The opinion of the court was delivered by
This сase involves an administrative determination by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) and the Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC) denying to Dr. Gilbert Banks a certificate of need for a proposed kidney dialysis center in Coffeyville, Kansas. The chronology of events is important and should be briefly stated: On August 27, 1979, Dr. Banks applied to KDHE for the certificate of need. On September 6,
We do not deem it necessary to discuss at length the purpose of health facility planning legislation. That was gone into in some depth in
Pratt v. Board of Thomas County Comm’rs,
In considering the need for a project, KDHE must apply certain “interim review criteria” established by the Statewide Health Coordinating Council under the authority granted by K.S.A. 65-4804. The five review criteria or standards tо be considered are community need, quality of care, community support, financial feasibility, and cost containment. The evaluation of any proposed health care project against the review standards requires considerable expertise in the field of health carе economics. The state agencies which participate in the process are bound by law to attempt to implement the national planning goals of containing rapidly growing costs and avoiding duplicative services. Each “certificate of need” proceeding is an exercise in the inherently inexact science of determining how society’s scarce health care resources might best be allocated.
An adverse administrative decision by KDHE may be appealed by an applicant for a certificate of need to the designated review agency, KCC (K.S.A. 65-4809), which is required to make independent findings of fact and determine the issue presented. It may approve or disapprove the decision of KDHE (K.S.A. 65-4814[a]). An adverse decision by the KCC may be appealed to the district court of the county in which the proposed health facility is to be located (K.S.A. 65-4816). As noted above, in this case the applicant-doctor appealed to the KCC which upheld the findings of KDHE. Dr. Banks then appealed to the district court of Montgomery County which, as noted above, set aside the administrative decision of the KCC and ordered that a certificatе of need be granted to Dr. Banks.
On appeal to the district court and also on appeal to this court, the standard of review is well established. Neither the district court nor this court on appeal is permitted to try the case de novo and substitute its judgment for that of the highest administrative tribunal, the Kаnsas Corporation Commission. The district court
In the present appeal, we have no issue raised that the KDHE or the KCC acted frаudulently or capriciously in denying Dr. Banks a full, fair, and open opportunity to present his evidence and to be heard by the administrative agency or that he was denied due process in any manner. There, likewise, is no contention that the denial of the certificate of need by KDHE or the KCC was nоt within the scope of their authority.
The sole issue for the determination of the district court was whether the findings of the KCC denying the certificate of need for the kidney dialysis center in Coffeyville were supported by substantial evidence. The deliberation of a reviewing court on application of the “substantial evidence” test is analogous to that of a trial court which considers whether to take a case away from a jury by sustaining a motion for a directed verdict. “Substantial evidence” has been defined as evidence which possesses both relevance and substance, аnd which furnishes a substantial basis of fact from which the issues can reasonably be resolved. Stated in another way, substantial evidence is such legal and relevant evidence as a reasonable person might accept as being sufficient to support a conclusion.
Jibben v. Post & Brown Well Service,
We have considered the entire record in this case and have
All administrative agencies were in agreement that the two criteria of “quality of care” and “community support” were met by Dr. Banks. As noted above, however, KDHE found that the criteria of “community need,” “financial feasibility,” and “cost containment” were not satisfied. On the community need requirement, concern was expressed by some of the witnesses as to the propriety of the proposed service area. The ESDR Network #9 Coordinating Council, of the federal health systems agency, has set planning objectives which require that dialysis services should be available within a sixty-mile radius of any facility, with 75% of the population being within a 60 or 90 minute driving time from dialysis services. In his application, Dr. Banks proposed that the sixty-mile radius include eleven counties. Two Kansas counties, Cherokee and Crawford Counties, were found to be closer to the existing facility at Joplin, Missouri, than to Coffeyville. Residents of Washington County in Oklahoma were within the sixty-mile radius of the Tulsa, Oklahoma, facility. The total service area population of the proposed eleven-county service area was about 220,000. Elimination of the three counties
Carla McCracken, staff member of HSASEK, testified, in substance, that in the entire area of HSASEK there are currently 152 patients who have been identified as having end-stage renal disease. Of these 152 patiеnts, only 23 were identified as living within the proposed service area. Of these 23 patients, eight are currently on home dialysis, four have been transplanted, and 11 currently receive in-center dialysis. Five individual dialysis patients, who live in either Crawford or Cherokee Counties, submitted letters stating that they would cоntinue to dialyze at Joplin and that they would not utilize a facility at Coffeyville. We have concluded that a bona fide doubt was raised as to whether there was sufficient community need in the proposed service area to justify the Coffeyville facility.
As to the criteria of “financial feasibility,” there was substаntial evidence to support KDHE’s and the KCC’s finding that the projected use rate of the proposed clinic would not be sufficient to sustain it financially. This finding was based in part on the conclusion that the proposed service area, when reduced by the three counties, would not provide suffiсient patients to support financially the center at Coffeyville. There was also evidence in the record that the proposed clinic would not receive sufficient medicare reimbursements to support the facility. Although the conclusion reached on this evidence might be fairly disputed by reasonable minds, it appears to us that it furnished substantial evidence to support the findings that the center failed to satisfy the criteria of financial feasibility. We also note that the ESDR planning documents state, as a condition for that agency’s federal support, that an apрlicant should provide evidence that the projected use rates of the machines will reach 70% within the first three years of operation. The executive director of ESDR testified that the applicant, Dr. Banks, had projected a 50% utilization rate for the dialysis stations by the end of the third yeаr of operation, which did not meet the ESDR goal.
There was also substantial evidence to support the findings that the proposed application for the certificate of need did not meet the review criteria of “cost containment.” The application of the
We can understand how the district court could have reached the conclusion that a kidney dialysis center at Coffeyville would provide kidney dialysis service to the people in the immediate area. However, as noted above, that is not the test to be applied by the district court on appeal from a determination by the KCC. After a careful review of the record, we can reach no other conclusion than that the record furnishes a substantial basis of fact which supports the findings of the KCC in its denial of the application for the certificate of need in this case. We, therefore, reverse the district court’s judgment ordering KDHE to grant a certificate of need for Dr. Banks’s kidney dialysis center at Coffeyville.
The judgment of the district court is reversed.
