NRV Real Estate, LLC v. Virginia Department of Health

659 S.E.2d 527, 51 Va. App. 514, 2008 Va. App. LEXIS 182
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 2008
Docket0904073
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 659 S.E.2d 527 (NRV Real Estate, LLC v. Virginia Department of Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NRV Real Estate, LLC v. Virginia Department of Health, 659 S.E.2d 527, 51 Va. App. 514, 2008 Va. App. LEXIS 182 (Va. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

HALEY, Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

NRV Real Estate, LLC (“NRV”) appeals the order of the Circuit Court of Roanoke County dismissing NRVs appeal from the decision of the Department of Health (“the agency”) to not accept NRV’s application for a Certificate of Public Need (“COPN”) to transfer nursing home beds. The circuit court held the agency lacked statutory authority to permit the transfer. On appeal, NRV argues the agency has such statutory authority, has exercised this power in the past by permitting transfers, and acted arbitrarily and capriciously in this case by disregarding its prior precedent. We agree with NRV and reverse and remand to the circuit court with instructions *520 to remand to the agency with instructions to accept the application and to reconcile its conflicting precedent.

II. FACTS

A succinct summary of relevant statutes is necessary to develop the continuum of facts.

To preclude overdevelopment of medical care facilities, an entity seeking to establish new medical care facilities must file an application for a COPN with the agency and demonstrate a public need for those facilities. Code § 32.1-102.3. After considering twenty statutory criteria, the agency determines if such a need exists, and, if concluding it does, issues a COPN. Id. A nursing home is a medical care facility. Code § 32.1-102.1. 1

The agency may not accept applications for a COPN “for any project which would result in an increase in the number of beds ... in which nursing facility ... services are provided” unless such application is in response to a Request for Applications (“RFA”) issued by the Commissioner of Health for the same. Code § 32.1-102.3:2(A) (emphasis added). No such RFA was outstanding in this cause.

Code § 32.1-102.1 includes in the definition of a “project” requiring a COPN: “5. Introduction into an existing medical facility of any new [here follows a list of specifically defined medical exploratory devices or procedures, and facilities for substance abuse or psychiatric treatment] ... which the facility ... has not provided in the previous 12 months.” (Emphasis added). Thus, the quoted language permits an existing medical facility to cease offering any of the designated services, but return to offering those services without seeking a new COPN, if they do so within twelve months of the cessation. The exception is generally referred to as the twelve *521 month rule. Nursing home services, including supplying nursing home beds, are not one of the services designated in Code § 32.1-102.1.

With this statutory foundation the following constitutes the relevant facts.

By letter dated June 28, 2004, Carilion Giles Memorial Hospital (“Giles Memorial”) advised the agency that effective September 24, 2004, it would cease operations as “an immediate care nursing home.” The letter further noted that nursing home residents had been advised of this cessation and that those “residents and families ... have already begun placement proceeding^] in other nursing homes.” Giles Memorial possessed twenty-one beds that had been certified for Medicaid reimbursement as nursing home beds, and were employed as such.

On September 20, 2004, Giles Memorial entered into an agreement with NRV to relocate the twenty-one nursing home beds from Giles Memorial to the Radford Nursing and Rehabilitation Center (“Radford Nursing”), owned by NRV. In accordance with the agreement, on September 24, 2004, Giles Memorial ceased offering nursing home beds and de-certified the twenty-one beds from Medicaid nursing home reimbursement. Both Giles Memorial and Radford Nursing are in Planning District Four. The twenty-one beds used as nursing home beds were included in Giles Memorial’s COPN as inventory in Planning District Four. 2

On August 1, 2005, NRV filed an application for a COPN seeking approval of the relocation of the twenty-one beds from Giles Memorial to Radford Nursing. By letter dated August 11, 2005, the Director of the Division of Certificate of Public Need replied. Citing Code § 32.1-102.3:2(A), he declined to accept the application “because execution of the proposed project would constitute an addition to the supply of nursing *522 home beds in PD 4” in violation of the statute, since there was no existing RFA for nursing home beds in the Planning District. Further, he wrote:

Although your application seems to imply that Giles Memorial has 21 nursing home beds available to be relocated, Giles Memorial does not now have such beds. Giles Memorial has never had nursing home beds, per se, but it did have 21 hospital beds certified for Medicaid nursing facility (“NF”) reimbursement until September 24, 2004 on which date these NF beds were de-certified pursuant to the hospital’s request. Since September 24, 2004, Giles Memorial has not had any beds that qualify as nursing home beds within the meaning of the statute governing the certificate of public need program.
Since January 1, 2005, Giles Memorial has been licensed for a total of 25 beds, which it identifies as 22 medical/surgical beds and three intensive care unit beds. Therefore, Giles Memorial does not have “nursing home” beds that could be relocated pursuant to a certificate of public need....
... Unless you can show that ... the application ... does not seek to increase the supply of nursing home beds in PD 4, we will return ... the application to you.

Counsel for NRV replied, and by letter dated September 12, 2005, the Director merely reiterated his reliance upon Code § 32.1-102.3:2(A) and declined to receive the application. 3

NVR appealed the Director’s decision to the Circuit Court of Roanoke County. Their petition maintained that their application would not add nursing home beds to PD 4 inventory, that prior agency decisions had applied the twelve-month rule to the relocation of nursing home beds from one medical care facility to another, and that the agency’s departure from those earlier decisions, without notice or explanation, was arbitrary and capricious.

*523 By order entered March 20, 2007, the trial court held: (1) that because nursing homes and nursing home beds were not designated as one of the medical services set forth in paragraph five of the definition of “project” in Code § 32.1-102.1, the twelve-month rule did not apply, and (2) that because the application “seeks to add nursing home beds to the planning district” in the absence of a RFA, the Director properly declined the application based upon Code § 32.1-102.3:2(A). This appeal followed.

III. ANALYSIS

A. Standard of Review

Under well-settled principles, the party appealing an administrative decision bears the burden of demonstrating error. Code § 2.2-4027; Loudoun Hosp. Ctr. v. Stroube,

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Bluebook (online)
659 S.E.2d 527, 51 Va. App. 514, 2008 Va. App. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nrv-real-estate-llc-v-virginia-department-of-health-vactapp-2008.