SAN CARLOS APACHE TRIBE V. XAVIER BECERRA, ET AL, No. 21-15641 (9th Cir. 2022)
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The Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (“ISDA”) allowed tribes to run their own healthcare programs, funded by Indian Health Services (“IHS”) in the amount IHS would have spent on a tribe’s health care. Because it was too expensive for the tribes to run the programs, Congress enacted a fix by requiring IHS to provide tribes with CSC—the amount of money a tribe would need to administer its healthcare programs. In addition, Congress allowed the tribes to bill outside insurers directly, and allowed tribes to keep the third-party revenue without diminishing their IHS grants, so long as tribes spent that revenue on health care.
The Tribe contends that the IHS must cover those additional CSC. The Tribe filed suit to recover the CSC for program years 2011-2013. The Ninth Circuit held that the text of the governing statute, 25 U.S.C. Sec. 5325(a), compelled reversal and remand for additional proceedings.
Court Description: Tribal Issues. The panel reversed the district court’s dismissal of the San Carlos Apache Tribe’s (“the Tribe”) claim alleging that federal defendants must cover the “contract support costs” (“CSC”) for the third-party-revenue-funded portions of the Tribe’s healthcare program. The Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (“ISDA”) allowed tribes to run their own healthcare programs, funded by Indian Health Services (“IHS”) in the amount IHS would have spent on a tribe’s health care. Because it was too expensive for the tribes to run the programs, Congress enacted a fix by requiring IHS to provide tribes with CSC—the amount of money a tribe would need to administer its healthcare programs. In addition, Congress allowed the tribes to bill outside insurers directly, and allowed tribes to keep the third-party revenue without diminishing their IHS grants, so long as tribes spent that revenue on health care. At issue is who pays the CSC for the additional money the Tribe recovers from outside insurers. The Tribe contends that the IHS must cover those additional CSC. The Tribe filed suit to recover the CSC for program years 2011-2013. The parties settled all claims but Claim 2, which alleges that defendants must cover CSC for the third-party-revenue-funded portions of the Tribe’s healthcare program. The panel held that the text of the governing statute, 25 U.S.C. § 5325(a), compelled reversal and remand for additional proceedings. The federal defendants contended that the language of the contract under which the Tribe operated its healthcare programs foreclosed the Tribe’s claim because the Tribe received the amount of CSC specified by the contract, a properly calculated amount that 25 U.S.C. § 5325(a) did not override. The panel held that this argument ignored the flexibility written into the contract, which allowed those amounts to be adjusted in the event of certain changes. A determination that the Tribe is owed CSC by statute for third-party-revenue-funded portions of its health-care program would fall under this umbrella. Additionally, because the contract incorporated the provisions of the ISDA, if that statute requires payment of the disputed funds, it controlled. The panel concluded that the contract was not dispositive and proceeded to determine whether the Tribe was owed those additional CSC by statute. The panel started with the CSC provisions of the relevant statute, 25 U.S.C. § 5325(a), and held that Sections (a)(2) and (a)(3)(A)(ii), together, pointed toward requiring the defendants to cover CSC for activities funded by third-party revenues. The panel noted that this conclusion departed from the only other circuit to have considered the issue in Swinomish Indian Tribal Cmty. v. Becerra, 993 F.3d 917, 920 (D.C. Cir. 2021). The panel held that it could not conclude that § 5325(a) unambiguously excluded those third-party-revenue-funded portions of the Tribe’s healthcare program from CSC reimbursement. The plain language of this section appears to include those costs. None of the additional statutory language to which defendants pointed erased this ambiguity. The Tribe merely needed to demonstrate that the statutory language was ambiguous, and the Tribe met this burden. Because the statutory language was ambiguous, the Indian canon applied, and the language must be construed in favor of the Tribe. The panel held that the ISDA required payment of CSC for third-party- funded portions of the Federal healthcare program operated by the Tribe. The panel found that the Tribe met its burden under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), reversed the dismissal of the claim, and remanded for further proceedings.
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