In The Matter of the Medical Assistance Pooled Special Needs Trust of Steven Muller ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 22–1331
    Submitted February 22, 2023—Filed April 28, 2023
    IN THE MATTER OF THE MEDICAL ASSISTANCE POOLED SPECIAL NEEDS
    TRUST OF STEVEN MULLER.
    THE CENTER FOR SPECIAL NEEDS TRUST ADMINISTRATION, INC.,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    IOWA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES,
    Appellee.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Patrick A. McElyea,
    Judge.
    The trustee of a pooled special needs trust appeals the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment order in favor of the Iowa Department of Human
    Services. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Oxley, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices joined.
    Elizabeth R. Meyer, Jana Weiler, and Elizabeth A. Etchells of Dentons
    Davis Brown PC, Des Moines, for appellant.
    Brenna Bird, Attorney General, Laura F. Kron, Assistant Attorney General,
    and Benjamin C. Chatman, Iowa Department of Human Services, for appellee.
    2
    OXLEY, Justice.
    This case involves the same parties and legal issues as another case filed
    today, In re the Medical Assistance Pooled Special Needs Trust of Scott Hewitt, ___
    N.W.2d ___ (Iowa 2023). In both cases, The Center for Special Needs Trust
    Administration, Inc. (the Center) acted as trustee over pooled special needs trust
    subaccounts for the benefit of disabled Iowans who received medical services
    paid through Medicaid. Following their deaths, the Center retained all residual
    funds in their trust subaccounts. The Iowa Department of Human Services
    (DHS),1 which administers Iowa’s Medicaid program, sought judicial intervention
    in both cases to obtain a detailed accounting of what the Center had done with
    the retained funds and payment of any funds that were improperly retained. In
    Hewitt, the district court decided in the Center’s favor that DHS was not entitled
    to more information, id. at ___, but in this case, the district court decided in favor
    of DHS. Not only did the district court here decide DHS was entitled to more
    information, it also ordered the Center to pay DHS all of the residual funds it
    had retained from Steven Muller’s trust subaccount.
    We must therefore decide who gets the $115,890.98 balance left in
    Mr. Muller’s subaccount at the time of his death, which turns on whether the
    trustee properly “retained” the funds and satisfied its accounting obligations.
    Having considered the intersection of Medicaid trust provisions and the Iowa
    1Prior to the district court’s ruling in this case and the notice of appeal, DHS began the
    transition process into the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). 2022 Iowa
    Acts ch. 1131, § 51. For consistency, we will refer to it as DHS throughout this opinion.
    3
    Trust Code raised in these cases, we conclude the Center provided an adequate
    accounting and reverse the district court.
    I.
    “A ‘pooled trust’ is a special arrangement with a non-profit organization
    that serves as trustee to manage assets belonging to many disabled individuals,
    with investments being pooled, but with separate trust ‘accounts’ being
    maintained for each disabled individual.” Lewis v. Alexander, 
    685 F.3d 325
    , 333
    (3d Cir. 2012) (quoting Jan P. Myskowski, Special Needs Trusts in the Era of the
    Uniform Trust Code, 46 N.H. Bar J. 16, 16 (2005–2006)). Funds held in the trust
    subaccounts are excluded from the beneficiary’s resources for purposes of
    Medicaid eligibility, see 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(1), (4), and are used to “pay[] for a
    disabled person’s Medicaid-ineligible expenses, such as clothing, phone service,
    vehicle maintenance, and taxes,” Cox v. Iowa Dep’t of Hum. Servs.,
    
    920 N.W.2d 545
    , 551 (Iowa 2018) (quoting Ctr. for Special Needs Tr. Admin., Inc.
    v. Olson, 
    676 F.3d 688
    , 695 (8th Cir. 2012)). “These trusts are ‘intended for
    individuals with a relatively small amount of money. By pooling these small
    accounts for investment and management purposes, overhead and expenses are
    reduced and more money is available to the beneficiary.’ ” Id. at 551 (quoting
    Lewis, 
    685 F.3d at 333
    ). When the beneficiary dies, Title XIX of the Social
    Security Act (Title XIX) allows the trustee to retain the remaining balance in the
    beneficiary’s subaccount, but any amounts not retained must be paid to the
    state to reimburse it for the Medicaid benefits it provided for the individual. 42
    U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C)(iv).
    4
    This case involves a pooled special needs trust established for the benefit
    of Steven Muller. Mr. Muller started receiving medical assistance covered by
    Medicaid in August 1994. In September 2014, Mr. Muller signed a joinder
    agreement to establish a subaccount with the National Pooled Trust. The Center,
    as trustee of the National Pooled Trust, accepted the joinder agreement on
    September 15, and Mr. Muller transferred $143,564.28 into the pooled special
    needs trust. Over the next several years, Mr. Muller’s pooled trust subaccount
    was used to pay for massage therapy, a “care manager,” investment services,
    and accounting and trustee fees. The Center provided annual reports to DHS
    reflecting these expenditures as well as the account’s share of investment gains,
    but did not file any annual reports in district court.
    Mr. Muller died on June 30, 2020. Shortly thereafter, DHS contacted the
    Center asserting that the trust terms, as well as federal and state law, required
    the remaining balance in Mr. Muller’s subaccount to be paid to DHS (over
    Mr. Muller’s lifetime, DHS paid $741,845.65 toward his medical care), less any
    funds the Center retained “for administrative or other expenses of the trust.”
    DHS sent another letter in September 2020, stating, “Rather than submitting to
    the jurisdiction of the District Court, we believe your client just kept all of the
    trust funds after death contrary to the state’s interest in the trust without the
    Court reviewing its actions. I understand your client’s legal arguments, but a
    trustee must seek court approval.” The Center then provided its final annual
    report to DHS, which reflected that Mr. Muller’s subaccount had a balance of
    5
    $115,890.98, including a gain on investments of $3,039.77 since the previous
    accounting. The Center retained that remaining balance.
    On March 2, 2021, DHS filed a petition to invoke jurisdiction over the
    irrevocable trust in the Iowa District Court for Scott County. See Iowa Code
    § 633C.4(2) (2021). DHS noted that the Center had never invoked the court’s
    probate jurisdiction concerning Mr. Muller’s trust by filing annual reports with
    the court as required by Iowa Code chapter 633C. Indeed, DHS asserted that the
    Center “has repeatedly failed to invoke jurisdiction over pooled trust matters in
    Iowa and currently has two living beneficiaries, and two deceased beneficiaries
    . . . where jurisdiction was not invoked by the trustee during the lifetime of the
    beneficiary.” DHS’s petition asked the court to “order the trustee to provide an
    accounting of how the funds have been or will be distributed since its last annual
    report,” and order that “any funds after the payment of properly retained funds
    be paid to DHS from the assets of the trust.”
    The Center filed its final report with the court on September 2, attaching
    copies of the annual reports previously provided to DHS as well as the final
    accounting covering the period between September 1, 2019, and October 1,
    2020. The report indicated that the final balance remaining in Mr. Muller’s
    subaccount was $0, “as all assets had been retained by The National Pooled
    Trust, pursuant to the terms of [the trust].” DHS objected and, by order of the
    district court for a more specific statement, the Center filed a supplemental final
    report on October 7. The supplement included an explanation of federal and
    state law concerning pooled special needs trusts, concluding:
    6
    14. The Trustee uses retained funds in furtherance of its
    nonprofit mission to provide specialized administrative services
    for persons with disabilities for the purpose of improving their
    quality of life.
    15. The Trustee is unable to provide a further accounting of
    the funds after the funds were retained by the Pooled Trust
    pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C)(iv) because the funds were
    retained in a master account and are no longer segregated in an
    individual sub-account.
    ....
    22. The Trustee does not use the retained funds for any
    prohibited expenses cited in the [Social Security Administration’s
    Program Operations Manual System (POMS)], and specifically the
    retained funds are not distributed to family members of the
    beneficiary, nor are they used to pay inheritance taxes, debts to
    third parties, or funeral expenses after death. See POMS SI
    01120.203(E)(2).
    ....
    30. The description “Trust Retention” for final disposition of
    the trust assets is consistent with the Trustee’s standard practice
    and consistent with the applicable code and regulations for pooled
    special needs trusts. The funds are retained and used in
    furtherance of the Trustee’s nonprofit mission to provide for
    disabled individuals and to improve the quality of life of those
    individuals.
    The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The Center
    submitted a verified statement from Michelle Diebert, its president, stating she
    had verified that the remaining funds from Mr. Muller’s subaccount were
    “retained in the trust’s master client account,” which “is used to administer the
    pooled trust at issue in this matter, and all funds from such account are used
    for the benefit of the beneficiaries of the pooled trust.” She also verified that the
    retained funds from Mr. Muller’s subaccount “were never transferred into an
    operating account used for the benefit of the trustee.” The Center took the
    position that once it had retained the funds to be used for permissible purposes,
    7
    DHS no longer had an interest in the funds and it owed DHS no further reporting
    obligations. DHS took the position that the Center was required to specifically
    account for how it had or would use the retained funds and remit to DHS any
    funds not used for identified administrative expenses or medical care for other
    beneficiaries of the pooled trust.
    The district court initially denied both parties’ motions for summary
    judgment, concluding DHS was entitled to a more detailed accounting of what
    the Center did with the remaining funds, but DHS had not “affirmatively
    establish[ed] the trust squandered the assets in the trust” to entitle it to
    summary judgment. The Center filed a motion to reconsider based on the Hewitt
    district court’s intervening ruling, which involved the same parties (and
    attorneys) but a different pooled special needs trust. The Hewitt district court
    granted summary judgment to the Center, concluding the Center provided all
    the accounting DHS was entitled to by certifying that it had retained the
    remaining funds in its master account for the benefit of other beneficiaries of the
    pooled trust. See Hewitt, ___ N.W.2d at ___.
    A different district court judge took up the motion to reconsider,
    disagreeing with the district court in Hewitt. Unlike the Hewitt court, this court
    concluded the trust’s retention of the funds was “not a valid expenditure of trust
    funds,” the trustee’s promise to act in accordance with the terms of the trust did
    not satisfy the trustee’s fiduciary duties owed to DHS as a beneficiary under Iowa
    trust law, and the trustee in fact violated its fiduciary duties by comingling the
    trust’s funds in the master account. The district court concluded:
    8
    [T]he Center has not retained any funds in the trust, it depleted the
    trust completely in order to inject the funds into another master
    account. As this use of trust funds is improper, the Court finds that
    there are no funds properly retained by the trust, and the
    $115,890.98 which was wrongfully expended from the trust as
    “retention” expenses must be paid out to DHS, who has expended
    well over that amount in medical assistance on behalf of Muller.
    The Center appealed, and we retained the appeal, together with DHS’s
    appeal in Hewitt, id. at ___, which we also decide today.
    II.
    We review summary judgment rulings for correction of errors at law. Kirlin
    v. Monaster, 
    984 N.W.2d 412
    , 415 (Iowa 2023). “Summary judgment is proper if
    the only issue is the legal consequences flowing from undisputed facts.” 
    Id.
    (quoting Johnson v. Associated Milk Producers, Inc., 
    886 N.W.2d 384
    , 389 (Iowa
    2016)). Because the only issues here involve the interpretation of statutory and
    trust provisions, summary judgment was “the proper vehicle to test the validity
    of [the] claim[s] . . . [and] we need only decide whether the district court properly
    applied the law.” 
    Id.
     (first and third alterations and omission in original) (quoting
    Hill v. State, Dep’t of Hum. Servs., 
    493 N.W.2d 803
    , 804–05 (Iowa 1992)).
    This appeal is controlled by our analysis in the Hewitt companion case.
    ___ N.W.2d ___. For a more thorough discussion of the interplay between the
    trust provisions of Title XIX in 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4) and chapters 633A and
    633C of the Iowa Trust Code, we direct the parties to that opinion. See Hewitt,
    ___ N.W.2d at ___. The district court here took a different route to reach a
    different conclusion, and we focus our discussion on the distinct issues raised
    by that decision.
    9
    When it enacted subsection 1396p(d) as part of the Omnibus Budget
    Reconciliation Act of 1993, Pub. L. No. 103–66, § 13611(b), 
    107 Stat. 312
    , 624–
    26, Congress set out rules that certain types of trusts would have to follow to
    keep assets in the trust from counting toward resources that would negatively
    impact the beneficiary’s ability to qualify for Medicaid. See Lewis, 
    685 F.3d at 333
     (discussing background of section 1396p). But Congress did not interfere
    with the trustee’s fiduciary obligations related to administration of the trust.
    Those it left to state trust codes. 
    Id. at 350
    .
    There is no dispute that DHS is a beneficiary of the pooled special needs
    trust established for Mr. Muller and administered within the separate
    subaccount maintained for his benefit by the Center. See Iowa Code § 633C.4(2).
    As the district court properly recognized, DHS’s interest in Mr. Muller’s trust
    subaccount is a contingent future interest. Specifically, DHS has an interest, in
    the words of Title XIX, only “[t]o the extent that amounts remaining in the
    beneficiary’s account upon the death of the beneficiary are not retained by the
    trust.” 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C)(iv); see also 
    Iowa Admin. Code r. 441
    —
    75.24(3)(c)(4) (providing for same limitation).
    Here, it is important to identify how and when DHS’s interest in
    Mr. Muller’s subaccount is extinguished to determine the extent of the
    accounting to which it is entitled. We do so by summarizing our analysis in
    Hewitt. As a contingent beneficiary, DHS’s interest ends when the contingency
    on which its interest depends can no longer happen (i.e., is defeated). See Hewitt,
    ___ N.W.2d at ___. Under the unambiguous language of section 1396p, DHS’s
    10
    contingent interest in a beneficiary’s subaccount is defeated when the trust
    “retains” the funds. 
    Id.
     at ___; see also 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C)(iv) (creating a
    contingent interest to the extent funds “are not retained by the trust”). And a
    trust can retain funds remaining in a trust beneficiary’s subaccount when he or
    she dies. Hewitt, ___ N.W.2d at ___; see also 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C)(iv).
    An individual’s pooled special needs trust subaccount terminates at the
    time of his or her death, and the decision to retain the funds remaining in that
    subaccount is part of the winding up process for that individual trust. See Iowa
    Code § 633A.2201(1)(b) (“[A] trust terminates when . . . [t]he trust purpose is
    fulfilled.”), (2) (“On termination of a trust, the trustee may exercise the powers
    necessary to wind up the affairs of the trust and distribute the trust property to
    those entitled to the trust property.”). For a pooled special needs trust,
    distribution of the trust property as part of the winding up process includes first
    deciding whether to retain the remaining subaccount balance, in whole or in
    part, and then remitting any balance not retained first to DHS to reimburse its
    Medicaid expenditures and, if any funds remain after that, then to any residual
    beneficiaries. 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C)(iv); Hewitt, ___ N.W.2d at ___; see also
    Reese, 881 F.3d at 1026 (“The trust agreement can direct who should receive
    any assets that might remain after reimbursement.”). Here, DHS’s contingent
    interest in Mr. Muller’s subaccount ended when the Center retained the funds
    remaining in his subaccount. See Hewitt, ___ N.W.2d at ___.
    That does not mean the Center no longer owed DHS any fiduciary duties
    when the trust terminated at Mr. Muller’s death. It still owed it a duty of
    11
    accounting. The extent of that accounting, and any attendant consequences for
    failing to provide it, determines the outcome of this case. Under the relevant code
    provisions defining a trustee’s fiduciary duties, the Center is required to provide
    an annual accounting to trust beneficiaries, Iowa Code § 633A.4213(3), including
    DHS, see id. § 633C.4. The content of the required accounting is largely “within
    the discretion of the trustee, as long as [it is] sufficient to reasonably inform the
    beneficiary of the condition and activities of the trust during the accounting
    period.” Id. § 633A.4213(6).
    The district court did not focus on the reporting requirements other than
    to reject the Center’s “promise” to properly use the funds it retained. Instead,
    apparently believing that the Center was required to retain the funds in
    Mr. Muller’s separate subaccount, it concluded that the Center “wrongfully
    expended” the $115,890.98 remaining balance “from the trust as ‘retention’
    expenses” “by comingling the trust’s funds with a master account.” Thus
    characterized as an expenditure, the court reasoned that the Center did not
    actually “retain[] any funds in the trust,” but instead “depleted the trust
    completely in order to inject the funds into another master account,” which the
    court held violated the requirement to pay the state for reimbursement of its
    Medicaid expenditures since the Center could not provide an exact accounting
    of how it used the retained funds. Having found a violation of the accounting
    statute, the court ordered the Center to pay the full amount of residual funds to
    DHS.
    12
    The district court’s analysis got off track in two respects. First, it
    misconstrued the trustee’s obligations at the time an individual beneficiary dies
    when it concluded that the Center was required to maintain Mr. Muller’s
    individual subaccount and that the Center depleted the trust when it closed his
    subaccount. While the trustee is required to maintain a separate account for
    each individual beneficiary of the trust to be used solely for that individual’s
    benefit, that is true only during the beneficiary’s lifetime. As we explained above
    (and more fully in Hewitt), when the beneficiary dies, the individual trust
    subaccount terminates, see Iowa Code § 633A.2201(1)(b) (“[A] trust terminates
    when . . . [t]he trust purpose is fulfilled.”), and the trustee winds up that
    beneficiary’s individual trust, ultimately by “distribut[ing] the trust property to
    those entitled to [it],” id. § 633A.2201(2). See Hewitt, ___ N.W.2d at ___. When
    the Center informed DHS that it could not account for the funds because they
    were no longer segregated from the master account, it was conveying the fact
    that it was no longer required to maintain a separate subaccount after Mr. Muller
    died. There would be no purpose for continuing the subaccount, which could
    only be used for Mr. Muller’s benefit. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C)(iii). Indeed,
    both the master National Pooled Trust governing document and the individual
    joinder agreement contemplated distributing the funds in the subaccount at
    Mr. Muller’s death. The district court’s conclusion that the Center did not retain
    any of the funds in the subaccount but “depleted the trust” misconstrues trust
    law. Once the trust terminated at Mr. Muller’s death, the trustee was obligated
    to distribute the remaining funds from the subaccount consistent with state and
    13
    federal law and pursuant to the terms of the trust, and in doing so was permitted
    to retain the funds.
    Second, the district court seems to have misunderstood the mechanics of
    how the subaccounts work. The trust is required to maintain separate accounts
    for each beneficiary’s use, but it is allowed to pool the funds for investment and
    management     purposes.    Id.   § 1396p(d)(4)(C)(ii).   As   the   Social   Security
    Administration explains in its Program Operations Manual System by way of
    analogy, “the pooled trust is like a bank that holds the assets of individual
    account holders. . . . The pooled trust instruments usually consist of an
    overarching ‘master trust’ and a joinder agreement that contains provisions
    specific to the individual beneficiary.” Soc. Sec. Admin., Program Operations
    Manual     System      (POMS)     SI     01120.203D(1)         [hereinafter   POMS],
    https://secure.ssa.gov/poms.nsf/lnx/0501120203            [https://perma.cc/87BZ-
    YZ97]. The actual funds, which are fungible, are pooled into a master account
    where they can be invested as a unit. Individual subaccounts are maintained for
    each beneficiary as an accounting function, not as an actual depository of funds.
    In other words, the master account always holds all of the funds, and those
    funds are allocated among the various individuals’ subaccounts based on their
    own funding infusions and expenditures, but the funds are never physically
    segregated. So when the trustee makes the decision to retain funds remaining in
    an individual beneficiary’s subaccount when he or she dies, the funds are not
    “comingled” with the master account. Nor are they “inject[ed] . . . into another
    master account.” They are already in the master account, of which Mr. Muller’s
    14
    subaccount was always a part.2 But there is no longer a separate accounting for
    that individual subaccount, which ceases to exist, leaving the retained funds in
    the master account but not tied to any individual subaccount. They are in effect
    unallocated funds within the master account. That the Center chose to retain
    the funds in its master account, which it verified is used only for the benefit of
    other beneficiaries of the trust, was a permissible distribution as part of the
    winding up process, not an “expenditure” out of the trust account.
    This brings us back to the underlying issue raised by this proceeding—
    whether the Center satisfied its reporting and accounting obligations. As DHS
    noted in its petition, the Center failed to file annual reports for any of the
    subaccounts held by Iowa beneficiaries until DHS brought the Muller and Hewitt
    trusts to its attention. Mr. Muller’s trust began in 2014, and the Center should
    have been filing annual reports each year since. DHS admitted it received annual
    accountings from the Center for Mr. Muller, but the Center apparently failed to
    file those reports with the district court as required by Iowa Code section
    633C.4(2). The Center did, however, rectify its filing deficiencies through this
    proceeding. No specific remedy is provided for a trustee’s failure to file annual
    reports as required by section 633C.4(2), but we admonish the Center to comply
    with its filing obligations.
    With respect to the adequacy of the accountings provided in the final
    report for Mr. Muller’s trust, we conclude, as we did in Hewitt, that the Center’s
    2The    Center has identified only a single master account, of which Mr. Muller’s subaccount
    was a part. We find nothing in the record to support the conclusion that Mr. Muller’s funds were
    “inject[ed] . . . into another master account.” (Emphasis added.)
    15
    final report adequately apprised DHS that the Center had retained the remaining
    balance for proper purposes as allowed by the trust documents and the relevant
    statutory provisions.
    Even if the Center’s final report had not met its reporting obligations, the
    district court’s chosen remedy is not one available to DHS in this particular
    action. DHS brought an action for an accounting because it alleged the Center
    was in violation of its fiduciary duties to inform and account under section
    633A.4213. But as the trust code makes clear, even if a trustee violates these
    duties, the only things a court can do are: “(1) [o]rder the trustee to comply with
    the trustee’s duties under this section,” and “(2) [a]ssess costs, including
    attorney fees, against the trustee personally.” Id. § 633A.4213(5)(a). Other than
    that, “the only consequence to a trustee’s failure to provide the required
    accounting” is that it cannot rely on the one-year statute of limitations in
    defending against a breach of trust claim. Id. § 633A.4213(5)(b); see also id.
    §§ 633A.4502(1) (authorizing a beneficiary to bring a claim seeking specific types
    of equitable relief to remedy a breach of trust “[e]xcept as provided in section
    633A.4213”), .4504(1) (providing a one-year statute of limitations for a breach of
    trust claim by a beneficiary who has received an accounting pursuant to section
    633A.4213).
    The district court essentially granted DHS the relief it could have sought
    had it brought an equitable claim for a nonreporting-related breach of trust,
    assuming DHS could substantiate a breach of trust claim. See id. § 633A.4502(1)
    (“Except as provided in section 633A.4213, to remedy a breach of trust which
    16
    has occurred or may occur, a beneficiary or cotrustee of the trust may request
    the court to do any of the following . . . .”). Had it brought such a claim, DHS
    could have requested the court to, among other things, “nullify an act of the
    trustee, impose an equitable lien or a constructive trust on trust property, or
    trace trust property wrongfully disposed of and recover the property or its
    proceeds.” Id. § 633A.4502(1)(g). But DHS did not bring a breach of trust claim.
    It brought a claim seeking an accounting, expressly relying on section
    633A.4213. The district court therefore lacked authority to grant the relief it
    provided to remedy the Center’s alleged failure to account for the retained funds.
    To the extent DHS was concerned about relying only on the Center’s promises to
    ensure that it would use the funds for only proper or allowed purposes (and there
    is nothing in this record to suggest it will not), DHS could have filed a breach of
    trust claim (assuming it could meet the pleading requirements) to pursue the
    relief it seeks here.3
    DHS has received the accounting to which it was entitled under Iowa Code
    section 633A.4213. The district court therefore erred in granting DHS’s motion
    for summary judgment and denying the Center’s cross-motion for summary
    judgment.
    3A pooled special needs trust must be administered by a nonprofit organization, which
    has its own reporting obligations. See Peter Swords, The Form 990 as an Accountability Tool for
    501(c)(3) Nonprofits, 
    51 Tax Law. 571
    , 571 (1998) (concluding “that the 990 can be quite useful
    for addressing abuses such as self-dealing”).
    17
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court should have granted summary
    judgment in favor of the Center. The district court’s summary judgment order is
    reversed and remanded for entry of judgment for the Center.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.