Ace Home Health Care, LLC v. Gentiva Health Services Inc.

162 So. 3d 931, 2014 WL 3796408
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedAugust 1, 2014
Docket2121065 and 2121076
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 162 So. 3d 931 (Ace Home Health Care, LLC v. Gentiva Health Services Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ace Home Health Care, LLC v. Gentiva Health Services Inc., 162 So. 3d 931, 2014 WL 3796408 (Ala. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

PITTMAN, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, the Alabama State Health Planning and Development Agency (“SHPDA”) and ACE Home Health Care, LLC, appeal from a judgment entered by the Montgomery Circuit Court in two administrative appeals brought by Gentiva Health Services, Inc. (“Gentiva”), and Amedisys Home Health, Inc., of Alabama (“Amedisys”) in which the circuit court reversed the decision of SHPDA’s Certificate of Need Review Board (“CONRB”) granting authority, in the form of a Certificate of Need (“CON”), to ACE Home Health Care, LLC, to operate a home-health-care practice in Madison County. Because the CONRB’s decision was supported by substantial evidence and was not entered in violation of any applicable law, we reverse the circuit court’s judgment.

The record reveals that on March 30, 2012, an application for a CON was sub[933]*933mitted to SHPDA by Paul Clennon in which Clennon sought a CON to operate a home-health-care and hospice-care entity in Madison County called “ACE Home Health & Hospice Care, LLC.” After SHPDA’s executive director had notified Clennon that home-health-care and hospice-care services would require separate applications and directed him to address the issue within BO days, Clennon amended the application within that period so as to clarify his intent to apply for a home-health-care CON only and to identify the entity he owned (and in whose name the CON would be issued) as “ACE Home Health Care, LLC”; Clennon also sought to simultaneously file papers with the Madison County probate office to change the corporate name of “ACE Home Health & Hospice Care, LLC” to remove any references to hospice care, but he was informed by representatives at that office that he could not then file those papers because of a processing backlog in the corporations section of the office of the Alabama Secretary of State. Clennon therefore reserved the right to use the business name “ACE Home Health Care, LLC” on behalf of the corporate entity, and that name has been used in literature issued by the corporate entity since then; we will hereinafter refer to that entity as “ACE” for the sake of simplicity.

ACE’s plan, as summarized by SHPDA’s staff, is to provide “a broad range of health care services,” such as “skilled nursing, home health aid[ ], physical, occupational, speech, respiratory therapy and social services,” primarily (but not exclusively) to veterans of the armed services. The principals of ACE, who are military veterans, claimed to have considerable knowledge of problems faced by patients needing care following military service and expressed their intent to prefer employment of veterans to serve veterans.

After the submission of the amended CON application, three home-health-care providers doing business in Madison County — Gentiva, Amedisys, and Alacare Home Health and Hospital Services, Inc. (“Ala-care”), appeared in opposition to the CON application and requested a contested-case hearing before an administrative-law judge (“ALJ”). Upon the conclusion of a two-day hearing, at which the parties presented testimony and documentary evidence, the ALJ issued a recommended order in which he concluded that, because “[ACE] Home Health and Hospice Care, LLC[,] was a legally formed entity at the time of the application, and th[at] entity was the one that originally sought to file its ... original application, the change in name on the application form ... should not render the application itself void.” However, on the merits of ACE’s CON application, the ALJ opined that, although the proposed project as submitted by ACE “would be in conformity with the most recent” State Health Plan (“SHP”), SHPDA should not issue a CON to ACE because of perceived flaws in the project’s economic feasibility and the availability of alternative providers. ACE filed exceptions to the ALJ’s findings and conclusions, and SHPDA’s executive director advised ACE that those exceptions would be ratified or rejected at an upcoming meeting of the CONRB.

On December 12, 2012, the CONRB met to consider whether to adopt or reject the ALJ’s recommendation. At that meeting, counsel for ACE introduced herself and noted the presence of Clennon, Dr. Tonia Butler, and three other persons connected with ACE at the meeting; she then indicated that Clennon would address the CONRB about the proposed project. The chairman of the CONRB overruled an objection lodged by counsel for Amedisys to Clennon’s addressing the CONRB, but cautioned Clennon that his remarks were [934]*934to be confined to matters within the record made before the ALJ; Clennon then addressed the CONRB, after which the CONRB heard statements from Dr. Butler (another ACE representative) and further arguments and rebuttal from counsel for the parties. Afterwards, a member of the CONRB moved to reject the ALJ’s recommendation and to approve the CON application, remarking that ACE’s personnel had adduced “evidence of a fledgling start-up that’s got a lot to learn” and suggesting that “they’re going to make some mistakes,” but observing that “they’re at least looking at doing it with their own money, not our tax money.” Another member of the CONRB, who seconded the motion, identified himself as a disabled armed-service retiree from Madison County and stated that “we are going to experience as the wars draw down more veterans coming back home and needing care there.”1 Finally, a third member of the CONRB identified himself as a former member of both the United States Army and the Marine Corps; although acknowledging the existence of Veterans Administration hospitals to provide care for veterans, that member opined that the “veteran population is woefully underserved.”

The CONRB then voted on the motion and by a majority vote agreed to it, subsequently issuing an order memorializing its decision. Because the CONRB’s order was issued after the application had already been considered by an ALJ as a contested case, and because reconsideration was not sought, the granting of the application by the CONRB constituted the “final decision” of SHPDA under subdivisions (6) and (12) of Ala.Code 1975, § 22-21-275, and Ala. Admin. Code (SHPDA), Rules 410-1-8.06 and 410-1-8-.07. A CON was then issued to ACE in January 2013.

Gentiva, Amedisys, and Alacare each filed notices of appeal from SHPDA’s decision to issue a CON to ACE, and thereafter Gentiva and Alacare, acting jointly, and Amedisys, acting separately, filed petitions seeking judicial review of the administrative decision in the circuit court;2 the two actions were ordered consolidated on SHPDA’s motion. Alacare subsequently withdrew as a party. After the parties had filed briefs in support of their respective positions, the circuit court held a hearing on the petitions of Gentiva and Amedisys, at which three arguments were articulated in favor of reversal of SHPDA’s decision: (a) that the CONRB violated SHPDA regulations by allowing Clennon and Butler to address the CONRB; (b) that the CON could not properly be issued to an entity that, the petitioners said, did not exist; and (c) that the decision by SHPDA to issue a CON was not supported by substantial evidence. After receiving draft judgments from counsel for the petitioners and for ACE, the circuit court entered a judgment mirroring the form submitted by the petitioners, ruling in favor of the petitioners on each of the three grounds asserted and reversing the decision of SHPDA. ACE and SHPDA separately and timely appeal[935]*935ed from the judgment, and the circuit court stayed its judgment pending the resolution of the consolidated appeals.

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 3d 931, 2014 WL 3796408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ace-home-health-care-llc-v-gentiva-health-services-inc-alacivapp-2014.