RUSSELL HOSP. DIST. v. EPHRAIM McDOWELL

152 S.W.3d 230
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2004
Docket2004-SC-0938-I, 2004-SC-0939-MR, 2004-SC-0984-OA
StatusPublished

This text of 152 S.W.3d 230 (RUSSELL HOSP. DIST. v. EPHRAIM McDOWELL) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RUSSELL HOSP. DIST. v. EPHRAIM McDOWELL, 152 S.W.3d 230 (Ky. 2004).

Opinion

152 S.W.3d 230 (2004)

RUSSELL COUNTY, KENTUCKY HOSPITAL DISTRICT HEALTH FACILITIES CORPORATION, Appellant/Movant,
v.
EPHRAIM McDOWELL HEALTH, INC.; and L. Clark Taylor, Jr., Appellees/Respondents. and
Russell County, Kentucky Hospital District Health Facilities Corporation, Appellant,
v.
Ephraim McDowell Health, Inc.; L. Clark Taylor, Jr.; and Hon. Vernon Miniard, Jr., Judge, Russell Circuit Court, Appellees. and
Russell County, Kentucky Hospital District Health Facilities Corporation, Petitioner,
v.
Ephraim McDowell Health, Inc.; and L. Clark Taylor, Jr., Respondents/Real Parties in Interest, and
Honorable Sara Combs, Judge, Kentucky Court of Appeals, Respondent.

Nos. 2004-SC-0938-I, 2004-SC-0939-MR, 2004-SC-0984-OA.

Supreme Court of Kentucky.

December 16, 2004.

*231 Robert L. Bertram, Bertram & Wilson, Joel Randolph Smith, Wilson & Smith, Jamestown, David Lewis Williams, Burkesville, Counsel for Appellant/Movant/Petitioner.

William P. Wiseman, Jr., Hiram Ely, III, Vickie Yates Brown, Melissa Norman Bork and Ann Toni Kereiakes, Greenebaum, Doll & McDonald, Louisville, Counsel for Appellees/Respondents, Ephraim McDowell Health, Inc.; and L. Clark Taylor, Jr.

Vernon Miniard, Jr., Monticello, Appellee, Vernon Miniard, Jr., Judge, Russell Circuit Court.

George E. Fowler, Jr., Court of Appeals, Frankfort, Counsel for Respondent, Hon. Sara Combs, Judge, Kentucky Court of Appeals.

OPINION AND ORDER

LAMBERT, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In a pending original action seeking a writ of prohibition, the Court of Appeals granted intermediate relief under CR 76.36(4) in the form of a temporary stay of a circuit court order. Subsequently, both an original action for a writ of prohibition against the enforcement of the temporary stay and an appeal of the temporary stay were filed in this Court. We are thus presented with the questions of whether the Supreme Court can hear an original action and whether an appeal can be taken from intermediate relief granted under CR 76.36(4). We conclude that an original action may be prosecuted in the Supreme Court under limited circumstances, though *232 we refuse to grant the requested writ of prohibition in this case, and that an appeal of intermediate relief granted under CR 76.36(4) is inappropriate because such relief is not a final order or judgment. We remand to the Court of Appeals for further proceedings.

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Until 1999, Russell County, Kentucky Hospital District Health Facilities Corporation, the Appellant/Movant/Petitioner in this case[1] (hereinafter "Petitioner"), operated the Russell County Hospital. On September 1, 1999, Ephraim McDowell Health, Inc. (hereinafter "Respondent") leased the hospital premises from Petitioner and took over the hospital's operations.

On October 25, 2004, the Petitioner filed a lawsuit in Russell Circuit Court, claiming that the Respondent was in default and seeking termination of the lease agreement. Later that day, the Russell Circuit Court entered an ex parte order, styled a "Restraining Order," which, among other things, prohibits all the parties from interfering in any way with the operation or the personnel of the Russell County Hospital, requires that the Respondent return any and all property belonging to Petitioner, and requires that the Respondent transfer all licenses required for operation of the Russell County Hospital to the Petitioner.[2]

Subsequently, the Respondent filed two pleadings with the Court of Appeals: (1) a motion for relief from a temporary injunction under CR 65.07 seeking to prevent enforcement of the Restraining Order, and (2) an original action under CR 76.36 seeking a writ of prohibition. On October 30, 2004, a Friday, the Court Appeals entered an order that, among other things, refused to grant the Respondent's requested relief under CR 65.07 because the Restraining Order was not reviewable under that Rule. But in response to an emergency motion filed along with the original action for a writ of prohibition, the Court of Appeals in its October 30, 2004 order granted a temporary stay against the enforcement of the Restraining Order pending further orders of the Court of Appeals. In granting the temporary stay, the Court of Appeals noted that "some interim provision must be made" before the following Monday when the matter could be more fully addressed, and that should the Respondent's claims be true, then it was apparent that the circuit court's order "could result in so serious degree of injury as to warrant the entry of a writ of prohibition." The Court of Appeals expressly indicated that it was proceeding overall under CR 76.36, but that it would revisit the matter the following Monday once a response had been entered by the Petitioner's counsel.

*233 On Monday, November 1, 2004, the Petitioner filed a response and the Court of Appeals revisited the matter by entering yet another order. The Petitioner had argued that the order of the Russell Circuit Court was a "restraining order" and, as such, was not reviewable pursuant to Common Cause of Kentucky v. Commonwealth.[3] The Court of Appeals noted in its new November 1, 2004, order that its October 30, 2004 order had recognized this, i.e., that the Russell Circuit Court's order appeared to be a "restraining order," and was thus not reviewable under CR 65.07. The Court of Appeals then went on to note that this argument did not address the fact that its October 30, 2004 order had actually been in response to an emergency motion under the original action for a writ of prohibition. The Court of Appeals also reiterated that it had such serious concerns over the Russell Circuit Court's Restraining Order that a writ of prohibition would be a possible remedy, and, as such, sustained the temporary stay against enforcement of the Restraining Order. However, the Court of Appeals indicated that it would hold a hearing on November 8, 2004, wherein it would hear both the motion for review under CR 65.07 and the merits of the original action for a writ of prohibition.

Rather than attending to the matter at the November 8, 2004, hearing at the Court of Appeals, Petitioner filed an extensive pleading with this Court, which is denominated as follows:

ORIGINAL ACTION AND PETITION FOR WRIT OF PROHIBITION PURSUANT TO CIVIL RULE 76.36;
MOTION FOR INTERMEDIATE RELIEF PURSUANT TO CIVIL RULE 76.36(4);
APPEAL TO SUPREME COURT FROM JUDGMENT OF COURT OF APPEALS ENTERED NOVEMBER 1, 2004 PURSUANT TO CIVIL RULES 76.36(7); AND
PETITION TO VACATE ORDER OF COURT OF APPEALS ENTERED NOVEMBER 1, 2004 AND ORDER ENTERED OCTOBER 30, 2004 PURSUANT TO CIVIL RULE 65.09

In other words, the Petitioner filed the following: (1) a petition for a writ of prohibition against the Court of Appeals under CR 76.36; (2) a motion for intermediate relief under CR 76.36(4) until such a writ is entered; (3) an appeal under CR 76.36(7) of the order issued by the Court of Appeals on November 1, 2004; and (4) a motion under CR 65.09 to vacate the orders entered by the Court of Appeals on October 30 and November 1, 2004. Because Petitioner's motion for intermediate relief and the motion to vacate the orders of the Court of Appeals were denied by this Court on November 12, 2004, only the appeal and petition for a writ of prohibition remain. We now address those matters.

III.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.3d 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-hosp-dist-v-ephraim-mcdowell-ky-2004.