Catonsville Nursing Home, Inc. v. Loveman

709 A.2d 749, 349 Md. 560, 1998 Md. LEXIS 314
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 15, 1998
Docket100, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 709 A.2d 749 (Catonsville Nursing Home, Inc. v. Loveman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catonsville Nursing Home, Inc. v. Loveman, 709 A.2d 749, 349 Md. 560, 1998 Md. LEXIS 314 (Md. 1998).

Opinion

CATHELL, Judge.

Catonsville Nursing Home and Maryland Health Resources Planning Commission, appellants, appeal from a reversal by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County of the Maryland Health Resources Planning Commission’s decision with respect to the allocation of nursing home “bed rights” as between Catonsville Nursing Home and its landlord, Joseph Loveman. Finding in favor of Aurelia Loveman, Guardian for the Estate of Joseph Loveman, appellee, the circuit court held that an exemption provision for health care projects in existence prior to the 1978 enactment of a comprehensive health planning statute was a right that attached to and ran with the land. Accordingly, the circuit court found that the bed rights in dispute belonged to appellee.

We shall reverse the judgment of the circuit court and remand with direction that it affirm the decision of the Maryland Health Resources Planning Commission.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Catonsville Nursing Home (CNH) and the Maryland Health Resources Planning Commission (Commission) appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County reversing an earlier Commission decision. The Commission had determined that CNH, as the operator and licensee of nursing home services, as opposed to Loveman, as the owner *564 of the building housing the nursing home operation and CNH’s landlord, held the bed rights in question and, accordingly, was the entity with authority to seek Commission approval affecting those bed rights.

This case has a lengthy procedural history and factual background, which were described in a previous appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. Loveman v. Catonsville Nursing Home, 114 Md.App. 603, 691 A.2d 693 (1996). There that court stated:

In 1960, Mr. Loveman opened a 98-bed comprehensive care facility at 333 Harlem Lane, in Baltimore County____ [T]he home was operated through a corporation known as Shangri-La Nursing Center, Inc., in which Loveman owned all the stock.... [H]e was the licensee and he ran the home as an owner-operated facility. In 1978, the Legislature enacted a comprehensive health planning law that, among other things, created a health planning and development agency and provided that a health care facility may not be established, relocated, or undergo a change in bed capacity without a certificate of need (CON) issued by that agency. The law exempted from that requirement ... a health care facility, such as that operated by Mr. Loveman, that was in operation before June 1, 1978. That exemption underlies the instant dispute.
Mr. Loveman operated the home through Shangri-La until 1981, when, as a consequence of his being convicted of medicaid fraud, he was required to surrender his nursing home administrator’s license and refrain from participation in the management or operation of a nursing home in Maryland. [In response to that restriction, Loveman leased] the real property and ... personalty used in the operation to one Dexter Case. Case, in turn, assigned his rights to Joseph Kaplan and Benjamin Ashman, who proceeded to operate the home under the name Inglenook Nursing and Convalescent Center [Inglenook]. Both the lease and the assignment were contingent on Kaplan and Ashman obtaining a license to operate the center. That license was issued in September, 1981. [In order to qualify *565 for that license, Inglenook was issued its own certificate of need.]
In 1987, the Center was acquired by Evergreen Health Group, Inc. In December, 1987, Loveman and Evergreen entered into a new four-year lease for the facility, with a six-year renewal option and an option to purchase. HRPC (the successor agency to the Health Planning and Development Agency) concluded that, as there would be no change in services or bed capacity, the acquisition was exempt from CON review. 1 Evergreen eventually exercised the option to renew. Although it is not clear from the record before us, we assume that Evergreen obtained either a new license to operate the home or an approved assignment of the license that had been issued to Kaplan and Ashman.
In November, 1990, Evergreen assigned its lease to appellee, Catonsville Nursing Home, Inc. (CNH). Included in the assignment was Evergreen’s nursing home license, although the assignment was made expressly contingent on (1) approval by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene of the transfer of the license, and (2) a determination by HRPC that a CON was not required to complete the transaction. As in 1987, the Commission, assured that there would be no change in services or bed capacity, determined that the acquisition was exempt from CON review.
... Although not clearly articulated in the briefs or the papers filed below, it is evident that what appellant fears is that, near or upon expiration of the current lease, CNH will seek permission from HRPC to transfer the beds to another location, that the Commission may grant that request by issuing a CON, and that Loveman will then be left in the position of being unable to lease his property to another *566 licensee unless that licensee obtains a new CON to replace the bed capacity that was moved.[ 2 ]

114 Md.App. at 605-07, 691 A.2d at 694-95 (footnote omitted).

On remand from the Court of Special Appeals, the Commission, in its Final Decision on Petition for Declaratory Relief, 3 framed the issue as “which entity—the licensee or the owner of the bricks and mortar of a nursing home—has the right to request Commission approvals regarding that nursing home[?]” The Commission resolved the issue by determining “that CNH as the lessee and operator of the facility—rather than Loveman as the owner of the bricks and mortar—has the right to seek Commission approvals affecting the comprehensive care facility beds currently being operated as Catonsville Community Convalescent Center.” Loveman argued to the Commission, to the circuit court, and now to this Court, that the bed rights in question, which are derived from the right to operate a health care project as provided in a CON or exemption, run with the land because the physical facility itself was exempted from obtaining a CON when the new statutory scheme was enacted by Chapter 911 of the Maryland Session Laws of 1978.

The circuit court agreed with Loveman and disagreed with the Commission’s finding that the CON and its concomitant bed rights belonged to CNH, stating in part:

When the health planning statute was enacted in 1978 and Shangri-La was permitted by the legislature to continue to *567 operate beds without a showing of need, that right attached to the land. The ... right so created is analogous to the non-conforming use granted to a gasoline station operating in a residential area before zoning laws....
... [W]hen Loveman surrendered his license to operate a nursing home, only his individual fitness to operate the beds was being impugned.

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Bluebook (online)
709 A.2d 749, 349 Md. 560, 1998 Md. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catonsville-nursing-home-inc-v-loveman-md-1998.