572 N.E.2d 849 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1991
This is an appeal by appellant, Good Samaritan Medical Center, from an order of the Certificate of Need Review Board ("board") denying a certificate of need ("CON") to appellant. Appellant requested a CON to establish a cardiac catheterization service.
The CON program, as established in Ohio, is a health planning program which is administered by appellee, Ohio Department of Health ("ODH"), pursuant to R.C. Chapter 3702 and Ohio Adm. Code Chapter 3701-12. Appellant previously filed an application for a CON for a cardiac catheterization laboratory in 1983 when both it and Bethesda Hospital ("Bethesda"), an intervenor in the present action, sought such laboratories in their respective institutions. Originally, ODH denied both applications but the board ultimately determined that a need existed for one laboratory and remanded the case to ODH to determine the appropriate site for such a laboratory. Appellant is located approximately two miles from Bethesda in Zanesville, Ohio. Subsequently, an agreement was reached between appellant and Bethesda to jointly operate a cardiac catheterization laboratory which would be located in Bethesda. Five years later, on September 29, 1988, appellant submitted a second application to ODH for a CON in order to establish a cardiac catheterization laboratory in its own institution.
Upon receipt of appellant's application, ODH reviewed the application for completeness of information and a notice of completeness was sent by certified mail to appellant on October 19, 1988. On January 17, 1989, ODH mailed by certified mail a written notice to appellant that it was extending the ninety-day decision period, incorporated in Ohio Adm. Code
Thereafter, on March 16, 1989, appellant appealed to the board with a hearing beginning on June 20, 1989 and concluding on June 21, 1989. ODH called three witnesses who testified at the hearing, while no testimony was presented by appellant on direct examination. All three witnesses opposed the proposed CON application submitted by appellant. On October 17, 1989, a hearing examiner issued his report and recommendation to the board in which he invalidated the process for reviewing applications for completeness established by Ohio Adm. Code
The board rejected the recommendation of its hearing examiner and found that the director of ODH had timely denied appellant's application concluding that the application was "* * * formally `complete' on October 19, 1988, the day on which the ODH declared the application complete * * *" and that the director of ODH had properly extended the ninety-day review period by letter to appellant on January 17, 1989. After rejecting the recommendation of the hearing examiner, the board affirmed the decision of ODH and denied appellant a CON for the establishment of a cardiac catheterization laboratory in its institution in Zanesville, Ohio.
It is from the board's decision that appellant pursues this appeal and sets forth three assignments of error for this court's review:
"A. The Board erred in failing to find that a certificate of need was granted to Good Samaritan by operation of law on December 28, 1988 and that ODH's letter of February 15, 1989 denying Good Samaritan's certificate of need application was invalid and a nullity.
"B. The Board erred in failing to find that Ohio Rev. Code §
"C. The Board erred in failing to find that the Board was without jurisdiction to consider the appeal because no appeals were filed in a timely manner." (Emphasis sic.)
Initially, it must be noted that ODH has filed a motion to dismiss appellant's appeal before this court on the basis that it is moot. R.C.
In response to ODH's motion to dismiss, appellant insists that the present appeal is not moot since anything less than a valid CON will allow ODH to continue to hamper appellant from performing any type of cardiac catheterization. While it appears that appellant is permitted to perform limited diagnostic cardiac catheterization, we feel that it is appropriate to address the merits of appellant's appeal since approval of the requested CON at issue would appear to provide greater reliability than the limited exemption under which appellant now operates and may also encompass more than the exemption allows. Thus ODH's motion to dismiss is not well-taken and is therefore denied.
R.C.
"The director of health shall administer a state certificate of need program in accordance with sections
"* * *
"(3) Grant or deny certificates of need within ninety days after receiving an application that 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
Appellant argues in its first assignment of error that its proposed CON was automatically approved as a result of ODH's failure to render a decision within ninety days of receipt of its completed application. Appellant insists that its application for a CON was complete when ODH received it, and therefore ODH had ninety days after September 29, 1988 in which to render a *442
decision either granting or denying its application. Instead, ODH did not notify appellant of the thirty-day extension until January 17, 1989, well after the ninety-day period for rendering a decision had expired, and therefore appellant's CON application was granted by operation of law on December 28, 1988. We find appellant's second assignment of error to be interrelated to its first assignment of error since appellant argues in its second assignment of error that as Ohio Adm. Code
ODH insists that it timely issued its decision on appellant's CON application since R.C.
Ohio Adm. Code
"Except as provided in paragraph (C) of this rule, upon receipt of an application and the appropriate fee, the director shall review the application for completeness of information. The director may request additional information from the applicant but shall not request any information that is not necessary to review the application in relation to the criteria established by rules
Ohio Adm. Code
"(C) The director shall grant or deny all completed applications for certificates of need no later than ninety days after the date of mailing of notice of completeness under paragraph (E) of rule
"(1) The director or the applicant may extend the ninety-day review period once, for no longer than thirty days, by written notice before the end of the ninety-day period. * * *
"* * * *443
"(E) If the director does not grant or deny the certificate of need within the applicable time period specified in this rule, the certificate shall be considered to have been granted."
While we believe that it is clear that R.C.
Upon review of Ohio Adm. Code
While we recognize that pursuant to R.C.
"* * * It is well established * * * that administrative rules, in general, may not add to or subtract from, as is the situation herein, the legislative enactment. * * *" (Emphasissic.)
Thus, where an administrative rule conflicts with a legislative pronouncement, that rule is invalid. Central OhioJoint Vocational School Dist. Bd. of Edn., supra; Matz v. J.L.Curtis Cartage Co. (1937),
If this court were to find Ohio Adm. Code
Finally, appellant argues in its third assignment of error that the board did not have jurisdiction to subsequently review the automatic approval of appellant's CON since the granting of appellant's CON was effective December 28, 1988 and was not timely appealed to the board. Since no timely appeals were filed regarding appellant's "deemed" CON, the board was without jurisdiction over the matter and appellant retains its CON approval.
R.C.
"Any affected person shall be entitled to an adjudication hearing before the certificate of need review board on a decision of the director of health to grant, deny, or withdraw a certificate of need or a ruling by the director that a proposed project is or is not a reviewable activity. * * *"
It is clear that strict compliance with the requirements for filing appeals is required in order for an appellate body to gain jurisdiction to review an alleged error. As was stated by the Supreme Court of Ohio in paragraph seven of its syllabus inState, ex rel. Curran, v. Brookes (1943),
"The filing of notice of appeal, in the court from which the appeal is taken, within the time prescribed by law, is the only jurisdictional step necessary to perfect an appeal and where such notice is not filed within such time the reviewing court is without jurisdiction to consider the appeal."
This rule has also been applied in administrative appeals as in Painesville v. Lake Cty. Budget Comm. (1978),
"* * * It is established law in Ohio that `"where a statute confers the right of appeal, adherence to the conditions thereby imposed is essential to the enjoyment of the right conferred."'Queen City Valves, Inc., v. Peck [(1954),
As a notice of appeal is jurisdictional, there must be strict compliance with the statutory provisions conferring the enjoyment of such a right. Hafner Sons v. Lindley (1979),
In In re Wendt-Bristol Diagnostics Co. (June 13, 1989), Franklin App. No. 88AP-1049, unreported, 1989 WL 65422, this court recognized that where the running of an appeal time commences upon the mailing date of a decision by the director of ODH, the failure to mail such notice delays commencement of the appeal period. This court relied upon the Supreme Court's decision in Sun Refining Marketing Co. v. Brennan (1987),
"The fifteen-day appeal period provided in R.C.
We believe the foregoing is equally applicable in the present case. It appears that R.C.
Order affirmed. *447
REILLY, P.J., and MARTIN, J., concur.
JOHN D. MARTIN, J., of the Fairfield County Court of Common Pleas, sitting by assignment.
"* * * 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