St. Luke Hospitals, Inc. v. Commonwealth

186 S.W.3d 746, 2005 Ky. App. LEXIS 134, 2005 WL 1317047
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 3, 2005
Docket2004-CA-000692-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 186 S.W.3d 746 (St. Luke Hospitals, Inc. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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St. Luke Hospitals, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 186 S.W.3d 746, 2005 Ky. App. LEXIS 134, 2005 WL 1317047 (Ky. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

BUCKINGHAM, Judge.

St. Luke Hospitals, Inc., appeals from a final order of the Franklin Circuit Court affirming the Cabinet for Health and Family Services’ denial of St. Luke’s Certificate of Need (CON) application. St. Luke argues that the circuit court’s decision is arbitrary and capricious because it is incorrect as a matter of law. Specifically, St. Luke contends that the circuit court erred by affirming the Cabinet’s decision even though the decision did not follow long-standing agency interpretation of CON regulations, by not adhering to principles of stare decisis, and by not applying the doctrine of contemporaneous construction. In addition, St. Luke argues that the circuit court violated its due process rights and failed to render an opinion capable of review and that it upheld a decision by the Cabinet that was not supported by substantial evidence. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

St. Luke is a nonprofit corporation that operates two hospitals in Northern Kentucky. St Luke Hospital East is located in Fort Thomas, and St. Luke Hospital West is located in Florence. St. Luke sought to establish a freestanding, separately licensed ambulatory surgical center (ASC) on its west campus in Florence. It claims that the new facility would contain two operating rooms and that it would shut down two existing operating rooms on the same campus. Thus, the application did not propose to create additional surgical capacity at St. Luke West or in the geographical service area.

During the seven years between 1996 and 2003, the Cabinet rendered several decisions regarding transfers of surgical capacity on a hospital campus. During that time, it granted several CON applications proposing transfers of surgical capacity from one health facility to a newly licensed facility on the same campus even though the State Health Plan (SHP) criteria under 902 KAR 1 17:041 were not met. In 1999, in response to the prevailing policy at the time, the Cabinet promulgated a transfer exemption under 900 KAR 6:050E § 7 to grant such transfers. The exemption provided in pertinent part:

(1) Applications proposing to relocate surgical services from one (1) licensed health facility to a newly established or other health facility and either facility is owned by the existing facility with surgical services shall be considered consistent with the State Health Plan if the existing facility has not added to its complement of operating rooms within twelve (12) months prior to filing the application for relocation and the following conditions are met:
a. The newly established surgical services are located:
(i) On the existing facility’s licensed premises; or
(ii) In the same county as the existing health facility and where there are no other licensed providers of surgical services in the county; and
b. The existing facility with surgical services which relocated the room and the newly established surgical service shall not add operating rooms for one (1) year following the date that the newly *749 established surgical services commence operations.

The Cabinet promulgated the exemption to expressly sanction its earlier decisions granting CONs to applicants that did not meet the SHP criteria. However, once the Cabinet decided the proliferation of newly licensed surgical centers was growing too quickly, it repealed the exemption, requiring all new applications to meet the SHP criteria. In other words, between 1999 and 2002, the Cabinet promulgated and then repealed the exemption in response to changing policy based on the needs of the health care community.

On August 30, 2002, the Cabinet conducted a hearing concerning its notice of intent to amend the surgical services criteria. St. Luke proposed an amendment that would allow nonsubstantive review for projects proposing transfers of existing surgical capacity to newly licensed facilities on the same campus. Nonsubstantive review would eliminate the requirement that St. Luke’s CON application satisfy the criteria required by the SHP. See 900 ICAR 6:050, § 8(5). The Cabinet did not accept the amendment and denied nonsub-stantive review, stating that hospitals already have the ability to transfer services on an existing license without a CON. See Cabinet for Human Resources, Interim Office of Health Planning and Certification v. Jewish Hospital Healthcare Services, Inc., 932 S.W.2d 388, 390-91 (Ky.App.1996). The Cabinet said the policy behind repealing the transfer exemption precluded nonsubstantive review of CONs for ASCs like the one St. Luke proposed. That policy is to prevent proliferation of unneeded separately licensed ASCs.

St. Luke filed its CON application on October 2, 2002, pursuant to KRS 2 216B.061(l)(a) 3 . On the following day, T.J. Samson Medical Center, an acute care hospital located in Glasgow, Kentucky, filed a similar CON application. On February 13, 2003, the Cabinet held a hearing on St. Luke’s application. St. Elizabeth Medical Center contested St. Luke’s compliance with the SHP concerning utilization of 85% of surgical capacity in the service area, which is necessary for obtaining a CON. St. Luke admitted that surgical utilization in its service area was only 44.37% of capacity. Although it was applying for a new license, St. Luke maintained that the SHP criteria did not apply because it was transferring existing surgical capacity and thus was not establishing a health facility pursuant to the statute or a “new surgical service” under the SHP.

St. Luke relied on Cabinet precedent for allowing transfers of health services without a CON over a period of seven years (1996-2003). As noted above, that precedent was continued when the Cabinet promulgated the transfer exemption in 1999. However, the exemption was repealed on June 28, 2002, four months before St. Luke’s application.

T.J. Samson’s CON application was approved on February 19, 2003. However, the Cabinet denied St. Luke’s application on May 19, 2003, on the grounds that it was proposing a new surgical service and was inconsistent with three of the five SHP criteria. The hearing officer noted that St. Luke could transfer the surgical services under its existing license without having to obtain a CON. See Jewish Hospital Healthcare Services, Inc., 932 S.W.2d at 390-91. The hearing officer also concluded that the T.J. Samson case had been wrongly decided.

*750 St. Luke appealed the Cabinet’s decision to the Franklin Circuit Court. The circuit court affirmed, finding that St. Luke’s application was subject to the SHP and did not meet the SHP’s first criterion. The court did not review the other criteria addressed by the Cabinet. This appeal followed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

“The findings of fact of an administrative agency, which are supported by substantial evidence of probative value, must be accepted as binding by the reviewing court.” Kosmos Cement Co., Inc. v.

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186 S.W.3d 746, 2005 Ky. App. LEXIS 134, 2005 WL 1317047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-luke-hospitals-inc-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-2005.