St. Dominic Med. Ctr. v. Madison Med. Ctr.

928 So. 2d 822
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 2006
Docket2004-SA-01240-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 928 So. 2d 822 (St. Dominic Med. Ctr. v. Madison Med. Ctr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Dominic Med. Ctr. v. Madison Med. Ctr., 928 So. 2d 822 (Mich. 2006).

Opinions

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

¶ 1. The motion for rehearing is granted. The prior opinions are withdrawn, and these opinions are substituted therefor.

¶ 2. This case concerns whether the Hinds County Chancery Court erred by reversing the approval by the Mississippi State Department of Health (Department) of an amended application for a certificate of need (CON) to St. Dominic-Jackson Memorial Hospital (St. Dominic) for a facility to be located in Madison County, Mississippi. The main argument centers on whether St. Dominic1 sought a "relocation" *Page 823 of licensed bed capacity from its Jackson location to a Madison County location or sought a "new" hospital.

¶ 3. St. Dominic is a general acute care facility. The hospital had a licensed capacity of 571 beds which consisted of 453 medical/surgical beds, 35 chemical dependency beds and 83 psychiatric beds. In June 2002, St. Dominic filed a CON application with the Department requesting approval for a new 100 bed hospital in Madison County. In September 2002, St. Dominic submitted an amended application to the Department. The amended application replaced the original application submitted in June 2002. This amended application sought to relocate 100 existing beds from its 571 licensed beds in Jackson to Madison County.

¶ 4. Madison County Medical Center (MCMC) opposed St. Dominic's amended CON application and requested a public hearing on the matter. The Department granted St. Dominic's amended CON application. However, the Department only permitted 50 beds at the Madison facility instead of the 100 beds requested in St. Dominic's amended application. Following this ruling, MCMC appealed the Department's decision to the Chancery Court of Hinds County. In his opinion, dated May 27, 2004, Chancellor William Singletary, reversed the Department's grant of the 50 bed facility. Thereafter, the Honorable Stuart Robinson, Chancellor, executed the final judgment reversing the Department's final order. Following this ruling, St. Dominic and the Department appealed to this Court.

FACTS
¶ 5. In June 2002, St. Dominic filed a CON application with the Department, seeking to establish 100 new acute care beds in Madison County, which is part of the General Hospital Service Area 3 (GHSA-3) which includes Hinds, Madison and Rankin Counties. During this time, MCMC had filed an application with the Department seeking to move all 67 of its beds from Madison County to Hinds County. MCMC is the only hospital in Madison County and is located in Canton.

¶ 6. The Department informed St. Dominic that until the application from MCMC was decided, St. Dominic's application would not be processed and would be held in abeyance. Thereafter, on August 1, 2002, St. Dominic asked that the original application be deferred. On September 3, 2002, St. Dominic submitted an amended application to the Department as a replacement for its original application. The amended application sought to relocate 100 licensed beds from the Jackson location to Madison County. Sometime during this process, the Department denied MCMC's request to move all of its beds from Madison County to Hinds County.

¶ 7. MCMC challenged St. Dominic's amended application and requested a hearing before the Department. MCMC argued that there was no need to relocate beds because Madison County was over-bedded; the Canton hospital met the needs of the county; St. Dominic's amended application sought to establish a new hospital; and the Department's denial of MCMC's request to move its beds from Madison County to Hinds County prohibited St. Dominic's amended application to relocate beds. According to MCMC, the only material difference in the original application and the amended application was that the amended application sought a relocation instead of a new hospital. MCMC also relied on testimony given by Harold Armstrong, the head of the Department's CON division, who testified that the only difference between the two applications was that one said "new hospital" and the *Page 824 other said "relocation." A portion of Armstrong's testimony follows:

Q. With regard to everything else [other than the change from building a new hospital to an application for relocation], in terms of operating costs and the cost of the facility and the personnel and personnel costs, the original application [for new hospital] and the amendment [for a "relocation"] is identical basically, isn't it?

A. Yes. Same size facility.

Q. Would you agree with me, Mr. Armstrong, that there really is no difference in these two applications for the cost of construction, the operation, there's no cost in this, the only difference being one application says a new hospital, and the other says relocation?

A. That is the basic difference.

Q. All right, sir. And, Mr. Armstrong, would you also agree with me in summary that there's no apparent reduction of any of the services currently being provided at the Hinds County or Jackson St. Dominic's facility after they move beds to Madison County?

A. It wasn't stated in the application.

Q. And in fact the application brings you to the conclusion that there doesn't appear that there is going to be any decrease in cost at the Hinds or Jackson facility, does it?

A. That's correct.

Further, the Department considered St. Dominic's changes as an amended application with a $500.00 fee instead of a new application with a $25,000.00 filing fee.

¶ 8. Following the hearing, the hearing officer recommended that St. Dominic's amended application be granted, allowing 50 rather than a 100 beds to be relocated to Madison County. The State Health Officer then accepted the hearing officer's recommendation and approved the amended application and granted the CON for 50 beds.

¶ 9. MCMC appealed the Department's approval of the CON to the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County. On May 27, 2004, Chancellor Singletary reversed the Department's grant of the CON. The chancellor found that the Department's findings were arbitrary and capricious and not supported by substantial evidence. From this ruling, St. Dominic and the Department filed an appeal to this Court raising the following issues:

I. Whether the Mississippi Department of Health's determination that St. Dominic's Amended Application is for a relocation and not for a new hospital is supported by substantial evidence.

II. Whether the Department's finding that there is a need for additional acute care beds in Madison County, and that, as a result, St. Dominic's CON application satisfied the need requirement is supported by substantial evidence.

III. Whether the Department's finding that St. Dominic amended application substantially complied with the general goals of the State Health Plan is supported by substantial evidence.

IV. Whether the Department's finding that St. Dominic's amended application substantially complied with the General Review Criteria set forth in the CON

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Singing River Health System v. Mississippi State Department of Health
172 So. 3d 1190 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2014)
St. Dominic Hosp. v. Miss. Dept. of Health
954 So. 2d 505 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2007)
Sandefer v. State
952 So. 2d 281 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2007)
St. Dominic Med. Ctr. v. Madison Med. Ctr.
928 So. 2d 822 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
928 So. 2d 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-dominic-med-ctr-v-madison-med-ctr-miss-2006.