Catholic Medical Center v. Elliot Hospital

543 A.2d 901, 130 N.H. 448, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 6, 1988
DocketNo. 87-299
StatusPublished

This text of 543 A.2d 901 (Catholic Medical Center v. Elliot Hospital) 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
Catholic Medical Center v. Elliot Hospital, 543 A.2d 901, 130 N.H. 448, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 43 (N.H. 1988).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

The defendant, Elliot Hospital (Elliot), filed this interlocutory appeal of a ruling by the Superior Court (McHugh, J.). The court concluded that Elliot had violated RSA 151-C:4, I, by offering, on an outpatient basis, left heart catheterization (LHC) services without first obtaining a certificate of need (CON) from the health services planning and review board (the board). Elliot contests the portion of the trial court’s decree which concluded that RSA chapter 151-C requires the providers of all new institutional health services, whether offered on an inpatient or an outpatient basis, to secure CON’s prior to furnishing the new services. We conclude that RSA chapter 151-C does not require Elliot to obtain a CON in order to continue performing LHC procedures on an [449]*449outpatient basis, and we therefore reverse the decision of the trial court and remand.

The action from which this appeal arises commenced in July, 1985, when the plaintiff Catholic Medical Center (CMC) filed a complaint with the board which asserted that Elliot was acquiring equipment with which to perform LHC’s without having first filed an application for a CON. Elliot responded that pursuant to a proposed order prepared by CMC and Elliot, and affirmed by this court in 1982, and to the equipment replacement provisions of RSA chapter 151-C, it possessed a legal right to purchase the equipment necessary to perform LHC’s. See RSA 151-C:5, 11(a) and (d). On November 22, 1985, the board ruled that Elliot was correct in its interpretation of the applicable statutes and, therefore, that Elliot did not need an additional CON in order to acquire the catheterization equipment.

In October, 1986, counsel for CMC learned that an LHC had been performed, at the Elliot Hospital, on a 54-year-old woman. CMC petitioned the board for injunctive relief to prevent Elliot from offering LHC services. Elliot responded to the board that its LHC program was exempt from the CON requirement of RSA chapter 151-C because it was offered exclusively on an outpatient basis. At an October 31 hearing concerning CMC’s petition, the board affirmed its prior decision that Elliot, in offering outpatient LHC services without having first obtained a CON, was not violating RSA chapter 151-C. The board also declined to act on CMC’s request that the board urge the office of the attorney general to seek injunctive relief against Elliot pursuant to RSA 151-C:14,1(d). In declining to so act, the board left it to the parties to litigate their dispute.

In December, 1986, CMC and Portsmouth Hospital (Portsmouth) jointly petitioned the court to enjoin Elliot from performing outpatient LHC procedures without benefit of a CON. Elliot responded by filing its own petition, which requested the court to enjoin CMC’s alleged performance of unauthorized institutional health services; namely, open heart surgery and angioplasty. The court advised the parties to agree to present their dispute, in the first instance, to the board, as RSA chapter 151-C contemplates. See RSA 151-C:9, :10. Since the parties were unable to agree on that course of action, the court decided to hear their dispute. The court found Elliot in violation of the CON requirement contained in RSA 151-C:4, I. However, it declined to grant CMC’s and Portsmouth’s request for injunctive relief pending the board’s review of and ruling on Elliot’s request for standards concerning [450]*450the performance of LHC procedures. This interlocutory appeal by Elliot followed.

The issue which this case presents is whether the trial court erred in ruling that RSA chapter 151-C requires Elliot to obtain a CON prior to offering LHC services, even if Elliot offers those services on an outpatient basis only and does not exceed the one-million dollar construction or the four-hundred-thousand dollar equipment acquisition limitations of RSA 151-C:5, II in order to make the service available.

CMC and Portsmouth argue, preliminarily, that Elliot failed to raise in a timely fashion at trial the claim which it now makes that the board interpreted RSA chapter 151-C to exempt outpatient services from the CON requirement. We disagree. Elliot’s trial brief specifically argued that “the State Board ha[s] recognized that outpatient services are exempt from 151-C . . . .” In support of this argument, the trial brief refers to a letter from the board to Ms. Martha Marsh, Vice President of Elliot Hospital, dated May 8, 1986. That letter stated that the board approved the hospital’s decision to replace its existing catheterization equipment, but did not approve of the hospital’s performing new inpatient services, including LHC’s, governed by RSA 151-C:5, 11(c). These references in Elliot’s trial brief are sufficient to have raised at trial the issue of whether or not the board interpreted RSA chapter 151-C to exempt outpatient procedures from the CON requirement.

RSA 151-C:4, I, requires that a CON be obtained prior to the offering of new institutional health service. The trial court concluded that the performance of LHC’s at the Elliot Hospital was the offering of a “new institutional health service,” within the meaning of RSA chapter 151-C, because, prior to October, 1986, LHC’s were performed only sporadically or as a result of emergency treatment, not as a part of a regular program of service. As a “new institutional health service,” the court determined, an LHC cannot be performed at Elliot’s facility on either an inpatient or an outpatient basis unless and until Elliot obtains a CON from the board.

Elliot bases its claim of error, in part, upon the ground that LHC’s are not a “new institutional health service,” as they have been performed at Elliot’s facility since the late 1970’s. Dr. Gerald Angoff, a cardiologist on the staffs of both Elliot and CMC, testified at trial that Elliot has maintained a catheterization laboratory adjacent to its intensive care unit since at least 1978, when he began practicing medicine in Manchester.

[451]*451In 1982, Elliot sought and obtained from the board a CON in order to be able to acquire, as part of its major renovation program, upgraded catheterization laboratory equipment which would give Elliot the same capacity to perform catheterizations as existed at CMC. Indeed, this Court in 1982 affirmed an order which issued the CON to Elliot. That CON does not limit Elliot regarding the improvement of its catheterization laboratory, nor does it prevent Elliot from developing a laboratory which is substantially identical to that which exists at CMC.

Dr. Michael J. Hearne of Manchester, an invasive cardiologist on the staffs of both Elliot and CMC, testified that he moved to Manchester in 1985 because he was recruited by a potential partner specifically to perform invasive cardiovascular procedures and that he was informed by his prospective partner that catheterization laboratories would be available to him at both Elliot and CMC.

Dr. John Beatty Hunter, also a Manchester cardiologist, testified that prior to October, 1986, Elliot’s capacity to perform LHC’s was limited because its facility lacked state-of-the-art equipment. For example, cine coronary angiography was not possible; hence, an LHC could not be performed on a patient over the age of thirty-five. Nonetheless, Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
543 A.2d 901, 130 N.H. 448, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catholic-medical-center-v-elliot-hospital-nh-1988.