It

1813is seeking to include those costs as part of its base upon which future Medicaid

1828reimbursement calculations for the Cedar Hills facility shall be made.

183827. At the time Cedar Hills was first leased in 1980, there was no

1852requirement that Americare exercise its option to purchase the facility. The

1863lease of Cedar Hills by Americare was not a condition precedent to the purchase

1877of the group of other facilities which were purchased by Americare

1888simultaneously with the leasing of Cedar Hills.

189528. However, it would not have been possible for Americare to become the

1908operator of Cedar Hills Nursing Center without acquiring both the tangible

1919assets and the lease agreement relating to Cedar Hills' physical plant.

1930Acquisition by Americare of the lease rights was necessary in order for

1942Americare to be able to use the Cedar Hills assets for nursing home purposes.

195629. The lease acquisition costs relating to Cedar Hills were associated

1967with the acquisition of approximately $90,000 worth of capital assets, some of

1980which, such as furniture, were clearly personalty, but some of which were

"1992fixtures," specifically, kitchen dietary equipment, laundry machines, and

2000plumbing which had been integrated into the leased building.

200930. FRVS determines the basis for allowable capitalized tangible assets

2019and for certain intangible costs which in and of themselves are not tangible

2032assets but which are allowed in the FRVS basis so long as they pertain to the

2048acquisition of tangible assets. Examples are attorneys' fees and accountants'

2058work associated with purchase of a facility which are normally capitalized along

2070with the facility when purchased.

207531. Soft costs are intangible costs, in that they are capital costs for

2088something that cannot be physically touched. Basically, they are costs

2098associated with an acquisition which are paid in the normal course of an

2111acquisition. Stated differently, soft costs are intangible type costs that are

2122related to tangible assets. GAAP and GAAS would characterize Petitioner's lease

2133in this situation as a "capitalized lease" and permit all its "soft costs" to be

2148handled as they have been.

215332. AHCA's audit to determine a FRVS base used documentation submitted by

2165Petitioner, including depreciation schedules. AHCA considered the lease-

2173purchase to be an "intangible." AHCA agrees that lease and option acquisition

2185costs may be considered "soft" costs in certain instances, but not this one.

2198Petitioner contended that lease and option acquisition costs are "soft" costs

2209and should be included in this instance. All costs incurred by the legal owner

2223in acquiring tangible fixed assets, including related soft costs, have been

2234included in the FRVS base established by AHCA. The FRVS audit report allowed

2247only $1,138.00 as acceptable additions to the FRVS base in the rate semester

2261that the lease was acquired by Americare based on costs incurred by the legal

2275title holder or by Americare in purchasing tangible fixed assets, including soft

2287costs, but Americare's soft costs associated with the lease acquisition were not

2299included.

2300CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

230333. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction over the

2313parties and subject matter of this cause, pursuant to Section 120.57(1), F.S.

232534. The parties' respective positions are as follows:

2333Petitioner contended that the lease and option acquisition costs

2342relating to Cedar Hills incurred in March 1980 by Americare Corporation when it

2355purchased a group of Florida nursing homes (J-3 of Petitioner's Exhibit 7)

2367should be included in the Cedar Hills asset cost for purposes of establishing a

2381Fair Rental Value (FRV) reimbursement rate; that the lease and option

2392acquisition costs are amortized soft costs which have been consistently included

2403by Petitioner and approved by HRS in the depreciation schedules relating to

2415Cedar Hills; and that the lease and option acquisition costs are includable in

2428capital related costs pursuant to Medicaid reimbursement guidelines if the costs

2439relate to the acquisition and use of tangible assets (Exhibit 4 to Petitioner's

2452Exhibit 3) that would be depreciable if owned outright.

2461Respondent's audit considered the lease of 1980 through 1993 and the

2472option to purchase which Americare exercised in 1993, both lease and purchase

2484option having been acquired in 1980, to be a "virtual purchase." Respondent

2496argued that a "virtual purchase" is a term of art or other recognized concept

2510under Medicare funding and reimbursement) which does not transfer legal title to

2522property and for which Medicare does not permit lessees to claim ownership

2534costs. Respondent has interpreted the organic law so that "acquisition" for

2545FRVS purposes can only mean "acquisition of legal title." Respondent further

2556contended that Petitioner's lease acquisition costs should not be included in

2567the FRVS base because Cedar Hills already has been reimbursed for these costs

2580and inclusion of these costs would constitute "double dipping" by Americare.

259135. As a threshold matter, this case involves not Medicare reimbursement,

2602but Medicaid reimbursement, and simply because a licensing arm of HRS put the

2615word "owner" on Cedar Hills' license, that fact is not controlling as to what

2629entity holds, or held, legal title.

263536. Why Medicaid converted from the step-up plan of reimbursing ownership

2646interests to the FRVS plan is important. Before FRVS, no matter what a

2659purchaser paid for a facility, as long as there was an appraisal, the purchaser

2673was reimbursed based on the total new cost paid by the new purchaser for the

2688facility. The change to FRVS was part of Florida's compliance with the federal

2701Deficit Reduction Act and was designed to prevent providers from continually

2712buying and selling their facilities to "step up" their costs. The change to

2725FRVS is summed up as, "Each existing facility, at October 1, 1985 shall have an

2740FRVS rate established for capitalized tangible assets based upon the assets'

2751acquisition prior to July 18, 1984." (See Conclusions of Law 39) FRVS took the

2765historic cost of assets instead of the most recent cost of assets as a

2779reimbursable factor.

278137. Nothing in the instant case is "disguised." The disputed $448,659.00

2793in soft costs consistently have been capitalized and reflected on Petitioner's

2804depreciation schedules, as have been tangible assets acquired by Petitioner in

2815the 1980 transaction. HRS/AHCA has consistently approved the method. The

2825disputed costs are reflected on, and can be easily determined from, Petitioner's

2837depreciation schedules. Here, all of Cedar Hills' papers and costs existed in

28491980, and Cedar Hills only contends that its 1980 lease-purchase acquisition of

2861use rights was the last date of a legal "acquisition" prior to July 18, 1984,

2876and that its 1980 lease-purchase was an "acquisition" as recognized by the

2888applicable organic law, even though it was not an acquisition of legal title

2901(ownership) by purchase.

290438. AHCA has not suggested that to hold for Petitioner in this case would

2918be to undermine the intent of the drafters of FRVS to avoid "step up" escalation

2933of reimbursement costs or would permit a flood of similar claims. Indeed,

2945except for a vague reference to one other occasion when a similar, but not

2959necessarily identical, situation arose and was denied for FRV purposes, AHCA's

2970expert could not illustrate the agency's blanket assertion that HRS/AHCA has

"2981consistently" disallowed situations similar to Petitioner's for FRV-Medicaid

2989purposes.

299039. The parties are agreed that the Medicaid Plan is not just instructive,

3003but controlling. Rule 10C-7.0482 F.A.C. adopts by reference the Florida Title

3014XIX Long Term Care Reimbursement Plan (Medicaid Plan) as the basis for nursing

3027home Medicaid reimbursement. The provision of the Medicaid Plan which is most

3039relevant is found at Section V. E. (1)(a):

3047a. Each existing facility, at October 1,

30541985, shall have an FRVS rate established

3061for capitalized tangible assets based upon

3067the assets' acquisition costs at the last

3074dates of acquisition prior to July 18, 1984.

3082Facilities purchased after July 18, 1984, and

3089not enrolled in the Medicaid program prior to

3097the purchase or facilities constructed after

3103July 18, 1984, and enrolled in the program

3111shall have an FRVS rate established on the

3119basis of the last acquisition costs prior to

3127enrolling in the Medicaid program. The

3133acquisition costs shall be determined from the

3140most current depreciation schedule which shall

3146be submitted by each provider. These

3152acquisition costs, including the cost of

3158capital improvements and additions subsequent

3163to acquisition, shall be indexed forward to

3170October 1, 1985, by a portion of the rate of

3180increase in the Florida Construction Cost

3186Inflation (FCFI) Index based on the Dodge

3193Construction Index. The change in the FCCI

3200Index from September, 1984 to March 1985, shall

3208be used to project the FCCI Index for October 1,

32181985, with no subsequent retroactive adjustment.

3224The costs of land, buildings, equipment, and

3231other capital items allowable for Medicaid

3237reimbursement per HCFA-PUB.15-1, such as

3242construction loan interest expense capitalized,

3247financing points paid, attorneys fees, and

3253other amortized "soft" costs associated with

3259financing or acquisition shall be included in

3266determining allowable acquisition costs

3270subject to indexing. Property taxes (which

3276excludes sales tax on lease payments) and

3283property insurance expenses shall not be

3289included in the calculation of the FRVS rates,

3297but shall be reimbursed prospectively, based

3303on actual costs incurred and included in the

3311total property rate. . . [emphasis supplied]

331840. Petitioner was an existing facility at October 1, 1985 and entitled to

3331have an FRVS rate established.

333641. Other categories in which Petitioner may fall are not so clear.

3348Petitioner is NOT a facility purchased after July 18, 1984 and not enrolled in

3362the Medicaid program prior to the purchase. It also is NOT a facility

3375constructed after July 18, 1984 and enrolled in the program after that date and

3389its construction. Rather, Petitioner is, in effect, a "hybrid," a facility

3400purchased after July 18, 1984, whose purchaser was the same licensed

3411provider/lessee enrolled in the Medicaid program prior to the 1993 purchase and

3423prior to the FRV 1984 time frame. The disputed costs arose four years prior to

3438the first FRV time frame.

344342. Despite oblique phraseology that reads as a complex exception to an

3455exception, the last sentence of Section V. E. (1) (a) suggests that sales taxes

3469on lease payments may be included in the FRVS. If sales taxes on lease payments

3484may be included, why not other costs of the lease?

349443. 42 Code of Federal Regulations Section 413.130 (1) (b), admittedly a

3506Medicare regulation, but one which was officially recognized, treats leases and

3517rentals as includable in capital-related costs if they relate to the use of

3530assets that would be depreciable if the provider owned them outright or they

3543relate to land, which is neither depreciable nor amortizable if owned outright,

3555saying, "the terms 'leases' and 'rentals of asset' signify that a provider has

3568possession, use, and enjoyment of the assets."

357544. With regard to this Petitioner's situation, HRS/AHCA seems to have

3586consistently treated Petitioner's depreciation tables and related lease expenses

3595as capital costs permitted under Medicaid guidelines and under 42 CFR Section

3607413.130 (1) (b), and has now elected to do otherwise.

361745. HCFA-PUB.15-1 is adopted by reference in Section V. E. (1)(a), the

3629applicable Medicaid rule supra.

363346. The parties' joint prehearing stipulation included the V. E. (1)(a)

3644reference to HCFA-PUB.15-1, the Medicaid Provider Reimbursement Manual, which

3653has been found as fact above at Finding of Fact 20. That Finding of Fact is

3669also adopted and incorporated herein as a Conclusion of Law.

367920. The parties stipulated that, "The costs

3686of land, buildings, equipment, and other

3692capital items allowable for Medicaid

3697reimbursement by HCFA-PUB.15-1 such as

3702construction loan interest expense

3706capitalized, financing points paid, attorneys

3711fees, and other amortized "soft" costs

3717associated with financing or acquisition are

3723included in determining allowable acquisition

3728costs in establishing the FRVS rate. (See,

3735Conclusions of Law 39, 46-47)

374047. HCFA-PUB.15-1 a/k/a H-I-M 15 a/k/a Paragraph 4728 (Prov. Reimb. Man.,

3751Part 1, Section 111) Medicare and Medicaid Guide , is the only portion of HCFA-

3765PUB.15-1 referenced in the parties' stipulation, the only portion officially

3775recognized, and the only portion before the undersigned for analysis. It

3786describes by way of "example" a situation remarkably similar to the one at bar.

380048. Under this example, if an arm's-length transaction/purchase of

3809tangible capital assets occurs and a favorable lease of incidental structures

3820occurs simultaneously, all the soft costs associated with the lease are

3831includable in the FRVS. Under this example, if the Cedar Hills lease and

3844Americare's simultaneous purchase of the other five nursing home facilities had

3855been interdependent, the soft costs of the Cedar Hills lease clearly would have

3868been includable for FRV purposes. The facts herein do not support a finding of

3882such interdependence of the 1980 transaction as regards the several nursing

3893homes. (See Findings of Fact 27-28). However, herein, Petitioner has

3903demonstrated that the lease was interdependent with Petitioner's capital asset

3913purchase of numerous tangible items, including but not limited to fixtures such

3925as plumbing, kitchen dietary equipment, and laundry equipment totalling

3934approximately $90,000, which equipment could not have been utilized without

3945leasing the building of which they are integral parts. Such "fixtures" are

3957often treated for purposes of normal real estate transactions as real property.

3969Two experts in health care accounting and reimbursement, who were also certified

3981public accountants, testified that as they interpreted Medicaid provision V. E.

3992(1) (a), codified as Rule 10C-7.0482 F.A.C. and the example explicating it, the

4005$448,659.00 in costs would be includable in FRVS and that for purposes of pre-

4020FRV Medicaid and for purposes of GAAP and GAAS, the tangible assets and the

4034lease soft costs would have been treated just as Petitioner has treated them.

404749. Part of AHCA's expert's reasoning as to why the lease may not be

4061integral to the purchase of the capitalized tangible fixtures in the instant

4073case is that the materiality of the overall value of the facility being leased

4087is greater than the amount being simultaneously purchased outright. The

4097disparity between the cost of purchased tangible assets and the lease price, or

4110ultimately the soft costs associated with the lease, factors into HRS' refusal

4122to include Americare's past soft costs in its future FRVS basis. However, it

4135has not been shown that anything in the Medicaid Plan restricts the allowability

4148of soft costs to only certain soft costs over or under a particular dollar

4162amount. Accordingly, AHCA's unwritten policy of adding this type of factor to

4174the methodology has not been properly explicated or justified and should not be

4187applied. See, Section 120.57 (1)(b)15 F.S.

419350. The remainder of AHCA's position depends on what constitutes an

"4204acquisition" associated with tangible assets.

420951. The Medicaid guidelines do not define "acquisition."

421752. Standard legal and lay language usage does not support AHCA's position

4229that "acquisition" applies exclusively to a transfer of legal title. For

4240instance, Black's Law Dictionary, Fifth Edition, copyright 1979, contains the

4250following alternative legalistic definitions:

4254Acquire. To gain by any means, usually by

4262one's own exertions; to get as one's own; to

4271obtain by search, endeavor, investment,

4276practice, or purchase; receive or gain in

4283whatever manner; come to have. In law of

4291contracts and of descents, to become owner of

4299property; to make property one's own. To

4306gain ownership of. ... The act of getting or

4315obtaining something which may be already in

4322existence, or may be brought into existence

4329through means employed to acquire it. ...

4336Sometimes used in the sense of "procure." It

4344does not necessarily mean that title has

4351passed. Includes taking by devise. See also

4358Accession; Acquisition; Purchase.

4361Acquisition. The act of becoming the owner of

4369certain property; the act by which one

4376acquires or procures the property in anything.

4383... Used also of the thing acquired. Taking

4391with, or against consent. ... Term refers

4398especially to a material possession obtained

4404by any means. ...(emphasis supplied)

4409The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, copyright 1981,

4419contains the following vernacular definitions:

4424acquire 1. To gain possession of. 2. To get

4433by one's own efforts. ... in addition to ...

4442obtain.

4443acquisition 1. The act of acquiring.

44492. Something acquired, especially as an

4455addition to an established category or group.

446253. Although actions of licensing arms of HRS and AHCA are not controlling

4475of the issue of who holds legal title to a nursing home, it is instructive to

4491note that various Florida statutes and rules relating to health care facilities

4503regulated by AHCA also regard leasing of nursing homes as synonymous with a

4516transfer of ownership or "acquisition" of nursing homes for regulatory purposes.

452754. For instance, Section 400.179 F.S., governing sale or transfer of

4538ownership of a nursing home facility, provides:

4545Whenever a nursing facility is sold or the

4553ownership is transferred, including leasing,

4558the transferee shall make application to the

4565department for a new license at least 60 days

4574prior to the date of transfer of ownership.

4582(emphasis supplied)

458455. Rule 59B-6.009 F.A.C., concerning reports required, defines "change in

4594health care entity ownership," to include "leasing of the health care entity"

4606when the lessee assumes the liability for operation of the health care entity.

461956. Rule 59C-1.002 (1) F.A.C., concerning certificates of need, defines

"4629acquisition" as:

4631...the act of possessing or controlling, in any

4639manner or by any means, a health care facility...

464857. Rule 59E-4.009 F.A.C., concerning health care cost containment,

4657describes "change of ownership" as:

4662A change in ownership means that a majority

4670of the ownership or the controlling interest

4677of the nursing home is transferred or assigned.

4685A change in ownership includes but is not

4693limited to the acquisition of the nursing home

4701by any person or any legal entity by any means,

4711the leasing of the nursing home when the

4719lessee agrees to undertake or provide services

4726at the nursing home to the extent that legal

4735liability for operation of the nursing home

4742rests with the lessee ... (emphasis supplied)

474958. Upon the foregoing, AHCA's position that "acquisition" means only an

4760acquisition by purchase of ownership/title is not reasonable.

476859. From a public policy standpoint, AHCA's expert in health care

4779accounting and reimbursement testified, and its counsel argued, that to allow

4790Petitioner's lease's soft costs to become a factor in the FRV would constitute

"4803double dipping," because under the pre-FRVS reimbursement methodology, lease

4812acquisition costs were considered capital items allowable for reimbursement.

4821Pre-FRVS, the costs of the user were submitted for reimbursement, which

4832Americare has already done. Under FRVS, it is the costs of the owner of record

4847(under AHCA's limited definition theory) which should be submitted as part of

4859the new basis for future reimbursement. AHCA therefore wants to include some

4871costs of Americare, the lessee, and some costs of the last owner/lessor in the

4885FRVS basis for prospective Medicaid reimbursement. AHCA's approach puts all the

4896emphasis upon construing the word, "acquisition" as used in the new FRV rule as

4910being synonymous with "owned-purchased," and apparently has not assessed the

4920fact that in the instant situation, under the pre-FRVS system, the prior owner

4933was not the Medicaid provider at the Cedar Hills facility. At any point in

4947time, only a Medicaid provider is ever reimbursed on any basis. The title

4960holder herein was not the provider/license holder, did not incur the disputed

4972lease costs, and was not reimbursed for them by Medicaid.

498260. When FRVS went into effect in 1985, Americare's lease and option

4994acquisition costs were capital items allowable under Medicaid. Cedar Hills is

5005not seeking any costs in excess of the actual costs it paid to acquire the lease

5021and option. It is only seeking to include those costs as part of its base upon

5037which future reimbursement calculations shall be made.

504461. Under this analysis, AHCA's contention that Petitioner is attempting

5054to "double dip" does not hold up. For instance, a piece of equipment with a

5069ten year life could be fully depreciated over a ten year period prior to the

5084beginning of FRVS reimbursement, yet the full cost of that equipment would be

5097included in the FRVS cost base, in spite of the fact that the provider had been

"5113reimbursed" for the full value of the equipment. Likewise, all soft costs for

5126which a provider has been reimbursed based upon amortization of those costs will

5139be included in the FRVS asset cost base in spite of the fact that the provider

5155has, in effect, been paid for those soft costs.

516462. AHCA's expert conceded that there is no "double dipping" on this

5176Petitioner's depreciation because eventually any amount that is recouped again

5186on the basis of tangible asset depreciation already taken by Petitioner will be

5199recaptured by the State at a future point under FRVS.

520963. Overall, the HRS expert's opinion of how Rule 10C-7.0482 F.A.C. (the

5221Medicaid FRV provision) should be interpreted is less persuasive than that of

5233the other experts because in response to most questions about Medicaid

5244reimbursement, the AHCA expert answered in terms of Medicare guidelines,

5254policies, and procedures. He also relied on a Medicare section he "believed"

5266was Section 110, concerning "virtual purchases." The undersigned could

5275speculate that Section 110 is the paragraph preceding Paragraph 4728 (Prov.

5286Reimb. Man., Part 1, Section 111) in the Medicare and Medicaid Guide in HCFA-

5300PUB. 15-1 (see Conclusions of Law 47), but it would only be speculation. A copy

5315of Section 110 was not offered in evidence or for official recognition, and if

5329it constitutes a policy of AHCA, it was not fully explicated in accord with

5343Section 120.57 (1) (b) 15. F.S., specifically because there is nothing in this

5356record that shows that Medicare includes the FRVS element found in Medicaid.

5368Also, it is noted that the parties seem to be in agreement that even under

5383Medicare principles, this Petitioner-provider's lease rights costs are

5391reimbursable as a "capital asset" because this Petitioner-provider actually

5400incurred the costs, and that Medicaid expressly includes valid soft costs in the

5413FRVS basis. It is also undisputed that the soft costs incurred here were

5426associated with acquisition of the listed capital tangible assets.

543564. Upon the greater weight of the credible competent opinion evidence,

5446Medicaid, parts of Medicare, and GAAP and GAAS support Petitioner's position.

5457AHCA's other analogies to Medicare sections not properly explicated in this

5468proceeding were not convincing. Upon the limited facts and legal arguments of

5480this proceeding, the disputed lease acquisition costs should be included in

5491Cedar Hills' FRVS asset base, because the costs have been included on its

5504depreciation schedules as capital items allowable for Medicaid reimbursement

5513and/or amortized soft costs directly associated with acquisition.

5521RECOMMENDATION

5522Upon the foregoing findings of fact and Conclusions of Law, it is

5534RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Health Care Administration include the

5544lease acquisition costs of $448,659.00 in Petitioner's asset cost basis for

5556establishment of its Fair Rental Value System reimbursement rate.

5565RECOMMENDED this 3rd day of April, 1994, at Tallahassee, Florida.

5575___________________________________

5576ELLA JANE P. DAVIS, Hearing Officer

5582Division of Administrative Hearings

5586The De Soto Building

55901230 Apalachee Parkway

5593Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550

5596(904) 488-9675

5598Filed with the Clerk of the

5604Division of Administrative Hearings

5608this 3rd day of April, 1994.

5614APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER 93-4262

5619The following constitute specific rulings, pursuant to S120.59(2), F.S.,

5628upon the parties' respective proposed findings of fact (PFOF).

5637Petitioner's PFOF:

56391-6 Accepted, but often rephrased

56447 Rejected as legal argument or a conclusion of law.

5654Covered under Conclusions of Law

56598-20 Accepted, but often rephrased

566421 Accepted as modified in Findings of Fact 31-32. Otherwise

5674rejected as a conclusion of law. See Conclusions of

5683Law.

568422-28 Accepted except often rephrased. Also cumulative material

5692was eliminated.

569429 Rejected as legal argument or as a conclusion of law. See

5706Conclusions of Law

570930 Accepted

571131-32 Rejected as legal argument or as a conclusion of law. See

5723Conclusions of Law

5726Respondent's PFOF:

57281-7 Accepted, but often rephrased. Also, cumulative material

5736was eliminated.

57388 Rejected as legal argument or as a conclusion of law. See

5750Conclusions of Law.

57539-15 Accepted, but often rephrased. Also cumulative material

5761was eliminated.

576316 Rejected as inaccurate or as a mischaracterization of the

5773record evidence as a whole.

577817 Accepted, but rephrased.

578218 Accepted that only one audit was done for FRVS purposes,

5793however prior yearly cost report approvals were, in

5801essence, HRS mini-audits of the provider's claimed

5808reimbursements. Therefore, the proposal as worded is

5815rejected as a whole.

581919-21 Accepted, but rephrased.

582322 Rejected as not supported by the greater weight of the

5834credible evidence.

583623 Rejected as cumulative

5840COPIES FURNISHED:

5842Harold Knowles, Esquire

5845Knowles & Randolph

5848528 E. Park Avenue

5852Tallahassee, FL 32301

5855Alfred W. Clark, Esquire

5859Post Office Box 623

5863Tallahassee, FL 32302

5866Sam Power, Agency Clerk

5870Agency for Health

5873Care Administration

5875The Atrium, Ste. 301

5879325 John Knox Road

5883Tallahassee, FL 32303

5886Douglas M. Cook, Director

5890Agency for Health

5893Care Administration

58952727 Mahan Drive

5898Tallahassee, FL 32308

5901NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

5907All parties have the right to submit written exceptions to this Recommended

5919Order. All agencies allow each party at least 10 days in which to submit

5933written exceptions. Some agencies allow a larger period within which to submit

5945written exceptions. You should contact the agency that will issue the final

5957order in this case concerning agency rules on the deadline for filing exceptions

5970to this Recommended Order. Any exceptions to this Recommended Order should be

5982filed with the agency that will issue the final order in this case.

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
Date: 06/16/1994
Proceedings: Final Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/15/1994
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 06/15/1994
Proceedings: Recommended Order
Date: 05/25/1994
Proceedings: Notice of Change of Street Address And Telephone Numbers (from A. Clark) filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/03/1994
Proceedings: Recommended Order sent out. CASE CLOSED. Hearing held 12-20-93.
Date: 02/23/1994
Proceedings: Supplemental Memorandum of Law filed. (From Alfred Clark)
Date: 02/08/1994
Proceedings: Order With Regard to Late-Filing sent out.
Date: 02/02/1994
Proceedings: (Respondent) Response to Petitioner's Motion to Strike Respondent's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
Date: 01/31/1994
Proceedings: (Petitioner) Motion to Strike Respondent`s Proposed Recommended Order filed.
Date: 01/28/1994
Proceedings: Respondent's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
Date: 01/21/1994
Proceedings: (Petitioner's) Proposed Recommended Order filed.
Date: 01/10/1994
Proceedings: Post-Hearing Order sent out.
Date: 01/07/1994
Proceedings: Transcript filed.
Date: 12/20/1993
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
Date: 12/03/1993
Proceedings: (joint) Prehearing Stipulation filed.
Date: 12/01/1993
Proceedings: Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum filed. (From Alfred Clark)
Date: 11/18/1993
Proceedings: Notice of Partial Compliance With Order of Prehearing Instructions and Motion for Extension of time to File Prehearing Stipulation filed. (From Alfred Clark)
Date: 10/25/1993
Proceedings: Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum filed. (From Alfred Clark)
Date: 10/19/1993
Proceedings: Amended Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum (Date Correction Only) filed. (From Al Clark)
Date: 08/18/1993
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for 12/20/93; 9:30am; Tallahassee)
Date: 08/18/1993
Proceedings: Order of Prehearing Instructions sent out.
Date: 08/16/1993
Proceedings: Petitioner's Response to Initial Order filed.
Date: 08/06/1993
Proceedings: Initial Order issued.
Date: 08/02/1993
Proceedings: Notice; Petition for Formal Administrative Proceeding; Agency Action Letter. filed.

Case Information

Judge:
ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
Date Filed:
08/02/1993
Date Assignment:
08/06/1993
Last Docket Entry:
06/16/1994
Location:
Jacksonville, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN TOTO
 

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Related Florida Statute(s) (2):

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