MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
The narrow issue presently before the court is whether the State of Utah may lawfully limit the funding of abortions provided to Medicaid recipients to those cases where the life of the mother would be endangered if an abortion is not performed.
The undisputed facts of this case show that at the time the abortion giving rise to this action was sought, plaintiff was a nineteen year old unmarried female and the mother of one child. Plaintiff is a recipient of Aid to Families with Dependent Children program (AFDC), 42 U.S.C. §§ 601 et seq., a welfare program established by the Social Security Act of 1935 and jointly administered by the United States and the State of Utah. As part of her AFDC assistance, plaintiff receives medical care under Title XIX of the Social Security Act, commonly known as the Medicaid program, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396a et seq. (1970).
After she became pregnant, plaintiff consulted with and was examined by her physician, and determined that her desire to secure an abortion was appropriate medical treatment for her condition in the best medical judgment of her physician. Plaintiff’s physician attempted to have plaintiff admitted to the University of Utah Medical Center for an abortion, but plaintiff was denied admission for treatment at the Medical Center on the ground that the Center would not be paid for the services rendered to plaintiff in light of certain provisions that had recently been enacted by the Utah State Legislature. Those provisions, House Bill 447 and a portion of Item 175 of House Bill 462, are the subject of this lawsuit and provide respectively:
The [Utah State Department of Social Services] shall not provide any public assistance for medical, hospital or other medical expenditures or medical services to otherwise eligible persons where the purpose of such assistance is for the performance of an abortion, unless the life of the mother would be endangered if an abortion -is not performed.
It is the intent of the Legislature to concur in the Hyde Amendment passed by Congress to the effect that none of the funds contained in this Act shall be used to perform abortions except where the life of the mother or health of the fetus would be endangered if the fetus were carried to full term or in cases of rape and incest. This statement will hold unless overturned by the United States Supreme Court. If H.B. 447 should pass and become law this intent statement is to be deleted.
(Emphasis added). Since House Bill 447 did pass and become law, the legislative intent provision was deleted from the codification of House Bill 447. The codification of House Bill 447, Utah Code Ann. § 55-15a-3 (1953), reads identically to the first above-quoted paragraph. By this action, plaintiff seeks injunctive and declaratory relief from these provisions pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1970) and 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343, 2201 and 2202 (1970).
At the time this action was filed, the United States Supreme Court had pending before it the cases of
Beal v. Doe,
On September 13 and September 30,1977, the court heard arguments on the above motions, and on the latter date the restraining order was vacated. In effect, this permitted defendants to enforce the challenged state provisions. The court observed in its vacating order that although the recent Supreme Court decisions did not decide the precise issue before this court, they “clearly shifted support to a position more favorable to defendants.” Order Vacating Temporary Restraining Order, filed October 14, 1977 at 2. The issues raised by the motions to dismiss and for summary judgment were taken under advisement by the court. Subsequently, plaintiff filed a motion to modify the court’s order vacating the restraining order by taking into consideration the recently enacted Labor-HEW Appropriations Act of 1978 requiring the funding not only of abortions where a pregnancy or childbirth would endanger the life of the mother, but also abortions desired where the pregnancy is the result of rape or incest or where the pregnancy would result in severe and long-lasting physical damage to the health of the mother. Arguments on this motion were had before the court and the matter again was taken under advisement. Since the matter was last argued and up through May 31, 1978, counsel for the parties have filed supplemental memoranda and correspondence with the court regarding the issues under advisement.
The positions of the parties may be stated as follows. Plaintiff contends that even though states participating in the Medicaid program are not obliged to provide funding for elective or nontherapeutic abortions (as the Supreme Court made clear in Beal and Maher), the states are required by the Medicaid statutes and regulations and the Constitution of the United States to supply such funding where a Medicaid recipient and her physician determine that an abortion is “medically necessary.” Because plaintiff’s abortion was “medically indicated” and thus felt to be “medically necessary,” plaintiff claims that the State of Utah’s refusal to provide funding of the abortion deprived her of: (1) the equal protection of the law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States; (2) due process of law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution; and (3) a benefit to which she was statutorily entitled under the Medicaid statutes and regulations. Defendants argue, however, that neither the Medicaid provisions nor the Constitution requires states to provide funding for medically indicated or necessary abortions. Defendants strongly urge that states may decide for themselves the extent to which they will provide funding for abortions, and that since plaintiff’s abortion was sought and obtained for reasons other than that plaintiff’s life would be endangered by continuing with her pregnancy, the State of Utah was and is under no obligation to bear the cost of plaintiff’s abortion. Having fully and carefully considered the matters presented by the motions of the parties, the court is prepared to enter its ruling.
The Constitutionality of Utah’s Abortion Funding 'Statute
Plaintiff attacks Utah’s abortion restrictions on both due process and equal protection grounds. With regard to the claim of violation of due process rights, plaintiff argues that the Utah provisions are constitutionally infirm “in that they prohibit pay
*612
ment for medically necessary abortions, thus effectuating an unconstitutional infringement upon the exercise of a constitutionally protected fundamental right.”
Plaintiff’s Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss
at 5. As to the equal protection claim, plaintiff contends that the State of Utah discriminates between therapeutic and nontherapeutic abortions and the “[exclusion of payment for therapeutic abortions [is] an impermissible limitation upon the exercise of a constitutionally protected right.”
Id.
at 6. In plaintiff’s complaint it was alleged that the claimed constitutional right of plaintiff could not be infringed unless in protection of a compelling state interest.
Complaint
¶¶ 15 and 17. In her recent memoranda, however, plaintiff makes no more mention of the necessity of such a compelling state interest, but she does continue to refer to a fundamental constitutional right to which she is entitled. Because of the overtones and the ambiguity in the language of plaintiff’s documents, and the significance of the language as it pertains to the proper constitutional analysis to be applied by the court, it is necessary to discuss the nature of the right claimed by plaintiff and the extent to which the state may permissibly “interfere” with that right. For if in fact a fundamental right or interest is involved, then for both due process and equal protection purposes, the state must' have a compelling interest in order to justify any abridgment of the right.
See Maher v. Roe, supra; Roe v. Wade,
In the landmark case of
Roe v. Wade,
In
Maher v. Roe,
the Court squarely addressed the issues surrounding the constitutional status of the so-called right to abortion. The district court in
"Maher
was among those courts that had concluded that
Roe v. Wade
had established a fundamental constitutional right to abortion. After stating that the “central question” in
Maher
was whether the challenged state regulation impinged upon a fundamental right protected by the Constitution, the Supreme Court concluded that “the District Court misconceived the nature and scope of the fundamental right recognized in
Roe.”
The
Maher
Court emphasized that, “the right in
Roe v. Wade
can be understood only by considering both the woman’s interest and the nature of the State’s interference with it.”
Id.
Rather than giving a woman an unqualified constitutional right to an abortion, “the right protects the woman from
unduly burdensome interference
with her freedom to decide whether to terminate her pregnancy.”
Id.
at 473-74,
The question remains, however, whether the situation presented in the instant case involves a suspect classification that, under Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection analysis, would require this court to employ a strict scrutiny standard in evaluating the challenged Utah provisions.
See, e. g., San Antonio School Dist. v. Rodriguez,
In
Maher v. Roe,
the issue before the Court was “whether the Constitution requires a participating State to pay for nontherapeutic abortions when it pays for childbirth.”
As she must, plaintiff accepts the decision in
Maher,
but argues that a state cannot further restrict the funding of abortions only to those that are necessary to save the life of the mother. Stated in the affirmative, plaintiff contends that the Constitution requires states participating in the Medicaid program to' fund those abortions deemed to be “medically necessary” by the pregnant woman’s attending physician. Plaintiff argues that
Maher,
“did not deal with medically necessary abortions. A statutory prohibition on a medically necessary
*614
procedure is constitutionally impermissible.”
Plaintiff’s Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss
at 5. Similarly, plaintiff asserts that, “discrimination -against therapeutic abortions is not constitutionally permissible.”
Id.
The acceptance of plaintiff’s position, of course, would necessitate the funding of many abortions that would not be paid for if Utah’s life-endangering standard were to be given effect, assuming that plaintiff’s definition of “medically necessary” is adopted. This definition is taken from the.companion case to
Roe v. Wade, Doe v. Bolton,
This court rejects plaintiff’s contentions for two reasons. First, in her argument plaintiff has misstated the issue presently under discussion. The above quote from plaintiff’s memorandum refers to a “statutory prohibition” on a medically necessary procedure. The crucial and simple fact remains, however, that Utah has placed no “statutory prohibition” on such a procedure — Utah has merely chosen to fund certain procedures and not to fund other procedures. Using the language of the Supreme Court in Maher:
[Utah] places no obstacles — absolute or otherwise — in the pregnant woman’s path to an abortion. An indigent woman who desires an abortion suffers no disadvantage as a consequence of [Utah’s] decision to fund childbirth; she continues as before to be dependent on private sources for the service she desires. The State may have made childbirth a more attractive alternative, thereby influencing the woman’s decision, but it has imposed no restriction on access to abortions that was not already there.- The indigency that may make it difficult — and in some cases, perhaps, impossible — for some women to have abortions is neither created nor in any way affected by the [Utah statute].
As one commentator has observed:
The economic limitations upon the procedure of abortion, where they truly exist, are not created by government, but rather by private physicians [and facilities] who demand fee guarantees prior to the surgery. ... To argue that, when a private' physician [or facilities] demands payment in advance from his patient, a state which does not meet his [or their] demand is using programs “to limit abortions” or to “unlawfully impinge” upon the patient’s rights, is to ignore both reality and stare decisis.
Hardy, Privacy and Public Funding: Maher v. Roe as the Interaction of Roe v. Wade and Dandridge v. Williams, 18 Ariz.L.Rev. 903, 911-12 (1976) (footnotes omitted) (hereinafter cited as “Privacy and Public Funding”).
It seems apparent to the court -that by her “statutory prohibition” argument plaintiff is injecting issues into this matter that have already been authoritatively resolved by the Court in
Maher.
The reference by-plaintiff to the Court’s language in
Singleton v. Wulff,
The Supreme Court observed it was “not unsympathetic to the plight of an indigent woman who desires an abortion . . ” but, as the Court noted, “ ‘the Constitution does not provide judicial remedies for every social and economic ill’.”
Second, plaintiff has provided no meaningful authority or reasoning to the court other than her bald assertion that the Utah provisions are unconstitutional. There is no reason why the principle articulated in Maher should not control the disposition of the constitutional issues in this case. The key concept set forth in Maher is that there is a basic difference between state interference with a protected activity and state encouragement of an alternative activity. Even though fewer abortions might be funded under Utah’s statute, such a result would be constitutionally insignificant. If the State of Utah, under Maher, may make a choice favoring childbirth over abortion and implement that decision through the allocation of public funds, it may do so on any reasonable conditions. Given the state’s strong interests in protecting the potential life of the fetus, encouraging normal childbirth and appropriately using state funds (see discussion of the state’s interests, infra), the life-endangering standard of Utah Code Ann. § 55-15a-3 (1953) is entirely reasonable. By so restricting its underwriting of abortions the State of Utah has placed no obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion, and it has not directly or otherwise interfered in an unduly burdensome fashion with the exercise of the woman’s right. Furthermore, the discrimination — if indeed it can be labeled as such— resulting from the state’s preference of childbirth over abortion is clearly justified by the above-mentioned interests of the state. The state’s interests are furthered by and are rationally and reasonably related to Utah’s funding provisions, and, thus, the disparate trehtment of childbirth and abortion is constitutionally permissible. Accord, Woe v. Califano, Order Granting Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Civil No. C-2-76-755 (S.D.Ohio, Eastern Div., Judge Duncan, filed January 9, 1978).
Additional support for the court’s conclusion can be found in one of the companion cases to
Maher, Poelker v. Doe,
Plaintiff cites language from
Maher
and
New Jersey Welfare Rights Organization v. Cahill,
The Consistency of Utah’s Abortion Funding Statute with Title XIX
The thrust of plaintiff’s second attack upon Utah’s limited abortion funding provisions is the alleged statutory shortcoming of the program. The Public Assistance Chapter of the Utah Code requires the State of Utah and the Utah Department of Social Services to administer its jointly-funded assistance programs in conformity with the federal assistance statutes and regulations. In particular, Utah Code Ann. § 55-15a-14 (1953) gives the director of the Department of Social Services authority to bind the state “to any executive of legislative provisions promulgated or enacted by the federal government which invites the state to participate in the distribution, disbursement or administration of any . money for the benefit and welfare of recipients of public assistance and other low income residents.” Further, § 55-15a-14 requires that the state “. . . shall comply with all requirements of the Social Security Act and all orders, rules and regulations promulgated thereunder when required as a condition of participation in benefits under the Social Security Act.” (Emphasis added). Inasmuch as Medicaid was enacted in 1965 as Title XIX of the Social Security Act, these statutory directives apply to Utah’s disbursements under the Medicaid program. The provisions of § 55-15a-14, however, merely state truisms of federal constitutional law and serve only to frame the question that this court now faces: to wit, what category of abortions, if any, must a state fund as a condition of participation in the federal Medicaid program? Once the answer to this question is ascertained, the action required on the part of the State of Utah will be readily apparent.
Plaintiff strenuously argues that the federal Medicaid “statutes and regulations require the defendants to make payment for .abortions based solely on regular Medicaid criteria: to-wit, eligibility and the determination of reasonable medical necessity for the treatment prescribed.”
Complaint
¶ 20. According to plaintiff, the restrictions on abortion funding enacted by the Utah Legislature are contrary to the Medicaid requirements as interpreted by the Supreme Court in
Beal v. Doe,
in that they do not allow the funding of therapeutic or “medically necessary” abortions, but rather permit the funding only of abortions that meet the life-endangering standard of the Utah statute. Again, plaintiff contends for definition of “medically necessary” that would include all of the factors listed in
Doe v. Bolton,
Defendants counter plaintiff’s contentions by arguing just as fervently that a state has broad discretion under the Medicaid program to determine what procedures it will fund and to what extent those procedures will be funded, so long as the standards set by the state are reasonable. And, it is asserted, Utah’s Legislature has exercised its discretion in setting the standard for the funding of abortions and plaintiff has not shown that these standards are unreasonable. Defendants not only feel that the Court in Beal did not hold that states must fund all “medically necessary” abortions, but they apparently claim that Beal held that states do not have to fund any class of abortions at all. Accordingly, defendants conclude that Utah’s policy is not inconsistent with any federal provisions and thus no questions of federal supremacy are raised.
Title XIX of the Social Security Act establishes a Medical Assistance Program pursuant to which the states may provide federally-funded medical aid to the “categorically” and “medically” needy. The statute makes no specific reference to abortions or, for that matter, to any other particular medical procedure. Instead the Act mentions general categories of service which must be made available. As a prerequisite to federal funding under Title XIX, a state Medicaid plan must provide financial assistance to the categorically needy with regard to five general categories of medical treatment: (1) inpatient hospital services; (2) outpatient hospital services; (3) other laboratory and X-ray services; (4) skilled nursing facility services, periodic screening and diagnosis of children, and family planning services; and (5) physician’s services. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396a(a)(13)(B) and 1396d(a)(l)-(5) (1970). Under the program, a state pays for medical assistance rendered pursuant to its Medicaid plan, and is then reimbursed by the federal government in accordance, with a statutory formula for that percentage of the payment that the federal government is obligated to pay for the services rendered. Nothing in the statute requires or even suggests that states participating in the Medicaid program must fund every procedure that falls within the delineated categories of medical care, and it is clear that states do have considerable latitude in choosing the procedures which they will fund and the extent to which such procedures will be funded. Title XIX expressly provides:
“A State plan for medical assistance must include reasonable standards .for determining eligibility for and the extent of medical assistance under the plan which . . are consistent with the objectives of this [Act]
42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(17) (1970 ed., Supp. V). The discretion of the states is bounded by the two criteria contained in this provision. That is, any standards adopted by a state must be reasonable and cannot be inconsistent with the objectives of Title XIX.
See Beal v. Doe,
These statutory and regulatory provisions lead inescapably to two basic conclusions. First, the participating state may select those procedures which it will fund under the Medicaid program and may determine the extent to which those procedures will be funded, placing “appropriate limits” on the *618 services offered. Second, the discretion of the participating state is limited only by three factors: (1) the plan or standard adopted by a state must be reasonable; (2) Medicaid funds must be distributed equally and equitably among Medicaid recipients; and (3) the plan or standard must be consistent with the objectives of Title XIX. Applying these concepts to the present case, the issue that this court must resolve may be'stated with a simplicity that belies the complexities and subtleties of this case: to wit, is the life-endangering abortion funding standard enacted by the Utah Legislature reasonable, equitable and consistent with the objectives of the Medicaid Act?
The authority that largely provides the answer to the instant question is the decision of the Supreme Court in
Beal v. Doe,
With regard to the Title XIX requirements of reasonableness and equality, the court feels that
Beal
is controlling and compels a conclusion in favor of defendants. Indeed, plaintiff does not make an effective argument to the contrary. The plaintiffs in
Beal
asserted that the exclusion of nontherapeutic abortions from Medicaid coverage was unreasonable on both economic and health grounds.
Defendants in this matter name two basic interests that Utah has in enforcing House Bill 447 and Item 175 of House Bill 462: “(1) The most appropriate use of limited Medicaid funds; and (2) Encouraging normal childbirth over abortion.”
Defendant’s Memorandum in Support of Motion to Vacate Temporary Restraining Order and to Dismiss
at 5. The economic interest advanced by Utah has been urged by other states and has generally been held to be unpersuasive because of the rebutting argument that abortions are generally less expensive than childbirth.
E. g., Roe v. Norton,
On a case-by-case level of analysis, this argument carries much weight. Abortions do, as a general rule, consume a lesser amount of medical resources than do deliveries. When viewed at the systems level, a different result may be obtained. The cost of a systematic provision of free abortion may be considerably higher than the cost of a system of free delivery, due to a tendency of low cost abortion to encourage reliance on abortion as a contraceptive, and due to long term complications on future deliveries.
Privacy and Public Funding at 926-27. See Id. at 926-30 for a detailed discussion in this vein.
The interest of the State of Utah in encouraging normal childbirth creates a powerful presumption that Utah’s funding scheme is reasonable. As the Court noted in
Beal,
the Court has long acknowledged that a “State has a valid and important interest in encouraging childbirth.”
This court also reaches a similar conclusion with respect to the equality requirement of Title XIX. The court sees no legally significant difference in the alleged disparate treatment in the disbursement of funds upheld in
Beal
and the disparate treatment alleged here. Indeed, the fact that the
Beal
Court did not even deal with the equality requirement causes one to wonder if the provision is a serious requirement at all. Also, the Court has indicated that disparate treatment in pregnancy related procedures may presumptively be more justified than such treatment in other medical procedures. In
Maher
the Court stated in response to such an allegation that, “[t]he simple answer to the argument that similar requirements are not imposed for other medical procedures is that
such procedures do not involve the termination of a potential human life.”
Although the reasonableness and equality requirements of Title XIX are easily satisfied by Utah’s funding statute, the question remains whether the state provisions are consistent with the objective of Title XIX. Plaintiff adamantly contends that the Medicaid Act and the
Beal
Court’s construction of the statute require that a participating state fund all those abortions which the attending physician of a Medicaid recipient deem to be “medically necessary.” Basing her argument upon certain statutory language and various dicta and footnotes of the Court in
Beal,
plaintiff claims that, “the United States Supreme Court ruled that a State Medicaid Plan . . . must require payment for medically necessary abortions.”
Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss
at 4. It is manifest, however, that the Court did not rule as plaintiff contends it did. The Court explicitly stated that “serious statutory
*620
questions
might
be presented if a state Medicaid plan excluded necessary medical treatment from its coverage .
In Beal, the Supreme Court identified the “broadly stated primary objective” of Title XIX as the Act’s enabling “each State, as far as practicable under the conditions in such State, to furnish . . . medical assistance on behalf of [properly qualified recipients] whose income and resources are insufficient to meet the costs of necessary medical services.” 42 U.S.C. § 1396 (1970); also, see Id. § 1396a(a)(10)(C)(i). It is this language found in the preamble to the Medicaid Act from which the term “medically necessary” is derived. Hence, in this context, the crucial question before the court is whether Utah’s life-endangering abortion funding standard is inconsistent with the broadly stated objective of Title XIX to provide “necessary medical services” to qualified individuals. Obviously, the resolution of this question requires the ascertainment of the meaning of the term “necessary medical services.” 1
The term “necessary medical services” has been said to have at least three possible meanings: (1) that intended by Congress at the time Title XIX was enacted; (2) that referred to in the medical community; or (3) that required by constitutional analysis; see
Butler, The Right to Medicaid Payment for Abortion,
28
Hastings LJ.
931, 954 (1977) (hereinafter cited as “Medicaid Payment for Abortion”). First, “[t]he starting point in every case involving construction of a statute is the language itself.”
Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores,
The second possible meaning of “necessary medical services” is that contemplated by the medical community. This has been defined as: “[that] care which is responsive to the problem for which it is offered.”
Medicaid Payment for Abortion
at 955. The application of this definition in the abortion context, for example,, would proceed as follows: pregnancy is the condition and any “treatment” of the condition of pregnancy requires medical services; and since abortion is a treatment for the pregnancy, abortion is therefore a medically necessary service. It is this definition that occupied the attention of the Court in
Beal.
The position of the three dissenters in
Beal
was that Title XIX required the funding' of elective abortions because, “[p]regnancy is unquestionably a condition requiring medical services,” and “abortions constitute medically necessary treatment for the condition of pregnancy.”
The third suggested possible construction of the term in question is that which may be referred to as required by the Constitution. As noted earlier, in
Doe v. Bolton,
This court does not believe that the list of factors in Bolton can be transported into Title XIX and become the standard by which the level of required abortion funding is measured. First, the footnotes in Beal to which plaintiff refers do not establish an inflexible funding standard. At most the references create ambiguities as to the intent or feeling of the Court in this matter. Various other passages in Beal may lead one to a very different conclusion (see discussion, infra at p. 623).
Second, as fully discussed in the constitutional analysis above, Bolton involved a direct interference with a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy. In contrast, the essence of Title XIX, of course, is funding. The Supreme Court has amply demonstrated in Maher and Beal that the right to an abortion acquires an entirely different hue and brings into play a wholly different set of factors in the funding context. Similarly, this court is of the opinion that the set of factors mentioned in Bolton is not the governing standard in the abortion funding setting. Under Utah’s funding provisions, for example, the state is not proscribing the performance of abortions or intruding into the doctor-patient relationship by prohibiting the recipient’s attending physician from advising his patient in accordance with his best medical judgment based on any factors deemed relevant by the physician. Rather, the state is merely setting the conditions under which it will pay for the abortions performed. To assert at this point that the present issue is distinguishable from the corresponding constitutional issue because Title XIX requires the funding of “medically necessary” abortions is to do nothing more than beg the question facing the court.
Finally, this court feels that the Supreme Court has clearly indicated that the standard of Doe v. Bolton has been modified in *622 the environment of abortion funding. A glance at the criteria set forth in Bolton reveals that the standard is not a great deal more restrictive than a standard that would allow mere elective abortions, and is in reality based largely on the spirit of personal choice and freedom that pervades the Bolton and Wade decisions. 1 By comparison, the concept of medical necessity given effect in Beal indicates that the attending physician must conclude from his consideration of all relevant factors that the factors indicate an actual effect on the woman’s health. Thus, it has been observed that, “Beal indeed may mark a significant turn in the interpretation of the underlying Bolton right itself.” Privacy and Public Funding at note 103. While this court is not saying that the so-called Bolton right has been diminished in a non-funding setting, it is saying that in the area of state funding of abortions under Title XIX the right and standard indicated in Bolton takes on a different and presently undefined — but certainly narrower — perspective.
Because none of the three previously suggested meanings of the term “necessary medical services” is a sound or reliable one — especially in the abortion context — it is incumbent upon this court to fashion what it believes to be an accurate and valid meaning of the term as it applies in this case. And in the absence of any intrinsic aids to construction of the term, resort must be had to extrinsic aids. The initial inquiry must be whether Title XIX
requires
participating states to fund abortions at all. (In
Beal
the Court made it clear, “that the federal statute leaves a State free to provide such covérage
if it so desires.”
[W]hen Congress passed Title XIX in 1965, nontherapeutic abortions were unlawful in most States. In view of the then-prevailing state law, the contention that Congress intended to require — rather than permit — participating States to fund nontherapeutic abortions requires far more convincing proof than [plaintiffs] have offered.
In 1972, Congress amended Title XIX to include “family planning services” within the five broad categories of required medical treatment. It was argued by proponents of abortion funding and held by some' courts that in light of similar enactments wherein Congress expressly excluded abortions as a method of family planning, the failure to so expressly exclude abortion in the Title XIX amendment strongly indicated an intention on the part of Congress
to require
Medicaid coverage of abortions. In
Beal,
however, the Court addressed this argument and concluded that: “This line of
*623
reasoning is flawed. The failure to exclude abortions from coverage indicates only that Congress intended
to allow
such coverage, not that such coverage is mandatory for non-therapeutic abortions.”
In
Beal
the Court used the word “non-therapeutic” in connection with its discussion of the circumstances existing at the time Title XIX was enacted. Because the word “therapeutic” is used by plaintiff and others interchangeably with the term “medically necessary,” it is essential to determine the meaning of “nontherapeutic” as that term is used by the Court. In the passages cited, the Court referred to “nontherapeutic” abortions as those that were unlawful in most states prior to its decision in
Roe v. Wade, supra-,
and, specifically, to the Texas statute at issue in
Roe
and those “similar statutes” that were “in existence in a majority of the States.”
That the Title XIX concept of therapeutic or necessary abortions must be viewed to be those abortions necessary to prevent the endangering of the life of the mother is also indicated by the highly relevant and significant action taken by Congress in enacting the Labor-HEW Appropriation Acts of 1977 and 1978. In the 1977 Act Congress prohibited the use of federal Medicaid funds for abortions except where the life of the mother would be endangered if the fetus were carried to term. Departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare Appropriation Act, 1977, § 209, Pub.L. 94-439, 90 Stat. 1434 (popularly known as the Hyde Amendment). The equivalent provision for 1978 increased the range of permissible abortions to allow funding, in pertinent part, where long lasting physical health damage to the mother would result if the pregnancy were carried to term. Departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare Appropriation Act, 1977, § 101, Pub.L. 95-205, 91 Stat. 1460. This congressional action bears upon the present matter in two important respects. First, it seems clear that an appropriations measure is an “act of Congress.”
See Tennessee Valley Authority v.
Hill, - U.S. -, -,
These later [appropriation] acts of Congress should be accorded “significant weight” in determining the intent of earlier legislation. NLRB v. Bell Aerospace Co.,416 U.S. 267 , 275,94 S.Ct. 1757 ,40 L.Ed.2d 134 (1974). Moreover, these Appropriation Acts, in themselves, may be considered substantive amendments to the Black Lung Act. United States v. Dickerson,310 U.S. 554 , 555,60 S.Ct. 1034 ,84 L.Ed. 1356 (1940).
Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs, U. S. Dep’t of Labor
v.
National Mines Corp.,
The second noteworthy item regarding the appropriation acts is the reference the Supreme Court made with respect to the bills. At the time the Court considered and ruled in
Beal, Maher
and
Poelker,
the Hyde Amendment was in effect. In
Beal,
after indicating that “therapeutic” abortions were those that were lawful in most states when Title XIX was enacted, the court concluded that the failure to provide coverage for “nontherapeutic” abortions is not inconsistent with Title XIX.
In sum, in light of all the above available factors, it is the opinion of this court that Title XIX may not require the funding of any class of abortions, and, if it does require the funding of some abortions, it requires the subsidizing of only those abortions that were lawful in most states when Title XIX was enacted. In Beal and Roe v. Wade, the Court has indicated that these abortions are those necessary to prevent the endangering of the life of the mother by the carrying of the pregnancy to term. Inasmuch as Utah Code Ann. § 55-15a-3 (1953) is consistent with this life-en *625 dangering standard, 2 it follows that the challenged Utah provisions must be upheld.
This court’s construction of Title XIX and the resulting level of participation required of the states are reinforced by several other considerations. First, the Utah provisions are pursuant to and consistent with the regulation promulgated under Title XIX. The regulation expressly provides that a state may place limits on the services offered under its Medicaid plan, such limits being based on criteria “such as” medical necessity or utilization procedures. See 45 C.F.R. § 249.10(aX5)(i) (1976). The term “medical necessity” must be read as relating back to the statutory term “necessary medical services” and is thus subject to the same construction that the court has given the statutory equivalent. Even if a broader meaning were to be associated with the term, the regulating provision indicates that the “medical necessity” criterion is merely illustrative of the types of criteria that may be employed to limit services, and nothing in the provision suggests a more restrictive criterion is prohibited. With respect to the requirement in the regulation that a state may not arbitrarily deny or reduce the availability of the services provided under its plan solely because of the diagnosis or type of condition, it is apparent that Utah has not denied or reduced the funding of abortions, but, in light of the great state interests involved, has only limited the funding of the service in an entirely authorized and non-arbitrary manner.
Second, the minority in Beal argued in its dissent from the majority opinion that,
“[i]f Pennsylvania is not obligated to fund medical services rendered in performing elective abortions because they are not ‘necessary’ within the meaning of [Title XIX], it must follow that Pennsylvania also would not violate the statute if it refused to fund medical services for ‘therapeutic’ abortions .
Third, certainly a very influential factor in the court’s decision is the statement of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit in
Doe v. Rose,
Finally, as discussed earlier, the Supreme Court in
Beal
held that states have “unquestionably strong and legitimate” interests in encouraging normal childbirth, and that these interests should not be undercut in the absence of a clear and strong contrary congressional intent.
Participation in Social Security programs such as the Medicaid program is a joint effort of the federal and state governments and is based on a “scheme of cooperative federalism.”
King v. Smith,
Conflicting claims of morality and intelligence are raised by opponents and proponents of almost every measure, certainly including, the one before us. But the intractable economic, social and even philosophical problems presented by public welfare assistance programs are not the business of this Court. [T]he Constitution does not empower this Court to second-guess state officials charged with the difficult responsibility of allocating limited public welfare funds among the myriad of potential recipients.
All that remains for this court’s decision are two procedural matters. First, inasmuch as plaintiff instituted this action as a class action and defendants have not resisted the maintenance of the action as such, the action will be considered as a class action. The court finds that the prerequisites of Rule 23(a), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, have been met and that defendants have acted or refused to act on grounds generally applicable to the class, thereby making injunctive and declaratory relief appropriate. Rule 23(b)(2), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Second, since matters outside the pleadings have been presented to and not excluded by the court, defendants’ motion to dismiss will be treated as one for summary judgment. Rule 12(b), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Accordingly,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that plaintiff’s action shall be maintained as a class *627 action under Rule 23(a) and Rule 23(b)(2), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiff’s request of this court to enter “a final Judgment pursuant to Sections 2201 and 2202 of Title 28, United States Code, and Rules 54, 57, 58 and 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, declaring that insofar as House Bill 447 and the challenged language of Item 175 of House Bill 462 enact restrictions on the right to secure an abortion, the same are in violation of the laws and Constitution of the United States of America, and to permanently enjoin the defendants, their agents and employees, their successors in office and all other persons acting in active concert and participation with said defendants from enforcement of said statutes” is denied.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiff’s motion to modify the prior order of this court of October 14, 1977, is denied.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiff’s request for an award of her costs and attorney’s fees is denied.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that defendants’ motion to dismiss shall be treated as a motion for summary judgment and the same is granted.
Notes
. The facts of the instant case demonstrate the proposition that the distinction between the terms therapeutic and nontherapeutic as used herein may be largely illusory. Plaintiff claims only, “that her desire to secure an abortion was appropriate medical treatment ... in the best judgment of her physician.” Complaint ¶ 10 (emphasis added). As defendants aptly observe, “[i]f, as plaintiff contends, all abortions which are considered ‘appropriate’ are ‘necessary,’ then there is no distinction whatsoever between a therapeutic and non-therapeutic abortion.” Defendants’ Reply Memorandum at 3. Beal does not allow such a result.
. Indeed, Utah may exceed any Title XIX requirement in that Utah appears to provide funding for abortions obtained in cases of rape and incest and where the health of the fetus is endangered, depending upon the force to be given to the noncodified but express legislative policy set forth in Item 175 of House Bill 462.
