Health Services v. HARFORD MEM. HOSP.

459 A.2d 192, 296 Md. 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 25, 1983
Docket[No. 65, September Term, 1982.]
StatusPublished

This text of 459 A.2d 192 (Health Services v. HARFORD MEM. HOSP.) 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
Health Services v. HARFORD MEM. HOSP., 459 A.2d 192, 296 Md. 17 (Md. 1983).

Opinion

296 Md. 17 (1983)
459 A.2d 192

HEALTH SERVICES COST REVIEW COMMISSION
v.
HARFORD MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

[No. 65, September Term, 1982.]

Court of Appeals of Maryland.

Decided April 25, 1983.

The cause was argued before SMITH, ELDRIDGE, COLE, DAVIDSON, RODOWSKY and COUCH, JJ., and W. ALBERT MENCHINE, Associate Judge of the Court of Special Appeals (retired), specially assigned.

Jay E. Levy, Assistant Attorney General, with whom were *18 Stephen H. Sachs, Attorney General, and Stanley Lustman, Assistant Attorney General, on the brief, for appellant.

N. Natalie McSherry, with whom were Whiteford, Taylor, Preston, Trimble & Johnston on the brief, for appellee.

COUCH, J., delivered the opinion of the Court. ELDRIDGE and DAVIDSON, JJ., concur and filed a concurring opinion at page 26 infra.

For the third time since 1978,[1] we are here concerned with a question regarding whether the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission[2] (the Commission) is empowered to review a hospital's application for a rate increase for certain medical specialties[3] furnished to patients.

The factual backdrop for this controversy is not in dispute. Suffice it to say that in June, 1981, the Executive Director of the Harford Memorial Hospital (Hospital) formally requested the Commission's approval of a temporary rate increase of its previously approved hospital rates to reflect the inclusion of the professional fees to its radiologists. Subsequently, the Commission staff found, in pertinent part:

"1) The current radiologists bill patients directly for services and their contract expires June 30, 1981.
2) The Hospital has signed a new contract with a different radiologist effective July 1, 1981. This new contract, in the staff's opinion, and in the opinion of the Commission's attorney, establishes a contractual arrangement whereby the Hospital acts as billing agent to *19 the physician rather than an employee relationship.
3) ...
4) Per the decision in the court proceeding known as Holy Cross III, the Commission lacks the jurisdiction to regulate these physicians."

Furthermore, the Commission staff recommended dismissal of the application "[s]ince the Commission lacks the authority to regulate the fees of the radiologists...."

Thereafter, on July 1, 1981, at a public meeting, the Commission adopted the staff recommendation and issued an order nisi denying the rate application "for the reasons stated in the Staff Report and Recommendation...." Curiously, the Commission also provided "the Commission will allow the hospital to charge for the professional component of Radiology as a physician service in accordance with proposed regulation 10.37.03.06." Being dissatisfied with this result, the Hospital noted an appeal to the Circuit Court for Harford County. Judge Albert P. Close concluded that the matter was within the authority of Commission review and thus remanded the case to the Commission for such review. In his memorandum opinion, Judge Close stated in pertinent part:

"In Holy Cross III [290 Md. 508, 431 A.2d 641 (1981)], and Holy Cross I, 283 Md. 677 [393 A.2d 181] (1981), the Court of Appeals has clearly enunciated the principle that where the charges of specialists are a part of the total costs of the hospital which means the hospital's expenditures or outlays of money in connection with the operation of the hospital, the Health Services Cost Review Commission is empowered to review and set charges by specialists. In Holy Cross, the fees charged by the specialists were placed on hospital accounts and billed by the hospital in such amounts to the patients. In this instance the Court held, and rightly so, that the fees charged were not a part of the total costs of the hospital.
*20 In the instant case, the Hospital has agreed to an annual guaranteed remuneration to the radiologist and would bill patients and third-party payors for radiologist services on a proposed unit value for various procedures, without regard to its ability to recover payment from patients and third-party payor. Such an arrangement does bring the radiologist's compensation based upon relative unit values directly within the total costs of the Hospital and thus within the authority of Commission Review, as provided by the statute."

An appeal was noted by the Commission to the Court of Special Appeals. Subsequently, prior to argument before that court, the Commission petitioned us for a writ of certiorari, which we granted.

Central to (and dispositive of) the question now before us is whether the Commission's reliance on our decisions in Holy Cross Hospital v. Health Services, 283 Md. 677, 393 A.2d 181 (1978) (Holy Cross I) and Health Services v. Holy Cross Hospital, 290 Md. 508, 431 A.2d 641 (1981) (Holy Cross III) was misplaced. Because of the factual differences that exist between the arrangements in Holy Cross I and the present case, we believe that reliance to have been misplaced. We explain.

In Holy Cross I, Judge Smith set forth the arrangement the hospital had with certain physicians practicing their specialties of pathology and radiology as follows:

"The doctors are members of the medical staff of the Hospital, just as numerous other physicians are members of such staff being assigned to the appropriate clinical department such as general medicine, surgery and the like, according to their respective specialties. For a number of years physicians in their categories conducted their own billing and collection operations, completely independent of the Hospital. This procedure was changed in 1972. At the times pertinent to this *21 proceeding each of the physicians had a contract with the Hospital by which it was to supply him with suitable space and certain equipment and supplies. Each of them was to act as the director of his respective department in the Hospital and to provide services to patients within those specialties. The Hospital director testified that the prior separate billing system resulted in numerous complaints from patients who, after paying the Hospital's bill, were chagrined to receive yet another bill from a physician who had performed a special service. As a result, the system was changed so that the Hospital billed for those specialties. Each month the Hospital remits to the respective physicians an amount equal to the gross billings on their behalf for the previous month, less 15% `retain[ed] to compensate it for bad debts and as reimbursement for the cost of administering' the contracts with the physicians. Each of the physicians is obligated to provide services without charge to any individual `determine[d] to be medically indigent, non-pay or part-pay....'" 283 Md. at 681-82, 393 A.2d at 183-84.

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