Grossmont Healthcare Dist. v. SDHA

95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 744, 80 Cal. App. 4th 578
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 2000
DocketD031994, D033461
StatusPublished

This text of 95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 744 (Grossmont Healthcare Dist. v. SDHA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grossmont Healthcare Dist. v. SDHA, 95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 744, 80 Cal. App. 4th 578 (Cal. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

95 Cal.Rptr.2d 744 (2000)
80 Cal.App.4th 578

GROSSMONT HEALTHCARE DISTRICT, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
SAN DIEGO HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION et al., Defendants and Respondents.

D031994, D033461.

Court of Appeal, Fourth District, Division One.

March 30, 2000.
As Modified on Denial of Rehearing April 28, 2000.
Review Granted June 28, 2000.

*746 Steefel, Levitt & Weiss, Stephen S. Mayne, Michael J. Lawson, San Francisco; Law Offices of Jeffrey G. Scott and Jeffrey G. Scott, San Diego, for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Seltzer, Caplan, Wilkins & McMahon, Seltzer, Caplan, McMahon, Vitek, Gerald L. McMahon, J. Scott Scheper; Barnhorst, Schreiner & Goonan, Stephen L. Schreiner and Teresa L. Kubu, San Diego, for Defendants and Respondents.

*745 NARES, J.

This is an action by Grossmont Healthcare District (the District) to recover possession of a publicly owned hospital and related assets that the District leased and transferred in 1991 to two private nonprofit corporations, defendants and respondents San Diego Hospital Association (SDHA) and Grossmont Hospital Corporation (GHC), under three written agreements made under the provisions of Health and Safety Code section 32000 et seq. (The Local Health Care District Law). The District's complaint alleges the agreements are void under Government Code[1] section 1092 because the District's chief executive officer, its general counsel, and all five members of its board of directors had personal financial interests in the agreements in violation of section 1090, one of California's conflict-of-interest statutes. GHC filed a motion for summary judgment, joined by SDHA, on the ground the District's action is time-barred. The District filed a cross-motion for an order summarily adjudicating there is no merit to the statute of limitations defense asserted by GHC and SDHA because it is barred under the "no limitations" rule in Hoadley v. San Francisco (1875) 50 Cal. 265, 1875 WL 1581 (Hoadley) and its progeny (the Hoadley rule), which (as we shall explain, post) provides that no lapse of time, whether asserted by a statute of limitations defense or a laches defense, will prevent the state or any of its subdivisions from reclaiming public trust property illegally transferred to or acquired by a private party.

In consolidated appeals,[2] the District appeals (in appeal No. D031994) from (1) the judgment entered in favor of SDHA and GHC after the court found this action was time-barred and granted the motion for summary judgment filed by GHC and joined by SDHA; (2) the denial of the District's cross-motion for summary adjudication; and (3) the subsequent denial of the District's motion to amend the complaint. The District also appeals (in appeal No. D033461) from (4) the portion of the amended judgment awarding $393,798 in attorney fees and other costs in favor of GHC, and $32,594 in attorney fees and other costs in favor of SDHA.

The principal issue presented is whether the Hoadley rule applies to an action by a public health care district to recover a leasehold interest in a public hospital that the district contractually conveyed to private entities, when the transaction was completed under color of lawful statutory authority (The Local Health Care District Law), but the legal defect that allegedly rendered the transaction void ab initio is an alleged violation of the conflict of interest prohibitions set forth in section 1090.

For reasons we shall discuss, we conclude in this case of first impression that the Hoadley rule applies and bars a limitations defense in such an action as a matter of sound public policy. Accordingly, we reverse the summary judgment and related orders challenged in these consolidated appeals.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. Parties and Players

The District is a local health care district organized and operating under the provisions of The Local Health Care District Law and is a political subdivision of the State of California. The District is the owner of Grossmont Hospital (the hospital), a public 465-bed acute care hospital located in La Mesa, California.

*747 In May 1991, before the lease transaction that is the subject of this action, the members of the District's five-member board of directors (the District's board) were: George Hurst, Adrian Jameson, Curtis Kelly, Basil Maloney, and Robert Muscio. The District's chief executive officer was Michael Erne. The District's legal counsel was John Whitney.

GHC is a private nonprofit corporation formed to operate the hospital. GHC has been operating the hospital under the subject 30-year lease (discussed, post) since May 1991. SDHA, which is also a private nonprofit corporation, is the parent of a multi-hospital health care system in San Diego County.

B. The May 29, 1991, Contracts and Leasehold Interest

On May 29, 1991, the District formally entered into an affiliation with respondent SDHA and leased the hospital to GHC for a term of 30 years. On this date, the District, with the approval of four of its five directors and acting under the authorization of The Local Health Care District Law, entered into the three contracts (hereafter the contracts) that are the subjects of the instant action: (1) an affiliation agreement, which shifted the hospital into the network of private healthcare facilities managed and controlled by SDHA; (2) a lease agreement between the District and GHC, which vested possession of the hospital and its revenues in GHC for 30 years; and (3) a transfer agreement, which gave GHC title to the District's cash and hospital-related intangible assets.

1. Exhibit 7.5 to the Affiliation Agreement: GHC Directors and Officers

Under article 7 of the affiliation agreement, the respective obligations of the District and SDHA to implement that agreement were subject to several specified conditions, including (among others) the condition set forth in section 7.5 of article 7 that "SDHA shall have elected and the District shall have approved, the persons designated in Exhibit 7.5 attached hereto as directors of GHC, and such directors shall have elected the persons designated in Exhibit 7.5 as officers of GHC."

Exhibit 7.5 to the affiliation agreement, titled "[GHC] Board of Directors and Officers," designated 15 named members of the GHC board of directors (GHC's board), including (among others) Michael Erne (the District's then-chief executive officer) and all five members of the District's then-existing board of directors: George Hurst, Adrian Jameson, Curtis Kelly, Basil Maloney, and Robert Muscio. The list of GHC officers set forth in exhibit 7.5 designated Michael Erne as the chief executive officer and assistant secretary of GHC.

2. Exhibit 7.3.2 (GHC Bylaws) to the Affiliation Agreement: Compensation of GHC's Directors and Chief Executive Officer

Section 7.3.2 of the affiliation agreement provided that, "[effective as of the closing date ... [t]he bylaws of GHC shall have been duly adopted in substantially the form attached hereto as Exhibit 7.3.2."

Exhibit 7.3.2 to the affiliation agreement, titled "Bylaws of [GHC]," stated in part in article V ("Board of Directors"), section 5 ("Compensation of Directors"), that all members of GHC's board would be compensated a monthly fee of $500 until May 1, 1996. (Bolding and italics deleted.)

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95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 744, 80 Cal. App. 4th 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grossmont-healthcare-dist-v-sdha-calctapp-2000.