Trident Medical Center, LLC v. South Carolina Department of Health & Environmental Control

772 S.E.2d 177, 412 S.C. 341
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 18, 2015
DocketAppellate Case No. 2012-213506; No. 5297
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 772 S.E.2d 177 (Trident Medical Center, LLC v. South Carolina Department of Health & Environmental Control) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trident Medical Center, LLC v. South Carolina Department of Health & Environmental Control, 772 S.E.2d 177, 412 S.C. 341 (S.C. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

GEATHERS, J.

These cross-appeals involve a decision of the South Carolina Administrative Law Court (ALC) upholding the issuance by the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC) of a Certificate of Need (CON) for hospital construction in Berkeley County to both Roper St. Francis Hospital-Berkeley (Roper) and Trident Medical Center, LLC (Trident) pursuant to the State Certification of Need and Health Facility Licensure Act, S.C.Code Ann. § 44-7-110 to - 394 (2002 and Supp. 2014) (the CON Act). Trident challenges the issuance of a CON to Roper, arguing the “Bed Transfer Provision” in the 2008-2009 State Health Plan prohibits DHEC from issuing a CON for the transfer of beds from Roper’s hospital in downtown Charleston to a hospital that has not yet been built.

On the other hand, Roper’s primary position is that the ALC’s decision should be affirmed in its entirety, but if this court accepts Trident’s argument and reverses the issuance of a CON to Roper, then the issuance of a CON to Trident must also be reversed. Because we affirm the ALC’s decision to uphold the issuance of a CON to both Roper and Trident, we need not address Roper’s appeal issue.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 2008, Berkeley County’s estimated population was 158,-140. However, there were (and still are) no acute care hospital beds licensed in Berkeley County. On August 13, [345]*3452008, Trident submitted an application for a CON to build a new fifty-bed acute care hospital in the Town of Moncks Corner in central Berkeley County pursuant to the 2004-2005 State Health Plan.1 The 2004-2005 State Health Plan’s inventory of general hospitals indicated that Trident’s existing North Charleston facility had a need for forty-two additional beds,2 and Trident sought to use this facility-specific need to obtain DHEC’s approval for the proposed fifty-bed facility in Moncks Corner pursuant to a provision in the State Health Plan referred to as the “Fifty Bed Rule.” This provision allows a hospital with a need for beds to add up to the greater of fifty beds or the actual projected number of needed beds to its inventory to provide for a cost-effective addition:

Should there be a need shown for additional beds for a hospital, then an increase may be approved. In order to provide for a cost-effective addition, up to the greater of 50 beds or the actual projected number of additional beds may be approved, provided the hospital can document and demonstrate the need for additional beds.

Chapter II.G.l § (A)(4)(d), 2004-2005 State Health Plan (Fifty Bed Rule).

Trident proposed to build the new hospital on a twenty-one acre site adjacent to its existing freestanding emergency department and outpatient center, Moncks Corner Medical Center. Trident indicated it planned to convert the building that houses the emergency department into a medical office building and move the emergency department into the new hospital.

[346]*346A few months after Trident’s CON submission, on December 10, 2008, Roper submitted an application for a CON to transfer some of its existing beds in its facility in downtown Charleston to a proposed new fifty-bed acute care hospital in the City of Goose Creek in southern Berkeley County pursuant to the Bed Transfer Provision of the 2008-2009 State Health Plan.3 The Bed Transfer Provision allows for the transfer of beds between affiliated hospitals in order to serve their patients in a more efficient manner, provided certain conditions are met. See infra. The new hospital is to be known as “Roper St. Francis Hospital-Berkeley.”

On May 21, 2009, DHEC conducted a joint project review hearing on the two applications. On June 26, 2009, DHEC approved both applications. DHEC also determined that Trident and Roper were not “competing applicants” and, thus, it could properly grant CONs to both. The term “competing applicants” is defined in section 44-7-130(5) of the South Carolina Code (2002) as

two or more persons or health care facilities as defined in this article who apply for [CONs] to provide similar services or facilities in the same service area within a time frame as established by departmental regulations and whose applications, if approved, would exceed the need for services or facilities.

(emphasis added). When DHEC is considering competing applications, it must award a CON on the basis of which applicant most fully complies with the CON Act, the State Health Plan, project review criteria,4 and applicable DHEC regulations. S.C.Code Ann. § 44-7-210(C) (2002) (amended 2010).

On July 6, 2009, Trident submitted two requests for final review conferences before DHEC’s board (the Board), seeking [347]*347(1) a reversal of the staffs decision to grant a CON to Roper, and (2) a determination that Trident and Roper were “competing applicants” and Trident was the applicant that most fully complied with the CON Act, the State Health Plan, project review criteria, and applicable DHEC regulations. On July 10, 2009, Roper also filed a request for a final review conference before the Board, seeking a determination that Roper was the applicant that most fully complied with the CON Act, the State Health Plan, project review criteria, and applicable DHEC regulations in the event the Board found Trident and Roper to be competing applicants. The Board declined to conduct final review conferences.

On August 7, 2009, Trident and Roper collectively filed three separate requests for a contested case review before the ALC. Trident sought (1) reversal of DHEC’s determination that Trident and Roper were not competing applicants and (2) reversal of DHEC’s issuance of a CON to Roper. Roper sought a decision either upholding DHEC’s issuance of CONs to both applicants or finding that Roper was the applicant that most fully complied with the CON Act, the State Health Plan, project review criteria, and applicable DHEC regulations.

The ALC consolidated the proceedings for trial and discovery purposes. Beginning on January 30, 2012, the ALC conducted a contested case hearing that lasted through February 16, 2012. Prior to receiving testimony, the ALC granted Roper’s motion for partial summary judgment, concluding that if the applicants were found to be competing, the matter would be remanded to DHEC for identification of the applicant that most fully complied with the CON Act, the State Health Plan, project review criteria, and applicable DHEC regulations.

On September 26, 2012, the ALC issued a written decision upholding DHEC’s issuance of a CON to both Trident and Roper. In its decision, the ALC deferred to DHEC’s interpretation of the Bed Transfer Provision and the Fifty Bed Rule and found that if both applications were approved, they would not exceed the need for acute care hospital beds in the area. On October 5, 2012, Trident filed a motion for reconsideration, which was denied on November 1, 2012. These appeals followed.

[348]*348ISSUES ON APPEAL

1. Did the ALC err in deferring to DHEC’s interpretation of the Bed Transfer Provision?

2. Did the ALC err in concluding that Trident and Roper were not competing applicants?

STANDARD OF REVIEW

The Administrative Procedures Act governs the standard of review from a decision of the ALC, allowing this court to

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
772 S.E.2d 177, 412 S.C. 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trident-medical-center-llc-v-south-carolina-department-of-health-scctapp-2015.