Kenley v. NEWPORT NEWS GENERAL
This text of 314 S.E.2d 52 (Kenley v. NEWPORT NEWS GENERAL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
James B. KENLEY, etc.
v.
NEWPORT NEWS GENERAL & NON-SECTARIAN HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION, INC.
Supreme Court of Virginia.
*53 Robert T. Adams, Asst. Atty. Gen. (Gerald L. Baliles, Atty. Gen., on briefs), for appellant.
Phillips M. Dowding, Newport News, for appellee.
Before CARRICO, C.J., and COCHRAN, POFF, COMPTON, STEPHENSON, RUSSELL and THOMAS, JJ.
COCHRAN, Justice.
Newport News General & Non-Sectarian Hospital Association, Inc. (owner and operator of Riverside Hospital and herein referred to as the Hospital or Riverside), filed in the trial court a motion for declaratory judgment against James B. Kenley, M.D., State Health Commissioner. The Hospital sought a declaration that it did not have to obtain a certificate of public need under Code §§ 32.1-93 to -102[1] to operate a program of open heart surgery.
The Commissioner filed a demurrer on the ground that the Hospital had not alleged compliance with either the Administrative Process Act (APA), Code §§ 9-6.-14:1 to :20, or Part Two A of the Rules relating to timely appeals. After overruling the demurrer, the trial court conducted an ore tenus hearing on the merits and, at the conclusion of the hearing, ruled orally in favor of the Hospital. By final order entered January 26, 1981, the court declared, over the Commissioner's objection, that the Hospital was not required to comply with Code §§ 32.1-93 to -102, or any rules or regulations of the State Board of Health, as a condition precedent to the maintenance and operation of a "complete open heart surgery program" at its facility. On appeal, the Commissioner contends that the trial court erred in overruling his demurrer and in ruling in favor of the Hospital on the merits.
This controversy is the outgrowth of correspondence originating with a letter to Riverside Hospital dated November 3, 1977, from P.M. Boynton, Executive Director of Eastern Virginia Health Systems Agency, Inc. (EVHSA).[2] In his letter *54 Boynton noted the small number of open heart surgery operations performed at Riverside in 1976, suggested a reevaluation of the need for the program, and requested pertinent information. By letter of November 7, 1977, Riverside reported that it had discontinued its program of open heart surgery in September, 1976, because of lack of anesthesia "coverage," but that it had recently employed an anesthesiologist and therefore was reactivating the program. Boynton replied that under applicable Federal regulations, services not offered within the preceding twelve months were classified as "new institutional services" for which a certificate of public need would probably be required. Boynton sent a copy of this letter to the Commissioner requesting his "advice."
By letter dated December 27, 1977, the Commissioner advised Boynton as follows:
This is in reference to your letter of November 14 and your followup letter of November 30 relative to re-instituting the open heart surgery service at Riverside Hospital. Based upon the advice provided by our legal counsel, who has researched this matter, it has been determined that if any services [sic] not provided by a hospital during its previous 12 months of operation is re-instituted, it is considered to be a new service and as such will require a Certificate of Public Need prior to implementation.[3]
I hope this clarifies the matter. By copy of this letter I am informing Mr. St. Clair, Administrator of Riverside Hospital, of this finding.
On April 17, 1978, a Riverside representative wrote to Boynton that Riverside was in error when it previously reported that it had discontinued its program of open heart surgery. In response to a request from Boynton, Riverside furnished additional information about its program, but EVHSA adhered to its position that a certificate of public need was required. There was a difference of opinion as to the correct definition of "open heart surgery," Riverside contending that such surgery required the mere availability of a heart-lung bypass pump, EVHSA believing that the pump must actually be used during the operation.
Following this correspondence with Boynton, Riverside representatives met with the Commissioner, presented information about their program, and by letter dated October 16, 1978, asked him to reconsider the position he had taken in his letter of December 27, 1977. By letter to Riverside dated November 21, 1978, the Commissioner noted that during the calendar year 1977 and the year 1978 to date Riverside had a limited cardiac surgery program consisting of pacemaker insertions, pulse generator changes, insertion of a vena cava umbrella, and pericardiectomies, but did not perform open heart surgery. Reciting the definition of a new service as one not offered during the preceding twelve months, the Commissioner continued as follows:
From this definition and the data provided, I conclude that:
Riverside Hospital can continue to operate a cardiac surgery program for non-open heart procedures.
Riverside Hospital must obtain a Certificate of Need prior to performing open heart surgery procedures.
Riverside then applied for a certificate of public need. When the application was denied, Riverside appealed, but before completing the appellate process, it initiated this declaratory judgment proceeding.[4] At trial, a surgeon on the staff at Riverside testified that he defined "open heart surgery" as "cardiac surgical procedures with pump assist or pump standby." He said that six pericardiectomies were performed at Riverside between September, 1976, and *55 November, 1977; although the pump was not used during any of these operations, it was available on a standby basis. No such operations with the pump available had been performed since November 11, 1977, the date the pump technician, known as the "perfusionist," left Riverside's employment. The 1979 State Medical Facilities Plan of the State Board of Health, introduced as an exhibit by the Commissioner, defined open heart surgery procedures as "procedures which use a heart-lung by-pass machine to perform the functions of circulation during surgery. (Citation omitted)."
We must first determine whether the Commissioner's letters of December 27, 1977, and November 21, 1978, were "case decisions" under the APA. Code § 9-6.-14:4(D) provides the following definition:
"Case" or "case decision" means any agency proceeding or determination that, under laws or regulations at the time, a named party as a matter of past or present fact, or of threatened or contemplated private action, either is, is not, or may or may not be (i) in violation of such law or regulation or (ii) in compliance with any existing requirement for obtaining or retaining a license or other right or benefit.
The Reviser's Notes to this statute state that the "heart" of a case decision "is a fact determination respecting compliance with law." For example, case decisions are those decisions "of a declaratory nature issued in advance of contemplated private activities" or those "forbidding named parties from acting ... or threatening to act in some way ... forbidden by the basic laws, the regulations, or other applicable law under which the agency is operating." Code § 9-6.14:4, Reviser's Notes D.
In Va. ABC Comm. v. York St. Inn, 220 Va.
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314 S.E.2d 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenley-v-newport-news-general-va-1984.