The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) provides that a party seeking judicial review of an agency’s decision “shall offer, and the reviewing court shall admit, the state agency record into evidence as an exhibit.” Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.175(d). The issue in this cause is whether that provision precludes an appellate court from filing an administrative record that the parties and the district court treated as admitted evidence, although it was not formally tendered as evidence. We hold that the court of appeals should have filed the record, and we remand this cause to that court with instructions that it file the administrative record and consider the merits of Texas Health Enterprises’ appeal.
Texas Health Enterprises, Inc., d/b/a Terrace West Nursing Center, sued the Texas Department of Health (TDH) for judicial review of the agency’s decision to terminate its Medicaid certification. Although TDH filed *314 the record of the administrative proceedings with the district court clerk, neither party formally offered the record into evidence. The statement of facts and the court’s order affirming TDH’s decision leave no doubt, however, that both parties relied on the administrative record in their arguments and that the court based its decision upon the administrative record, as the APA requires. See Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.175(e).
On its appeal to the court of appeals, Texas Health Enterprises tried to file the administrative record as a supplemental transcript. The court of appeals reluctantly concluded that to file the administrative record would be contrary to this Court’s opinion in
Nueces Canyon Consolidated Independent School District v. Central Education Agency,
In
Nueces Canyon,
the party seeking judicial review had offered the administrative record into evidence but tried to transmit the record to the court of appeals as part of the transcript (rather than as part of the statement of facts).
Nueces Canyon,
Appellate courts have repeatedly held that evidence that is not objected to and that the trial court and the parties treat as admitted is, for all practical purposes, admitted.
See Texas Dept. of Pub. Safety v. Latimer,
Accordingly, under Texas Rule of Procedure 170, we grant Petitioner’s application for writ of error, and, without hearing oral argument, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand this cause to that court with instructions that it file the administrative record and consider the merits of Texas Health Enterprises’ appeal.
