IN RE CERTIFICATE OF NEED APPLICATION FOR THE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF SALEM COUNTY (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 2, 2020
DocketA-2571-18T1
StatusPublished

This text of IN RE CERTIFICATE OF NEED APPLICATION FOR THE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF SALEM COUNTY (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH) (IN RE CERTIFICATE OF NEED APPLICATION FOR THE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF SALEM COUNTY (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IN RE CERTIFICATE OF NEED APPLICATION FOR THE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF SALEM COUNTY (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH), (N.J. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-2571-18T1

IN RE CERTIFICATE OF APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION NEED APPLICATION FOR July 2, 2020 THE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF SALEM COUNTY. APPELLATE DIVISION _________________________

Argued February 10, 2020 – Decided July 2, 2020

Before Judges Sabatino, Sumners and Natali.

On appeal from the New Jersey Department of Health, Docket No. FR 18-0503-17-01.

Eric S. Aronson argued the cause for intervenor- appellants Carneys Point Rehabilitation & Nursing Center and Golden Rehabilitation & Nursing Center (Greenberg Traurig, LLP, attorneys; Eric S. Aronson and Matthew F. Bruno, on the briefs).

Patrick Jhoo, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent Department of Health (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Patrick Jhoo, on the brief).

Steven D. Gorelick argued the cause for respondent Salem County Hospital Corp. (Garfunkel Wild, PC, attorneys, join in the brief of respondent Department of Health).

Barry J. Muller argued the cause for amicus curiae Health Care Association of New Jersey (Fox Rothschild LLP, attorneys; Jonathan D. Weiner, of counsel and on the brief; Maureen E. Kerns and A. William Henkel, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

NATALI, J.A.D.

Carneys Point Rehabilitation & Nursing Center (Carneys) and Golden

Rehabilitation & Nursing Center (Golden) (collectively, intervenors) appeal a

final decision of the Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Health

(the Commissioner) that granted Salem County Hospital Corporation's (SCHC)

application for a certificate of need (CN) to transfer ownership of the

Memorial Hospital of Salem County (Salem Hospital) to SCHC. In the context

of that approval, the Commissioner also permitted SCHC to establish thirty

long-term care (LTC) beds and twenty-six adult acute care psychiatric beds at

the hospital.

We conclude that, despite the general deference owed to administrative

agencies on appeal, the Commissioner failed to apply the relevant statutory

factors to determine that there was a need for LTC beds in Salem County and

he improperly awarded those beds without issuing a call notice in the New

Jersey Register inviting competing applications. Further, even if the

Commissioner's final decision can be interpreted as having determined a need

for LTC beds in the area, the record contained insufficient support for such a

finding. We also conclude that the Commissioner was required to conduct an

A-2571-18T1 2 independent analysis of the actual need for a proposed service regardless of

whether the transaction has an otherwise meritorious purpose, such as to

support a hospital's financial viability. We agree, however, with the

Commissioner's approval of the open adult acute care psychiatric beds to

SCHC consistent with an unimplemented CN. Accordingly, we affirm in part

and vacate and remand in part.

I.

Salem Hospital is a licensed general acute care hospital 1 located in

Salem. It was formerly owned and operated by Salem Hospital Corporation,

"an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of . . . Community Health Systems, Inc.

(CHS)." While owned by CHS, the hospital was licensed to provide a bed

capacity of 114 medical and surgical beds, as well as twelve adult Intensive

Care Unit/Critical Care Unit beds, totaling 126 beds.

In May 2017, the Commissioner approved a CN to transfer ownership of

Salem Hospital from CHS to Prime Healthcare Foundation-Salem Hospital,

LLC (Prime) for $15 million. In support of his decision, the Commissioner

noted Salem Hospital's "sustained operating losses and reduction in patient

1 N.J.A.C. 8:33-1.3 defines "[g]eneral hospital" as "a hospital which maintains and operates organized facilities and services as approved by the Department for the diagnosis, treatment or care of persons suffering from acute illness, injury or deformity . . . ."

A-2571-18T1 3 volume for several years" and that "the only option [besides] the transfer of

ownership of Salem Hospital is the closure of the Hospital . . . ." Prime,

however, cancelled the agreement and the transfer of ownership never

occurred.

In addition, on November 17, 2017, the Commissioner approved a CN

application by CHS which permitted it to implement twenty-six "open adult

acute care psychiatric beds" at Salem Hospital. That CN, however, was never

implemented.

On May 1, 2018, SCHC filed a CN application to transfer ownership of

Salem Hospital. SCHC noted in its application that it sought to modify the

licensed bed capacity at Salem Hospital to implement the November 17, 2017

award of twenty-six "[o]pen [a]dult [a]cute [p]sychiatric" beds. Further, as

noted, SCHC sought to establish thirty LTC beds at the hospital. The

Commissioner, however, did not issue a call notice regarding the need for LTC

A-2571-18T1 4 beds in the area. 2 In conjunction with its request to add the LTC beds, SCHC

also sought to reduce the number of medical/surgical beds from 114 to 75. 3

In support of its request for the thirty LTC beds, SCHC stated it sought

"to meet the demand for post-acute services and to enhance the continuity of

services at the current location." It contended that there was a "minimal

availability of [LTC] services in the immediate area of [Salem] Hospital," and

that the additional beds would "represent[] an addition of only 5.8% of

capacity in the Salem County service area and will have minimal impact on

existing providers." It also stated that the closest facility offering [LTC]

services was "located more than [ten] miles from [Salem] Hospital."

Further, SCHC noted that because the application was "limited to a

[t]ransfer of [o]wnership, there [would] be no reduction in competition," an d

that "any decrease in volume on any one provider will be minimal, at best."

SCHC prepared a Market Share Data report and concluded that "since this

2 Pursuant to N.J.A.C.8:33-4.1(a), "[t]he Commissioner shall publish in the New Jersey Register . . . an anticipated schedule for receipt of [CN] applications subject to full review procedures," otherwise known as a call notice, in order to "invite [CN] applications" for a particular service in a given area. 3 SCHC's CN application provides that it would reduce the amount of medical/surgical beds to [sixty-five]. In SCHC's responses to completeness questions from the Department, however, it clarified that "all references to [sixty-five] medical/surgical beds were intended to be [seventy-five]."

A-2571-18T1 5 application is limited to a [t]ransfer of [o]wnership, there will be no reduction

in competition as a result of the project." That report included no analysis

regarding any effect on providers in the service area specifically relating to

SCHC's proposed increase in LTC beds. With regard to alternatives to the

project, SCHC noted in its application that its only available alternative would

be "the closure of [Salem] Hospital."

On November 8, 2018, the Department held a public hearing on SCHC's

application. It considered written testimony on behalf of Carneys, Golden, and

another facility objecting to approval of the portion of the application that

requested the establishment of LTC beds. Those facilities argued that

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IN RE CERTIFICATE OF NEED APPLICATION FOR THE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF SALEM COUNTY (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-certificate-of-need-application-for-the-memorial-hospital-of-salem-njsuperctappdiv-2020.