IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA17-710
Filed: 17 April 2018
Mecklenburg County, No. 15 CVS 19217
CARLOS PACHAS, by his attorney in fact, JULISSA PACHAS, Petitioner,
v.
NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,
Respondent.
Appeal by petitioner from order entered 21 April 2017 by Judge W. Robert Bell
in Mecklenburg County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 10 January
2018.
Legal Services of Southern Piedmont, by Madison Hardee and Douglas Stuart
Sea, for petitioner-appellant.
Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Lee J. Miller,
for respondent-appellee.
DIETZ, Judge.
Carlos Pachas was a Medicaid recipient. In 2016, he challenged the deductible
applied to his Medicaid coverage. After losing throughout the administrative process,
Pachas ultimately prevailed on judicial review in the trial court. The court held that
the applicable Medicaid statute required the State to use the federal poverty level for
a family, not an individual, to calculate Pachas’s income limit.
PACHAS V. NC DEP’T OF HEALTH & HUM. SERVS.
Opinion of the Court
Later, Pachas qualified for an alternative Medicaid program subject to at least
some different rules than traditional Medicaid. After the State again imposed a
deductible based on the federal poverty level for individuals, Pachas skipped the
administrative review process and returned directly to the trial court with a motion
to enforce the court’s previous order and petition for writ of mandamus. The trial
court dismissed the motion for lack of jurisdiction.
As explained below, we affirm. Although a trial court, sitting as an appellate
court to review an agency decision, has jurisdiction to enforce an existing order, it
lacks jurisdiction to apply a previous order to new facts and legal arguments not at
issue in the previous ruling. Here, the new Medicaid program in which Pachas
enrolled permits the State to request, and the federal government to grant, waivers
from various Medicaid provisions. The State contends that the federal government
waived the income limit rules for this alternative Medicaid program. This argument
involves questions of law and fact not addressed in the first judicial review
proceeding, which concerned standard Medicaid coverage.
Our holding today does not mean we agree with the State on the underlying
Medicaid issue. We hold only that Pachas cannot bypass the agency review process
and take this new issue directly to the trial court. Accordingly, we affirm the trial
court’s dismissal of Pachas’s motion and petition for lack of jurisdiction.
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PACHAS V. NC DEP’T OF HEALTH & HUM. SERVS.
Opinion of the Court
Facts and Procedural History
In 2014, Petitioner Carlos Pachas began receiving Medicaid coverage after a
stroke and a brain tumor left him confined to a wheelchair and in need of nursing
care. Pachas was the primary provider for his wife, his two minor children, and his
wife’s elderly parents.
In early 2015, Pachas began receiving Social Security disability benefits. The
Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services determined that, based on his
Social Security disability payment of $1,369 per month, Pachas’s income was above
the federal poverty level and thus required him to pay a deductible on his Medicaid
benefits. DSS informed Pachas that it would not provide further Medicaid coverage
until Pachas paid a 6-month deductible of $6,642.
DSS calculated this deductible based on the federal poverty level for an
individual, rather than the poverty level for a family. Had DSS applied the federal
poverty level for a family, Pachas would have been eligible for Medicaid benefits
without having to pay a deductible.
Pachas appealed DSS’s decision through the administrative process but did not
prevail. He then petitioned for judicial review in superior court. Pachas argued that
the applicable federal statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(m), required the agency to determine
his Medicaid eligibility based on the federal poverty level for a “family of the size
involved.” Because Pachas was the primary provider for his wife, children, and elderly
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Opinion of the Court
in-laws, he contended that the agency should have used the federal poverty level for
a family of either four or six people.
Pachas prevailed in superior court. The court reversed the agency decision and
ordered the agency to reinstate Pachas’s Medicaid benefits. The court held that the
agency improperly applied the income limit because “[t]he plain language of the
controlling federal statutory provision, 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(m), states that the
applicable Medicaid income limit . . . must be based on a ‘family of the size involved.’”
In February 2017, Pachas left the nursing facility that had been caring for him
and returned home under a special Medicaid program known as the Community
Alternative Program for Disabled Adults, or CAP/DA. The CAP/DA program offers
the State the option of providing Medicaid coverage to adults who wish to receive
support services at their own homes, rather than in a nursing home.
The State has discretion to define the scope of its CAP/DA program by
requesting a waiver of various Medicaid provisions from the federal government. See
42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c). The State contends that it requested, and received, a waiver
from the requirement that it calculate CAP/DA income limits using a “family of the
size involved” under 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(m).
Based on this purported waiver, when Pachas enrolled in the CAP/DA program
and began receiving in-home support services, the State calculated his income limit
for CAP/DA coverage using the individual federal poverty level, not the family
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PACHAS V. NC DEP’T OF HEALTH & HUM. SERVS.
Opinion of the Court
poverty level. As a result, the State required him to pay a deductible before receiving
CAP/DA coverage.
The trial court, in its initial order on judicial review, did not address the
CAP/DA program or the factual and legal issues concerning the State’s request for a
waiver of various Medicaid provisions through CAP/DA. Indeed, the CAP/DA
program was not even at issue in the initial administrative challenge because, at the
time, Pachas was receiving only standard Medicaid coverage. As a result, the
administrative record from the initial proceeding does not include any documents
addressing either CAP/DA coverage generally or whether the federal government
approved the State’s purported request to waive the requirements of 42 U.S.C. §
1396a(m).
After learning that the State would require a deductible for CAP/DA coverage,
Pachas bypassed the administrative review process and filed in superior court a
motion to enforce the court’s previous order and a petition for a writ of mandamus.
Following a hearing, the trial court dismissed the motion and petition for lack of
jurisdiction.
The trial court ruled that its initial order “does not apply to Petitioner’s
Medicaid eligibility under the CAP/DA waiver” because the CAP/DA program is
“governed by [a] separate federal statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c)” which permits the
federal government “to waive the State Plan requirements for income and resource
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Opinion of the Court
rules . . . that the Court considered in the March 17, 2016 Order.” The trial court
therefore held that “Petitioner must resort to the administrative process governed by
N.C.G.S. § 108A-79 to appeal” the State’s decision to require a deductible for CAP/DA
coverage. Pachas appealed the trial court’s ruling to this Court.
Sadly, Pachas passed away during this litigation. His wife, Julissa Pachas, was
substituted as petitioner in her capacity as administrator of Pachas’s estate.
Analysis
Pachas challenges the trial court’s dismissal of his motion to enforce the court’s
previous order, and the corresponding petition for a writ of mandamus. We begin our
analysis by discussing the trial court’s authority to consider these filings.
Ordinarily, trial courts lack jurisdiction to directly review a decision by a
county department of social services with respect to Medicaid coverage. The General
Assembly created an administrative review process for these claims, and courts have
jurisdiction to hear these disputes only when they arrive through a petition for
judicial review after exhaustion of this administrative review. See N.C. Gen. Stat.
§§ 108A-79, 150B-43.
But as in other legal proceedings, trial courts reviewing administrative
decisions have jurisdiction to enforce their own orders. See N.C. R. Civ. P. 70; Bryan
v. BellSouth Commc’ns, Inc., 492 F.3d 231, 236 (4th Cir. 2007). Thus, when a trial
court on judicial review orders an agency to take action, the court retains jurisdiction
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Opinion of the Court
to ensure its order is carried out. Consequently, when a trial court interprets a statute
and orders the agency to apply that interpretation—as happened here—the agency
must do so. If the agency ignores the trial court’s instructions, the court retains the
power to take further action to ensure compliance.
There are limits to this supervisory authority, however. The trial court’s
authority to supervise the agency’s actions extends only to issues “actually presented
and necessarily involved in determining the case.” Tennessee-Carolina Transp., Inc.
v. Strick Corp., 286 N.C. 235, 239, 210 S.E.2d 181, 183 (1974). In other words, the
trial court’s continuing jurisdiction applies to issues involving “the same facts and
the same questions, which were determined in the previous appeal.” Id.
Here, the trial court properly concluded that the agency’s determination of
Pachas’s CAP/DA program eligibility involved different facts and legal issues than
the traditional Medicaid benefits at issue in its first order. As the trial court observed,
its first order instructed the State “to reinstate Petitioner’s Medicaid eligibility
through the North Carolina Medicaid State Plan pursuant to the controlling federal
statutory provision, 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(m).”
The court then observed that Pachas later “voluntarily applied for Medicaid
eligibility through the Community Alternative Program for Disabled Adults . . . which
is governed by [a] separate federal statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c).” Unlike the
traditional Medicaid program at issue in the court’s first order, the CAP/DA program
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Opinion of the Court
permits the State to seek waivers from various provisions of the Medicaid statutes.
42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c). The State contends that it requested, and received, a waiver
from the requirement that it calculate CAP/DA income limits based on a “family of
the size involved” under 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(m).
The scope of this waiver provision, and whether the State in fact applied for
and received a waiver of the income limits provision, involve facts and legal questions
that were not “actually presented and necessarily involved” in the trial court’s order
addressing traditional Medicaid coverage. Tennessee-Carolina Transp., Inc., 286 N.C.
at 239, 210 S.E.2d at 183. Indeed, these issues could not have been addressed in the
court’s first order because, as the parties concede, with respect to traditional Medicaid
coverage, the statutory income limit requirements cannot be waived.
As a result, the trial court correctly held that “the Order signed on March 17,
2016 does not apply to Petitioner’s Medicaid eligibility under the CAP/DA waiver”
and that “Petitioner must resort to the administrative process governed by N.C.G.S.
§ 108A-79 to appeal the February 14, 2017 decision issued by the Mecklenburg
County DSS.” The trial court lacks jurisdiction to review the legal and factual issues
raised in this appeal until they reach the court through exhaustion of the
administrative review process and a petition for judicial review.
We recognize that this is a frustrating result for the Pachas family, who
already fought one lengthy administrative battle with the agency and must now do
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Opinion of the Court
so again. And we agree with our dissenting colleague that requiring a “dying indigent”
to slog through this pointless bureaucracy before presenting his legal arguments to a
court of law feels “unjust and wrong.” But it is what the law requires. Although the
agency seems convinced of its legal position, that does not make the administrative
review process “futile” or “inadequate” as those terms are defined by law. See Huang
v. North Carolina State Univ., 107 N.C. App. 710, 715, 421 S.E.2d 812, 815–16 (1992).
Once Pachas has an opportunity to be heard on these issues in the administrative
review process, the agency might well agree and rule in his favor.
Simply put, the law requires Pachas to exhaust administrative remedies before
presenting these new legal and factual arguments to the trial court. If requiring
claimants like Pachas to exhaust administrative remedies in these circumstances is
unfair or unjust, it is up to those who enacted these administrative laws and
regulations to fix it. We reject our dissenting colleague’s view that judges can ignore
the law if the outcome seems to them unjust or wrong. Even if all judges were angels,
this would be dangerous. And we are not angels.
Although we reject Pachas’s arguments on appeal, we make two observations
about this case in the interest of justice. First, much of the parties’ briefing concerned
the portion of the trial court’s order stating that “[a]ccording to 42 U.S.C.
§ 1396n(c)(3), DHHS is allowed to waive the State Plan requirements for income and
resource rules under 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(m).” Because, as explained above, the trial
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Opinion of the Court
court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate the CAP/DA coverage issue, the court had no
authority to decide this question. The State asserts that it has this waiver authority,
but that legal question—and the factual question of whether the State actually
applied for and received such a waiver—are issues that must be decided through the
agency review process.
Second, a Medicaid recipient ordinarily must appeal a decision of a county
department of social services within 60 days from the date of the agency’s action. N.C.
Gen. Stat. § 108A-79(c). The statutes governing the administrative review process
state that failure to timely appeal constitutes a waiver but “for good cause shown, the
county department of social services may permit an appeal notwithstanding the
waiver.” Id. Pachas sought review directly in the trial court, rather than through the
administrative process, in good faith. His arguments on appeal were not frivolous. If
there was ever a case in which good cause exists to permit an untimely administrative
appeal, this is it.
Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the trial court’s order dismissing
Pachas’s motion and petition for lack of jurisdiction.
AFFIRMED.
Judge ELMORE concurs.
Judge HUNTER, JR. dissents with separate opinion.
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No. COA17-710 Pachas v. North Carolina Department of Health & Human Services
HUNTER, JR., Robert N., Judge, dissenting in separate opinion.
I respectfully dissent from the majority’s holding that the trial court lacked
jurisdiction to review the legal and factual issues raised in this appeal until Carlos
Pachas1 reaches the court through exhaustion of the administrative review process
and a petition for judicial review. As Pachas’s exhaustion of the administrative
review process is imperative to the issues raised in this appeal, a chronological
timeline of events is necessary.
At the relevant time, Pachas, age 47, financially supported his immediate and
extended family. His wife, Julissa, their two minor daughters, and his elderly in-
laws, ages 76 and 73, all lived with Pachas in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.
Pachas’s mother-in-law suffered from osteoporosis. Due to his in-laws’ inability to
pay rent, Pachas and his wife provided them with food and clothing. Both minor
daughters received $336 per month in Social Security income.
In December 2013, Pachas’s “problems really started . . . [as] . . . his
vision . . . was starting to decline[.]” In 2014, Pachas suffered a stroke and brain
tumor, which resulted in required 24-hour care. Consequently, Pachas’s doctor2
“disabled him because . . . according to the MRI result he couldn’t work anymore.” 3
Although disabled in 2014, Medicare eligibility began in 2016. In January 2015,
1 On appeal, Pachas’s estate is represented by the administrator of the estate, Julissa Pachas.
2 The record does not disclose which doctor labeled Pachas as disabled.
3 The record does not disclose in what field Pachas worked prior to the decline of his health.
PACHAS V. NC DEP’T OF HEALTH & HUM. SERVS.
HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
Pachas started receiving $1,369 per month as Social Security Disability Benefits and
sometime later applied for Medicaid/Special Assistance re-enrollment.4 However, on
20 April 2015, Mecklenburg Department of Social Services (“DSS”) requested Pachas
provide proof of income for himself and Julissa, and all bank numbers and statements
in his and Julissa’s names. The request for information set a deadline of 2 May 2015.
During this time, Julissa, an employee of Bissell Companies, left her job to care
for Pachas. She explained, “I ha[d] to stop working because he, started getting very
sick. . . . He had numerous, several different problems, and I had to stop
working. He need[ed] a lot of therapies.” On 9 March 2015, Pachas executed a power
of attorney, authorizing Julissa to act on his behalf. On 1 May 2015, Bissell
Companies notified Julissa, as of 3 May 2015, her coverage under Bissell’s group
medical, dental, and vision insurance would cease due to separation from
employment.
On 5 May 2015, DSS sent notice to Pachas, informing him his Medicaid
benefits would terminate, unless he met a $6,642 six-month deductible. Pachas
requested an administrative hearing to appeal the termination of his benefits and
contended “[h]ad DSS applied the applicable income limit for a household of either
four or six persons, [Pachas] would have remained eligible for MAD benefits without
4The record does not indicate on which date Pachas submitted an application for re-enrollment
for the Medicaid/Special Assistance Program.
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HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
having to meet a deductible[.]” The applicable income limit for a household of four
persons, in 2015, was $2,021. The applicable income limit for a household of six
persons, in 2015, was $2,715. Pachas asserted the North Carolina Department of
Health and Human Services (“DHHS”) violated 42 U.S.C. 1396a(m) by concluding the
Medicaid income limit applicable to him was the limit for a single individual.
According to Pachas’s petition, the applicable individual income limit is 100% of the
federal poverty line for a “family of the size involved.” Pachas contended the family
of the size involved in the present case is four to six individuals. The family of the
size involved would be four, if only counting Pachas, Julissa, and their two daughters.
However, the family of the size involved would be six, if counting his in-laws as
members of Pachas’s family.
As the first step in the administrative review process, in May 2015, DSS held
a local hearing to discuss Pachas’s contentions. At the local hearing, DSS specialist,
Melinda Bass, heard statements regarding the disputed deductible. Pachas
requested the applicable income limit be four to six individuals. On 13 May 2015,
Pecolia Price, a Local Hearing Officer, affirmed the agency’s decision. In support of
her decision, she cited Medicaid Manual (“MA”) section 2360, which states,
“[m]edically needy recipients whose net income exceeds the Medically Needy Income
Limit must meet a deductible before they may be authorized for Full Medicaid. The
deductible is met by incurring medical expenses equal to the amount of the
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HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
deductible.” Price concluded “the county action on this case was correct and that all
of the appropriate policies and procedures were followed.”
Pachas next requested an appeal at the DSS state level. On 16 June 2015,
DSS held a state hearing. Again, DSS cited MA 2360 to support its actions regarding
Pachas’s Medicaid coverage. During the hearing, Pachas’s attorney asked Julissa to
speak to Pachas’s medical situation:
[Q]: . . . And, does [Pachas] still have a need for medical
treatment?
...
[A]: He needs a lot of therapies. He also needs that thing
that is for cancer. Chemotherapy or something like that,
but he doesn’t have cancer. He has vasculitis, in the brain.
He’s taking steroids for a year and a half. The doctor needs
to remove the, take away him from steroids. He cannot take
it anymore, that’s why he needs chemotherapy. The
chemotherapies are extremely expensive.
[Q]: Without Medicaid is he able to afford, afford the
chemotherapy and physical therapy that the doctor has
recommended?
...
[A]: No. . . . I cannot even cover his medicines, monthly
medicines because they are extremely expensive.
[Q]: And without the treatment and medicines that have
been recommended will [Pachas] ever be able to recover?
…
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HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
[A]: Impossible.
In support of his contentions, Pachas cited Martin v. North Carolina
Department of Health and Human Services.5 Pachas insisted a “family size” included
those who lived with and relied upon him, therefore making an individual income
level inapplicable to his current situation.
On 10 August 2015, Gwendolyn Vinson, a State Hearing Officer, affirmed
Pachas’s six-month Medicaid deductible requirement. Pachas appealed the decision
on 13 August 2015. On 27 August 2015, Pachas filed an argument, in support of their
appeal with DHHS, appealing the DSS state hearing decision, and contending DHHS
must compare Pachas’s income against 100% of the official federal poverty level for
his family size. Further, Pachas argued the hearing officer plainly erred in her
interpretation of the applicable federal statute.
On 1 October 2015, DHHS Assistant Chief Hearing Officer, Nancy
Pappenhagen, affirmed the 10 August 2015 decision. Within her decision,
Pappenhagen concluded, as a final decision, Pachas’s Medicaid services required a
$6,642 deductible. On 16 October 2015 Pachas filed a petition for judicial review,
pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-79(k) and the Administrative Procedure Act, N.C.
Gen. Stat. § 150B-43, et seq. Pachas sought reversal of the 1 October 2015 final
5 Martin v. N.C. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 194 N.C. App. 716, 670 S.E.2d 629 (2009).
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HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
agency decision, which terminated his Medicaid Benefits. Additionally, Pachas
requested reinstatement of his Medicaid Benefits, effective 1 June 2015, and for
continuation of his benefits without having to meet the deductible. Pachas again
contended DHHS erred by concluding “the Medicaid income limit applicable to [him]
was the limit for a single individual in violation of 42 U.S.C. 1396a(m), under which
the applicable income limit is 100% of the federal poverty line for a ‘family of the size
involved.’ ”
On 17 November 2015, DHHS filed a response to Pachas’s petition for judicial
review. DHHS contended “the Final Agency Decision of [DHHS] contains adequate
findings of fact and conclusions of law which are in conformity with the applicable
federal and State statutes, rules, regulations, cases, and policies, and are supported
by substantial competent evidence of record.”
On 6 January 2016, the Mecklenburg County Superior Court heard arguments
from Pachas and DHHS regarding Pachas’s Medicaid benefits and large deductible
requirement. In its 17 March 20166 order, the trial court reversed the final agency
decision. The trial court ordered DHHS “promptly reinstate Medicaid benefits to
[Pachas] effective June 1, 2015 and to continue providing Medicaid to [Pachas] until
determined ineligible under the rules as modified according to this decision.” The
6 Although entered on 18 March 2016, the parties refer to this order as the 17 March 2016
order. I follow suit.
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trial court found the final agency decision “erroneous as a matter of law[.]”
Specifically, the trial court found:
2. The North Carolina General Assembly has elected the
option under the federal Medicaid statute, 42 U.S.C. §
1396a(m), to provide Medicaid to aged, blind and disabled
persons with incomes under 100% of the federal poverty
level. . . . This category of Medicaid is known as
categorically needy coverage for the aged, blind and
disabled (MABD-CN).
3. The income limit for MABD-CN varies by the number of
persons considered by the agency to be in the household
unit because the federal poverty line varies by household
size.
...
8. The plain language of the controlling federal statutory
provision, 42 U.S.C. §1396a(m), states that the applicable
Medicaid income limit for the MADB-CN category must be
based on a “family of the size involved.” Because the official
poverty line published annually by the federal government
varies by family size, the determination of family size
determines the applicable income limit under the language
of this statute.
9. The Federal Medicare and Medicaid agency has
interpreted the language “a family of the size involved” to
include “the applicant, the spouse who is living in the same
household, if any, and the number of individuals who are
related to the applicant or applicants, who are living in the
same household and who are dependent on the applicant
or the applicant’s spouse for at least one-half of their
financial support.” 42 C.F.R. § 423.772 (2005).
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DHHS did not appeal this order. Instead, pursuant to the 17 March 2016
order, DHHS reinstated Pachas’s Medicaid benefits, retroactive to 1 June 2015.
During the above summarized proceedings, Pachas’s medical condition
worsened. A physician diagnosed Pachas with encephalitis and sepsis, rendering 7
Pachas “completely blind, wheelchair bound, and fully dependent on others for all his
daily needs.” Additionally, the physician noted Pachas was confused and restless.
On 6 May 2016, University Place admitted Pachas as a patient, where he
received 24-hour care. Pachas remained in the facility until his discharge in February
2017. During this time, Pachas’s Medicaid benefits covered his care, with no need to
meet a deductible.
Following his time at University Place, Pachas received home care through the
Community Alternative Program for Disabled Adults (“CAP/DA”). As described by
Petitioner, CAP/DA is a program which “provides Medicaid services in the home for
persons who would otherwise require care in a nursing home.” Pachas’s CAP/DA
services cost $33,714.89 annually, while his Medicaid reimbursement rate of his
nursing home facility cost $160.23 per day.
On 14 February 2017, DSS sent Pachas a notice, stating his monthly CAP/DA
deductible would be $1,113, effective 28 February 2017. DSS, again, assessed his
7 The record does not indicate the physician’s name and medical history with Pachas.
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individual income when determining CAP/DA eligibility. On 15 February 2017,
Pachas filed a motion in the cause to enforce the 17 March 2016 order and filed a
petition for a writ of mandamus. In support of the motion and petition, Pachas
contended he “[wa]s . . . imminently threatened with irreparable harm and ha[d] no
adequate remedy at law.” He further asserted:
12. Because they need to support a family of six, [Pachas]
and his wife cannot afford to pay for medical care up to the
amount of [his] monthly deductible . . . . If that occurs,
[Pachas] will be unable to obtain his medications, his CAP-
DA in-home care services, and other critically needed
medical care.
13. If [Pachas] loses access to CAP-DA services, he will
likely be forced to leave his family again and enter a
nursing home, at great expense to the taxpayer, causing
severe emotional harm to [Pachas] and his family.
14. . . . [Pachas] has no available administrative remedy to
enforce th[e] Court’s order. Exhaustion of the
administrative remedy that has been offered to him would
be futile.
Pachas requested, inter alia, the court direct DHHS “to immediately reinstate [his]
Medicaid benefits, including [his] CAP-DA services, effective February 14, 2017 and
continuing without having to first meet a deductible.”
On 6 March 2017, DHHS filed a motion to dismiss and response to Pachas’s
motion to cause to enforce the trial court’s order and petition for writ of mandamus.
DHHS contended:
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4. The administrative procedures by which a public
assistance applicant or recipient may appeal the actions
and decisions of a county department of social
services . . . are provided in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-79 and
Article 4 of the North Carolina Administrative Procedure
Act.
5. Under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-79, “A public assistance
applicant or recipient shall have a right to appeal the
decision of the county board of social services, county
department of social services, or the board of county
commissioners . . . . These statutory administrative
appeal procedures include local appeal hearings with the
county DSS, state level administrative appeal hearings
with the DHHS Office of Hearings and Appeals, and appeal
to the Superior Court for judicial review of DHHS final
agency decisions.
...
7. In this case, the legislature has provided adequate
administrative remedies for the actions and decision that
[Pachas] complains of in his Motion in the Cause to Enforce
Court’s Order and Petition for Writ of Mandamus, and
[Pachas] has not exhausted the statutory administrative
remedies that are available to him.
In support of its argument, DHHS stated:
9. In this case, there can be no question that the actions
and decisions of the Mecklenburg County DSS in
evaluating [Pachas]’s CAP/DA Waiver application for
services involve discretionary rather than ministerial
duties. The criteria used for evaluating an application for
CAP/DA Waiver eligibility is not governed by the March 17,
2016 Order but instead by state and federal statutes,
regulations, and policies, including 42 U.S.C. § 1396n, the
North Carolina CAP/DA Waiver, and relevant sections of
the North Carolina Adult Medicaid Manual.
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...
13. Such an overly expansive application of the March 17,
2016 Order, as requested by [Pachas], would have the effect
of entitling [Pachas] to unlimited access to any and all
Medicaid eligibility and services regardless of the relevant
state and federal statutes, regulations, and policies . . . .
On 27 March 2017, the trial court heard arguments from Pachas and DHHS
on Petitioner’s motion to enforce the court’s order and petition for writ of mandamus.
On 17 April 2017, Pachas passed away.8 Four days later, on 21 April 2017, the trial
court dismissed the motion in the cause to enforce court’s order and petition for writ
of mandamus. The trial court concluded:
2. The [17 March 2016] Order found that the language
“family of the size involved” contained in 42 U.S.C. §
1396a(m) must be considered when determining [Pachas]’s
Medicaid eligibility under the State Plan.
...
6. According to 42 U.S.C. §1396n(c)(3), DHHS is allowed to
waive the State Plan requirements for income and resource
rules under 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(m) that the Court considered
in the March 17, 2016 Order.
7. DHHS does not consider the “size of the family involved”
when determining an individual’s deductible under the
CAP/DA waiver.
8. Therefore, the Order signed on March 17, 2016 does not
apply to [Pachas]’s Medicaid eligibility under the CAP/DA
8 The court substituted Julissa as a party in the action.
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PACHAS V. NC DEP’T OF HEALTH & HUM. SERVS.
HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
waiver.
On appeal, DHHS asserts the federal government authorized DHHS to waive
the income requirements, which includes the “family of the size involved”
requirement, found in 42 U.S.C. 1396a(m) when determining financial eligibility for
CAP/DA coverage. The majority holds the wavier provision relied upon by the State
“involve[s] facts and legal questions that were not ‘actually presented and necessarily
involved’ in the trial court’s order.” Therefore, the majority holds, these issues “could
not have been addressed in the court’s first order . . . .” Thus, as a result, the majority
agrees with the trial court’s order “Petitioner must resort to the administrative
process . . . to appeal the February 14, 2017 decision issued by the Mecklenburg
County DSS.”
As stated in the majority, “the General Assembly created an administrative
review process for these claims, and courts have jurisdiction to hear these disputes
only when they arrive through a petition for judicial review after exhaustion of this
administrative review.” See N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 108A-79, 150B-43 (2017). However,
Pachas is correct that it is well settled the “exhaustion requirement may be excused
if the administrative remedy would be futile or inadequate.” Justice for Animals, Inc.
v. Robeson Cty., 164 N.C. App. 366, 372, 595 S.E.2d 773, 777 (2004) (citing Huang v.
N.C. State Univ., 107 N.C. App. 710, 715, 421 S.E.2d 812, 815 (1992)). In holding
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PACHAS V. NC DEP’T OF HEALTH & HUM. SERVS.
HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
Pachas must resort to the administrative process, the majority does not address the
futility or inadequacy of the administrative remedies in the instant case.
Given the tragic history of Pachas, I cannot vote to place him, or others
similarly situated, back in the hands of the Medicaid bureaucracy, which has already
denied benefits on the identical question of family size and its relation to required
deductibles for Medicaid coverage. In my view, it is particularly telling that in the
first case, the law of his case was based upon the conclusion that the State had made
an error of law in denying him benefits. To tell a dying indigent that he or his family
must endure another round of “administrative remedies”, when the Medicaid
authorities moved him from one program to another for their own cost benefits, and
when the issue is a matter of law, which had been previously adjudicated, is simply
unjust and wrong. Under the specific facts of this case, I would hold requiring the
dying indigent to exhaust his administrative remedies would be futile.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-79 (2017) provides the remedy for individuals who wish
to challenge the termination of their Medicaid coverage. The statute, in pertinent
part, reads:
A public assistance applicant or recipient shall have a right
to appeal the decision of the county board of social services,
county department of social services, or the board of county
commissioners granting, denying, terminating, or
modifying assistance, or the failure of the county board of
social services or county department of social services to act
within a reasonable time under the rules and regulations
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PACHAS V. NC DEP’T OF HEALTH & HUM. SERVS.
HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
of the Social Services Commission or the Department.
Each applicant or recipient shall be notified in writing of
his right to appeal upon denial of his application for
assistance and at the time of any subsequent action on his
case.
Id. However, in the present appeal, Pachas is not simply challenging the Medicaid
coverage termination, but, rather, the violation of the trial court’s 17 March 2016
order requiring DHHS to apply his family size to income considerations. Specifically,
this is an appeal for enforcement.
A trial court’s authority encompasses the power to enforce its own judgments.
See Sturgill v. Sturgill, 49 N.C. App. 580, 587, 272 S.E.2d 423, 428-29 (1980); Parker
v. Parker, 13 N.C. App. 616, 618, 186 S.E.2d 607, 608 (1972). Here, Petitioner has
once, already, fully exhausted the administrative review process, thereby complying
with the requirement to do so. The administrative review process produced an order
which supported Pachas’s challenge of initial Medicaid coverage. Now, he seeks
judicial review for the enforcement of such order after it was violated by DHHS and
DSS.
In concluding the trial court lacks jurisdiction to enforce its 17 March 2016
order, the majority seemingly strips Pachas, and those similarly situated, of an
adequate remedy. Mindful of the necessity of the administrative review process, but
aware of the administrative review process’s inability to provide Pachas with an
adequate remedy, I conclude the trial court does have jurisdiction to decide this issue.
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PACHAS V. NC DEP’T OF HEALTH & HUM. SERVS.
HUNTER, JR., Robert N., J., dissenting
I would, therefore, reverse the trial court’s 21 April 2017 decision and remand with
instructions to re-determine Pachas’s Medicaid eligibility, in compliance with the 17
March 2016 order.
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