Federal Circuits, 3rd Cir. (November 24, 1989)
Docket number: 89-3209
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U.S. Supreme Court - Firefighters v. Stotts, 467 U.S. 561 (1984)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Cir. - Ca 79-2657 Philadelphia Welfare Rights Organization, a Voluntary Association By Louise Brookins, Trustee Ad Litem; Policy Advisory Committee of the Get Set Day Care Centers of Philadelphia By Nancy C. Bullett, Chairwoman; Nellie Rodriguez, Individually and on Behalf of Her Minor Children, Alicia, Jose, Ramiro, Judy, Marilyn, Cynthia, Eileen; Rowena Scott, Individually and on Behalf of Her Minor Children, Melvin, David, Blair, Darlene, Lorraine, Yvonne, and Jermarie, on Behalf of Themselves and all Others Similarly Situated, Appellants, v. the Honorable Milton J. Shapp, Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Helene Wohlgemuth, Secretary of the Department of Public Welfare of Pennsylvania, and Don Jose Stovall, Executive Director, Philadelphia County Board of Assistance, Individually and in Their Official Capacity., 602 F.2d 1114 (3rd Cir. 1979) a Voluntary Association By Louise Brookins, Trustee Ad Litem; Policy Advisory Committee of the Get Set Day Care Centers of Philadelphia By Nancy C. Bullett, Chairwoman; Nellie Rodriguez, Individually and on Behalf of Her Minor Children, Alicia, Jose, Ramiro, Judy, Marilyn, Cynthia, Eileen; Rowena Scott, Individually and on Behalf of Her Minor Children, Melvin, David, Blair, Darlene, Lorraine, Yvonne, and Jermarie, on Behalf of Themselves and all Others Similarly Situated, Appellants, v. the Honorable Milton J. Shapp, Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Helene Wohlgemuth, Secretary of the Department of Public Welfare of Pennsylvania, and Don Jose Stovall, Executive Director, Philadelphia County Board of Assistance, Individually and in Their Official Capacity.
U.S. Supreme Court - Braxton v. United States, 500 U.S. 344 (1991)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Cir. - Air Courier Conference of America/International Committee, International Express Carriers Conference, Dhl Airways, Inc., Dworkin-Cosell Interair Courier Services, Inc., Federal Express Corporation, Intertrade Courier International, Inc., Tnt Skypak, Inc., and Ups Air Forwarding, Inc. v. U.S. Postal Service Air Courier Conference of America/International Committee, an Unincorporated Association, Appellant., 959 F.2d 1213 (3rd Cir. 1992) International Express Carriers Conference, Dhl Airways, Inc., Dworkin-Cosell Interair Courier Services, Inc., Federal Express Corporation, Intertrade Courier International, Inc., Tnt Skypak, Inc., and Ups Air Forwarding, Inc. v. U.S. Postal Service Air Courier Conference of America/International Committee, an Unincorporated Association, Appellant.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Cir. - Terri Lee Halderman, a Retarded Citizen, By Her Mother and Guardian, Winifred Halderman; Larry Taylor, a Retarded Citizen, By His Parents and Guardians, Elmer and Doris Taylor; Kenny Taylor, a Minor, a Retarded Citizen, By His Parents and Guardians, Elmer and Doris Taylor; Robert Sobetsky, a Minor, a Retarded Citizen, By His Parents and Guardians, Frank and Angela Sobetsky; Theresa Sobetsky, a Retarded Citizen, By Her Parents and Guardians, Frank and Angela Sobetsky; Nancy Beth Nowman, a Retarded Citizen, By Her Parents and Guardians, Mr. and Ms. Horace Nowman; Linda Taub, a Retarded Citizen, By Her Parents and Guardians, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Taub; George Sorotos, a Minor, a Retarded Citizen, By His Foster Parents, William and Marion Caranfa, all of the Above Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated; the Parents and Family Association of Pennhurst Pennsylvania Association for Retarded Citizen, Jo Suzanne Moskowitz, a Minor, By Her Parents and Next Friends, Leonard and Nancy ..., 901 F.2d 311 (3rd Cir. 1990) a Retarded Citizen, By Her Mother and Guardian, Winifred Halderman; Larry Taylor, a Retarded Citizen, By His Parents and Guardians, Elmer and Doris Taylor; Kenny Taylor, a Minor, a Retarded Citizen, By His Parents and Guardians, Elmer and Doris Taylor; Robert Sobetsky, a Minor, a Retarded Citizen, By His Parents and Guardians, Frank and Angela Sobetsky; Theresa Sobetsky, a Retarded Citizen, By Her Parents and Guardians, Frank and Angela Sobetsky; Nancy Beth Nowman, a Retarded Citizen, By Her Parents and Guardians, Mr. and Ms. Horace Nowman; Linda Taub, a Retarded Citizen, By Her Parents and Guardians, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Taub; George Sorotos, a Minor, a Retarded Citizen, By His Foster Parents, William and Marion Caranfa, all of the Above Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated; the Parents and Family Association of Pennhurst Pennsylvania Association for Retarded Citizen, Jo Suzanne Moskowitz, a Minor, By Her Parents and Next Friends, Leonard and Nancy ...
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Cir. - Holland v. New Jersey Dept. Corrections (3rd Cir. 2005)
Thomas A. Leonard (argued), James J. Rodgers, Charles E. Caniff, Jr., Jonathan J. Bart, Dilworth, Paxson, Kalish & Kauffman, Philadelphia, Pa., for appellant.
Bruce G. Baron (argued), Asst. Counsel, Office of Legal Counsel, Dept. of Public Welfare, Harrisburg, Pa., for John F. White, Jr. and Eileen Schoen.Jane L. Dalton, Duane, Morris & Heckscher, Philadelphia, Pa., for amicus curiae The Hosp. Ass'n of Pa.Before GIBBONS, Chief Judge, HUTCHINSON, Circuit Judge, and WOLIN, District Judge.*OPINION OF THE COURTHUTCHINSON, Circuit Judge.Philadelphia Geriatric Center (PGC) appeals the denial of its motion to enforce the terms of a court-ordered stipulation of dismissal entered in 1983 as well as the denial of its motion for reconsideration. Although PGC was not a party in the earlier litigation, it was a third-party beneficiary to the stipulated agreement supposedly settling the case. PGC claims that the 1983 stipulation "grandfathered" in a "new construction" exception to certain Pennsylvania Medicaid regulations governing reimbursement for nursing home care that had been in effect before the regulations were amended in 1981. The "new construction" exception would have allowed PGC's Sley Pavilion nursing facility to continue receiving the higher rate of reimbursement that the pre-1981 regulations allowed for new construction of additional nursing home beds whose construction the state had previously approved, apparently on the basis of need, as required by 55 Pa.Code Sec. 9424.7121, 8 Pa.Bull. 2828 (1978). PGC alleged that appellees, certain officials of Pennsylvania's Department of Public Welfare (DPW), violated the terms of the stipulation by discontinuing this higher rate of reimbursement after the 1981 amendments became effective and by seeking partial repayment for post-1981 reimbursements PGC has already received.We hold that the 1983 stipulation is ambiguous on the "grandfathering" issue. Therefore, we will vacate the district court's judgment and remand this case to the district court to resolve the ambiguity in accordance with the intent of the parties. To do so, the district court, acting as a factfinder, must resolve the question of the parties' intent by interpreting the stipulation on the basis of relevant extrinsic evidence. Only thereafter can the stipulation be construed as a matter of law. In interpreting the parties' intent, relevant extrinsic evidence includes evidence of the parties' negotiations leading up to the stipulation.1 It also includes any evidence of the parties' actions in the course of performing the stipulated agreement that sheds light on whether they intended to "grandfather" the former regulations' "new construction" exception into future regulations for hospitals named in the stipulated agreement. In particular, the information contained in the affidavit of Jane L. Dalton (Dalton), one of the attorneys involved in drafting the stipulation, should be considered if presented in accordance with other applicable evidentiary requirements.I.PGC owns and operates licensed nursing home facilities in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In 1974, after specific regulatory approval, PGC finished constructing and began operating a new health care institute on its premises. The new construction included a 120-bed nursing home facility called the Sley Pavilion. The Sley Pavilion is designed to meet the needs of severely impaired patients who, in many cases, would otherwise occupy an acute care hospital bed.About seventy percent of PGC's total revenues comes from Medicaid reimbursement by DPW, the state agency that now administers the federal Medicaid program within Pennsylvania. See Joint Appendix (App.) at 196. Pennsylvania has two reimbursement rates for patients entitled to nursing home care under Medicaid. The standard rate is paid for ordinary non-hospital based, freestanding nursing home care, and the significantly higher rate is available for nursing care in converted acute care beds in a hospital-based nursing facility. When the Sley Pavilion began operating, DPW and PGC reached an agreement concerning Medicaid reimbursement. Under that agreement, DPW recognized that up to one-half (sixty beds) of the Sley Pavilion's 120 beds qualified for the higher reimbursement rate, apparently because DPW determined that this number of beds was needed to provide the relatively high level of nursing care then thought to be associated with hospital-based facilities. The other half were classified under the lower rate allowed to ordinary freestanding nursing homes. In November, 1982, DPW unilaterally tried to change this agreement by reducing the number of beds that qualified for the higher reimbursement rate at the Sley Pavilion in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1981 to thirty, but the original sixty-bed figure was reinstated after PGC appealed to DPW's Office of Hearings and Appeals. See Washington Hosp. v. O'Bannon, No. 80-1106, slip op. at 3 (W.D.Pa. Feb. 22, 1989).In the meantime, DPW had begun to enact a stricter nursing home classification scheme that reduced the hospital-based beds that qualified for the higher Medicaid reimbursement rate. Those hospitals that had beds qualified under the old system were not pleased, and in August, 1980 four Pennsylvania hospitals (not including PGC) brought suit in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania against DPW and its Secretary and Deputy Secretary in Washington Hospital v. O'Bannon, No. 80-1106. This suit challenged, inter alia, the DPW rate-classifying regulations that had gone into effect on October 1, 1978. These regulations had seriously affected the Medicaid reimbursement the complaining hospitals received.2 The hospitals alleged that these requirements unreasonably denied them hospital-based Medicaid reimbursement because none of them could satisfy the converted acute care bed requirement. In addition, the hospital plaintiffs sought relief on behalf of eighteen other hospitals (including PGC) that also might be excluded from higher Medicaid reimbursement rates because of the 1978 Regulations even though those eighteen presently qualified for the higher rates.While this suit was still pending, DPW promulgated even stricter regulations. They went into effect on July 25, 1981. See 55 Pa.Code Sec. 1181.42 (1989).3 The 1981 Regulations eliminated previously approved "new construction" from the facilities whose beds qualified for the higher hospital-based reimbursement rate, leaving only converted acute care beds in the class qualifying for the higher reimbursement. The 1981 amendments intensified the concerns of the hospitals involved in the Washington Hospital case.4In November, 1983, the parties to the Washington Hospital litigation mutually agreed to a settlement and, in order to effectuate it, entered into a Stipulation of Dismissal that was also signed and approved by the district court. See App. at 258. The stipulation was drafted not only to benefit the parties, but also included terms that benefited other hospitals also providing nursing home care. Those other hospitals were listed in Appendices I and II of the stipulated agreement and included PGC. See paragraphs 4 and 5, App. at 260-61.For almost three years after the Washington Hospital litigation was settled, DPW continued to reimburse PGC at the higher hospital-based rate. Then it started to take contrary steps. In 1986, DPW notified PGC that it would no longer get the higher Medicaid reimbursement rate for any services at the Sley Pavilion. App. at 206. On July 1, 1986, DPW began reimbursing PGC at the lower freestanding nursing home rate. The pressure increased as DPW delayed issuing PGC's audited Medicaid cost reports for fiscal years ending 1982 and thereafter, despite its obligation to process them within six months.5 This effectively prevented PGC from appealing DPW's administrative reimbursement determinations to its Office of Hearings and Appeals, where PGC had already successfully contended that it was entitled to the higher reimbursement rate for services rendered in sixty of the Sley Pavilion's 120 beds in fiscal year 1981.The audited cost reports were not finally issued until the fall of 1988, and then they reflected DPW's administrative determination that PGC was not entitled to the higher reimbursement rate for the Sley Pavilion after July 1, 1981, the beginning of fiscal year 1982. Consequently, DPW demanded that PGC reimburse it almost $1,900,000 for what DPW said were Medicaid overpayments PGC had received at the higher hospital-based rate for costs incurred at Sley Pavilion after July 1, 1981.6 DPW demanded full repayment of this $1,900,000 by March 31, 1989. PGC responded with its motion in the district court to enforce the 1983 stipulation and to hold Secretary John F. White, Jr. and Deputy Secretary Eileen Schoen of DPW in civil contempt. Later, PGC also filed a motion for preliminary injunctive relief.The district court, at a hearing on PGC's application for a preliminary injunction, heard the testimony of three witnesses and received exhibits. After the parties agreed that the record was sufficient to determine the merits of PGC's underlying motion to enforce the stipulation,7 the district court, in an order entered February 22, 1989, denied PGC's motion to enforce and its request for a civil contempt adjudication with the limited exception of Medicaid payments received between July 1 and July 25, 1981. The district court based this order on its construction of the terms of the stipulation. See Washington Hosp. v. O'Bannon, No. 80-1106 (W.D.Pa. Feb. 22, 1989). The district court, construing paragraphs 4 and 10 of the stipulation together, held it "grandfathered" the "new construction" exception only until July 25, 1981, when the 1981 amendments to the regulations governing hospital-based nursing care reimbursement went into effect. Id., slip op. at 12-15.After the court announced its decision, PGC moved for reconsideration and in support offered evidence on the parties' intent with respect to the "grandfathering" issue.8 The district court denied the motion for reconsideration without opinion. App. at 1. PGC then appealed both the denial of the motion to enforce and the denial of the motion to reconsider to this Court.II.We have jurisdiction over this appeal from these orders of the district court under 28 U.S.C.A. Sec. 1291 (West Supp.1989). The district court had subject matter jurisdiction over PGC's action under the terms of the 1983 court-ordered stipulation. Although a district court does not have continuing jurisdiction over disputes about its orders merely because it had jurisdiction over the original dispute, a stipulated agreement signed by the court does allow a district court to retain jurisdiction. See McCall-Bey v. Franzen, 777 F.2d 1178, 1188 (7th Cir.1985) ("[W]e have expressed no doubt of the power of a district judge to dismiss a lawsuit conditionally, retaining jurisdiction to effectuate the terms of settlement agreed to by the parties. Nor do we think there is any magic form of words that the judge must intone in order to make the retention of jurisdiction effective. All that is necessary is that it be possible to infer that he did intend to retain jurisdiction....").We think there is little question that the district court retained jurisdiction to resolve allegations of non-compliance with the stipulated agreement. Paragraph nine of the court-approved stipulation states: "Plaintiffs will make no further effort to have their claims adjudicated or to request judicial relief upon those claims except insofar as questions or issues are raised: (1) by any failure of Defendants to comply with the terms of this Agreement...." App. at 263 (quoting p 9 in material part).Paragraph nine cannot be read to limit the district court's jurisdiction to requests for relief identical to those sought by the plaintiffs in the original Washington Hospital suit. A court must be able to protect the integrity of a stipulation of dismissal that is functionally equivalent to a consent order or consent decree9 when it has retained jurisdiction and a party alleges that another party is not obeying the terms of the agreement. See, e.g., Stotts v. Memphis Fire Dept, 679 F.2d 541, 557 & n. 16 (6th Cir.1982) (a court "has an independent duty to ensure that the terms of the decree are effectuated" and "to protect the integrity of its decree," especially upon motion of a party), rev'd on other grounds sub nom. Firefighters Local Union No. 1784 v. Stotts, 467 U.S. 561, 104 S.Ct. 2576, 81 L.Ed.2d 483 (1984). Since PGC was asking the court to enforce the terms of this stipulation in the face of alleged non-compliance by the appellees, p 9 allowed the district court to properly assert jurisdiction in this matter.We also think that PGC had standing to invoke that jurisdiction even though it was not a party to the original Washington Hospital litigation. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 71 allows a non-party to enforce a court order in its favor just as a party could.10 The district court does not lose jurisdiction merely because PGC may have other proceedings pending before DPW's Office of Hearings and Appeals. Accordingly, the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over PGC's motion to enforce and its motion for reconsideration.The construction of the stipulation, including the question of whether it is ambiguous, is a matter of law over which we exercise plenary review. See United States v. Reader's Digest Ass'n, 662 F.2d 955, 961 (3d Cir.1981) ("construing the meaning of a consent order ... is a question of law for the court"), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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