25 Pa. Commw. 435 | Pa. Commw. Ct. | 1976
Opinion by
The Analytical-Biochemical-Biological Laboratory Act, Act of September 26,1951, P.L. 1539, as amended, 35 P.S. §2151 et seq., subjected to State regulation by the Department of Health of:
“[a]ny place, establishment or institution organized and operated primarily for the performance of all or any bacteriological, biochemical, microscopical, serological, or parasitological tests by the practical application of one or more of the fundamental sciences to material originating from the human body, by the use of specialized apparatus, equipment and methods, for the purpose of obtaining scientific data which may be used as an aid to ascertain the state of health.
“The term ‘Department’ means the Department of Health.” Section 2, 35 P.S. §2152.
Section 13, 35 P.S. §2163, exempted from the operation of the Act a number of specified kinds of laboratories, including “a laboratory operated by a physician licensed to practice in this Commonwealth, provided such laboratory is operated solely in connection with the diagnosis and treatment of his own patients.”
By amendment to the original form of the Act made in 1962
The subject of this lawsuit in our original jurisdiction is the following proposed regulations of the Department of Health, published at Yol. 5, Number 35, Page 2129 of the Pennsylvania Bulletin:
Ҥ5.1. Definitions.
“For the purpose of these regulations, the following definitions shall apply.
“(a) ‘Clinical Laboratory’:
“ (1) Any place, establishment or institution organized and operated primarily for the performance of all or any bacteriological, biochemical, hematological, microscopical, serological or parasitological or other tests by the practical application of one or more of
“(2) Provided, however, that the term ‘Clinical Laboratory’ shall not apply to the office or clinic of a licensed practitioner of the healing arts who performs only the following procedures as part of his or her examinations of the patient to obtain results which are essential for the immediate diagnosis and therapy of the patient:
“(i) Chemical examinations of urine by ‘Dipstik’ and/or tablet methods.
“(ii) Microscopic examinatoin of urine sediment. ‘ ‘ (iii) Pregnancy tests.
“ (iv) Bed and white blood cells counts.
“ (v) Sedimentation rate of blood.
“(vi) Gram stain.
“(vii) Primary culturing for transmittal to a licensed laboratory including preincubation, if required.
“(viii) Qualitative chemical examination of stool specimens.
“ (ix) Test for pinworms.
“ (x) Test for Trichomonas vaginalis.
‘ ‘ This list may be revised by the Department in the event it is deemed advisable to add or eliminate specific procedures which either qualify or which no longer qualify as exempt items under the meaning and intent of this Section.
‘ ‘ Such procedures may be performed by the practitioners personally or with the aid of an assistant who need not be otherwise qualified.
It will be noted that the Department has added to the list of statutory tests the performance of which will constitute a Clinical Laboratory, the word “hematological” and the phrase “or other” [tests]
The plaintiffs in this suit in our original jurisdiction are three licensed physicians and the Pennsylvania Medical Society suing in behalf of 13,444 members. The plaintiffs seek an injunction restraining the Secretary and the Department of Health from enforcing the proposed regulation with respect to places performing hematological tests and with respect to physicians’ offices and clinics where tests are made for the diagnosis, treatment and care of patients. The defendants have filed a responsive answer. The parties, and we, agree that there are no issues of fact. Both parties have filed motions for summary judgment pursuant to Pa. R.C.P. No. 1035. The announced effective date of the questioned regulations has been suspended by stipulation pending the outcome of this litigation.
The plaintiffs assert that the questioned provisions are attempts by the defendants to amend The Clinical Laboratory Act under the guise of regulatory power
The rule making power vested in the Department of Health by this Statute is clearly interpretive, not legislative and the Department’s regulators must depend for their validity not upon a law-making power but on whether they track the meaning of the Act. The Statute confers power to adopt regulations “for the proper enforcement of this Act,” not to make rules to effectuate the Act’s policies or purposes or to formulate policy. The subject matter is fully explained in Uniontown Area School District v. Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission, 455 Pa. 52, 75-80, 313 A.2d 156, 168-171 (1973). We turn then to the areas of dispute.
As we have noted, the defendants have added “hematological” and the phrase “or other” to the list of tests, the performance of which by the Act’s definition renders a place a regulated Clinical Laboratory. Does this make law or simply interpret the Act1? The plaintiffs contend that the statutory definition enumerates with specificity the tests which the Legislature wanted to include, and that the defendants had no power to expand the list. The defendants say that any tests of blood or blood tissue, the object of hematological tests, would be included within the statutory listing of biochemical, miseroscopical and serological tests and that the word hematological is
If we are wrong in our conclusion, in view of the defendants’ argument that hematological tests are now included by other names, there' can be no harm in our enjoining the Department from enforcing this assertedly unnecessary addition to the Statute.
What we have said with respect to hematological tests would apply as well to such “other tests.” We note that Section 12: of the Act, 35 P.S. §2162, provides for appeals and hearings before the Secretary by any person aggrieved by an action of the Department. If the Department feels that some test, under another name, falls within one of the described statutory tests, it-may seek to enforce the Act as to such test subject to the right of the regulated to complain to the Secretary and, if still unrequited, to this Court for the review of the Department’s action.
The plaintiffs also attack that portion of the regulations which specifically includes within the definition of clinical laboratories the “private offices and clinics of practitioners of the healing arts” — that is, doctors’ offices. The plaintiffs say that since a Clinical Laboratory is defined as “any place,' estab
Opinion by
July 9, 1976:
I agree with the conclusion that the Department of Health’s regulation, adding the word “hematological” and the phrase “or other” [tests] to the list of statutory tests, the performance of which will constitute a place a clinical laboratory, makes law rather than simply interprets the Act.
I have no answer to the question of why the Legislature originally specifically exempted doctors’ offices from the definition of a clinical laboratory if it intended by its definition to exclude such places from regulation. Nevertheless, I am convinced that doctors’ offices are not organized and operated primarily for the performance of tests but rather for the diagnosis and care of patients and consequently are not within the controlling definition of the Act which defines a clinical laboratory as “any place, establishment or institution organized and operated primarily for the performance of all or any [enumerated] tests . . . .”
Order
The opinions of Judges Rogers and Mencer express the views of members of the Court.
The six judges who participated unanimously concluded that the inclusion of the word “hematological” and the phrase “or other” [tests] in the Department
The court is evenly divided on the issue of the lawfulness of the regulations relating to offices and clinics of practitioners of the healing arts, rendering it nonjusticiable. Since the plaintiffs may wish to appeal this issue to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, we hereby enter a final order dismissing the Complaint as it relates to this regulation.
35 P.S. §2163 (Supp. 1975-1976).
Act of August 4, 1961, P.L. 920, 35 P.S. §2161.1.
Our discussion of the regulations regarding tests which follows was prepared prior to Saturday, February 28, 1976, when in Pennsylvania Bulletin Vol. 6, number 9, the Department of Health, without notice to this Court, published new proposed regulations which delete the words “hematological” and the phrase “or other” [tests] from the Department’s definition.
The Clinical Laboratory Act, Act of September 26, 1951, P.L. 1539, as amended, 35 P.S. §2151 et seq.