These consolidated actions challenge the validity, as applied to the complaining parties, of certain administrative regulations of the Department of Health, the Department of Economic Security, and the Louisville and Jefferson County Board of Health which have the effect of increasing the minimum room size and space per bed required in nursing homes and rest homes, thereby reducing the number of resident patients the various plaintiff institutions are licensed to accommodate.
The trial court denied temporary injunc-tive relief and dismissed the actions on the grounds that (1) the facts alleged in the complaints do not indicate irreparable injury with no adequate remedy at law and (2) the plaintiffs had failed to exhaust the administrative remedies available to them. 1 We shall discuss these grounds in reverse order.
In Goodwin v. City of Louisville,
Another basis on which some courts have held the exhaustion requirement inapplicable when the issue is the validity of a regulation is that the administrative proceeding probably would be an exercise in futility. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise, § 20.07 (Vol. 3, p. 99); Jaffe, Judicial Control of Administrative Action, p. 44-9. But a more practical rationale is that if a person immediately affected by a regulation must either comply with it or violate it and await the consequences he simply does not have a reasonable, and therefore adequate, alternative to initiating a challenge in court. Especially is this so when, as in these cases, a violation subj ects him to criminal sanctions as well as forfeiture of his license. 2 He cannot reasonably be expected to live indefinitely under a sword of Damocles.
We realize, of course, that the same situation may exist by reason of factual circumstances that are in dispute, or which create uncertainty with regard to the applicability of particular regulations. This merely illustrates that there is a gray area which may have to be explored on a case by case basis as the need arises. 3 The single issue presented by the cases now before us is the validity of regulations that have the effect of making it illegal for the several appellants to continue using their property in a manner that was not illegal before the promulgation or amendment of the regulations in question. They have no way of initiating or precipitating a challenge except by a proceeding in court. We hold the requirement of exhaustion to be inapplicable.
In Kendall v. Beiling,
The considerations applicable to a grant or denial of temporary injunctive relief are discussed in Oscar Ewing, Inc. v. Melton, Ky.,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
