Presbyterian Hospital North v. Texas Health Facilities Commission

664 S.W.2d 391, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 5399
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1983
Docket13840
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 664 S.W.2d 391 (Presbyterian Hospital North v. Texas Health Facilities Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Presbyterian Hospital North v. Texas Health Facilities Commission, 664 S.W.2d 391, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 5399 (Tex. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

Presbyterian Hospital North and Presbyterian Medical Center of Dallas, appellants, are non-profit corporations organized and existing under the laws of the State of Texas. They applied jointly to the Texas Health Facilities Commission for a certificate of need that would authorize their construction and operation of a new acute-care general hospital in southwest Collin County, Texas. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4418h, Texas Health Planning and Development Act, §§ 3.01-3.15 (1976 and Supp. 1982). The Commission consolidated appellants’ application with those of five other applicants who had requested similar authority to build and operate hospitals in the same vicinity. 1 After a contested-case *394 hearing, the Commission issued final orders concurrently denying appellants’ application and granting certificates of need to each of the other applicants. Appellants sued in a district court of Travis County for judicial review of the Commission’s final order denying their application. They now appeal to this Court from a district court judgment that affirms the agency order. 2 Tex.Rev. Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 6252-13a, Texas Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (APTRA), §§ 19, 20 (Supp.1982). We will reverse the judgment of the district court and direct that the cause be remanded to the Commission for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

APPELLANTS’ POINT OF ERROR

The Commission’s final order contains findings of fact expressed in statutory language, that is, findings of ultimate fact or conclusions of law. The denial of appellants’ application rests upon these findings of ultimate fact or conclusions of law. In purported compliance with APTRA § 16(b), the final order also sets out findings of “underlying fact” to “support” the findings of fact expressed in statutory language. In appellants’ view, the findings of underlying fact are not sufficient to support the findings of fact expressed in statutory language, that is, the agency’s findings of ultimate fact or conclusions of law. Based upon this asserted insufficiency, appellants charge that the final order is “arbitrary or capricious” and that it requires reversal and remand to the agency because their “substantial rights” have been “prejudiced.” APTRA § 19(e)(6). Because we agree with appellants’ contentions in this regard, we need not address their remaining points of error.

THE APPLICABLE REGULATORY STATUTE AND AGENCY. RULES

The applicable statutory provisions, as they existed at the time of the Commission’s final order, required that appellants obtain from the agency, before constructing *395 the proposed hospital, a certificate of need that authorized the work. Texas Health Planning and Development Act, supra, §§ 1.03(4), (7), (9), (15), 3.01(a)(2), 3.12. This statute is administered by the Commission and requires the agency to promulgate the criteria by which it shall determine whether to issue such certificates of need. Id., § 3.10(a). While the act does not foreclose the agency’s promulgation of other or more specific criteria, the act does specify certain minimum criteria that the Commission must establish and apply in making its decision to issue or deny a certificate of need. Id., § 3.10(b).

At the times material to the present case, the Commission had promulgated agency rules that established the following criteria among others:

[The proposed] project must be necessary to meet the health care requirements of the community or population to be served.
[T]he medical service area for the project must contain sufficient current and future population to require the additional facility.
[T]he project’s [sic] approach to providing health care services should be less costly, or more effective or more appropriate than other methods which are available, or which have been approved to be developed.
When a project compares unfavorably with one or more of the criteria against which it is properly measured, the application for a certificate of need may be denied.

Texas Health Facilities Comm., Rules 315.-19.01.010, .020, .030, .050, 3 Tex.Reg. 1362-64 (1978), as amended 4 Tex.Reg. 2949 (1979); now codified as amended at 25 Tex. Admin.Code § 513.1-.21.

In the present case, the Commission denied appellants’ application for a certificate of need because the agency determined that the health facility proposed by them failed to meet each of the foregoing criteria.

THE DECISIONAL PRINCIPLES APPLICABLE ON APPEAL

In our view, the present case is controlled squarely by the principles discussed and applied in our opinion in Charter Medical-Dallas, Inc. v. Texas Health Facilities Commission, 656 S.W.2d 928 (Tex.App.1983, writ pending). The final order now under review, issued by the same administrative agency, is invalid for the same vices identified in Charter Medical — primarily the vice of attempting to make mere summaries of the evidence do service for the findings of “underlying fact” required by the express terms of APTRA § 16(b). We were informed in oral argument, on submission of the present appeal, that the Commission routinely composes its findings of underlying fact as mere summaries of the evidence; and that the agency intentionally does so for the reason that it wishes not to appear “arbitrary” by declaring to be true any particular facts about which there is conflicting evidence. This may or may not be the policy of the agency and the irony is self-evident. In any event, we now review a second appeal where the Commission has merely summarized the evidence in purports ed compliance with the requirements of AP-TRA § 16(b).

More sobering still is appellees’ claim that our decision in Charter Medical was unprecedented and ushered in a “new day” in the judicial review of the final orders of administrative agencies. This is incorrect. The principles discussed and applied in Charter Medical, relative to findings of fact and conclusions of law made by administrative agencies in contested cases, and to the “substantial evidence rule” as a standard of judicial review, are quite literally “horn-book law” and the elementary principles familiar to all students of basic administrative law. 2 Cooper, State Administrative Law at 465-81 (1965); Davis, Administrative Law Text, §§ 16.01-16.10 (1972). These principles have been applied repeatedly in numerous and unvarying decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas, which decisions we have re-emphasized for the interested practitioner by way of a foot *396 note. 3 That these principles are apparently unfamiliar to an important State agency, and that they are attacked at this late date, not on the basis that they are inapplicable *401

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jesse L. Rogers, III v. David Sexton, Warden
Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 2013
Henry v. Low
132 S.W.3d 180 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2004)
Allied Bank Marble Falls v. State Banking Board
739 S.W.2d 73 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
664 S.W.2d 391, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 5399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presbyterian-hospital-north-v-texas-health-facilities-commission-texapp-1983.