Court Opinion

ID: 4429558
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-08-20 19:26:09.031029+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:01:16.857627
License: Public Domain

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                               APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
        This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
     internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

                                                        SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                        APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                        DOCKET NO. A-5369-16T1

MERIDIAN NURSING and
REHABILITATION INC.,

         Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

EDMUND SKWARA,

     Defendant-Appellant.
________________________

                   Argued December 12, 2018 – Decided January 18, 2019

                   Before Judges Koblitz, Ostrer and Currier.

                   On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
                   Division, Mercer County, Docket No. L-0956-15.

                   Carl G. Archer argued the cause for appellant (Archer
                   Law Office, LLC, attorneys; Grant S. Ellis, on the
                   briefs).

                   Robyn B. Gigl argued the cause for respondent
                   (GluckWalrath, LLP, attorneys; Robyn B. Gigl, of
                   counsel and on the brief).

PER CURIAM
      Defendant Edmund Skwara's mother suffered a stroke that left her

mentally incapacitated, unable to speak and partially paralyzed. On September

12, 2013, she was admitted to plaintiff Meridian Nursing and Rehabilitation

Inc.'s (Meridian) facility. Because Ms. Skwara was incapable of entering into

an agreement with Meridian, defendant entered into a binding agreement that

provided for long-term care. Meridian agreed to provide nursing care, food,

shelter, and other services in return for defendant coordinating payment for his

mother's care from her resources, either as a private pay patient or through

Medicaid, if she qualified. Defendant signed the agreement as the responsible

party almost two weeks after his mother was admitted.          Ms. Skwara was

subsequently found ineligible for Medicaid because she had too many financial

resources to qualify and Meridian sued defendant personally. The trial court

granted partial summary judgment to Meridian on liability and found damages

in the amount of $140,246, the sum Medicaid would have paid. Defendant

appeals from the June 23, 2017 final judgment in that amount.            Because

defendant is not personally responsible for his mother's nursing care cost, and

his failure to comply with the contract he signed as the "responsible party" by

using his best efforts to exhaust his mother's resources is disputed, we reverse.

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      In assuming contractual responsibility to coordinate payment through

Medicaid, if his mother qualified, defendant agreed to apply for Medicaid on his

mother's behalf, including providing all information requested by Medicaid, and

further that he would act to establish and maintain her Medicaid eligibility.

Defendant agreed that, if his mother did not qualify for Medicaid, she would be

obligated to pay for Meridian's services as a private pay resident. Ms. Skwara

continues to reside at the facility.

      Pursuant to his contractual obligations, defendant applied for Medicaid

assistance on behalf of his mother. The application was denied by the Ocean

County Board of Social Services (OCBSS) because it found that Ms. Skwara

was "over-resource[d]." See N.J.A.C. 10:70-5.1(a).

      Defendant requested a fair hearing, which was held in July 2014 before

an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). The ALJ did not conclude that Ms. Skwara

was over resourced. He did find, however, that a transfer of real property owned

by Ms. Skwara, which had a pre-transfer value of $332,000.00, to Skwara

Properties LLC (Skwara LLC), owned jointly by Ms. Skwara and defendant, and

the subsequent mortgaging of that property by Skwara LLC and a second LLC

(HOP 33), owned primarily by defendant, constituted a transfer of assets too

close in time to allow Medicaid eligibility.     42 U.S.C. § 1396p(c)(1)(A);

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N.J.S.A. 30:4D-3(i)(15)(b); N.J.A.C. 10:71-4.10(a). The ALJ remanded to the

OCBSS to determine the exclusion period.

      Defendant, on behalf of his mother, appealed for agency review to

Director Valerie Harr, Department of Human Services, Division of Medical

Assistance and Health Services, who issued a final agency decision on

December 19, 2014. The Director upheld the denial of Medicaid, but rejected

the ALJ's finding. In her decision, the Director found that Ms. Skwara was

ineligible because she owned "excess resources," rather than having gifted an

asset. She found that the 2010 appraised market value of the fully developed

property was $3,000,000.1 Based on mortgages of $2,790,456 taken out to

construct a restaurant, she found Ms. Skwara's seventy-five percent ownership

interests in Skwara LLC was worth $157,158. The Director also found that HOP

33 was paying rent to Skwara LLC that exceeded the LLC's loan payments,

resulting in some income to Skwara LLC. The Director explained: "Petitioner

does not own the IHOP or the property; she is the owner of a company that owns

the property and rents to another company that operates the IHOP."         The

1
  The Director further found that Ms. Skwara had not submitted an updated
appraisal of the property.
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Director did not determine whether defendant did or did not have the ability to

liquidate Ms. Skwara's asset, the seventy-five percent interest in Skwara LLC.

      The business office manager at Meridian testified before the trial court

regarding the daily Medicaid reimbursement rates from January 2013 through

October 2016.    The trial court subsequently found that, had defendant not

breached the contract by failing to obtain Medicaid, plaintiff would have

received $140,246 in Medicaid payments from September 12, 2013 through

April 30, 2017. The private pay rate for the same services for the same time

period would have been much greater.

      Defendant argues that plaintiff "cannot require a guarantee of payment

from anyone other than the resident . . . ."      Defendant cites Manahawkin

Convalescent v. O'Neill, 217 N.J. 99, 105 (2014), for the proposition that

N.J.S.A. 30:13-3.1(a) prevents money judgments against third parties.           In

Manahawkin, the Court "caution[ed] nursing homes and their counsel" that the

Nursing Home Act's "constraints on the liability of a 'Responsible Party' should

be clearly reflected in contracts and communications between facilities and

individuals who arrange payment on a resident's behalf." Id. at 107. That

provision of the Nursing Home Act, N.J.S.A. 30:13-1 to -17, states:

            a. A nursing home shall not, with respect to an applicant
            for admission or a resident of the facility:

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                 ....

           (2) require a third party guarantee of payment to the
           facility as a condition of admission or expedited
           admission to, or continued residence in, that facility;
           except that when an individual has legal access to a
           resident’s income or resources available to pay for
           facility care pursuant to a durable power of attorney,
           order of guardianship or other valid document, the
           facility may require the individual to sign a contract to
           provide payment to the facility from the resident’s
           income or resources without incurring personal
           financial liability.

     On February 13, 2017, the court, in denying defendant's motion for

summary judgment based on this statute, and granting plaintiff's motion for

partial summary judgment for breach of contract liability, articulated the

following reasons:

           Well, what I have before me is your motion for
           summary judgment and then theirs on Counts 1 and 2.
           And with respect to your motion, I'm going to deny the
           application for summary judgment. I can sit here and
           recount all the facts that were presented by the parties,
           but there really is no dispute. Ms. Skwara has been
           hospitalized. She couldn’t sign the admission papers
           herself. Her son . . . did that. And he signed as the
           responsible party.

           What's significant to the [c]ourt is the hearing that was
           held on November 6th, 2014 by [the ALJ] makes certain
           specific findings of fact and conclusions. . . . While not
           finding that Ms. Skwara was over-resourced, [the ALJ]
           found that there was an issue with respect to the transfer

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            of the real property that was owned by the defendant's
            mother. And so the [c]ourt does have to consider that.

            [He] also made some additional comments, comments
            about the lack of cooperation and the information that
            was not produced by the defendant during the
            proceeding. . . . I'm not putting any specific weight on
            that at this juncture.

            However, [the Director] did issue a final decision that
            was on December 2014 which those specific findings
            made certain evaluations of the property that you're
            both familiar with, and they're incorporated in her
            written opinion. So I'll just leave that the way it is.

            What's also clear is that that decision was not appealed
            by the defendant. The defendant also never completed
            the -- another Medicaid application after that was
            denied. He, the defendant, is not paying the plaintiff's
            rate at this juncture, some three plus years of admission
            into the facility. And plaintiff has suffered damages as
            a result of that breach of the obligation.

            Now you made certain very detailed arguments with
            respect to the validity of this contract. I find that the
            agreement is enforceable. I didn’t think that there was
            any particular reason to invalidate that contract. I
            didn’t find that it violated any federal or state laws. I
            find that the defendant's obligation under the agreement
            was to liquidate his mother's assets. And that issue was
            already litigated and affirmed and confirmed by the
            final decision maker on these matters. Certainly, a
            judge with much more expertise in this area.

      In interpreting contracts, the basic rule remains to determine the intention

of the parties from the language of the contract, giving effect to all of its parts

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so as to accord a reasonable meaning to its terms. Simonetti v. Selective Ins.

Co., 372 N.J. Super. 421, 428 (App. Div. 2004). When the terms are clear and

unambiguous the court must enforce the contract as it finds it; the court cannot

make a better contract for the parties than they themselves made. Ibid.

      "The interpretation or construction of a contract is generally a legal

question" for the court. Peterson v. Twp. of Raritan, 418 N.J. Super. 125, 133

(App. Div. 2011). To the extent any ambiguity exists, that is, to the extent that

a contractual term is susceptible of more than one reasonable interpretation,

Powell v. Alemaz, Inc., 335 N.J. Super. 33, 44 (App. Div. 2000), a court may

discern the parties' intent from evidence bearing on the circumstances of the

agreement's formation, Conway v. 287 Corporate Ctr. Assocs., 187 N.J. 259,

269 (2006), and of the parties' behavior in carrying out its terms, Savarese v.

Corcoran, 311 N.J. Super. 240, 248 (Ch. Div. 1997), aff’d o.b., 311 N.J. Super.

182 (App. Div. 1998).      The required factual inquiry to resolve any such

ambiguity typically precludes summary judgment unless the evidence is so one-

sided as to compel judgment as a matter of law for one party or the other. Great

Atl. & Pac. Tea Co., Inc. v. Checchio, 335 N.J. Super. 495, 502 (App. Div.

2000).

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      When reviewing a trial court's grant of summary judgment, we are "bound

by the same standard as the trial court under Rule 4:46-2(c)." State v. Perini

Corp., 221 N.J. 412, 425 (2015). We "consider whether the competent evidential

materials presented, when viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving

party, are sufficient to permit a rational factfinder to resolve the alleged disputed

issue in favor of the non-moving party." Ibid. (quoting Brill v. Guardian Life

Ins. Co. of Am., 142 N.J. 520, 540 (1995)). "To the extent that the grant or

denial of summary judgment is based on an issue of law, [this court] owe[s] no

deference to an interpretation of law that flows from established facts." Perini

Corp., 221 N.J. at 425.

      In his agreement with Meridian, defendant represented that his mother did

not recently make gifts, to deplete her assets, in the hopes of qualifying for

Medicaid. The agreement states:

             The [r]esident and/or the [r]esponsible [p]arty represent
             that neither the [r]esident nor the [r]esponsible [p]arty
             has made a gift in contemplation of the execution of this
             [a]greement or within five (5) years of the [r]esident
             anticipating making an application for Medicaid, and
             have not agreed to make such a gift which would render
             the [r]esident ineligible for Medicaid or impair the
             [r]esident's ability to pay fees and charges while this
             [a]greement is effective.

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      Defendant engaged in business dealings with his mother two years before

she was admitted to Meridian's facility. Defendant contends that his mother

received value for the transfer of her assets, in the form of an interest in Skwara

LLC. Had Director Harr found that Ms. Skwara gifted defendant, he may have

been personally liable to repay such a gift, given his representation in the

contract. But, given the Director's contrary finding, we need not determine the

proper remedy for such a breach.

      By signing the agreement as the responsible party, defendant undertook

certain contractual obligations in connection with his mother's Medicaid

application.   His obligations included:        timely providing all necessary

information to Medicaid; providing the facility with copies of the infor mation

given to Medicaid; taking all necessary steps to ensure the applicant's assets

were appropriately reduced; and continuing to make payment from the resident's

assets until assistance was granted. Once Director Harr found Ms. Skwara was

ineligible for Medicaid because she was over-resourced and had income,

defendant had a contractual obligation to use her funds to pay for her care. He

did not, however, have an obligation to pay out of his own funds.

      Defendant is obligated to liquidate his mother's asset—a portion of the

business they formed. Defendant argues "Skwara Properties LLC was insolvent

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and impossible to sell without spending money."          Defendant offered Ms.

Skwara's seventy-five percent ownership interest in Skwara Properties LLC to

plaintiff, which turned down the offer because Meridian is not in the business

of owning a company that rents property to another company operating a

restaurant.

      We reject Meridian's argument that the agency's decision that Ms. Skwara

was over-resourced collaterally estops defendant from disputing whether he

could have liquidated Ms. Skwara's seventy-five percent ownership in the

Skwara LLC., and, if so, how much he would have received from the sale. The

issue of compliance with the nursing home contract was not before the agency.

See Olivieri v. Y.M.F. Carpet, Inc., 186 N.J. 511, 521 (2006) (quoting In re

Estate of Dawson, 136 N.J. 1, 20-21 (1994), for the proposition that in order for

collateral estoppel to apply, "the issue to be precluded [must be] identical to the

issue decided in the prior proceeding").

      The agency's decision and its subsidiary findings would have been entitled

to collateral estoppel effect in an action by Meridian against Ms. Skwara. See

Dawson, 136 N.J. at 20-21 (explaining collateral estoppel requires a final

determination of the same essential issue after litigation with the same party).

There was a binding Medicaid determination that Ms. Skwara owned an asset of

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value. Had the nursing home obtained a judgment against Ms. Skwara, or

accepted defendant's offer of her portion of the business, it might have been able

to sell her asset, perhaps through the appointment of a receiver or fiscal agent.

This resolution would have the additional benefit of making Ms. Skwara then

eligible for Medicaid. The current stand-off does not benefit plaintiff and puts

Ms. Skwara in a precarious position with regard to her care.

      The grant of summary judgment as to liability is reversed. Defendant is

not liable for his mother's cost of care based on the Medicaid determination

alone. A dispute remains as to whether defendant could have sold Skwara, LLC,

the company he owned with Ms. Skwara, given its encumbrances. The Director

did not take up the question of whether defendant took all appropriate steps to

liquidate the asset owned by Ms. Skwara.        What happened to any income

generated by Skwara LLC is also unclear.

      Although the trial court found no "particular reason to invalidate [the

nursing home] contract," and did not "find that it violated any federal or state

laws," we do not preclude defendant from raising contract issues on remand after

discovery is completed.

      Reversed and remanded for further proceedings.           We do not retain

jurisdiction.

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