OPINION OF THE COURT
Thе question raised by this appeal is whether the doctrine of vested rights or res judicata bars a second administrative proceeding — where the first has failed — for automatic revocation of petitioners’ nursing home operating certificate owing to their industry-related felony convictions.
On April 4, 1979, petitioners Louis Hodes and Herman Surkis, owners and operators of Franklin Park Nursing Hоme (a licensed residential care facility), each entered a plea of guilty to grand larceny in the third degree, based on fictitious
Central to this appeal is Public Heаlth Law § 2806 (5) as it existed at the time of petitioners’ convictions in 1979, and as thereafter twice amended — once in 1981 and a second time in 1983.
In 1979, Public Health Law § 2806 (5) permitted the Commissioner after a hearing to revoke a nursing home operating certificate if the person controlling the facility was convicted of an industry-related felony (L 1977, ch 896). Upon petitioners’ convictions they were advised that a hearing would be held by the Department of Health to determine whether their operating certificate should be revoked, suspended, limited or annulled by reason of their convictions. The Administrative Law Judge before whom the hearing took place found that petitioners’ felony convictions were sufficient to warrant revocation of their operating certificate and so recommended. By order dated February 24, 1981 the Department of Health revoked petitioners’ operating certificate pursuant to Public
In July 1981 Public Health Law § 2806 (5) was amended, effective immediately, to make revocation of operating certificates mandatory upon a controlling person’s conviction for an industry-related felony (L 1981, ch 607). The accompanying executive memorandum made clear that these amendments addressed a concern that convicted felons were taking advantage of prolonged administrative and judicial revocation proceedings, while continuing to operate facilities that cared for the aged and infirm (1981 McKinney’s Session Laws of NY, at 2604).
On petitioners’ appeal to this court, we reversed the Appеllate Division judgment, concluding that the Public Health Law as it existed at the time of our decision — which is the applicable law (see, Strauss v University of State of N Y.,
Within weeks the Legislature responded by amending both Public Health Law § 2806 (5) and Correction Law § 701 (2) specifically to require revocation of nursing home operating certificates upon a controlling person’s industry-related felony conviction, despite a certificate of relief from disabilities (L 1983, ch 584). The amendments were to take effect immediately and "apply to all existing operating certificates even though the felony conviction may have been entered and the certificate of relief from disabilities granted prior to the effective date hereof.” (L 1983, ch 584, § 3.) The sponsoring agency’s memorandum, referring to the nursing home scandals of the mid 1970’s, again took note of the serious situation created by convicted felons continuing to operate health care facilities as review proceedings dragged on. While the 1981 amendments intended to rid the industry of such persons, and to do so expeditiously, several nonetheless continued operating
Armed with the amended legislation, in 1984 the Commissioner of Health commenced the present proceeding against petitioners under Public Health Law § 2806 (5) to revoke their operating certificate upon a finding that they had been convicted of industry-related felonies. The proceeding was, however, enjoined by Special Term on the ground that petitioners enjoy the protection of "the res judicata effect of the favorable Court of Appeals determination.” A divided Appellate Division affirmed, the majority concluding both that petitioners have a vested property right in the judgment on the merits in their favor, and that the new proceeding is barred by the doctrine of res judicata. In this posture the case comes before us.
As the starting point for our analysis, we agree with the Appellate Division dissenter that the 1983 amendments to Public Health Law § 2806 (5) — explicitly made retroactive by the Legislature — were intended to apply to all licensed operators, even those like petitioners who had litigated the automatic revocation issue to a final judgment in their favor under preexisting law. While clear expression of such purpose is unquestionably necessary (see, e.g., Gleason v Gleason,
The question is whether realization of that legislative objective is precluded either by a vested right petitioners acquired in the judgment or by the doctrine оf res judicata. We conclude that neither is a bar to the present revocation proceeding.
The Vested Rights Doctrine
Although a statute is not invalid merely because it reaches back to establish the legal significance of events occurring
Germania Sav. Bank v Village of Suspension Bridge (
Since Germania Sav. Bank (supra), however, the traditional principle has undergone more critical analysis. We have recognized that the vested rights doctrine is conclusory, and indeed a fiction that "hides many unmentioned considerations of fairness to the parties, reliance on pre-existing law, the extent of retroactivity and the nature of the public interest to be served by the law. (Hochman, Retroactive Legislation, 73 Harv. L. Rev. 692.)” (Matter of Chrysler Props. v Morris,
Balancing the various factors, we hold that the vested rights doctrine does not preclude application of the amended statute to these рetitioners.
Examining first the nature of the right petitioners allegedly secured by the judgment, plainly there can be no vested right in their continued operating license; petitioners themselves acknowledge this. The amended legislation does not reopen petitioners’ criminal prosecution. At most, the judgment could give them an advantage over their fellow facility operators whose certificates under the amended law are automatically revoked upon an industry-related felony conviction. It is, further, significant in the balance that petitioners’ alleged right arises as the unfortunate result of an inadvertent gap or anomaly in the interrelationship of two laws, which the Legislature within weeks cured by the amended statute now sought to be enforced. Any rеliance by petitioners on the judgment thus would have been the product of a legislatively unintended windfall which was, immediately upon identification, eliminated. (See, Hochman, The Supreme Court and the Constitutionality of Retroactive Legislation, 73 Harv L Rev 692, 705-706.)
To be weighed with these considerations is the fact that petitioners continue to run a public health facility. Nursing homes care for the aged and infirm, and receive State funds for such care under the Medicaid program (see, Social Services Law § 363). There is a public interest in policing this industry and removing persons convicted of industry-related felonies from the operation of nursing homes. That this is a compelling interest is plain not only from the nature of the services offered but also from the publicized scandals that have plagued this industry. Automatic revocation in these circumstances in itself serves the public interest, so that upon
Thus, we conclude that there is a strong public interest to be served by permitting the law to be enforced as amended in 1983, and that in this casе the public interest overrides petitioners’ claimed constitutional objection.
Res Judicata
Finding no constitutional impediment in the application of the amended statute to petitioners, we next consider whether the cause of action for automatic revocation was somehow extinguished by the judgment in the prior proceeding, brought under the old law.
Simply stated, where therе is a valid final judgment the doctrine of res judicata, or claim preclusion, bars future litigation between those parties on the same cause of action. The doctrine rests not on constitutional underpinnings but on sound public policy considerations. Putting an end to a matter for all time is fair to the party who has endured the cost and travail of a litigation, fair to the party whosе claim has once been heard, and in the interest of the judicial system generally (Matter of Reilly v Reid,
While simply stated, the doctrine often eludes ready application because of difficulty determining whether there is the requisite identity between an earlier cause of action and a later one. The fact that causes of action may be separately stated or statable, оr invoke different legal theories, will not permit relitigation of claims (Matter of Reilly v Reid, supra, at 19; see also, O’Brien v City of Syracuse,
Twice recently this court has applied the transaction test where the only real difference between the first and second actions was an intervening сhange in law. In Matter of John P. v Whalen (
Although both revocation proceеdings instituted against petitioners are based on the same felony convictions, seeking the same remedy, it is equally true that petitioner in John P. twice made virtually the same FOIL requests and plaintiff in Meegan S. twice commenced the same paternity suit. The operative consideration in all three cases is that the statutory rights of the parties were altered between the first and second proceedings. This being so, the two proceedings against petitioners can be said to lack the requisite identity for application of res judicata (see, State Farm Ins. Co. v Duel,
We find this analysis particularly apt in the present situation because of the public importance of the issues involved (see, Restatement [Second] of Judgments § 28 [2], comment c;
Petitioners’ arguments in support of res judicata are in the end much the same as their plea for application of the vested rights doctrine — that permitting a second revocation proсeeding to go forward against them unfairly impairs rights already adjudicated by this court in the first proceeding. Indeed, the doctrines of vested rights and res judicata — while resting on different foundations and implicating different válues — do have certain common elements, most powerfully a central concern for fairness. In this respect, however, our "vested rights” analysis and conclusions are рertinent. A second revocation proceeding is not unfair to petitioners in any sense that is protected by law; this proceeding is, to the contrary, supported by supervening considerations of public interest that have been properly balanced by the Legislature.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and the petition dismissed.
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Simons, Alexander, Titone, Hancock, Jr., and Bellacosa concur.
Order reversed, etc.
Notes
. A third petitioner, Fred Springer, was also a respondent on this appeal. Springer and his partners in the Park Nursing Home and the Rockaway Nursing Home have entered into voluntary receivership agreements with the State Department of Health and relinquished their operating certifiсates for these facilities, and the appeal has been withdrawn as to him.
. Correction Law § 701 (2) provided in part that: "Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a conviction of a crime or of an offense specified in a certificate of relief from disabilities shall not cause automatic forfeiture of any license, permit, employment or franchise, including the right to register for or vote at an election, or automatic forfeiture of any other right or privilege, held by the eligible offender and covered by the certificate.”
