Opinion
Thе Director of the state Department of Public Health is required to adhere to the Administrative Procedure Act (specifically Gov. Code, §§ 11420-11427) in adopting rules and regulations establishing the rates which the state will pay for health care supplied to Medi-Cal patients. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 10553.1, 10554, 10554.1, 14105, 14124.5;
California Assn. of Nursing Homes etc., Inc.
v.
Williams
(1970)
The present appeal stems from a declaratory relief action filed by the California Optometric Association (“Association”) challenging the procedure utilized in adopting a regulation fixing rates for optometric services and eye appliances. The trial court entered a declaratory judgment in favor of the Association and against the Director of Health (“Director”) invalidating the regulation and, in Paragraph 2, setting forth a *504 declarаtion of the' Director’s duties in the future promulgation of such regulations. The Director appeals only from Paragraph 2 of the judgment. That paragraph is quoted in the margin. 1 We have italicized the phraseology forming the particular targets for the Director’s attack on appeal.
This is the third appeal in this court challenging the Medi-Cal agency for failure tо comply with the rule-adoption provisions of the California Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”).
2
In 1970 we nullified a regulation fixing nursing home rates, declaring that “the adoption and repeated amendment of the regulation are characterized by serious procedural vices which prevent meaningful judicial review and frustrate any attempt to pass upon its substantive compliance . . . .”
(California Assn. of Nursing Homes etc., Inc.
v.
Williams, supra,
The Association points out that the challenged declaratory judgment is identical to judgments which the superior court entered after remand in California Association of Nursing Homes etc., Inc. v. Williams, supra, and Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Assn. v. Brian, supra. It *505 contends that the rule of collateral estoppel prevents the incumbent Director from challenging a judgment identical to that imposed upon his prеdécessors in office.
The rule of collateral estoppel is a manifestation of the principle of res judicata.
(Clark
v.
Lesher
(1956)
In adopting regulations establishing rates or prices the Medi-Cal agency exercises a quasi-legislative function; there is no constitutional requirement for any hearing in a quasi-legislative proceeding; hence, the promulgation proceeding is statutoiy and does not arouse the demands of procedural due process.
(Pitts
v.
Perluss
(1962)
One objective of the APA is assurance of meaningful public participation in the adoption of administrative regulations by state agencies; another is creation of an administrative record assuring effective judicial review. (California Assn. of Nursing Homes etc., Inc. v. Williams, supra, 4 Cal.App.3d at pp. 810-812.)
Contrary to assumptions that the APA embodies a “notice and hearing” requirement, the Attorney Generаl points out that it does not expressly demand a public hearing; that Government Code section 11425 (fn. 4, ante) permits written statements from interested parties “with or without opportunity to present the same orally.” He reasons that the act demands of the agency only that it fix a time and place for the reception of written statements; that the agency may then close the public portion of the proceeding; that it may consult evidence not incorporated in a hearing record and made available to interested parties; that even when an oral hearing takes place, the agency need not permit cross-examination and rebuttal.
The assertion that a public hearing is optional has not been considеred by the California courts. As the Attorney General observes, the APA does not in terms demand a public hearing in the sense of an oral convocation. In prior decisions construing the Administrative Procedure Act, this court has referred to the “hearing” process but without really inquiring whether the act guarantees interested parties the right to appear in person and to address the agency orally.
(Schenley Affiliated Brands Corp.
v.
Kirby
(1971)
Administrative law concepts draw a distinction “between proceedings for the purpose of promulgating policy-type rules or standards, on the one hand, and proceedings designed to adjudicate disputed facts in particular cases on the other.”
(United States
v.
Florida East Coast R. Co.
(1973)
The declaratory judgment errs by making a fixed demand for trial-like hearings in Medi-Cal rate adoption proceedings. That demand is inconsistent with section 11425, which invests the agency with discretion to proceed without supplying an opportunity for oral presentation. Section 11425 permits a purely documentary proceeding yet, in its last paragraph, refers to the proceeding as a “hearing.” Thus, contrary to superficial assumptions, it does not necessarily demand a hearing characterized by oral testimony and oral argument. The section was part of the rulemaking procedure added to the California APA in 1947. The California proposal was modeled after cognate provisiоns of the federal Administrative Procedure Act. (Kleps,
The California Administrative Procedure Act
(1947) 22 State Bar J. 391; Report,
State Bar Committee on Administrative Agencies and Tribunals
(1945-1946) 21 State Bar J. 161.) The federal act embodies no fixed demand for an oral evidentiary hearing; it authorizes the agency to permit only written statements and presentations. (5 U.S.C. § 553;
California Citizens Band Assn.
v.
United States
(9th Cir. 1967)
The trial court’s fixed- directions for cross-examination and rebuttal are also erroneous. No statutory or decisional doctrine establishes ineluctable rights of cross-examination and rebuttal at quasi-legislative hearings. Absorbing courtroom analogies, the judgment would direct multilateral multiloquence among diverse interests. “There must be a limit to individual argument in such matters if government is to go on.”
Bi-Metallic Investment Co.
v.
State Bd. of Equalization,
The declaratory judgment errs in a third respect by confining the agency to action based exclusively upon evidence admitted at a hearing. In directing the agency to consider “relevant matter,” seсtion 11425 (fn. 4,
ante)
impliedly obliges it to exercise good faith, to avoid fixed preconceptions and to be responsive to new insights emanating from the parties’ presentations. Possible adoption of a regulation differing from the original proposal is one objective of the hearing process; to confine the agency to the terms of its original proposal would negate that objective.
(Schenley Affiliated Brands Corp.
v.
Kirby, supra,
The declaratory judgment would require the agency to prepare and file findings as a step additional to the rule adoption. At this point, too, the judgment imposes a trial-like procedure transcending the demands of the APA. The Association and amici curiae have pointed to no express or implied statutory behest for findings. In the case of a price or rate-setting regulation, the enactment itself forms a set of implied findings. 5
*509
The challenged paragraph of the declaratory judgment is infused with error. Were modification possible, we would nevertheless refrain from ordering it. In section 11440, the APA offers declaratоry relief “as to the validity of any regulation.” The present judgment is not confined to a declaration of invalidity; it essays control over the agency’s future proceedings, thus extending beyond the scope of review described in section 11440. The challenged declaration exceeds the relief available under the general declaratory relief statute. (Codе Civ. Proa, § 1060.) It would dictate a public agency’s ongoing administration of statutory functions and impose judicial control upon future rate-fixing activities affecting parties not before the court. Such a judgment ruptures the parameters of declaratory relief; it represents an abuse of judicial discretion. (See
Zetterberg
v.
State Dept. of Public Health
(1974)
This opinion is vulnerable to serious misinterpretation. The human and economic importance of Medi-Cal rate regulations (each involving a separate set of health providers) as well as the antecedents and characteristics of this appeal—these evoke some deliberate dicta. The briefs on behalf of the Director of Health do not make clear whether the Director seeks merely to discover the rock-bottom minima of rate-setting procedures or whether he actually intends to utilize them. 6 Like the Administrative Procedure Act itself, this decision deals only with procedural minima. Fulfillment of these minimal directions does not assure procedural invulnerability.
The procedural directions of the APA are designed to promote fulfillment of its dual objectives—meaningful public participation and effective judicial review. (California Assn. of Nursing Homes etc., Inc. v. Williams, supra, 4 Cal.App.3d at pp. 810-812.) Although implied rather than expressed, these objectives are just as statutory and just as binding as the APA’s itemized directions. Compliance with procedural minima does not necessarily achieve these goals. Administrativе agencies have wide latitude in fashioning procedures for the pursuit of their inquiries. (Id., at p. 813.) In Rivera, supra, we pointed out that reception and consideration of post-hearing evidence need not result in unfairness. (265 *510 Cal.App.2d at pp. 589-590.) Yet we warned that assurances of public participation “cannot be fulfilled by recorded hearings which are paralleled by substantial ‘off record’ investigations.” (Id., at p. 588.)
In
Nursing Homes, supra,
we stated that an agency “may not base its decision upon evidence outside the record and not made available for rebuttal by the affected parties.” (
These declarations were framed with an eye to the California Supreme Court’s
Olive Proration
decision,
The significance of effective judicial review increases in direct ratio with administrative sprawl. Judicial review is usually described in terms of scope or breadth, when the real dimension is depth or intensity. Routine descriptions of judicial ; review standards form an overlay for deep-seated problems of agency accountability and responsiveness. These qualities cannot be attained without informed judicial review guided by objective criteria. Judicial review frequently focuses upon claims of arbitrariness, that is, that the regulation has no evidentiary
*511
support.
(Pitts
v.
Perluss, supra,
A prescription so vague leaves considerable to ad hoc agency practices. A respected analyst of thе federal administrative process suggests that indistinct procedural directions stimulate administrators to clothe their actions “in the full wardrobe of adjudicatory procedure” as a protection against judicial reversals. (Wright, The Courts and the Rulemaking Process: The Limits of Judicial Review (1974) 59 Cornell L.Rev. 375, 386-388.) If the prior litigation described in this opinion is any token, the California tendency is quite the opposite. Aside from statutory procedural directions, most mortals, including those in government, need all the wisdom they can get. Administrators may indulge in rulemaking with fair assurance of procedural legality by inviting as much public participation as time and staff permit.
The cause is remanded to the superior court with a direction to vacate Paragraph 2 of thе judgment. Appellant to recover costs on appeal.
Puglia, P. J., and Evans, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 12, 1976.
Notes
“2. It is the statutory duty and obligation of defendant to promulgate and adopt a valid and legal regulation or valid legal regulations, establishing rates of payment for Optometry and Eye Appliances in the Medi-Cal Program pursuant to public hearings at which;
“(a) The evidence upon which the defendant relies in establishing said rates is presented and made a part of the record;
“(b) The regulations and rates established are based solely on the evidence in such record;
“(с) Any interested person can present statements, arguments, contentions or evidence and can be sworn under oath in the event oral testimony is taken;
“(d) All relevant evidence is compiled, presented and kept for transmission to the court for judicial review;
“(e) Any interested person is provided the right of reasonable cross-examination with respect to any testimony or other evidence which is adduced at the hearing and the oppоrtunity to rebut such testimony or evidence;
“(0 The defendant receives and considers the evidence presented and makes findings based only on such evidence.”
In justice to the incumbent Director, we observe that all challenges have arisen as a result of action or inaction on the part of earlier administrators of the Medi-Cal program.
A11 statutory references in this opinion will be to the Government Cоde unless otherwise noted.
Section 11425 is of particular importance and we quote it in full: “On the date and at the time and place designated in the notice the state agency shall afford any interested person or his duly authorized representative, or both, the opportunity to present statements, arguments, or contentions in writing, with or without opportunity to present thе same orally. The state agency shall consider all relevant matter presented to it before adopting, amending or repealing any regulation.
“In any hearing under this section the state agency or its duly authorized representative shall have authority to administer oaths or affirmations, and may continue or postpone such hearing from time to time to such time and at such place as "it shall determine.”
We avoid any implication that findings are impermissible. The federal Administrative Procedure Act directs the agency to incorporate “in the rules adopted a concise general statement of their basis and purpose.” (5 U.S.C. § 553(c).)
Here, in the context of optometric rates, the Director objects to demands for рublic hearings, for oral evidence, for examination of witnesses by any party and for a decision based solely upon the evidence. Relative to pharmaceutical suppliers, he has adopted a formal regulation calling for hearing procedures approximating those which he challenges here. (See Cal. Admin. Code, tit. 22, § 51513.2, subd. (i).)
The continued hearings authorized by section 11425 (fn. 4, ante) supply opportunities for progressive disclosure of data and views which unfold in the course of the agency’s study, thus permitting avoidance of the procedural disaster depicted in Olive Proration.
