Humana of Tennessee v. Tennessee Health Facilities Commission

551 S.W.2d 664, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 524
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 551 S.W.2d 664 (Humana of Tennessee v. Tennessee Health Facilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humana of Tennessee v. Tennessee Health Facilities Commission, 551 S.W.2d 664, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 524 (Tenn. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

HARBISON, Justice.

This case arises under the Tennessee Health Facilities Act of 1973, T.C.A. § 53-5401 et seq. After administrative procedures and hearings provided for in the statutes, the Health Facilities Commission granted a certificate of need to appellee University Medical Center, Inc., authorizing it to construct a sixty-five-bed specialty care hospital in Wilson County, Tennessee.

The application was opposed at all administrative stages by appellant, which owns and operates a 137-bed general care hospital in Wilson County. Appellant sought review of the final order of the Commission in the chancery court. After considering the records of the administrative hearings and additional evidence filed in court, the Chancellor affirmed the action of the Commission. Appellant seeks further review here.

Although the record reveals some procedural irregularities, no error sufficiently material or prejudicial to warrant reversal has been shown. Accordingly we affirm the judgment of the Chancellor.

Before discussing the specific assignments of error, we think it appropriate to summarize the procedural background.

I. History of the Litigation

In January 1975 University Medical Center, Inc., a nonprofit corporation, filed its application with the Tennessee Health Facilities Commission, seeking permission to build a sixty-five bed hospital in Wilson County. As provided by T.C.A. § 53-5412, the Commission referred the application to an area-wide health planning agency, the Mid-Cumberland Comprehensive Health Planning Council. After a public hearing held on February 27, 1975, that agency recommended that the certificate be granted. Its recommendation was forwarded to the State Health Planning Agency for review, pursuant to T.C.A. § 53-5413, and the latter recommended approval by the Commission.

On March 25, 1975 the Health Facilities Commission considered the application in a review-and-comment session. At that time the application failed to receive six affirmative votes as required by T.C.A. § 53-5407. Only eight members of the Commission were in attendance. Of these, four voted for the application, two against, and two members abstained.

Pursuant to T.C.A. § 53-5415, the applicant was granted a public hearing before the Commission. This was held on May 29, 1975, at which time a number of witnesses testified. Following that hearing, the Commission approved the application by a vote of nine to one.

Appellant sought review of the decision of the Commission by petition for certiorari filed in the chancery court at Nashville on July 23, 1975. This was after the effective date of the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act, T.C.A. § 4-507 et seq., but the administrative hearings had been held before July 1, 1975, when most of the provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act went into effect.

Therefore, in the chancery court, the matter was treated as a certiorari proceeding, the Chancellor at one point holding that review would be had as under a “common law” writ of certiorari, T.C.A. § 27-801 et seq. Nevertheless, after the ease had reached the chancery court, appellant took fifteen depositions, comprising nearly four hundred pages of testimony, calling as witnesses all but one member of the Health Facilities Commission, together with personnel on the staff of the Commission and an official of the Mid-Cumberland Comprehensive Health Planning Council.

These depositions were very wide ranging in scope, involving not only the procedures used before the respective agencies, but also inquiries of the various Commission members as to the reasons for their votes and the evidence they considered.

*667 The Chancellor apparently reviewed all of these depositions, together with the records made before the administrative agencies, and after considering the numerous assignments of error made before him by appellant, he affirmed the action of the Health Facilities Commission in granting the application.

Appellant appealed to the Court of Appeals as under a certiorari proceeding, but after the cause reached that Court, appellant for the first time invoked the provisions of the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act and sought to have the cause transferred here pursuant to T.C.A. § 4-524. The Court of Appeals granted the motion, and we have concluded to allow the request of appellant to have the cause reviewed in this Court under the provisions of that Act.

The matter is not free from uncertainty, and it is possible that the case should be treated as a certiorari proceeding, as it began. This, however, might involve a remand to the Court of Appeals. More than two years have already been consumed in administrative and judicial proceedings since the filing of the original application for a certificate. Therefore, we believe it appropriate to dispose of the case here, despite its unusual procedural history.

II. Judicial Review Under the Administrative Procedures Act

In the recent case of Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County v. Shacklett, released for publication at Nashville on January 24, 1977, the Court had occasion to consider the provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act governing judicial review, both in the chancery court and on appeal, T.C.A. §§ 4-523, 524.

There, it was noted that the provisions of T.C.A. § 4-523(h) provide for a limited review in the chancery court, rather than a de novo review upon the record. New evidence may be received in that court only in cases “of alleged irregularities in procedure before the agency, not shown in the record . . . .” T.C.A. § 4-523(g). Otherwise, review is confined to the record made before the administrative agency.

There are provisions for remand to the agency for further proceedings. On the record before it, however, the court may reverse or modify the decision of the agency only if it finds that the agency findings, inferences, conclusions or decisions are:

“(1) in violation of constitutional or statutory provisions;
(2) in excess of the statutory authority of the agency;
(3) made upon unlawful procedure;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
551 S.W.2d 664, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humana-of-tennessee-v-tennessee-health-facilities-commission-tenn-1977.