Saint Luke’s Regional Medical Center, Ltd. (St.Luke’s), appeals the order of the district court dismissing its petition for review based on the district court’s conclusion that a provider does not have standing to request judicial review of a board of county commissioners’ decision to deny a medical indigency application. We vacate the order of dismissal and remand the ease for further proceedings.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
From May 4, 2006, until June 21, 2006, St. Luke’s provided treatment to an eighty-one year old widow, Violet O’Brien, for cervical cancer. O’Brien incurred $88,074.74 in medical and hospital bills over the course of her cancer treatment. The Ada County Medical Advisor found the treatment and services O’Brien received were necessary, non-emergency services. On June 6, 2006, O’Brien filed an application for county assistance with Ada County under the Medical Indigency Act, Idaho Code § 31-3501, et seq. On June 8, 2006, O’Brien submitted a separate application for Medicaid coverage with the Idaho State Department of Health & Welfare. This latter application was denied on the basis that O’Brien’s income was too high under Social Security guidelines for her to be eligible for Medicaid.
On July 17, 2006, the Ada County Clerk issued its Initial Determination, denying county assistance to O’Brien. The determination to deny county assistance was based on the clerk’s finding that O’Brien’s application was untimely under Idaho Code § 31-3505. Under that statute, applications for non-emergency services must be filed ten days prior to receiving services. Because *755 O’Brien had not submitted her application until thirty-nine days after the first day of the provision of necessary medical services, her application was determined to be untimely-
St. Luke’s and Diagnostic Pathology Nam-pa Radiologists appealed the initial decision on August 4, 2006, requesting a hearing before the Ada County Board of Commissioners (the Board). The Board heard the appeal on October 4, 2006. The Board upheld the initial denial, determining that O’Brien’s Medicaid application was not bona fide, and that her county application for assistance was therefore untimely. On November 1, 2006, St. Luke’s timely filed a petition with the district court for judicial review of the Board’s decision. A stipulation resolved a portion of the claim pertaining to medical services for which O’Brien’s application was undisputed to be timely. Following a hearing on the petition for review, the district court issued its decision dismissing the petition, ruling that St. Luke’s lacked standing to seek judicial review of the Ada County Board of Commissioners’ decision under Idaho Code § 31-3505G.
St. Luke’s timely appealed the decision of the district court to dismiss its petition for judicial review. The sole issue raised on this appeal is whether a medical provider has standing to seek judicial review under I.C. § 31-3505G of a final decision of a board of county commissioners denying county assistance under the Medical Indigency Act.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court freely reviews the interpretation of a statute and its application to the facts.
State v. Yzaguirre,
If the statutory language is unambiguous, “the clearly expressed intent of the legislative body must be given effect, and there is no occasion for a court to consider rules of statutory construction.”
Payette River Property Owners Assn. v. Board of Commrs. of Valley County,
When a statute is ambiguous, the determination of the meaning of the statute and its application is also a matter of law over which this Court exercises free review.
Kelso & Irwin, P.A. v. State Insur. Fund,
III. ANALYSIS
Title 31, Chapter 35 of the Idaho Code (Medical Indigency Act) requires counties to provide medical care for indigents either through maintaining county hospitals or by paying providers for medical treatment rendered to indigents. I.C. § 31-3503. The policy behind Chapter 35 is to encourage personal responsibility for medical care and to charge counties with the duty to care for individuals that cannot meet this responsibility. Idaho Code § 31-3501. “In construing [Idaho Code § 31-3501,
et seq.],
this Court has stated that ‘the legislature’s general intent in enacting the medical indigency assistance statutes is twofold: to provide indigents with medical care and to allow hospitals to obtain compensation for services rendered to indigents.’ ”
University of Utah
*756
Hosp. v. Ada County Bd. of Comm’rs,
In order to qualify as a medical indigent, an individual or a third party on their behalf must complete, swear to, sign, and file an application with the clerk of the county. I.C. § 31-3504(1), (2). After receiving an application, the clerk conducts an interview and investigation, and files a statement of findings with the board. I.C. § 31-3505A. The board then makes an initial determination on the application. I.C. § 31-3505C. “An applicant or provider may appeal an adverse decision of the board by filing a written notice with the board within twenty-eight days of the initial determination.” I.C. § 31-3505D. The board must hold a hearing on the appeal wherein the applicant may produce additional evidence pertaining to eligibility. I.C. § 31-3505E.
Idaho Code § 31-3505G governs judicial review of a board’s final decision. It provides:
If, after the hearing as provided in section 31-3505E, Idaho Code, the final determination of the board is to deny an application for financial assistance with necessary medical services, the applicant, or a third party making application on an applicant’s behalf, may seek judicial review of the final determination of the board in the manner provided in section 31-1506, Idaho Code.
The referenced statute, I.C. § 31-1506, provides: “Unless otherwise provided by law, judicial review of any act, order or proceeding of the board shall be initiated by any person aggrieved thereby within the same time and in the same manner as provided in chapter 52, title 67, Idaho Code, for judicial review of actions.” I.C. § 31-1506(1). Thus, the Idaho Administrative Procedure Act, Idaho Code § 67-5201, et seq., (IDAPA), is applicable to a county board decision of whether to grant an application for medical relief.
The Medical Indigency Act has never explicitly granted providers the right to petition for judicial review. Until 1996, Idaho Code § 31-3505 only provided applicants the right to judicial review. I.C. § 31-3505 (1981) (repealed 1996). At that time, “applicant” was an undefined term within the statute.
However, for over twenty years, Idaho courts have recognized that providers have standing to seek judicial review in the district courts of adverse decisions made by county boards, pursuant to this Court’s rulings in
Carpenter v. Twin Falls County,
In
Carpenter,
this Court considered several issues pertaining to the Medical Indigency Act, including whether a provider had standing to appeal an adverse decision of a board of county commissioners. This Court affirmed the decision of the district court granting a hospital standing to apply for financial relief under the Medical Indigency Act, despite the fact that Carpenter had previously filed for bankruptcy. The county board claimed the hospital’s standing was derived from the indigent’s standing, and since Carpenter’s bankruptcy disqualified him for medical indigency benefits, the hospital was similarly disqualified.
Carpenter,
This Court rejected that argument, holding the hospital possessed a right to pursue a claim independent of Carpenter. This Court concluded that because Idaho Code §§ 31-3406, 31-3407 & 31-3508 all dealt with a provider’s right to seek payment for the care of medical indigents, providers had the right to appeal as a real party in interest. In reaching its conclusion, the Court stated:
“We read these provisions as clearly establishing and we so hold, that the Hospital is a real party in interest, entitled to make an application for medical indigency benefits on behalf of the person to whom emergency medical services were provided, entitled to pursue the denial of such benefits by appeal, and entitled to the receipt of the County’s payment.”
*757
Id.
at 586,
A real party in interest “is the person who will be entitled to the benefits of the action if successful, one who is actually and substantially interested in the subject matter.”
Carrington v. Crandall,
In
Intermountain Health Care II,
this Court held the provider, Intermountain Health Care, Inc. (IHC), had standing to seek review of an adverse board decision.
Intermountain Health Care II
at 302,
Viewed together, the holdings in Carpenter and Intermountain Health Care I & II limit standing to parties with pecuniary expectations because they were predicated on the basis that providers are entitled to compensation from the county for medical services rendered to indigents. Thus, before 1996, third parties without pecuniary expectations, such as adult children, relatives, and friends of patients, did not have standing to seek judicial review of final decisions of a county board rendered on a medical indigency application.
The legislature amended the Medical Indigency Act in 1996. 1996 Idaho Session Laws, ch. 410, 1357. The 1996 amendments augmented the statute governing judicial review and added to the defined terms. Idaho Code .§ 31-3505 was amended to provide that a “third party making application on the applicant’s behalf’ had the right to petition for judicial review in addition to an applicant. I.C. § 31-3505G. The definitions section of Idaho Code § 31-3502 was expanded to include definitions for the terms “applicant,” “third party applicant,” and “provider” among others. 1996 Idaho Session Laws, ch. 410, p. 1357.
After the 1996 amendments, until the instant case, Idaho courts have continued to allow providers to petition the district court for judicial review of county board decisions consistent with the rulings in
Carpenter
and
Intermountain Health Care II. E.g. Mercy
Med.
Ctr. v. Ada County,
In the instant case, the district court held providers did not have standing to appeal the county boards’ decisions on medical indigency applications, concluding that the 1996 amendments to the Medical Indigency Act had overturned the rulings of Carpenter and Intermountain Health Care II. Ada County argues that the plain meaning of Idaho Code § 31-3505G demonstrates the legislature’s intent to overturn Carpenter and Intermountain Health Care II, using the principles *758 stated in Seward v. Pacific Hide & Fur Depot as a basis for its argument:
This Court assumes that the legislature knew of existing precedent at the time it passed or amended a statute. When a statute is amended, however, it is presumed that the legislature intended the statute to have a meaning different from the meaning accorded the statute before amendment.
Essentially, Ada County urges that the legislature intended to make a subtraction by addition when it amended Idaho Code § 31-3505G. That is, by adding definitions and the term “third parties making application on the applicant’s behalf,” the legislature intended to subtract providers from the group of parties that traditionally have standing to seek judicial review of medical indigency decisions made by a county’s board of commissioners. According to Ada County, the omission of providers from the language of Idaho Code § 31-3505G manifests such intent.
Ada County’s argument is unconvincing. In discussing rules of statutory construction, this Court in
Robison v. Bateman-Hall, Inc.,
It is more likely the legislature, assumed under
Seward
to be aware of the precedent granting providers standing, simply did not see the need to codify what was already well established and accepted as the law — that providers have standing to seek judicial review of adverse decisions of a county board. While
Carpenter
and
Intermountain Health Care II
grant standing to providers with pecuniary expectations, it did not extend to third party applicants under the holdings. This explains the need to amend Idaho Code § 31-3505G to include third party applicants, and why it was not necessary to include a reference to providers in the amendment. Ada County’s argument leads to absurd results which are contrary to the expressed legislative intent.
Gillihan v. Gump,
Moreover, the district court’s narrow interpretation of the statute would lead to an absurd patchwork of parties entitled to appeal at one stage and not at another, an inconsistent appellate procedure. A provider would be allowed to seek review of a board’s initial decision under I.C. § 31-3505D, but would lack standing to seek further judicial review under I.C. § 31-3505G. Inversely, a third party applicant would have the right to appeal final board decisions, I.C. § 31-3505G, but not initial board decisions, I.C. § 31-3505D, according to the district court’s interpretation. Consequently, a county could arbitrarily determine it is not obligated to compensate a provider, and the provider would not have standing to appeal that decision except to the county board. The only way to assure a provider would have standing to
*759
seek judicial review would be for each provider to co-sign every medical indigency application. This is a seemingly meaningless and absurd ritual exalting form over substance.
Intermountain Health Care I,
This Court has stated that placing too heavy a burden on providers to collect on services rendered to medical indigents could reduce hospitals’ ability to provide such services.
University of Utah Hosp. v. Ada County Bd. of Comm’rs,
This Court concludes that the legislature did not intend by the 1996 amendments to the Medical Indigency Act to overturn this Court’s rulings in Carpenter and Intermountain Health Care II that medical care providers are real parties in interest which have standing to seek judicial review of adverse county medical application decisions under Idaho Code § 31-3505G. Therefore, we hold that providers continue to have standing to seek judicial review of final decisions of a county board denying a medical indigency application pursuant to rationale of Carpenter and Intermountain Health Care II.
IV. CONCLUSION
This Court holds that the district court erred by dismissing St. Luke’s petition for judicial review of the Ada County Board of Commissioners’ denial of medical indigency aid to Violet O’Brien based on its conclusion that providers lack standing to seek judicial review under Idaho Code 31-3505G. The order of dismissal is vacated and the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings. Costs on appeal are awarded to the appellant.
