09-002967 Gavin Naylor vs. Department Of Management Services, Division Of State Group Insurance
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Wednesday, September 16, 2009.


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Summary: Petitioner is not entitled to reimbursement for wife's medical expenses prior to their marriage and denial of attempt to retroactively reduce amount in his medical reimbursement account due to alleged but not proven agency error.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8GAVIN NAYLOR, )

11)

12Petitioner, )

14)

15vs. ) Case No. 09-2967

20)

21DEPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT )

25SERVICES, DIVISION OF STATE )

30GROUP INSURANCE, )

33)

34Respondent. )

36)

37RECOMMENDED ORDER

39Pursuant to notice, this cause was heard by Linda M. Rigot,

50the assigned Administrative Law Judge of the Division of

59Administrative Hearings, on August 24, 2009, in Tallahassee,

67Florida.

68APPEARANCES

69For Petitioner: Gavin Naylor, pro se

751531 Tallavana Trail

78Havana, Florida 32333

81For Respondent: Sonja Matthews, Esquire

86Department Management Services

89Office of the General Counsel

944050 Esplanade Way, Suite 260

99Tallahassee, Florida 32399

102STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

106The issue presented is whether Petitioner is entitled to a

116refund of monies paid into his medical reimbursement account.

125PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

127By correspondence dated March 23, 2009, Respondent

134Department of Management Services, Division of State Group

142Insurance, advised Petitioner Gavin Naylor that his request to

151retroactively change the amount of his contribution to his

160medical reimbursement account was denied. Petitioner timely

167requested an administrative hearing regarding that

173determination, and this cause was transferred to the Division of

183Administrative Hearings to conduct the evidentiary hearing.

190Petitioner testified on his own behalf and presented the

199testimony of Mandy Manning, Linda Lieblong, and Jackie Williams.

208The Department presented the testimony of Petitioner, Sandi

216Wade, and James West. Additionally, Petitioner's Exhibits

223numbered 2 and 3 and the Department's Exhibits numbered 1, 2, 7,

2358, 13, 14, and 16 were admitted in evidence. Further, the

246Department's request for official recognition was granted as to

255Sections 110.123 and 110.161, Florida Statutes; 26 C.F.R. §

2641.125-4; Chapter 60P, Florida Administrative Code, and 26 U.S.C.

273§ 125.

275No transcript of the final hearing was filed. The parties

285have submitted post-hearing proposed recommended orders which

292have been considered in the entry of this Recommended Order.

302FINDINGS OF FACT

3051. Petitioner has a Ph.D and has been a professor at

316Florida State University (FSU) since November 2003.

3232. Petitioner met his now-wife Veronika in England in

332September 2004. In the summer of 2005 she quit her job in

344London and came to Tallahassee. She enrolled in FSU's graduate

354program to fulfill the conditions of her visa.

3623. Petitioner attempted to add her to his health insurance

372coverage claiming that she was a dependent or a "partner,"

382reasoning that since she was living with him she was

"392effectively" his wife. When required to produce a marriage

401license, Petitioner was unable to do so. Accordingly, since she

411was not legally his spouse and, therefore, was not eligible to

422be covered under Petitioner's benefits, his attempt to include

431her in his health insurance coverage was unsuccessful.

4394. From the beginning of his employment up through the

449time of the final hearing in this cause, Petitioner has received

460every year the Department's Benefits Guide for active State

469employees. He has also received additional information yearly

477regarding the State's benefits program and options during the

486annual open enrollment period.

4905. In 2005 Petitioner began participating in the State of

500Florida's pre-tax flexible spending account program by setting

508up a medical reimbursement account (MRA). Each year he had

518approximately $600 deducted from his gross salary (pre-tax) to

527cover medical expenses not covered under his health insurance

536plan.

5376. In 2008 he and Veronika began fertility treatments,

546incurring approximately $14,000 in bills for these treatments.

555In April 2008 Veronika became pregnant. Petitioner and Veronika

564were married on May 7, 2008. Because his marriage was a

575qualifying status change, he was allowed to add her to his

586health insurance coverage because she became eligible as his

595spouse.

5967. On approximately May 20, 2008, he took his check to the

608Human Resources office at FSU to pay the additional charge

618resulting from converting his health insurance from individual

626coverage to family coverage. He gave his check to Jackie

636Williams, who worked in that office and who had contacted him

647about the need to pay the additional money.

6558. On that date he also made arrangements to increase his

666MRA from $600 to $5,000, with the increased payroll deductions

677to begin July 1 since he was on a nine-month contract.

6889. In December 2008 he submitted a claim for reimbursement

698from his MRA for the fertility treatments that Veronika

707underwent prior to their marriage. That claim was denied

716because the treatments occurred prior to the time that Veronika

726became an eligible dependent.

73010. Since those expenses were not eligible for

738reimbursement, he next sought to reduce his election of $5,000

749for his MRA back down to his normal level of $600. He told

762other personnel in FSU's Human Resources office that Williams

771had told him that he could claim reimbursement from his MRA for

783expenses incurred by Veronika before her marriage to him since

793the plan year for an MRA was from January through December.

80411. Based solely upon Petitioner's assertion that Williams

812gave him wrong information, other personnel in that office

821directed a memorandum to People First telling that company,

830which operates the State of Florida's payroll and employee

839benefits services, that due to an "agency error" Petitioner's

848MRA should be reduced to its prior level. That request was also

860denied because a change in Petitioner's MRA could only be made

871during open enrollment or because of a qualifying status change,

881and neither condition applied.

88512. Jackie Williams remembers her contacts with Petitioner

893because Veronika spells her name with a "k," which is an unusual

905way to spell it. Williams only discussed with Petitioner his

915health insurance coverage and did not discuss with him his MRA.

92613. Petitioner asserts that the Benefits Guide, which he

935consulted, lends credence to the misinformation he says Williams

944gave him because it provides in the section describing MRAs:

"954The entire amount in your account is available at the beginning

965of the plan year." That sentence, however, speaks only to the

976issue of the timing of claims filed against the account. It

987does not speak to the eligibility of expenses claimed.

99614. The Benefits Guide is very clear as to who is eligible

1008to receive benefits under the State's employee benefits options.

1017It uses plain language that has not changed from year to year

1029although the page number on which the explanation is given may

1040change. The Benefits Guide for 2008 on page 11, for example,

1051states clearly that all active full-time or part-time State of

1061Florida employees qualify for coverage under the benefits plans

1070described in the Guide plus the employee's spouse and children.

108015. Eligibility for reimbursement of expenses is quite

1088different from the time period during which claims for eligible

1098expenses can be made. Although the State's MRA plan year runs

1109from January through December, the expenses of only eligible

1118persons will be covered. Since Veronika and Petitioner did not

1128marry until May 7, 2008, her medical expenses before that date

1139do not qualify for reimbursement from Petitioner's MRA, just as

1149she did not qualify to be added to Petitioner's health insurance

1160coverage until they married.

116416. To the extent that Petitioner claims he was misled by

1175Jackie Williams, his argument is not persuasive. First,

1183Petitioner had his Benefits Guide which gave the correct

1192information, and his reliance on one sentence in the Guide which

1203does not refer to eligible persons or eligible expenses is

1213illogical and misplaced. Second, Williams' testimony that she

1221did not discuss his MRA with him and that she remembers her

1233transactions with him because of the unusual spelling of

1242Veronika is credible and was supported by the way both

1252Petitioner and Williams referred to that spelling during her

1261testimony at the final hearing.

126617. Veronika's medical expenses incurred before her

1273marriage to Petitioner do not qualify for reimbursement from

1282Petitioner's MRA. Further, Petitioner is not entitled to a

1291reduction in his 2008 MRA contribution due to an "agency error"

1302or a misrepresentation by FSU's Human Resources office because

1311no agency error or misrepresentation was made. Quite simply

1320put, Petitioner herein seeks a benefit of marriage prior to the

1331time he was entitled to enjoy it under both the law and the

1344State of Florida's employee benefits plans.

1350CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

135318. The Division of Administrative Hearings has

1360jurisdiction over the subject matter hereof and the parties

1369hereto. §§ 120.569 and 120.57(1), Fla. Stat.

137619. Petitioner bears the burden of proof in this

1385proceeding. See Florida Dept. of Transp. v. J.W.C. Co. , 396

1395So.2d 778 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981); Balino v. Dept. of Health and

1407Rehab. Serv. , 348 So. 2d 349 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977); and Young v.

1420Dept. of Community Affairs , 625 So. 2d 831 (Fla. 1993).

1430Petitioner has failed to meet his burden of proving his

1440allegation by a preponderance of the evidence.

144720. The State of Florida Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA)

1456were established pursuant to Section 110.161, Florida Statutes,

1464the State Employees Pretax Benefits Program Act. An FSA

1473provides a federal income tax benefit by reducing an employee's

1483reportable gross income. One type of FSA, the medical

1492reimbursement account (MRA) covers qualified medical expenses

1499not otherwise covered by health insurance.

150521. The rules applicable to the State of Florida's pre-tax

1515program are primarily found in Chapter 60P-6, Florida

1523Administrative Code, and, by references therein, Chapter 60P-2

1531is also applicable. Among the definitions found in Florida

1540Administrative Code Rule 60P-6.006 is the definition of

"1548qualifying status change (QSC) event" or "QSC event," which

1557means "the change in employment status, for subscriber or

1566spouse, family status or significant change in health coverage

1575of the employee or spouse attributable to the spouse's

1584employment." Fla. Admin. Code R. 60P-6.006(13). That Rule also

1593defines the "plan year" as a 12-month period beginning January 1

1604and ending December 31. Fla. Admin. Code R. 60P-6.006(11).

1613Further, "health care expenses" are defined as "any unreimbursed

1622eligible expenses incurred by a participant or by a spouse or

1633dependent of such participant for medical care." Fla. Admin.

1642Code R. 60P-6.006(7).

164522. Florida Administrative Code Rule 60P-6.0068(2),

1651provides that during a plan year an election is irrevocable

1661except when a participant in a pre-tax plan experiences a QSC

1672event. Petitioner was able to make a change in his 2008 MRA

1684during the plan year because he experienced a QSC event in 2008

1696due to his marriage to Veronika, but he experienced no other QSC

1708event that year which would allow him to make the second change

1720which he seeks in this proceeding.

172623. Section 110.161(5), Florida Statutes, authorizes the

1733Department of Management Services to develop rules for the pre-

1743tax program. Subsection (6)(c) requires the Department to take

1752all actions necessary to preserve the tax-exempt status of the

1762program. To maintain the pre-tax benefit, employers are

1770required to administer the program in compliance with the

1779Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 125), the applicable federal

1789rules and regulations, and the employer’s written plan. The

1798State of Florida’s administrative rules clearly provide that a

1807spouse is covered but a girlfriend is not. Accordingly,

1816approving Petitioner’s request that his girlfriend’s medical

1823expenses be reimbursed would violate the State of Florida’s

1832written plan and would jeopardize the tax-exempt status of the

1842State’s MRA FSA.

184524. Though not requested as such by Petitioner, he is

1855requesting retroactive reduction of his MRA based upon the

1864theory of estoppel. He argues that the Department should not

1874deny the retroactive reduction because of a misrepresentation by

1883an FSU personnel employee. This tribunal does not have

1892jurisdiction to grant equitable remedies. § 26.012, Fla. Stat.

190125. Even if there were jurisdiction to award equitable

1910relief in this proceeding, Petitioner would have the burden of

1920proving the following elements: (1) a representation by a party

1930as to some material fact, (2) reliance on that representation by

1941the party claiming estoppel, and (3) a change in the party's

1952position caused by his or her reliance on the representation to

1963his detriment. See , e.g. , Shaffer v. School Bd. of Martin

1973County , 543 So. 2d 335 (Fla. 4th DCA 1989).

198226. Further, as a general rule, estoppel may be applied

1992against the state only in rare instances or under exceptional

2002circumstances. Dolphin Outdoor Advertising v. Dept. of Transp. ,

2010582 So. 2d 709 (Fla. 1st DCA 1991).

201827. Petitioner has not proven a factual basis for applying

2028equitable estoppel in this proceeding. It has been found that

2038Jackie Williams did not discuss Petitioner’s MRA with him and,

2048therefore, did not misrepresent a material fact. Accordingly,

2056Petitioner has also failed to prove that he relied on that

2067misrepresentation and that he changed his position to his

2076detriment due to his reliance on that misrepresentation.

208428. Even if Petitioner were provided misinformation as

2092alleged by him, his reliance was not reasonable in that the

2103information was readily available in the administrative rules

2111and in the Benefits Guides which Petitioner received each year.

2121Further, based upon his previous experience Petitioner knew or

2130should have known that benefits are available only to “legal

2140spouses.” Council Bros., Inc. v. City of Tallahassee , 634 So.

21502d 264 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994).

215629. As a general rule, estoppel will not apply to mistaken

2167statements of the law. Dept. of Rev. v. Anderson , 403 So. 2d

2179397 (Fla. 1981). The question of eligibility of medical

2188expenses that can be reimbursed from an MRA is a question of law

2201in that the requirements are established by the Department’s

2210substantive statutes and administrative rules.

221530. Even if the alleged misrepresentation had been made,

2224FSU is a separate entity from the Department, and

2233representations made by FSU cannot be attributed to the

2242Department. Bright v. Dept. of Management Serv., Div. of

2251Retirement , DOAH Case No. 03-2142 (F.O. 4/8/04). Further,

2259Section 110.123(5), Florida Statutes, provides that final

2266decisions regarding the State’s group insurance program cannot

2274be delegated by the Department.

2279RECOMMENDATION

2280Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of

2290Law, it is

2293RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered denying

2301Petitioner’s request for a retroactive reduction in his MRA.

2310DONE AND ENTERED this 16th day of September, 2009, in

2320Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.

2324S

2325LINDA M. RIGOT

2328Administrative Law Judge

2331Division of Administrative Hearings

2335The DeSoto Building

23381230 Apalachee Parkway

2341Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060

2344(850) 488-9675

2346Fax Filing (850) 921-6847

2350www.doah.state.fl.us

2351Filed with the Clerk of the

2357Division of Administrative Hearings

2361this 16th day of September, 2009.

2367COPIES FURNISHED :

2370Sonja P. Mathews, Esquire

2374Department of Management Services

2378Office of the General Counsel

23834050 Esplanade Way, Suite 260

2388Tallahassee, Florida 32399

2391Gavin Naylor

23931531 Tallavana Trail

2396Havana, Florida 32333

2399John Brenneis, General Counsel

2403Department of Management Services

24074050 Esplanade Way

2410Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0950

2413NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

2419All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within

242915 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions

2440to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that

2451will issue the Final Order in this case.

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
PDF:
Date: 10/20/2009
Proceedings: Final Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/19/2009
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 09/16/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order
PDF:
Date: 09/16/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held August 24, 2009). CASE CLOSED.
PDF:
Date: 09/16/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
PDF:
Date: 09/08/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 09/04/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner`s Proposed Recommended Order filed.
Date: 08/24/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 08/17/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Motion to Take Official Recognition filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/17/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Response to Pre-hearing Instructions filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/22/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Transfer.
PDF:
Date: 06/09/2009
Proceedings: Order of Pre-hearing Instructions.
PDF:
Date: 06/09/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for August 24, 2009; 10:00 a.m.; Tallahassee, FL).
PDF:
Date: 06/05/2009
Proceedings: (Respondent's) Response to Initial Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/29/2009
Proceedings: Initial Order.
PDF:
Date: 05/29/2009
Proceedings: Denial of Level II Appeal filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/29/2009
Proceedings: Request for Administrative Hearing filed.
PDF:
Date: 05/29/2009
Proceedings: Agency referral

Case Information

Judge:
LINDA M. RIGOT
Date Filed:
05/29/2009
Date Assignment:
07/21/2009
Last Docket Entry:
10/20/2009
Location:
Tallahassee, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN TOTO
 

Counsels

Related DOAH Cases(s) (2):

Related Florida Statute(s) (5):

Related Florida Rule(s) (2):