An application by the Secretary of Health and Human Services to
stay, pending her appeal to the Court of Appeals, the District
Court's "preliminary injunction" is granted insofar as it required
her to promulgate nationwide regulations providing hospitals with
rights to immediate review of their individual Medicare
reimbursement rates and with enhanced reimbursement for inpatient
services. If the Court of Appeals were to affirm the District
Court's use of a "preliminary injunction" to require the Secretary
to issue nationwide regulations, at least four Members of this
Court would probably vote to grant certiorari. Moreover, it does
not appear that the District Court had authority to order such
sweeping "preliminary" relief, and the "stay equities" favor the
Secretary. However, it does not appear likely that four Members of
this Court would grant review of the issues presented by that
portion of the District Court's order granting preliminary relief
to respondent operator of a hospital, which had filed the suit only
to challenge the administrative determination of its own Medicare
reimbursement rate and to obtain additional reimbursement.
Accordingly, the application for a stay is denied with respect to
the latter portion of the District Court's preliminary
injunction.
JUSTICE REHNQUIST, Circuit Justice.
Applicant, the Secretary of Health and Human Services
(Secretary), asks that I stay an order entered by the United States
District Court for the Northern District of California pending
disposition of her appeal to the Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit. This suit began as a challenge by the operator of a single
hospital, Redbud Hospital District (Redbud), to its Medicare
reimbursement rate. In addition to affording Redbud itself
preliminary relief, the District Court, in a "preliminary
injunction" dated July 30, 1984, and a "modification" of that
injunction dated June 14, 1985, required the Secretary to
promulgate, by July 1, 1985, nationwide
Page 473 U. S. 1309
regulations providing hospitals like Redbud with rights to
immediate administrative review and enhanced reimbursement for
inpatient services. On June 28, 1985, a two-judge panel of the
Ninth Circuit denied the Secretary's request for an emergency stay.
On July 1, 1985, the Secretary published the regulations in
question "under protest." 50 Fed.Reg. 27208, to be codified in 42
CFR § 412. Absent a stay, these regulations will go into effect on
August 1, 1985. After considering both the Secretary's application
and Redbud's response, I have decided to grant in part and deny in
part the Secretary's request for a stay.
Section 1886(d) of the Social Security Act, added by the Social
Security Amendments Act of 1983, Pub.L. 98-21, 97 Stat. 152, 42
U.S.C. § 1395ww(d) (1982 ed., Supp. 1), established a prospective
payment system (PPS) for Medicare payment to hospitals furnishing
inpatient services to Medicare beneficiaries. Under this system,
payment is made at a predetermined rate for each hospital
discharge. The rate is based in part on a "hospital-specific" rate,
which in turn is based on the hospital's actual operating costs
during a particular "base year."
See 42 U.S.C. §
1395ww(d)(1) (1982 ed., Supp. 1). The Secretary has delegated to
"fiscal intermediaries" the responsibility for calculating the
hospital-specific rate for each of the hospitals participating in
the Medicare program.
Redbud, the operator of a sole community hospital in Cleardale,
California, brought this suit against the Secretary on June 26,
1984, challenging the fiscal intermediary's determination of
Redbud's hospital-specific rate. Redbud alleged that it would
suffer losses of approximately $20,000 per month unless its
hospital-specific rate were adjusted to reflect recent capital
improvements completed after the close of its base year. In its
prayer for relief, Redbud requested (1) a declaratory judgment that
the Secretary must allow the intermediary to adjust Redbud's
hospital-specific rate to account for costs not reflected in the
base year, (2) a preliminary and permanent injunction barring the
Secretary
Page 473 U. S. 1310
"from implementing Medicare reimbursement to Redbud under PPS
unless such reimbursement accounts for" those costs, and (3) an
order requiring the Secretary "to instruct the intermediary to
account for [those] costs." Redbud did not seek the promulgation of
nationwide regulations.
The Secretary moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that
Redbud had not obtained a final agency determination properly
subject to either administrative or judicial review, and that the
court therefore had no jurisdiction over Redbud's claim. Apparently
in response to this motion, Redbud then requested a hearing before
the Provider Reimbursement Review Board (Board) to review the
intermediary's refusal to make the requested adjustments to
Redbud's hospital-specific rate. On July 17, 1984, the Board sent a
response stating that, pursuant to a ruling of the Health Care
Financing Administration, 49 Fed.Reg. 22413 (1984), it was "unable
to accept" Redbud's request for a hearing because that request was
premature. On July 30, 1984, the District Court denied the
Secretary's motion to dismiss, holding that it had "jurisdiction
under 42 U.S.C. § 1395
oo to review the Board's decision of
July 17, 1984." The District Court went on to state that it "also
has jurisdiction under the All Writs Act to issue an injunction
maintaining the
status quo in this case pending agency
action." Relying on these jurisdictional findings, the District
Court then entered a "preliminary injunction" that "remanded" the
case to the Secretary with instructions to promulgate "regulations
or written policies" that (a) "take into account" the
"extraordinary and unusual costs not necessarily reflected in a
hospital's base year costs"; (b) "take into account the special
needs of hospitals serving a disproportionate number of Medicare
and low-income patients"; (c) "take into account . . . the special
needs of sole community hospitals and the unique effects of their
status upon the hospital-specific rate"; and (d) "provide for
timely and reasonable review" of intermediary estimates of
hospital-specific rates under the PPS program. As to Redbud
itself,
Page 473 U. S. 1311
the District Court ordered Redbud's intermediary to "reconsider"
its estimate of Redbud's hospital-specific rate
"in light of regulations promulgated in accordance with the
foregoing."
"Pending compliance with this order and until further order of
the court, defendant is enjoined from imposing the pre-payment
system upon [Redbud] or otherwise reducing [Redbud]'s current level
of reimbursement."
No date was set for compliance with the "preliminary injunction.
"
In the spring of 1985, the parties filed a number of motions in
the District Court, all of which were heard on May 20, 1985. Redbud
asked,
inter alia, that the court modify the "preliminary
injunction" by requiring the Secretary to publish, by July 1, 1985,
the "regulations or written policies" described in the court's
original order. The Secretary moved to dissolve the injunction,
renewing her argument that the District Court lacked
jurisdiction.
At the May 20 hearing, the District Court stated that it would
grant Redbud's motion "to modify the preliminary injunction." On
June 14, 1985, the District Court entered an order stating that
"[t]he following paragraph will be added to this court's July 1984
order:
"The Secretary shall publish these implementing regulations in
the
Federal Register as an interim final rule by no later
than July 1, 1985, effective August 1, 1985. A 45-day comment
period shall follow publication of the interim final rule. The
regulations shall be published in the Federal Register as a final
rule no later than October 1, 1985."
The obligation of a Circuit Justice in considering the usual
stay application is
"to determine whether four Justices would vote to grant
certiorari, to balance the so-called 'stay equities,' and to give
some consideration as to predicting the final
Page 473 U. S. 1312
outcome of the case in this Court."
Gregory-Portland Independent School District v. United
States, 448 U. S. 1342
(1980) (REHNQUIST, J., in chambers). In this case, however, the
Secretary is not asking for the usual stay of a judgment of the
Court of Appeals pending the disposition of a petition for
certiorari in this Court. She asks instead that I grant a stay of
the District Court's order pending appeal to the Ninth Circuit when
the Ninth Circuit itself has refused to issue the stay. As is often
noted, "
a stay application to a Circuit Justice on a matter
before a court of appeals is rarely granted.'" Atiyeh v.
Capps, 449 U. S. 1312,
449 U. S.
1313 (1981) (REHNQUIST, J., in chambers) (quoting
Pasadena Board of Education v. Spangler, 423 U.
S. 1335, 423 U. S.
1336 (1975) (REHNQUIST, J., in chambers)). Nevertheless,
for the reasons set out below, I believe that the present case is
sufficiently unusual to warrant granting a partial stay of the
District Court's order.
In arguing for a stay, the Secretary contends that there is a
"strong probability" that the District Court's order will be
overturned on one of three distinct grounds. First, she claims that
the District Court exceeded its jurisdiction in reaching the merits
of Redbud's claim for additional reimbursement. Even if the Board's
July 17, 1984, ruling that Redbud's administrative claim was
premature is a judicially reviewable final decision under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1395
oo(f) (1982 ed., Supp. 1), the scope of the District
Court's review was limited to the Board's own jurisdictional
determination. Second, the Secretary argues that the District
Court's use of a "preliminary injunction" to compel "publication of
nationwide regulations is unprecedented, unwarranted, and a clear
abuse of the court's power to fashion preliminary relief." And
third, the Secretary asserts that, in deeming the regulations in
question mandated by Congress, the District Court "clearly
misconstrued" the relevant provisions of the Medicare statute.
However the Ninth Circuit may decide these questions on appeal,
I am not at all certain that four Members of this
Page 473 U. S. 1313
Court would be inclined to review either the "finality" of the
Board's July 17, 1984, ruling or the District Court's conclusions
on the merits. I do believe, however, that the District Court's use
of a "preliminary injunction" to require the Secretary to issue
regulations of nationwide application would prompt at least four
Members of this Court to grant review should the Court of Appeals
affirm that aspect of the District Court's order.
Federal district courts have jurisdiction under 42 U.S.C. §
1395
oo(f) (1982 ed., Supp. 1) to review "any final
decision of the Board" in suits brought by providers of Medicare
services such as Redbud. Judicial review under § 1395
oo(f)
is sharply circumscribed, however,
see, e.g., V. N. A. of
Greater Tift County, Inc. v. Heckler, 711 F.2d 1020, 1024-1027
(CA11 1983), and I am persuaded that the section does not authorize
the kind of sweeping "preliminary" relief awarded by the District
Court here. Nor do I believe that such relief is authorized, as the
District Court thought, by the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a),
which encompasses a limited judicial power to preserve the
status quo while administrative proceedings are in
progress and to prevent impairment of the effective exercise of
appellate jurisdiction.
See FTC v. Dean Foods Co.,
384 U. S. 597,
384 U. S.
603-604 (1966). The District Court's requirement that
the Secretary promulgate new nationwide regulations cannot possibly
be justified as necessary to preserve the
status quo.
Redbud's interest in maintaining the
status quo is
protected by that part of the District Court's order, which I do
not stay, that enjoins the Secretary from applying the prospective
payment system to Redbud or "otherwise reducing [Redbud]'s current
level of reimbursement" without making the requested adjustments.
In its complaint, Redbud did not even seek regulatory reform. Nor
can I view the regulations as in any way necessary to the effective
exercise of appellate jurisdiction. The District Court's July 30,
1984, and June 14, 1985, orders, in combination, are a far cry from
"the usual
prohibitory' injunction which merely freezes the
positions of the parties until the
Page 473 U. S.
1314
court can hear the case on the merits." Heckler v.
Lopez, 463 U. S. 1328,
463 U. S.
1333 (1983) (REHNQUIST J., in chambers). Plainly, I
think, the District Court has inappropriately used its "preliminary
injunction" as a vehicle for final relief on the merits.
University of Texas v. Camenisch, 451 U.
S. 390, 451 U. S. 395
(1981).
The new regulations will at least require significant
readjustment in the administration of PPS, and will therefore cause
hardship to the applicant. More important, the District Court's
requirement that the Secretary promulgate new regulations is
plainly not necessary to protect Redbud's interests in this
litigation. I think the "stay equities" favor the applicant.
Accordingly, I grant the application of the Secretary to stay
the preliminary injunction of the District Court, as modified,
pending determination of the Secretary's appeal by the Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, but only insofar as the injunction
orders the Secretary to promulgate and apply nationwide
regulations. In all other respects, the application for a stay is
denied.