This is аn action by four West Virginia private non-profit hospitals to enjoin the enforcement of sections 16-29B-4 and 16-29B-27 of the West Virginia Health Care Review Act, W.Va.Code § 16-29B-1, et seq. (Supp.1984) (hereafter “Act”) and any regulations promulgated thereunder by the West Virginia Health Care Cost Review Authority created to implement and administer the Act and for a declaratory judgment of the uneonstitutionality of such sections.
The original defendants in the action were the Governor and Attorney General of West Virginia, the West Virginia Department of Health and its director, and the Office of Assistant Commissioner of Medical Services for the West Virginia Department of Welfare and the Individual Assistant Commissioner. Jurisdiction was predicated on 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343 (1983), in support of claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and 28 U.S.C. § 2201, et seq.
Prior to the filing of an answer by the named defendants, the district judge, on motion of the plaintiffs, entered a temporary restraining order against the enforcement of the challenged sections, and later, after the original defendants had answered, a preliminary injunction to the same effect was granted. Thereafter, by stipulation, the Governor and Attorney General were dismissed as defendants and the Authority and its individual members were added as defendants. The Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services was also permitted (actually requested) to file a memorandum of position as an amicus curiae. After a hearing on the merits, the district judge entered an order granting the plaintiffs declaratory judgment of invalidity of section 4 of the Act.
The beginning point for a review of the judgment is the Act itself. As stated in its preamble, the purpose of the legislation was to establish a complex, integrated system for restraining “unreasonable increases in the costs of aсute care hospital services” in the State of West Virginia.
While the Act became effective as of March 12, 1983, jurisdiction of the board over “rates for health services care” did not arise until July 1, 1984. Section 16-29B-4 which is the object of the plaintiffs’ attack, was enacted to govern health service charges by State acute care hospitals in the interim period between the effective date of the Act and the date after the
The Legislature clearly recognized that Medicare and Medicaid rates presented special problems in establishing both interim and permanent rates and required special treatment. It sought to meet this problem by its grant of authority to the board and by subsections (d) and (e) of § 16-29B-16, as well as by the language of section 4 relating to the “cap” on patient care reserve which was to be prorated in connection with Medicare and Medicaid patients. The subsections of section 16 provided that the board should “[u]pon appointment” оf its members, seek approval for reimbursement to hospitals under the Medicare and Medicaid programs in accordance with rates approved by the board and to this end was charged with the responsibility “[o]n or before” June 1, 1984, of submitting to the Secretary of Health and Human Services application for approval of such rates.
Immediately after their appointment and qualification, the members of the board began the preparation of rules and regulations to be followed in the administration of the Act both during the interim period and for thе period after the issuance of the initial rate schedule by the board. These rules and regulations were revised a time or two but in the final, approved revision, they were submitted for public hearing in accordance with state procedures. Thereafter, they were filed with and approved by the appropriate legislative rule-making review committee as required under § 29A-3-11 of the West Virginia Code (Supp. 1984). As approved by the designated legislative committee, such rules and regulations were then approved in formal legislation by the full Legislature.
It is the position of the plaintiffs that both the provision of section 4 freezing (subject to adjustment as provided in that section) the rates charged by them in the interim period between the enactment of the Act and the date when the board created under the Act issues its initial rate schedules for each hospital as well as the provision of the same section restricting increases in annual gross patient revenue of the
The Secretary of Health and Human Services, however, has filed in the proceedings her “Memorandum of Law as Amicus Curiae,” in which she stated her opinion that Section 4 of the State Act, as applied under the board’s regulations, was in conformity with and not in violation of the federal Medicare and Medicaid programs. In this opinion, she summarized her position on the constitutional validity of the Act as follows:
In the Secretary’s view, the provisions of W.Va.Code § 16-29B-4 and implementing regulations do not on their face violate federal statutes or regulations under the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Under West Virginia’s statute and regulations hospitals continue to receive the full reimbursement to which they are entitled under the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The fact that hospitals may be subject to a limit on overall revenues would not seem to affect compliance with the statutory and regulatory requirеments of Titles XVIII and XIX of the Act. In addition, W.Va.Code § 16-29B-4 provides for an adjustment to the allowable twelve percent per annum increase to reflect an increase (or decrease) in the proportion of Medicare, Medicaid or charity patients, which would seem to avoid any problem of cost shifting.”
On this record, however, the district judge found that the “freeze” on hospital rates as stated in section 4 of the Act represented “a significant change in repayment methodology” for Medicaid and Medicare patients and constituted “a signifiсant state intervention in the federal repayment system for Medicare” even though the “State [had] taken no action toward gaining federal approval for its proposed [interim] regulation[s.]...” It concluded, therefore, that “[w]ithout compliance with the federal procedural requirements, section four conflicts with federal law and is unenforceable.” On the “cap” in patient revenue of hospitals, which the district court declared was “the most troublesome aspect of section four,” it said:
“The natural, resulting effect of the limit on gross patiеnt revenues is to threaten the adequate delivery of health services, at any cost, to all West Virginians, of every economic strata and regardless of age or geographic location. All Plaintiff hospitals presented testimony to the effect that changes in their respective operations to meet the effects of this legislation will include curtailment in services to charity patients. For example, these patients raise ‘gross patient revenues’ without a resulting increase of cash flow to the servicing hospital.”
It dismissed the Secretary’s approval of the Act and its procedures for interim operation under the Act with the comment that “the Court is not satisfied that the Secretary’s conclusion is in accord with the Section I through III of her submission.” Sections I through III, as referred to in the district court’s order, covered the Secretary’s introductory statement of the requirements of the federal law under the Medicaid and Medicare statutes as imposed upon participating states. It found, though, that “[t]here [was] no correlative requirement for agreement with any federal agency, including the Department of Health and Human Services, concerning the interim regulatory activities that had its inception with the passage of the health care cost review legislation____ The Court is of the opinion that this oversight is fatal to the legitimacy of challenged section 4.” The district court accordingly granted the plaintiffs’ motion for a declaratory judg
The dispositive issue on the appeal from this judgment is the constitutionality of a single section in a comprehensive state statute (i.е., section 4 of the Act). However, it is a familiar rule that the constitutionality of a part of an act or statute is not to be resolved in isolation from other parts of the statute and from the purposes of the statute as a whole, particularly if the section in question refers to or embraces other sections of the Act (as does the section under review). Weinberger v. Hynson, Westcott & Dunning,
Where the statute (as does the statute here) authorizes the implementing or administering agency to issue such rules or regulations as may be appropriate or necessary, such regulations are to be sustained so long as they are “reasonably related to the purposes of the enabling legislation,” and are to be given consideration by a reviewing court. Mourning v. Family Publications Service, Inc.,
The basic fault in the district court’s reasoning is that it sought, contrary to the authorities earlier cited, to look to the language of section 4 in isolation, without taking into account other sections of the Act considered as a whole, particularly those sections which, by the express language of section 4, qualified the scope and application of the latter section, and without considering at all the regulations issued thereunder by the board and approved explicitly by the legislature. Thus, the “freeze” of rates, as provided in section 4, is by the terms of the section subject to the authority granted under section 21(c) “to allow a temporary change in a hospital’s rate.” That power is not restricted to the period after the issuance of initial rate schedules by the board; it applies both to “before” and “after” the issuance of such schedules, thus to both interim and to permanent rates. In exercising its authority, as provided in section 4 “to develop rules and regulations to administer the provisions of this section,” and as provided in section 21(c) of the Act, the board has made special provisions in this interim period for increases in rates for Medicare and Medicaid patients. Sections 4.01.01(b) and 5.02(b) of the regulations provide that any rate changes “for changes in cost reimbursement agreements or contracts” are effective “upоn filing of the application.”
The plaintiffs offer a number of objections to this argument of the defendants that Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements contracts have been effectively excluded from the freeze of hospital rates in section 4, both by the qualifying language of the section itself and by the regulations issued by the board under the express authorization granted it by the section. The first of these objections is that, though the hospital may automatically on the filing of notice of the increase put the proposed rate increase into effect, the regulations are invalid simply because under
The second objection is that the regulations, as originally drafted, provided that rate adjustments put into effect immediately under the regulations were by other terms of the regulations “[sjubject to refund or reduction or both if the hospital fails to meet the criteria and standards necessary for a rate change.”
“(d) Except for applications concerning fеderal medicaid and medicare, rates put into effect immediately may be:
“(1) Suspended____” (Italics added)
Plaintiffs would also find that the provision in § 5.02(b) for “pass-through” of Medicaid and Medicare rate increases is discretionary with the board as evidenced by the use of the word “may.” While the term “may” in a statute or agency regulation dealing with agency power is generally construed as permissive rather than mandatory, the construction of such term — whether discretionary or mandatory — is reached in every case “on the context of the statute [or regulation], and on whether it is fairly to be presumed that it was the intention of the legislature [or agency] to confer a discretionary power or to impose an imperative duty.” Thompson v. Clifford,
There can be no question that the board intended the challenged provision in this regulation, even though stated in terms of “may,” to be mandatory. The
Finally, the district court seems to have assumed that the board did not construe the Act and its regulations as allowing adjustments in the hospital rates for Medicare and Medicaid patients during the interim period, even though that has been the argument of the board throughout this litigation. It bases this on some language, again taken out of context and in isolation, appearing in the testimony of one of the members of the Authority. We do not read the testimony of the witness as does the district court. Mrs. Richardson, the member of the Authority tо whose testimony the district court referred, was asked whether section 4 did “initially freeze [hospital rates] subject to relaxation by the Authority ...” (Italics added) and her answer was “that's right.” Such answer was correct and followed faithfully the language of the Act. Her answer referred to the modifying language in the “freeze” provision, which recognized the power of the Authority to relax the freeze in the interim period. In exercising that “relaxing” power granted under section 21(c) of the Act, Mrs. Richardson went on to explain that the Authority in its regulations had no intent in any way to “change the cost reimbursement contracts or agreements between Medicare and Medicaid and a single hospital in West Virginia.” The Authority’s intent in its regulations, Mrs. Richardson added, was to pass such increases under a cost reimbursement agreement (i.e., for Medicare and Medicaid charges) “right on through without any need for review or approval by the Authority and issue an order.” We discern no inconsistency between this testimony, taken as a whole, and the position of the defendants on this appeal. As the Secretary of Health and Human Services said in her Memorandum filed with the district court, these provisions of the Act and the regulations of the Authority operated to permit the automatic “pass-through” of all changes in cost reimbursement agreements with any West Virginia hospital and, for that reason, the “freeze” in section 4 did not violate either the Medicare or Medicaid programs.
Neither do we find unconstitutional the so-called “cap” on patient care revenues constitutionally infirm. The language of section 4 itself suggests that this “cap” was not applicable until the Act and its proposed initial schedule of rates for Medicaid and Medicare рatients were approved by the federal authorities. It cannot be questioned that the regulations issued by the board make clear that this is the effect to be given the “cap” language of section 4. Thus, Section 4.03 of the regulations provides:
“Temporary rate changes granted pursuant to these regulations may result in an adjustment to the amount of gross patient revenue otherwise allowed a hospital in accordance with the regulations of the authority governing the Limitation on Hospital Gross Patient Revenues or during the setting of the hospital’s initial ratе schedule.”
This regulation, as we have said, was submitted to the Legislature and was approved by.it. We are unable to perceive any valid reason for not accepting this formal approval of the regulation by the Legislature as establishing the very construction of the statute and its regulations adopted by the Secretary of Health and Human Services. It very definitely protects against the danger envisioned by the plaintiffs.
While they do not question the right of the board to issue regulations relating to the administration of the Act (something they could not do in view of the express grant of such authority by the Act) and seemingly recognize that the regulations protect them from the dangers they
In Sheppe v. West Virginia Bd. of Dental Examiners,
In Eastern Gas & Fuel Associates v. Hatcher,
It follows that we find the statutory provision which the plaintiffs challenge constitutionally valid. The grant of a declaratory judgment that such provision was unconstitutional is, therefore, reversed and the action is remanded to the district court with instructions to dismiss.
REVERSED and REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Notes
. Section 16-29B-27 is the penalty section of the Act. Since the district court found the substantive section invalid, the attack on the penalty section became moot.
. W.Va.Code § 16-29B-1.
. While § 16-29B-5, which provides for the creation of the administering agency, describes such agency as "Authority,” the statute states that it is “hereinafter referred to as the board,” and we later follow this suggestion and refer to the “Authority" as the “board."
. Section 16-29B-4 concluded with this statement:
"The board shall have authority to develop rules and regulations to administer the provisions of this section."
. W.Va.Code § 16-29B-7(b), (c).
. For an excellent review of the Medicaid and Medicare programs see Charleston Memorial Hospital v. Conrad,
. In the cited case, it was said that the drafters of the Consumers Credit Protection Act "were well aware that the provisions and the purposes of the Bankruptcy Act and the new legislation would have to co-exist."
. In Ruhe, we said:
"But once an agency’s statutory construction has been ‘fully brought to the attention of the public and Congress,’ and the latter has not sought to alter that interpretation although it has amended the statute in other respects, then presumably the legislative intent has been correctly discerned.’’ (quoting United States v. Rutherford,442 U.S. 544 , 554 n. 10,99 S.Ct. 2470 , 2476 n. 10,61 L.Ed.2d 68 (1979)) 12
In Fredericks, the court said:
"Our determination that EDA’s regulations are consistent with the intent of Congress is reinforced by the fact that Congressional oversight committees acquiesced in EDA’s regulations and guidelines before they were put into effect. Hearings were held in May 1977, and the regulations and guidelines were allowed to become operative. That the careful review of these committees found the regulations and guidelines to be consistent with the congressional intent lends the firmest possible support to our conclusion.”
. “Cost reimbursement agreement or contract” is a term which is generally used to include Medicare and Medicaid programs, as § 2.05 of the rules and regulations recognizes.
. § 4.01.01(d)(2) of the rules and regulations.
