This is a taxpayer’s suit seeking to enjoin the operation of the recently enacted Nursing Home Loan Agency Law, Act of July 22, 1974, P.L.-, No. 207, Pa.Legis. Serv. 571 (1974) (to be codified as 62 P.S. § 1521.101 et seq.). Plaintiff filed his complaint in the Commonwealth Court alleging a variety of constitutional defects. Defendants petitioned this Court to assume plenary jurisdiction, 1 which we did by per curiam order on October 25, 1974. The рarties, after stipulating that no issues of fact existed to be tried, have filed motions for judgment on the pleadings. We determine that judgment should be awarded to defendants.
The N.H.L.A.L. stems from legislative concern with the inability of many nursing homes to provide safe and healthy accommodations for their residents.
2
Pursuant
“All nursing homes meeting applicable State and Federal regulations, with the exception of Life Safety Code, for the acceptance of Medicaid patients shall be eligible to apply for loans from the Nursing Home Loan Agency under provisions of this act.” 5
Funds for the loans are to be provided by a sale by competitive bidding of general obligation bonds (not exceeding $100,000,000) backed by the credit of the Commonwealth. §§ 401, 402(c). The Law creates a sinking fund for payment of interest and principal. § 408(a). The sources of the sinking fund are funds received in repayment of loans to nursing homes and appropriations by the Legislature. §§ 205, 411.
Plaintiff’s first attack on the N.H.L.A.L. is cast in terms of the absence of a public purpose. He invokes the principle, well-settled for over a century, that “the legislature [does not have] any constitutional right to create a publiс debt, or to lay a tax, ... in order to raise funds for a mere
private
purpose.”
Sharpless v. Mayor of Philadelphia,
Plaintiff correctly asserts that the means chosen by the Legislature must be “reasonably designed” to achieve permissible ends.
Basehore v. Hampden Industrial Development Authority,
In this case, plaintiff has failed to demonstrate that а program of making “loans to nursing homes for repair, reconstruction and rehabilitation”
9
is not a ra
Plaintiff’s argument thаt private gain to nursing homes somehow outweighs the public purpose of the Law is equally meritless. We rejected this theory in Basehore, where we sustained the constitutionality of the Industrial Development Authority Law. Speaking through Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Jones, we stated:
“The taxpayers’ main concern is that the party who is really benefiting from this program is the private manufacturer whо acquires an industrial plant at a much lower cost than he would have incurred had he built it himself. It is beyond question that private manufacturers receive a very large benefit from this program; however, this fact alone should not invalidate the program. If the legislative program is reasonably designed to combat a problem within the competence of the legislаture and if the public will benefit from the project, then the project is sufficiently public in nature to withstand constitutional challenge.”
Plaintiff next contends that the N.H.L.A.L. involves an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power in violation of article II, section 1 of the Constitution.
10
Plaintiff argues that the Legislature did not provide standards in the N.H.L.A.L. He points to various sections of the Law
12
which grant the agency policy
More importantly, the N.H.L.A.L. provides numerous procedural guidelines for protection against administrative arbitrariness and caprice.
18
For example, the agen
The Legislature has provided adequate standards and guidelines for the guidance and restraint of administrativе discretion. We reject plaintiff’s contention as meritless.
Plaintiff argues that the N.H.L.A.L. creates an arbitrary classification and thus is a “special law” violating article III, section 32 of the Constitution.
23
Pointing to section 301 of the Law,
24
he argues that it arbitrarily singles out the benefited class of nursing homes “from all the other nursing homes that may not meet one or the other of State or Federal regulations for acceptance of Medicaid patients. Yet, these other facilities are caring for old and disabled citizens of Pennsylvania and
It is well settled that the prohibition of special laws does not forbid the Legislature from creating statutory classifications. Rather it requires only that a classification must have some rational relationship to a proper state purpose. See
Johnson v. Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency,
Plaintiff’s final contention is that the N.H. L.A.L. violates article VIII, section 8 of the Constitution, which рrovides:
“The credit of the Commonwealth shall not be pledged or loaned to any individual, company, corporation or association nor shall the Commonwealth become a joint owner or stockholder in any company, corporation or association.”
He argues that the lending to nursing home proprietors of funds raised by an issue of general obligation Com
In determining the meaning of section 8, we look to the evil to which it is addressed. See Statutory Construction Act, 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921(c)(3) (Special Pamphlet, 1973). In the mid-nineteenth century, industrial expansion, particularly the growth of the railroads, created great demands for investment capital. When the private sector was unable to satisfy the demand, state and local governments stepped in to fill the need.
26
One common method of assisting the railroads to raise capital was public guaranty of railroad obligations, frequently taking the form of an exchange of railroad bonds for state bonds, which the railroad then sold on the open market. In this way, railroads were able to attract investors who, without thе credit of the state on which to rely, would not have invested. Article VIII, section 8 was adopted in 1857 in reaction to and with the specific purpose of eliminating these speculative forms of financing.
27
The phrase “pledge or loan of credit” is a term of art referring to these financing devices and was clearly not intended to prohibit other sorts of financiаl transactions between the Commonwealth and private citizens or cor
Courts may not declare a statute unconstitutional “unless it
clearly, palpably,
and
plainly
violates the Constitution.”
Daly v. Hemphill,
We have examined the N.H.L.A.L. and the constitutional defects 28 which plaintiff perceives. We conclude that they are meritless. Judgment on the pleadings is therefore entered for defendants. Each party to pay own costs.
Notes
. Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act of 1970, Act of July 31, 1970, P.L. 673, art. II, § 205,17 P.S. § 211.205 (Supp.1974).
. The Legislature “determined and declared as a matter of legislative finding” that “most nursing homes in the Commonwealth do not presently comply with State and Federal Safety Standards including the Life Safety Code” and that “financing of these safety improvements is apparently not presently available through private financing under terms and conditions which would enable the improvements to be made . . ..” N.H.L.A.L. § 102.
The Life Safety Code, a publication of the National Fire Protection Association,
“deals with life safety from fire and like emergencies. It covers construction, protection, and occupancy features to minimize danger to life from fire, smoke, fumes, or panic before buildings are vacated. It specifies the number, size, and arrаngement of exit facilities sufficient to permit prompt escape of occupants from buildings or structures in case of fire or other condition dangerous to life.”
Life Safety Code 101-1 (21st ed. 1967).
Compliance with the Code is a prerequisite for reimbursement under the federal Medicare program (42 U.S.C.A. § 1395x(j)(13) (1974)) and for receipt of payments under the federal Medicaid program (42 U.S.C.A. § 1396a(a)(28)(F)(i) (1974)).
Morеover, all nursing homes in the Commonwealth must be licensed by the Department of Public Welfare. Public Welfare Code, Act of June 13, 1967, PX. 31, art. 10, § 1002, 62 P.S. § 1002
This chain of interlocking statutes and regulations uncovers an anomaly in the language of the N.H.L.A.L. Section 103 of the Law defines “nursing home” as “any facility licensed or approved as a nursing home by the Department of Public Welfare under” the Public Welfare Code. As demonstrated above, the Department may not license a nursing home which does not satisfy the Life Safety Code. It would seem that nursing homes failing to comply with the Life Safety Code are not “nursing homes” within the meaning of the Law. This anomaly is probably the result of less than perfect drafting rather than considered legislative policy. We assume for purposes of deciding this case that the term “nursing home” in the N.H.L.A.L. includes: (1) nursing homes that did comply with all applicable standards when initially licensed by the Department but no longer satisfy the Life Safety Code; and (2) nursing homes that would be eligible for licensure by the Department but for noncompliance with the Life Safety Code, cf. N.H.L.A.L. § 301.
. “Debt may be incurred without limit for purposes specifically itemized in the law authorizing such debt, if the question whether the debt shall be incurred has been submitted to the electors and approved by a majority of those voting on the question.”
. Act of April 11, 1974, P.L. ——, No. 62, § 3, Pa.Legis.Serv. 284 (1974).
. Applicable Federal standards for the acceptance of Medicaid patients are found in 42 U.S.C.A. § 1396a(a)(28) (1974). State standards are established by the Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 904, § 5, amending the Public Welfare Code, Act of June 13, 1967, P.L. 31, art. 4, as amended, 62 P.S. § 443.1(3) (Supp.1974).
. Brief for Plaintiff at 7.
. Id. at 6.
.
Nebbia
v.
New York,
. N.H.L.A.L. § 203(6).
. “The legislative power of this Commonwealth shall be vested in a General Assembly, which shall consist of a .Senate and a House of Representatives.”
. Our prior cases have sometimes embodied a distinction between lawmaking and administrative policymaking. See, e. g., Belovsky v. Redevelopment Authority of Philadelphia,
“While the legislature cannot delegate the power to makе a law, it may, where necessary, confer authority and discretion in connection with the execution of the law . . . .”
This distinction has been cogently criticized by a noted commentator. See 1 K. Davis Administrative Law Treatise § 2.02 (1958).
. E. g„ § 203(6):
“The agency shall have the following powers:
(6) . to make loans to nursing homes . . . and to set the terms and conditions of the loans as the agency deems necessary.”
§ 303:
“In the event the loan apрlication requests exceed the loan moneys available the agency shall after advice from and consultation with the Department of Health establish criteria for the making of loans and determine priorities among applicants.”
§ 304(D):
“Eligibility for loan refinancing shall be based upon standards' established by the agency. The agency shall require such security, assurances, covenants and conditions as it deems necessary . . .
. See §§ 102(1), 203(6), 301, 302(a)(1).
. See §§ 102(2), 302(a)(4).
. See §§ 203(6), 203(12), 204, 206, 302(a)(5), 302(b), 302(c), 304(D).
. Section 103; see
Johnson
v.
Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency,
. See, e. g., § 302(a)(l)-(5) (contents of loan application form); § 303(l)-(4) (criteria for determination of priority among applicants).
. See
Kugler v. Yocum,
. Section 303.
. Section 304(D).
. Section 302(a).
. Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 769, as amended, 45 P.S. § 1101 et seq. (Supp.1974).
. “The General Assembly shall pass no local or special law in any case which hаs been or can be provided for by general law
. “All nursing homes meeting applicable State and Federal regulations, with the exception of Life Safety Code, for the acceptance of Medicaid patients shall be eligible to apply for loans from the Nursing Home Loan Agency under provisions of this act.”
. Brief for Plaintiff at 12.
. For a description of one such scheme, see
Sharpless
v.
Mayor of Philadelphia,
. Pinsky, State Constitutional Limitations on Public Industrial Finanсing: An Historical and Economic Approach, 111 U.Pa.L. Rev. 265, 277-82 (1963).
. In his complaint and motion for judgment, plaintiff also stated that the N.H.L.A.L. creates exemptions from taxation in violation of Pa.Const. art. VIII, and irrevocably grants special privileges and immunities in violation of Pa.Const. art. I, § 17. However, he has abandoned these contentions in his brief and therefore we do not address them.
