STATE EX REL. ADVENTIST HEALTH CARE SYSTEM/SUNBELT HLT. CARE CORP. v. Nashville Memorial Hosp., Inc.

914 S.W.2d 903
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 9, 1995
StatusPublished

This text of 914 S.W.2d 903 (STATE EX REL. ADVENTIST HEALTH CARE SYSTEM/SUNBELT HLT. CARE CORP. v. Nashville Memorial Hosp., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE EX REL. ADVENTIST HEALTH CARE SYSTEM/SUNBELT HLT. CARE CORP. v. Nashville Memorial Hosp., Inc., 914 S.W.2d 903 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

914 S.W.2d 903 (1995)

STATE of Tennessee, ex rel. ADVENTIST HEALTH CARE SYSTEM/SUNBELT HEALTH CARE CORPORATION, a Florida Not-For-Profit Corporation and Adventist Health System/Sunbelt, Inc., d/b/a Tennessee Christian Medical Center, a Florida Not-For-Profit Corporation, and Adventist Health System/Sunbelt Health Care Corporation, a Florida Not-For-Profit Corporation and Adventist Health System/Sunbelt, Inc., d/b/a Tennessee Christian Medical Center, a Florida Not-For-Profit Corporation, Plaintiffs/Appellants, and
William Gray Davis, M.D., on behalf of Nashville Memorial Hospital, Inc., as a Director of Same, Homer Chance, Jeff Pennington, M.D., Robert L. Pettus, Jr., *904 M.D., and Wendell Wilson, M.D., for Themselves and Other Members of Nashville Memorial Hospital, Inc., Similarly Situated and as Relators Intervening-Plaintiffs and Relators/Appellants,
v.
NASHVILLE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, INC., Nashville Memorial Health Systems, Inc., Nashville Memorial Foundation, Inc., Memorial Companies, Inc., Nashville Memorial Outreach Services Corporation, Community Health Services, and Medical Credit Clearing, Inc., Corporate Defendants/Appellees, and
J.D. Elliott, James A. Rainey, William P. Puryear, Garland Rose, Charles Beck, M.D., Frank Bumstead, Edward C. Dunn, Charles Fentress, Thomas Hanes, M.D., Alice Hooker, Russ Kersten, Drew Maddux, James Martin, Herbert T. McCall, M.D., and David E. McKee, M.D., Individually and in their capacity as Directors, Trustees, or Officers of the Corporate Defendants, Individual Defendants/Appellees, and
Healthtrust, Inc. — The Hospital Company, Intervening-Defendant/Appellee.

Court of Appeals of Tennessee, Middle Section, at Nashville.

August 9, 1995.
Permission to Appeal Denied December 18, 1995.

Paul C. Ney, Jr., Doramus & Trauger, Nashville, for Plaintiffs/Appellants.

William R. Willis, Jr., Marian F. Harrison, Willis & Knight, Nashville, for Defendants/Appellees.

Charles W. Burson, Attorney General and Reporter, Perry Allan Craft, Deputy Attorney General, Cynthia E. Carter, Deputy Attorney General, Jon J. Tucci, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, for the State.

*905 Ames Davis, Nancy S. Jones, L. Beth Evans, Nashville, for HealthTrust, Inc.

Phillip North, R.H. Pursell, North, Pursell & Ramos, Nashville, for Intervening Plaintiffs.

OPINION

LEWIS, Judge.

This appeal involves two cases appealed from the Davidson County Chancery Court. The cases were consolidated by order of this court and involved the sale of Nashville Memorial Hospital, a not-for-profit corporation, to HealthTrust, Inc., a for-profit hospital company.

This court ordered the consolidation of three separate appeals represented by the following notices of appeal filed in the Chancery Court for Davidson County: 1) a notice filed in case number 93-3413-I (the quo warranto action) by the original plaintiffs from a final judgment entered as to them on 28 February 1994; 2) a notice filed on 20 April 1994 by the Intervening plaintiffs in a quo warranto action from a final judgment which was entered as to them on 24 March 1994; and 3) a notice of appeal filed in case number 94-744-I (the Attorney General action) on 14 September 1994 from an order entered on 19 August 1994 denying intervention to the Intervening plaintiffs in the quo warranto action.

The owners and operators of Nashville Memorial Hospital (Memorial defendants) signed a letter of intent on 4 November 1993 granting HealthTrust the exclusive right to negotiate for the purchase of assets of and including Nashville Memorial Hospital for a period of thirty (30) days. Subsequently, Adventist Health Systems/Sunbelt Health Care Corporation (Adventist plaintiffs) filed a complaint as relators pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated sections 29-35-101 and 102, the quo warranto statute, against the Memorial defendants and J.D. Elliott in his capacity as an officer and director of the Memorial defendants. They sought to enjoin the sale of Memorial Hospital to HealthTrust and to require the Memorial defendants instead to negotiate in good faith with the Adventist plaintiffs for a merger between Memorial Hospital and Tennessee Christian Medical Center, a hospital owned and operated by the Adventist plaintiffs and located in the same geographical area as Memorial Hospital. Thereafter, the Memorial defendants filed a motion to dismiss the Adventist complaint on 23 November 1993 on the grounds that the plaintiffs lacked standing to bring the action under the quo warranto statute and that the complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted.

HealthTrust moved to intervene as a defendant and filed a motion to dismiss the complaint and/or for summary judgment. On the same day, 23 November 1993, five individuals filed a petition to intervene as plaintiffs (Intervening plaintiffs). They alleged they were either original incorporators, contributors, members or current directors of the not-for-profit corporation which owned and operated Memorial Hospital. The Intervening plaintiffs also named as defendants the State of Tennessee Attorney General, the 20th Judicial District Attorney General, and other persons in both their individual capacities and their official capacities as directors or trustees of the corporate Memorial defendants. On 28 December 1993, the court entered an order granting the Adventist plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint to add a single corporate defendant as well as two individual defendants to be sued in their official capacity as members of the Board of Trust of Memorial Hospital.

In January 1994, the District Attorney General notified the Chancellor that he would not join in the Adventist plaintiffs' quo warranto proceedings. The Adventist plaintiffs, thereafter, moved for an in limine hearing on the issue of whether the District Attorney General's refusal was improper or unjustified. Subsequently, the Memorial defendants filed a motion to dismiss the complaint of the Intervening plaintiffs and/or for summary *906 judgment on the grounds that the Intervening plaintiffs lacked standing and that the statute of frauds barred their claims as charitable contributors. HealthTrust also subsequently joined in the motion.

Thereafter, the Chancellor granted the motion of HealthTrust and the Memorial defendants to dismiss the complaint of the Adventist plaintiffs and/or for summary judgment. The Chancellor found that the Adventist plaintiffs were not affiliated in any way with the Memorial defendants. Therefore, they lacked standing with respect to counts I through V of their complaint to bring an action under the quo warranto statute because their interest in the proposed sale of Memorial Hospital was common to that of the general public. The court further held that the determination of whether the sale of the assets of a non-profit charitable corporation was in the public interest is vested by statute to the Attorney General of the State of Tennessee pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 48-62-102(g). The court also held that counts VI and VII of the complaint failed to state a claim for breach of contract because the written agreements upon which those counts were predicated neither required the Memorial defendants to negotiate indefinitely with the Adventist plaintiffs nor prevented the Memorial defendants from negotiating with other parties.

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914 S.W.2d 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-adventist-health-care-systemsunbelt-hlt-care-corp-v-tennctapp-1995.