Roberts Health Care v. SHPDA

698 So. 2d 106, 1997 WL 139473
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 28, 1997
Docket1951684
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 698 So. 2d 106 (Roberts Health Care v. SHPDA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts Health Care v. SHPDA, 698 So. 2d 106, 1997 WL 139473 (Ala. 1997).

Opinion

Roberts Health Care, Inc. ("Roberts"), and Regency Oaks Health Care Facility, Inc. ("Regency"), appeal from a circuit court judgment in favor of the State Health Planning and Development Agency ("SHPDA") that terminated the certificate of need ("CON")1 SHPDA had awarded Roberts to construct a nursing home in Madison County. We reverse and remand.

I.
The history of this case is a labyrinth of interaction between Roberts, Regency, and SHPDA. Accordingly, the following discussion, although lengthy, is only a summary of the events. On August 11, 1993, SHPDA issued a CON to Roberts to construct a 71-bed skilled nursing facility in Madison County. The project was to be a joint venture between Roberts and Regency. A CON generally has a 12-month duration, but SHPDA may grant the holder of a CON a 12-month extension. SHPDA Rules and Regs. § 410-1-11-.01. SHPDA granted Roberts such an extension; thus, Roberts's CON was to expire on August 10, 1995.

Early in 1995, Roberts obtained an oral promise for financing from a real estate investment trust; it later got that commitment in writing. Then, in April 1995, Roberts entered into a contract to purchase the property on which the nursing facility was to be built, and the then owner of the land sought a zoning change for the property. Roberts chose a contractor, but that contractor was later unable to proceed and Roberts was forced to find a replacement contractor. Roberts provided that contractor with drawings and specifications, and the parties entered into contract negotiations. Thereafter, in July 1995, SHPDA gave its first-stage approval for the project plan.

That same month, a controversy arose between Roberts and Regency regarding their joint venture agreement. On August 4, 1995, six days before the CON was to expire, Regency filed a complaint in the Madison Circuit Court against SHPDA and Roberts, seeking a judgment declaring the rights of all the parties in relation to the CON. The complaint contained a count for injunctive relief, seeking to delay the expiration of the CON under the tolling provision of SHPDA Rules and Regs. §410-1-11-.01, and seeking to prevent SHPDA from taking any action adverse to the rights of Roberts and Regency during the pendency of the litigation. Regency's complaint also sought damages against Roberts for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and tortious interference with business relations.

On August 8, two days before the CON was to expire, Roberts and its contractor entered into a standard American Institute of Architects ("AIA") contract for construction of the nursing home; that contract was filed with SHPDA the next day. The contract provided that if Roberts did not give Regency notice to proceed with construction, Roberts would pay $5,000 in liquidated damages. Roberts stated to SHPDA that it believed it had entered into a "firm commitment" or "obligation" that would "toll" the "running of the duration" of the CON, under SHPDA Rules and Regs. § 410-1-11-.01. *Page 108

On August 9, Regency amended its complaint to add a count seeking the dissolution of the Regency and Roberts partnership. On August 28, Roberts's president met with Elbert Peters, SHPDA's executive director, and promised Peters that the nursing home project was continuing and would be completed as soon as the litigation was resolved. Peters did not inform Roberts at that time that it was SHPDA's position that the filing of Regency's complaint did not delay the expiration of the CON. Roberts answered the complaint and filed counterclaims against Regency, alleging breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, fraudulent misrepresentation, and fraudulent suppression and seeking a judgment declaring the rights of the various parties in relation to the CON.

In September 1995, SHPDA moved for a transfer of the action; the Madison Circuit Court transferred the case to the Montgomery Circuit Court. In October 1995, the Department of Public Health approved Roberts's chosen site for construction of a nursing home, and Roberts also obtained a zoning variance to allow construction of a nursing home. That same month, Roberts wrote its contractor and instructed the contractor to move a project trailer onto the site and to begin site preparation work. However, in the letter Roberts stated that its instruction to begin site preparation was not a notice to the contractor to proceed under the AIA construction contract they had entered into in August.

In November 1995, SHPDA answered Regency's complaint and opposed Regency's request for injunctive relief against SHPDA. SHPDA filed a counterclaim for declaratory relief against Regency, seeking a declaration that the Roberts CON was null and void. SHPDA also sought an order from the court requiring Roberts and Regency to cease any further construction of the nursing home.

On November 30, the Montgomery Circuit Court entered an order dismissing Regency's claim for injunctive relief. It also severed SHPDA's claims for declaratory and injunctive relief from the remaining claims brought by Regency and Roberts. The court maintained jurisdiction over SHPDA's claims and transferred the claims between Regency and Roberts to the Madison Circuit Court. Thereafter, SHPDA filed a cross-claim for declaratory relief against Roberts, seeking a ruling that the CON had expired.

In June 1996, the circuit court ruled that the filing of Regency's complaint did not delay the expiration of Roberts's CON. The court held that the action Regency had initiated was not the kind of legal or administrative action contemplated by SHPDA Rules and Regs. § 410-1-11-.01, and that the construction contract Roberts had entered into was not a "firm commitment" or "obligation," under § 410-1-11-.02. The court affirmed SHPDA's decision that Roberts's CON had expired, and it ruled that the CON was null and void. The court also enjoined any further construction on the project.

Roberts and Regency appealed to this Court and filed a motion with the circuit court for a stay of the judgment pending appeal. The circuit court granted the stay, but held that it did not have the power to aid the stay by enjoining SHPDA's CON review board from granting a CON to another health care provider to build the nursing home. Roberts and Regency then petitioned this Court for an injunction against SHPDA to aid the trial court's stay of the judgment. We granted the petition and ordered that SHPDA be enjoined from taking any further action relating to the awarding of nursing home space in Madison County pending this appeal.

II.
This Court must determine whether the expiration of Roberts's CON, which would have occurred on August 10, 1995, was delayed, under SHPDA Rule 410-1-11-.01, by the complaint filed by Regency in the Madison Circuit Court against Roberts and SHPDAor, under Rule 410-1-11-.02, by the construction contract between Roberts and a construction contractor and by certain construction-related activities at the locality where the nursing home was to be built.

III.
SHPDA Rules and Regs. § 410-1-11-.01, states, in relevant part: "The running of the *Page 109 duration [of the CON] shall be tolled from the date of the filing of a complaint arising under § 22-21-260, et seq., Codeof Alabama

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
698 So. 2d 106, 1997 WL 139473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-health-care-v-shpda-ala-1997.