Bush v. North Dakota Health Council, Department of Health

128 N.W.2d 866, 1964 N.D. LEXIS 105
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1964
DocketNo. 8142
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 128 N.W.2d 866 (Bush v. North Dakota Health Council, Department of Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. North Dakota Health Council, Department of Health, 128 N.W.2d 866, 1964 N.D. LEXIS 105 (N.D. 1964).

Opinions

STRUTZ, Judge.

On or about the 21st day of August 1962, the petitioners made application to the North Dakota Health Council, Department of Health, for a license to operate a nursing home in Beach, North Dakota. The North Dakota Health Council took no formal action on such application and, more than nine months later, on June 10, 1963, the petitioners filed a written request for a hearing on their application. Thereafter, a notice of hearing was served on the petitioners, setting July 30, 1963, as the date for hearing. The notice further informed the petitioners that their application had not been acted upon favorably because:

1. The proposed nursing home does not comply with the provisions of Chapter 23-16, North Dakota Century Code; and

2. The proposed nursing home does not comply with standards set up by the North Dakota Health Council, Department of Health.

At the hearing before the North Dakota Health Council, it was disclosed that the facility for which application for license was made had been licensed and operated by the applicants as a general hospital from 1941 to 1962. Since medical hospitals and nursing homes are licensed under the same statute, the question arose as to whether the facility for which application for license was made, which formerly was operated by the applicants as a general hospital, was, in fact, a new facility or whether it was the same facility with a more limited scope of operation as to the type of patients that it would serve.

Section 23-01-03(4) of the North Dakota Century Code, originally enacted as part of Chapter 200 of the 1947 Session Laws, gives to the North Dakota Health Council the authority and power to provide for the development, establishment, and enforcement of basic standards for "hospitals and related medical institutions” which render medical and nursing care, such standards to cover matters pertaining to sanitation, building construction, fire protection, nursing procedures, and preservation of medical records. The statute then imposes the following condition:

“* * * provided no regulation shall be made as to building construction of [869]*869existing medical hospitals save in relation to safety factors.”

After the hearing before the State Health Council, that bod’/ made its findings and conclusions and entered its order denying the petitioners the right to use the former hospital as a nursing home, and ordered all nursing home-type patients removed from the premises within ninety days after the date of such order. The applicants appealed to the district court of Golden Valley County from such order, and the appeal was heard on October 29, 1963.

From the record, it appears that, during the years 1941 through 1962, the facility had been operated by the applicants as a general medical hospital under license issued by the North Dakota Health Council. In 1962, a new medical hospital was opened in Beach, and the petitioners thereupon applied for a license to operate the old hospital as a nursing home. The State Health Council refused to grant them a license to operate the nursing home on the ground that the building does not comply with the standards and regulations which had been adopted by the Health Council during the time the facility was licensed as a medical hospital.

The trial court held that the law makes no distinction between a medical hospital and a nursing home; that both are considered as hospitals, and that hut one type of license is provided for by law to he issued for hospitals and related medical institutions which render medical and nursing care. The court further found that the Health Council had produced no competent evidence to establish that the conditions objected to by the Health Council violated any regulations relating to health, sanitation, or disease control, and that the applicants were entitled to the license applied for. The court thereupon ordered the Health Council to issue the license.

From the judgment entered on this order, the Health Council has appealed to this court.

It may be stated generally that the preservation of the public health is a duty devolving upon the State as sovereign. 25 Am.Jur., “Health,” Sec. 3, p. 287. The power to guard the public health may be delegated to subordinate governmental agencies, and such delegation may he in general terms. But where such delegation of power is in language which is clear and unmistakable, the power of such agency is limited by such delegation.

Section 23-16-01, North Dakota Century Code, the provision of law under which the facility was licensed as a medical hospital and under which the application for license to operate a nursing home was made, provides, in part:

“After July 1, 1947, no person, partnership, association, corporation, county or municipal corporation, or agency thereof, which maintains and operates organized facilities for the diagnosis, treatment or care of two or more non-related persons suffering from illness, injury, or deformity, or where obstetrical or other care is rendered over a period exceeding twenty-four hours shall be established, conducted, or maintained in the state of North Dakota without obtaining annually a license therefor in the manner hereinafter provided in sections 23-16-02 and 23-16-03.”

The next section, 23-16-02, provides:

“Institutions subject to this chapter which are already in operation at the time of enactment of this chapter shall be given a reasonable time, not to exceed one year from the date of the enactment of this chapter, within which to comply with the rules, regulations and minimum standards provided for herein.”

Any standards and regulations which were a part of the 1947 Act had to be complied with under Section 23-16-02 within one year after the date of passage [870]*870of the Act. This facility was licensed as a medical hospital from January 1948 through 1962. It cannot be disputed that the facility for which application for license now is made, if it satisfactorily complied with the regulations embodied in the 1947 law, must have complied with such regulations prior to 1962, since such compliance had to be within one year after January 1, 1948. Neither can it be argued that the institution did not exist prior to 1962. Chapter 23-01 of the North Dakota Century Code applies to “hospitals and related medical institutions which render medical and nursing care.” The fact that a general hospital formerly was operated in the facility and that the medical hospital was moved to a new location, and that application immediately was made by the same parties who had operated the medical hospital for license to continue to operate the facility as a nursing home, does not make it a new facility. The Health Council made no showing of what rules, regulations, and minimum standards for hospitals and related medical institutions which render medical and nursing care had been established and existed prior to July 21, 1961. However, prior to that time, this facility had been licensed annually by the appellant and it must be presumed that there was full compliance with all rules and regulations.

Chapter 23-01 of the North Dakota Century Code applies to “hospitals and related medical institutions which render medical and nursing care,” and the fact that the petitioners now propose to render a more limited service does not make the venture a new one under the provisions of the statute cited. The facility has been operated by the applicants under license of the North Dakota Health Council since 1941.

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Bluebook (online)
128 N.W.2d 866, 1964 N.D. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-north-dakota-health-council-department-of-health-nd-1964.