Total Renal Care Of N. Carolina

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 18, 2015
Docket14-1076
StatusPublished

This text of Total Renal Care Of N. Carolina (Total Renal Care Of N. Carolina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Total Renal Care Of N. Carolina, (N.C. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA14-1076

Filed: 18 August 2015

Office of Administrative Hearings, Nos. 13 DHR 18127, 18223

TOTAL RENAL CARE OF NORTH CAROLINA, LLC, Petitioner,

v.

NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, DIVISION OF HEALTH SERVICE REGULATION, CERTIFICATE OF NEED SECTION, Respondent,

and

BIO-MEDICAL APPLICATIONS OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC., Respondent- Intervenor.

Appeal by petitioner from final decision entered 23 June 2014 by

Administrative Law Judge Craig Croom in the Office of Administrative Hearings.

Heard in the Court of Appeals 3 March 2015.

Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, by K. Edward Greene, Lee M. Whitman, and Tobias S. Hampson, for petitioner-appellant.

Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Special Deputy Attorney General June S. Ferrell, for respondent-appellee.

Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, by Marcus C. Hewitt and Elizabeth Sims Hedrick, for respondent-intervenor-appellee.

DIETZ, Judge. TOTAL RENAL CARE OF N.C., LLC V. N.C. DEP’T OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVS.

Opinion of the Court

This appeal challenges the process by which the Department of Health and

Human Services determines whether two certificate-of-need applications are

“competitive,” meaning they must be reviewed together.

The certificate of need law directs DHHS to “establish schedules for submission

and review of completed applications” and further directs that “[t]he schedules shall

provide that applications for similar proposals in the same service area will be

reviewed together.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-182(a) (2013). The agency also

promulgated its own regulation stating that applications must be reviewed together

if “the approval of one or more of the applications may result in the denial of another

application reviewed in the same review period.” 10A N.C. Admin. Code 14C.0202(f)

(2013).

As part of the 2013 State Medical Facilities Plan, DHHS determined that

Franklin County needed 10 additional dialysis stations. Petitioner Total Renal Care

of North Carolina, LLC (TRC) and Respondent-Intervenor Bio-Medical Applications

of North Carolina, Inc. (BMA) both applied to fill this need.

This case arose because the two companies did not file their applications in the

same “review period.” BMA proposed moving ten existing dialysis stations from

Wake County to Franklin County and, under the schedules established by the agency,

was required to file its application on 15 March 2013. TRC proposed moving two

dialysis stations from Wake County and another eight stations from a different site

-2- TOTAL RENAL CARE OF N.C., LLC V. N.C. DEP’T OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVS.

within Franklin County. Because TRC’s application involved moving stations both

from another county and from within the same county, TRC could have filed its

application on 15 March 2013, but it also could wait and file it in a separate review

period beginning 15 April 2013. TRC chose the latter. As a result, the agency’s

schedules did not treat the two applications as “similar proposals for the same service

area,” and thus the agency did not review them together. On appeal, TRC argues

that DHHS’s failure to review the applications together violates the certificate-of-

need statute, the agency’s own regulations, and TRC’s due process rights.

As explained below, we reject these arguments. Our precedent requires us to

defer to the agency’s reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous statute and to an

agency’s interpretation of its own rules and regulations. In the context of medical

services, the statutory term “similar proposals” is ambiguous. Medical services that

appear “similar” to a layperson (or an appellate judge) might be entirely dissimilar to

experts in the field. That is precisely why the General Assembly tasked DHHS, the

state agency with expertise in this area, with determining what is, and is not, a

similar proposal. Because we conclude that the agency’s interpretations of the

statute and its regulations are reasonable, we must defer to those interpretations.

Accordingly, we affirm the final decision of the Office of Administrative Hearings.

-3- TOTAL RENAL CARE OF N.C., LLC V. N.C. DEP’T OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVS.

Facts and Procedural Background

In January 2013, the Department of Health and Human Services published its

Semiannual Dialysis Report, identifying a need for ten additional dialysis stations in

Franklin County. DHHS publishes this report in January and July of each year as

part of its State Medical Facilities Plan, cataloguing surpluses and deficits of stations

by county and forecasting the number of stations that will be needed to serve dialysis

patients in the future.

Private providers seeking to fill a deficit of medical facilities in our State must

apply for and obtain “certificate of need” approval. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-178(a); see

also id. § 131E-176(16). The Certificate of Need Section of DHHS reviews all

certificate of need applications for conformity with the statutory review criteria set

forth in the applicable statute. Id. § 131E-183(a). To facilitate this process, the

statute authorizes DHHS to adopt rules governing the orderly administration of

certificate of need applications. See, e.g., id. §§ 131E-177(1); 131E-182.

The statute requires the agency to establish review schedules under which

“similar proposals in the same service area will be reviewed together.” Id. § 131E-

182(a). Additionally, the agency’s review is limited to a period of 90 days,1 starting

1The statute provides that the Agency “may extend the review period for a period not to exceed 60 days and provide notice of such extension to all applicants.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 131E-185(c); see also 10A N.C. Admin. Code 14C.0205(b) (“Except in the case of an expedited review, the period for review may be extended for up to 60 days by the agency if it determines that . . . it cannot complete the review within 90 days.”).

-4- TOTAL RENAL CARE OF N.C., LLC V. N.C. DEP’T OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVS.

“on the day established by rule as the day on which applications for the particular

service in the service area shall begin review.” Id. § 131E-185(a1).

As the statute instructs, the agency has adopted schedules setting forth

deadlines for the filing and review of various categories of medical services. See 10

N.C. Admin. Code 14C.0202(e). These categories and filing dates are contained in

the State Medical Facilities Plan each year, and applicants must comply with the

filing deadlines to ensure consideration in any particular period of review. Id.; see

also id. § 14C.0203(a)-(b) (mandating that the agency “shall not . . . review[ ]”

applications unless they are “filed in accordance with this Rule”).

The categories relevant to this appeal are Category D and Category I.

Category D includes applications proposing the “relocation of existing certified

dialysis stations to another county pursuant to Policy ESRD-2.” N.C. Dep’t of Health

& Human Servs., Div. of Health Serv. Regulation, Med. Facilities Planning Branch,

North Carolina 2013 State Medical Facilities Plan, N.C. Dep’t of Health & Human

Servs., 18 (January 1, 2013), http://www.ncdhhs.gov/dhsr/ncsmfp/2013/2013smfp.pdf.

(emphasis added). Policy ESRD-2, which governs dialysis services, permits an

applicant to relocate dialysis stations into a contiguous county only if there is a

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