Appeal of the New England Heart Institute & Maine Medical Center

746 A.2d 990, 144 N.H. 546, 1999 N.H. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 29, 1999
DocketNo. 97-586
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 746 A.2d 990 (Appeal of the New England Heart Institute & Maine Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appeal of the New England Heart Institute & Maine Medical Center, 746 A.2d 990, 144 N.H. 546, 1999 N.H. LEXIS 154 (N.H. 1999).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The petitioners, New England Heart Institute (NEHI) and Maine Medical Center, appeal the decision of the health services planning and review board (board) granting certificates of need (CONs) to the respondents, Portsmouth Regional Hospital and Concord Hospital, to allow new cardiac surgery programs. The petitioners contend that the board erred in issuing the CONs because: (1) the regulations for cardiac surgery are legally deficient; (2) the board failed to determine that need existed for additional cardiac surgery services before issuing a request for applications; (3) the CONs issued to the respondents were fundamentally inconsistent with a prior CON; and (4) a board member failed to recuse himself early in the CON process thereby tainting the proceedings. Because we agree that the board failed to determine that need existed before issuing a request for applications, we remand.

In 1996, Concord Hospital solicited a Request for Applications (RFA) for new cardiac surgery programs from the board. The board voted to issue an RFA. NEHI informed the board that, in its opinion, the regulations failed to recite a clear test to determine need for the issuance of an RFA as required by RSA 151-C:6 (1996 & Supp. 1999) and asked the board to clarify whether it had found need. In response to the requested clarification, the board decided to continue with the RFA process, and Concord Hospital and Portsmouth Regional Hospital submitted applications to obtain CONs. The petitioners filed for and received intervenor status. The CONs were issued to the respondents, and the petitioners filed a motion for rehearing and reconsideration, which was denied. This appeal followed.

Our review of the board’s decision- is governed by RSA 541:13 (1997), which states that the board’s decisions “shall not be set aside or vacated except for errors of law, unless the court is satisfied, by a clear preponderance of the evidence before it, that such order is unjust or unreasonable.” RSA 151-C:10, III, however, requires that “ [t]he court shall affirm the decision of the board unless it finds it to be arbitrary or capricious or not made in compliance with applicable law.” We have held that these standards of review “are essentially the same, and both standards apply to appeals from [548]*548decisions of the board.” Appeal of Courville, 139 N.H. 119, 123, 649 A.2d 1233, 1236 (1994) (citation omitted). Accordingly, “we deem all factual findings by the board to be prima facie lawful and reasonable . . . [and the petitioners] bear[] the burden of showing by a clear preponderance of the evidence that the board’s decision was arbitrary or capricious or not made in compliance with applicable law.” Id. (citation and quotation omitted).

The CON process is governed by RSA chapter 151-C. RSA 151-C:4 (1996 & Supp. 1999) states:

I. No new institutional health service shall be offered or developed within the state . . . except pursuant to obtaining a certificate of need for such service.
II. No certificate of need shall be granted by the board unless a standard has been developed which delineates the need for the service and outlines the criteria which must be met by any person proposing such a service.

The board is required to establish standards for each of the six types of new institutional health services listed in RSA 151-C:5, II including “ [t]he development and offering of new inpatient services,” which covers the additional cardiac surgery services at issue here. RSA 151-C:5,11(c) (1996). When there is no existing standard, the board must develop a standard for new institutional heath services that “shall be either a standard allocating the new service by number, type, and location or a statement that the proposed new service is in the best competitive interest of health care in the state.” RSA 151-C:6, 11(e) (1996). RSA 151-C:8, 1(a) (1996) further provides:

I. If a standard developed through RSA 151-C:5 or 151-C:6 indicates a need for additional health services, the board shall issue & request for applications. ... At a minimum the notice shall include:
(a) A brief description of the service to be provided, including the amount, type, and location as established by the standard.

Thus, the board must first determine that a need, as defined by a standard, exists in order to issue an RFA. If an RFA issues, the board can only issue a CON to an applicant if the applicant has shown that it meets the CON requirements, defined by statute and regulations.

At the outset, for clarification, we note that all of the regulations referred to by the parties have undergone revision, [549]*549expiration, or reenactment since this case was first submitted. The regulations that were in effect at the time of the board’s decision are the regulations that we look to in deciding this appeal.

The petitioners first contend that the board’s regulations for cardiac surgery in 1996, then found in New Hampshire Code of Administrative Rules, Parts He-Hea 1108-1110 (effective September 27, 1991; expired September 27, 1997), are legally deficient because they do not delineate a need standard for cardiac surgery programs by “number, type, and location” as required by RSA 151-C:6, 11(e). The parties discuss two particular regulations as possibly qualifying as a need standard: He-Hea 1108.03 and 1108.04. The respondents, however, concede that He-Hea 1108.03 is not a need standard. Therefore, we turn to He-Hea 1108.04, which the respondents contend is the applicable standard.

He-Hea 1108.04 provides:

(a) Each new adult open heart surgery program shall assure that the proposed volumes of service shall not be detrimental to the existing health care system of the state.
(b) No new adult open heart surgery program shall be approved unless it can be demonstrated that the proposed program can retain the number of patients needed to assure a minimum volume of 250 cases annually per facility.
(c) No new service shall be approved if the introduction of any new services cause the volume in each facility dedicated for adult open heart surgery in the State to drop below 350 adult open heart surgery cases per year.

The petitioners contend that the need standard set out in He-Hea 1108.04, referred to by the parties as a volume standard, is not a need standard but rather a standard to evaluate if a particular application should receive a CON. The basis for this contention is that “[t]his initial determination of Need [when deciding to issue a RFA] is always based upon readily available historical data or information . . . which is essentially free from challenge or dispute . . . and never based upon projections or estimates.” Additionally, the petitioners contend that a need standard does not evaluate individual applicants but rather assesses need based on a regional or statewide analysis. As support for this allegation, the petitioners list a variety of need standards that they argue demonstrate the clear and regional or statewide nature of such standards.

The petitioners’ reliance on other need standards to demonstrate the inadequacies of He-Hea 1108.04 is misplaced. The correct [550]

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Related

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886 A.2d 1005 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2005)
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802 A.2d 1175 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
746 A.2d 990, 144 N.H. 546, 1999 N.H. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-the-new-england-heart-institute-maine-medical-center-nh-1999.