668 N.E.2d 974 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1995
Appellant, Fort Hamilton-Hughes Memorial Hospital ("Fort Hamilton"), appeals from an order of the Certificate of Need Review Board ("CON Review Board") granting a certificate of need ("CON") to appellees, Mercy Hospital of Fairfield ("Mercy"), and Good Samaritan Hospital ("Good Samaritan").
On September 15, 1988, Mercy and Good Samaritan jointly filed an application with the Director of Health ("director") seeking a CON to establish an obstetrics *353 unit at Mercy Hospital in Butler County by relocating obstetric and nursery beds from Good Samaritan Hospital in Hamilton County. As amended, appellees' application proposed relocating fifteen obstetric beds, eight Level II newborn bassinets and nine Level I newborn bassinets from Good Samaritan to Mercy ("original application").
On September 30, 1988, the director requested additional information from appellees regarding their application. On June 20, 1989, the director received the last of the information requested from appellees, thus completing appellees' original application. On July 6, 1989, the director issued a "notice of completeness" to appellees.
On September 21, 1989, the director notified appellees in writing that he was extending the period for issuing a decision by thirty days.
On October 31, 1989, Mercy and Good Samaritan again amended their application, causing it to become incomplete and subject to further review ("amended application").
On September 27, 1990, the director denied appellees' amended application. Appellees appealed this denial to the CON Review Board. In addition, appellees filed a mandamus action in this court alleging that the director had failed to timely act upon their original application resulting in that application having been approved by operation of law under the "deemer" provision of R.C.
On February 27, 1992, the director and appellees entered into a settlement agreement which called for the director to grant appellees' original application on the grounds that the project had been "deemed" granted under R.C.
On March 27, 1992, Fort Hamilton appealed the director's grant of appellees' original application to the CON Review Board. Appellees subsequently filed notices of appearance in Fort Hamilton's appeal. By agreement of the parties the matter was then continued for almost two years. On July 11, 1994, an adjudication hearing was finally held before a CON Review Board hearing examiner. On November 28, 1994, the hearing examiner issued a report and recommendation in which he concluded that appellees' original CON application *354
had been "deemed" approved pursuant R.C.
On February 2, 1995, the CON Review Board issued an order adopting the hearing examiner's report. Fort Hamilton appeals therefrom, assigning the following errors:
"A. The Board erred in determining that the application was properly approved by operation of law (i.e., deemer), as such determination was not supported by substantial, reliable and probative evidence nor in accordance with law.
"B. The Board erred in its application of the special review criteria to the project, especially as those criteria relating to need and adverse impact [sic].
"C. The Board erred in awarding the certificate of need to the joint applicants, Mercy and Good Samaritan, in light of substantial, reliable and probative evidence that Good Samaritan had no intention of implementing the project."
The order of the CON Review Board shall be affirmed unless appellant can demonstrate that the factual findings of the CON Review Board are not supported by reliable, probative, and substantial evidence or that the order is not in accordance with law. R.C.
In its first assignment of error, Fort Hamilton argues that the CON Review Board's determination was not in accordance with law, as the board incorrectly applied former rather than amended R.C.
When appellees filed their original application, R.C.
"* * * In administering the certificate of need program, the director shall:
"* * *
"(3) Grant or deny certificates of need within ninety daysafter receiving an application that meets the requirements ofdivision (A)(2) of this section and the criteria for a completeapplication specified in rules adopted under division (B) ofsection
In In re Good Samaritan Med. Ctr. (1991),
However, effective August 5, 1989, R.C.
"* * * In administering the certificate of need program, the director shall:
"* * *
"(3) Grant or deny certificates of need within ninety days after an application meets the requirements of division (A)(2) of this section and the criteria for a complete application specified in rules adopted under division (B) of section
Under amended R.C.
If former R.C.
If, on the other hand, amended R.C.
Section
However, pursuant to R.C.
"All appeals pending before the Certificate of Need Review Board on which the hearing has been completed * * * on the effective date of this section shall be conducted and decided based on sections
The CON Review Board concluded that this provision did not expressly provide for the retrospective application of amended R.C.
In In re E. ProMedica Professional Bldg. (June 30, 1992), Franklin App. Nos. 91AP-869 and 91AP-892, unreported, 1992 WL 158430, we interpreted Section 31, Am.Sub.H.B. No. 332 to mean that "where a hearing had not yet been held or an order of the director not yet appealed, the new version of [the statute] would apply, otherwise the prior version of the statute is applicable." See, also, In re Jefferson Health Care Ctr. (Mar. 26, 1991), Franklin App. No. 90AP-670, unreported, 1991 WL 42480, fn. 2 and accompanying text. We continue to believe that this is the plain meaning of Section 31.
Appellees argue, however, that In re VHA Diagnostic Serv.,Inc. (1992),
The date of the applicant's hearing before the CON Review Board does not appear in the text of VHA Diagnostic. However, appellees have provided the report and recommendations of the hearing examiner in that case to show that the parties filed stipulations in lieu of a hearing on May 3, 1990, well after the effective date of amended R.C.
Preliminarily, we cannot properly interpret VHA Diagnostic
based upon facts not contained in the opinion. Further, retrospective application of amended R.C.
Applying Section 31, Am.Sub.H.B. No. 332 in the present case, no appeal to the CON Review Board had been taken from appellees' original CON application, let alone the hearing completed, when amended R.C.
Since the CON Review Board's determination that appellees' original CON application was "deemed" approved was not in accordance with law, Fort Hamilton's first assignment of error is sustained.
Fort Hamilton's second and third assignments of error raise issues dealing with the merits of appellees' original CON application. Although the hearing examiner fully considered the merits of Fort Hamilton's appeal, the CON Review Board considered only the "deemer" issue. The CON Review Board's order states in relevant part:
"IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED THAT, based upon the evidence of record, the analysis contained in the Hearing Examiner's Report, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, the determination of the Director of Health IS AFFIRMED that the certificate of need application of Good Samaritan Hospital/Mercy Hospital of Fairfield * * * WAS DEEMED APPROVED pursuant to Ohio Revised §
Further, the minutes of the CON Review Board meeting, dated February 2, 1995, indicate that the board believed that the merits of appellees' CON application were not before it. Specifically, CON Review Board member Darrell A. *358 Fields "observed that the matter before the Board pertained to a `deemer' issue, as opposed to the merits of the case."
Because the CON Review Board did not consider the merits of this case, the merits are not properly before us. See In reSummit Health Care Ctr. (Aug. 15, 1991), Franklin App. Nos. 90AP-1222 and 90AP-1225, unreported, 1991 WL 159889. Therefore, we overrule Fort Hamilton's second and third assignments of error, and remand this matter to the CON Review Board for consideration of the merits.
Having sustained Fort Hamilton's first assignment of error, and having overruled its second and third assignments of error, the order of the CON Review Board is reversed and this cause is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Order reversed and cause remanded.
JOHN C. YOUNG and TYACK, JJ., concur.
DEAN STRAUSBAUGH, J., retired, of the Tenth Appellate District, sitting by assignment.
"If the director does not grant or deny the certificate within the applicable time period specified in this division, the certificate shall be considered to have been granted. * * *"