Bankruptcy Court Decision May Be the Bandage Needed By the Healthcare Lending Industry
March 1, 2000
John J. Monaghan- Boston
Lynne Beth Xerras - Boston
You’ve seen the stories. On the front page of every newspaper in the United
States you’ve seen the picture. An elderly person, sitting in what looks like
a comfortably decorated room, supportive relatives by his or her side, and a
caption quoting the nursing home resident’s expression of concern about having
to leave the elderly care facility that has been home for the past ten years due
to a bankruptcy. You can even name the players if you think about it—Mariner,
Charter, Vencor, Lenox, Frontier and NewCare. It is easier to name the big
nursing home companies that are in Chapter 11 than it is the companies that are
not. When you do come up with a nursing home company not in Chapter 11, your
mind automatically fills in "yet."
In addition to giving rise to the human turmoil reported by the press and
monitored by state attorney generals’ offices, the spate of healthcare
bankruptcies filed over the past year has also threatened the health of a
segment of the financial industry—the healthcare lender. The threat is greater
than simply having a sizable portion of an institution’s industry portfolio
going into bankruptcy. In healthcare cases, debtors, trustees and creditors’
committees are not only seeking to reduce the amount of the claims asserted by
healthcare lenders, but are asserting an ability to avoid their liens, even if
the usual steps for obtaining and perfecting a security interest were followed.
The theory turns on the novel nature of healthcare receivables. A recent case
from the Bankruptcy Court in Massachusetts, however, may provide healthcare
lenders with a way to stem the bleeding from these challenges.
Loans to healthcare entities usually look like any other asset-based loan.
There is a loan agreement in which a borrowing base is set forth and a security
interest is granted. The borrowing base is largely comprised of accounts
receivable, and the security interest granted includes accounts receivable,
accounts and their proceeds. The lender attempts to perfect its security
interest through filing a financing statement with the appropriate state
recording authority.
Healthcare receivables, particularly nursing home company receivables,
however, bear little resemblance to accounts receivable in other industries. A
significant percentage of a nursing home’s receivable base is comprised of
amounts to be paid by state administrators of federal Medicare and Medicaid
programs, which are subject to extensive statutory provisions and regulations
promulgated by the Heath Care Financing Administration (HCFA). Those receivables
that are not Medicare/Medicaid funded are largely funded by private insurers.
Those differences, that might at first blush be a source of comfort about the
certainty of collection, have been the basis for challenge. Applying legal
theories that require less creativity than one might expect, given the surprise
by the drafters of healthcare loan documents when they are served with a
pleading, the challengers to healthcare lenders’ secured interests assert both
an invalid grant of a security interest and a failure of perfection in
receivables.
The asserted bases for challenging the grant of a security interest in
Medicare and Medicaid receivables are the anti-assignment provisions of the
federal statutes relating to state administration of federal health care payment
programs. Under Title XIX of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§1395g(c),
1395u(b)(6) and 1396(a)(32), generally referred to as the Anti-Assignment
Provisions, a state plan for administration of federal healthcare assistance
programs must "provide that no payment under the plan for care or service
provided to an individual shall be made to anyone other than such individual or
the person or institution providing such care or service, under an assignment or
power of attorney or otherwise." The Anti-Assignment Provisions go on to
provide specific exceptions to the seemingly broad proscription on assigning
government funded healthcare receivables, allowing assignments to a government
agency or pursuant to a court order.
The statutory prohibition on assignment, assert the challengers, renders any
assignment of Medicare and Medicaid receivables, of any sort, even an assignment
for security purposes, invalid and unenforceable. While the challengers would
argue that any pledge of an interest in Medicare and Medicaid receivables is
invalid, avoidance of the lender’s interest is particularly appropriate where
the loan documents contain a lock box provision requiring direct payment to an
account subject to the control of the lending institution. Direct payment to any
party other than the care recipient or the care giver, according to the
challengers, is specifically prohibited by the Anti-Assignment Provisions.
The allegation of having an invalid grant of security is followed by the
allegation that, even if there were some interest obtained, that interest was
not properly perfected. This part of the challenge, however, is not dependent
upon the vagaries of federal statutory interpretation, but is straight from the
Uniform Commercial Code.
In attempting to perfect an interest in the Medicare and Medicaid
receivables, healthcare lenders will generally take the usual step of filing
financing statements with the appropriate state and local agencies. Perfection
of a security interest through filing a financing statement is wholly the
creation of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. While Article 9’s
provisions are broad, they are not all encompassing. Section 9-104 of the
Uniform Commercial Code provides several exceptions to Article 9’s coverage,
and, therefore, to the ability to perfect an interest in property under its
provisions. One of those exceptions, set forth in Section 9-104(g), is for
"a transfer of an interest in or claim in or under any policy of insurance,
except as provided with respect to proceeds . . . and priorities in
proceeds."
Proceedings brought to challenge asserted secured interests in health care
receivables have asserted that Medicare and Medicaid receivables constitute
government provided insurance payments. Relying on the lack of any Uniform
Commercial Code provided definition of insurance, these challenges assert that
any provision for payment from a third party from collective funds constitutes
insurance excluded from Article 9’s scope.
Faced with these challenges, the lender’s first response is to point out
the catastrophic impact of adopting the reasoning put forth. In the nursing home
industry, which is deeply reliant on Medicare and Medicaid payments, and where
the time between rendering services and cutting through the regulatory reporting
requirements that ultimately leads to payment can exceed several months, the
unavailability of an operating line of credit because the bulk of otherwise
strong receivables can not be pledged could, the argument goes, bring elder care
to a screeching halt. Without an operating line, the homes’ cash flow would be
insufficiently consistent to guaranty the ability to buy food and medicine for
patients.
Although there have been very few cases interpreting either the
Anti-Assignment Provisions or the applicability of Article 9’s insurance
policy exclusion to Medicare and Medicaid receivables, a recent case from the
Bankruptcy Court in Massachusetts continues a tendency, if not yet quite a
trend, to apply the gloss of the industry doomsday scenario propounded by
lenders to read the statutory language to uphold the secured interest. A court
with an early case presenting the issue, the United States Court of Appeals for
the Fifth Circuit in Wilson v. First National Bank of Lubbock Texas (In the
Matter of Missionary Baptist Foundation of America, Inc.) 796 F. 2d 752 (5th
Cir. 1986) stated outright that the underlying policy of Medicare and Medicaid
to ensure adequate high quality health care for the needy mandated that the
Anti-Assignment Provisions "cannot be interpreted to prevent the kind of
loan financing at issue in this case." Similar policy based decisions were
rendered by various state courts, yet challenges continued.
In Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee v. Chittenden Trust Co. (In re
East Boston Neighborhood Health Center Corp.), 242 B.R. 562 (Bankr. D. Mass.
1999), the Bankruptcy Court took a less policy driven and more analytic approach
than had been evidenced in most previous decisions on the issue of healthcare
receivables. It approached the Anti-Assignment Provisions’ argument through
scrutinizing the language of the statute. The Court noted that nothing in the
Anti-Assignment Provisions expressly prohibits the grant of a security interest
in Medicare or Medicaid receivables. Rather, the statute prohibits governmental
insurers from making payment on the receivables to anyone other than the Debtor.
According to the Court, "the statutes may impair the [lender’s] ability
to seek payment on the receivables from the governmental insurer without the
provider’s cooperation, but that cooperation may well be available, and the
statutes do not impair the [lender’s] ability to enforce their security
interests once payment has been issued."
The Bankruptcy Court in the East Boston Neighborhood Health Center case also
found the security interest granted to have been properly perfected. It first
held that the receivable was not due from a policy of insurance, but was due
from the patient. Therefore, the collateral received by the lender was a patient
owed account receivable, not a right to payment under an insurance policy. The
coverage provided for this patient account receivable by Medicare, Medicaid or a
private insurer, reasoned the Court, was property generated upon disposition of
that patient account receivable, which falls squarely within the definition of
"proceeds" under section 9-306 of the Uniform Commercial Code as
incorporated into Section 9-104(g). Because Article 9’s exclusion of insurance
from its coverage expressly did not exclude proceeds from coverage, those
proceeds were within the perfection provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code
and an interest in those proceeds could be perfected through filing a financing
statement. As a backstop holding, the Bankruptcy Court went on to find that,
even if the Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance payments were not proceeds,
but were payments due under a policy of insurance, "it would not
necessarily follow that the security interests were invalidly granted or
invalidly perfected." Absent coverage by the U.C.C., interests in property
could be perfected under other existing law. Because the actions taken by the
lender of recording appropriate financing statements, even if not subject to
perfection under Article 9, were "well-calculated to put the world on
notice of the existence of the security interests," those interests were
perfected.
Because there are a number of high-profile healthcare Chapter 11 cases
currently pending, the issue of the ability to receive and perfect a security
interest in healthcare receivables is almost certain to be revisited by another
court. The East Boston Health Center decision does not guaranty the result in
the next case in which the challenge arises. It is, however, at least a
temporary patch for the healthcare lending industry.
Related Practices