*440 Opinion
The Madera Community Hospital (Hospital) refused to reappoint Jack R. Wilkinson, M.D., to the medical staff of the Hospital because he failed to maintain malpractice insurance with a “recognized insurance company” as was required by the Hospital’s rules. The doctor’s petition for a writ of mandate to compel the Hospital to reinstate his staff privileges was denied by the superior court. He appeals.
The board of trustees of the Hospital enacted a resolution which required all members of its medical staff to maintain malpractice insurance “with a recognized insurance company” in the minimum amount of $500,000 per occurrence. The Hospital interpreted “recognized” as meaning an insurance company admitted to transact a casualty insurance business in California by the California Department of Insurance. An admitted insurer is one that has been issued a certificate of authority by the California Insuranсe Commissioner.
Pursuant to its resolution, the Hospital refused to accept malpractice coverage obtained by petitioner with Commonwealth Marine and General Assurance Company, Ltd. for $1 million per occurrence. Commonwealth was domiciled in Belize, Central America, and had not been admitted in California to conduct a malpractice insurance business.
The Hospital passed its resolution pursuant to the authority contained in Health and Safety Code section 1319 (hereinafter section 1319), which states: “The rules of a health facility may include provisions that require every member of the medical staff to have professional liability insurance as a condition to being on the medical staff of the health facility.”
Appellant levels a series of constitutional attacks on the statute and the action of the Hospital board. Before discussing those contentions, it is appropriate to recognize the imрortance to the Hospital, to potential claimants, and to the insured of requiring staff doctors to have medical malpractice insurance coverage with an insurance company that has been admitted to engage in a malpractice insurance business in California.
The authority of the Insurance Commissioner over an admitted carrier is comprehensive. (See Ins. Code, § 700 et seq.) The Insurance Commissioner continuously monitors admitted companies fоr compliance with the Insurance Code. Monitoring is achieved primarily by financial surveillance of the activities of a licensed insurer. Every insurance carrier must file both quarterly and annual financial statements with the Insurance Commissioner. Every carrier is subject to periodic examination by the commissioner. Every *441 admitted carrier must be a member of the California Insurance Guarantee Association. The association protects the interests of policyholdеrs and claimants of an insolvent insurer. (See Ins. Code, § 1063 et seq.) Producers writing business on behalf of the licensed insurer are in turn subject to examination, licensing, regulation and discipline by the Insurance Commissioner.
By comparison, the Insurance Commissioner exercises no authority over an insurer, such as Commonwealth Marine and General Assurance Company, Ltd., not admitted to transact an insurance business in California. 1
At the time the Hospital acted in this case, the Department of Insurance had not made any determination with respect to the quality, liquidity and availability of Commonwealth’s assets. Moreover, in denying reappointment to appellant, the Hospital was aware that both the Insurance Commissioner and the Surplus Line Association had deemed Commonwealth to be an unacceptable insurance carrier in California. It follows that a policy of medical malpractice insurance with an admitted carrier, as compared to a nonadmitted carrier, would be more likely to furnish secure financial protection to the Hospital, to the Hospital’s patients, and to the insured himself.
Turning to section 1319, in
Rosner
v.
Peninsula Hospital Dist.
(1964)
Appellant’s brief is not brief. It is prolix, rambling and repetitive. Appellant launches a multi-faceted constitutional attack on section 1319. 2
Appellant urges that by enacting Health and Safety Code section 1319 the Legislature unconstitutionally delegated its authority to the hospital board *442 and to insurance companies. He asserts that under the broad language of the section, hospitals are free to arbitrarily determine who may or may not practice medicine by establishing what insurance companies are acceptable and the amount of malpractice insurance that must be carried. He argues that section 1319 does not contain any standards or safeguards which prevent hospitals from denying privileges on the basis of arbitrary insurance requirements.
At the outset, we observe that “[b]efore a court may declare an act of the Legislature invalid because of due process or other constitutional conflict, ‘such conflict must be clear, positive, and unquestionable.’ ”
(Naismith Dental Corp.
v.
Board of Dental Examiners
(1977)
Once it has established the law, the Legislature may delegate the authority to administer or apply the law.
(People
v.
Wright
(1982)
“An unconstitutional delegation of legislative power occurs when the Legislature confers . . . unrestricted authority to make fundamental policy decisions. [Citations.]”
(People
v.
Wright, supra,
Thus, a delegation of authority must be accompanied by safeguards which insure that the delegatеe does not act arbitrarily.
(Kugler
v.
Yocum, supra, 69
Cal.2d at p. 376.) In a proper case, however, the requisite safeguards may be implied by the statutory purpose.
(People
v.
Wright, supra,
In the case at bench, it is clear that the Legislature did not delegate a policy-making function to hospitals. By determining that a hospital could deny privileges to a doctor who had not obtained insurance, the Legislature resolved a “fundamental issue.” (Kugler v. Yocum, supra, 69 Cal.2d at p. 376.) Pursuant to its legislative policy-making power, the Legislature determined that the best interests of society would be served by allowing hospitals the discretion to require staff doctors to carry malpractice insur *443 anee. Inherent in this legislative policy is the determination that noninsured doctors may be barred from practicing in a hospital.
However, the question remains as to whether section 1319 contains sufficient safeguards to prevent hospitals from devising arbitrary insurance requirements. As has bеen noted above, safeguards may be implied by the statutory purpose.
(People
v.
Wright, supra,
In light of the increasing number and amount of personal injury verdicts against doctors and hospitals, it is highly germane to consider a hospital’s interest in having its staff doctors insured in an adequate amount and by a reliable carrier. 3
Such coverage protects the vital financial integrity of a hospital. It provides an assured fund to pay a judgment where the doctor is held personally liable. If by reason of the relationship between a doctor and a hospital, the hospital is held jointly liable with the primarily responsible doctor, the hospital would have the right of indemnifiсation against the doctor and the doctor’s carrier. Thus, the existence of malpractice insurance covering staff doctors would likely reduce the insurance premium on the hospital’s liability coverage. Lastly, the existence of such coverage protects hospital patients.
Returning to the unconstitutional delegation argument, in
Birkenfeld
v.
City of Berkeley
(1976)
A similar situation is presented in this case. As is well known, insurance premiums are constantly subject to change. Thus, the Legislature could not have set a specific monetary figure as to how much insurance could be required. As in Birkenfeld, it would appear that the “exigencies” of the particular situation prohibit the Legislature from setting any particular limits on thе amount of insurance which a doctor may be compelled to obtain. 4
A hospital may generally refuse privileges to a doctor so long as the criteria employed are not “substantively irrational or otherwise unreasonably susceptible of arbitrary or discriminatory application.”
(Miller
v.
Eisenhower Medical Center
(1980)
We conclude that section 1319 may be read as containing the implied safeguard that hospitals may only devise reasonable insurance requirements. These requirements would be only those which would guarantee that the hospital would be protected in the event the doctor committed malpractice. The establishment by the hospital board pursuant to section 1319 of the amount of malpractice insurance and the requirement that it be placed with a company admitted to do a malpractice business in California were reasonable and authorized requirements. Those requirements are rationally needed to protect the financial integrity of the hospital.
*445
Relying upon
Rosner
v.
Peninsula Hospital Dist., supra,
In light of the subsequent Supreme Court authority, we decline to follow
Rosner.
In
Wilke & Holzheiser, Inc.
v.
Dept. of Alcoholic Bev. Control
(1966)
“Yet, if the producer’s contractual designation of a resale price binding on all retailers is not the exercise of an unlаwfully delegated legislative power, the statutory requirement that he designate that price cannot transform his act into the exercise of such a power. The statutory requirement clearly confers no power on the producer that he would not have possessed without it.
“. . . The opinion points out that the act of designating a resale price binding on all retailers is ‘ “no more legislative in character than are other acts ... of private parties undertaken as a prerequisite to the application of a statute.” ’ ” (Id., at p. 365.) Stated otherwise, there was no delegation of legislative authority since the wholesalers were already free to require a minimum retail price as a term of their contract with retailers.
The identical analysis applies in this case. Insurance companies are entitled to deny policies to doctors for arbitrary reasons
(Ascherman
v.
San Francisco Medical Society
(1974)
Appellant argues that section 1319 deprives him of due process because it authorizes a hospital to arbitrarily establish the type, amоunt and quality of insurance. This argument has already been essentially answered under another guise. It need not detain us long.
“In determining whether legislation is violative of due process, courts ‘exercise an extraordinary power over a coordinate branch of government and perform a correspondingly narrow function: we simply determine whether the statute reasonably relates to a legitimate governmental purpose. ’
(Wilke & Holzheiser, Inc.
v.
Dept. of Alcoholic Bev. Control,
From what has been said, section 1319 is reasonably related to the legitimate governmental purpose of protecting hospitals from sole liability for torts committed by members of their medical staff and tends to assure that doctors will be more likely to obtain malpractice insurance. The means employed by section 1319 are rationally relаted to that purpose. We perceive nothing irrational or arbitrary about its requirements.
While the statute does not bear directly on a doctor’s competence to practice medicine, 7 it is not for the courts to decide social policy. Our inquiry extends only to determining if the statute has a proper purpose and that the means adopted to carry out the purpose are rationally related to that purpose.
*447 Appellant argues thаt the statute is arbitrary because it does not permit a doctor to meet the financial responsibility requirements by demonstrating his own financial worth. On the contrary, it is entirely reasonable to forbid qualification by proof of self worth. Financial worth is ephemeral. A person’s worth can and does change rapidly, many times depending upon forces and circumstances over which the individual has no control. Thus, continuing financial responsibility would require frequent review. Moreovеr, such a method would be more subjective and more likely to be arbitrarily administered than requiring an insurance policy in a minimum amount from an admitted carrier.
Appellant argues that section 1319 deprives him of due process since he is prohibited from exercising his property right to practice medicine.
(Edwards
v.
Fresno Community Hosp.
(1974)
Appellant also contends that section 1319 is unconstitutionally vague. He is in error. “ ‘. . . A statute will not be held void for uncertainty if any reasonable and practical construction can be given its language.’ [Citation.]”
(American Civil Liberties Union
v.
Board of Education
(1963)
Without legal argument other than to state the conclusion, appellant notes that in other fields where the Legislature has enacted mandatory insurance requirements it has also provided the means whereby insurance can be obtained from a state agency. Thus, state agencies supply workers’ compensation insurance, disability insurance, and unemployment insurance. As appellant notes, there is no statе agency which supplies insurance to doctors who seek hospital privileges. He concludes that the Legislature “must provide commensurate statutory legislation guaranteeing that every licensed physician required to carry such insurance can obtain it, . . .” Since appellant has suggested no legal argument supporting this suggestion, we decline to address it.
Appellant contends that his right to equal protection of the law is violated by section 1319 in that the section discriminates on the basis of *448 wealth. In appellant’s view, a doctor may be prevented from obtaining privileges at a hospital merely because he cannot afford to purchase insurance. We need not reach this contention.
In order to challenge the constitutionality of a statute on the ground that it is discriminatory, the complaining party must be a member of the class which is allegedly being discriminated against.
(Estate of Horman
(1971)
Lastly, appellant urges that there is a fatal conflict between state and federal law. Since federal law is supreme, appellant concludes that section 1319 must be struck down. (13 Cal.Jur.3d, Constitutional Law, § 9, pp. 33-34.) This contention is meritless.
Appellant cites 42 United States Code section 1395a 8 which generally provides that patients receiving benefits under certain fеderal programs are entitled to the services of the doctor of their choice. Appellant urges that section 1319 conflicts with federal law since it prohibits patients from choosing uninsured doctors.
In making this contention, appellant overlooks 42 United States Code section 1395
9
which specifically provides that federal authorities may not supervise or control the administration of health care. Section 1395 indicates that a state may determine the cоnditions a doctor must satisfy in order to practice medicine. (See generally,
O’Bannon
v.
Town Court Nursing Center
(1980)
*449 The judgment is affirmed.
Franson, J., and Woolpert, J., concurred.
Notes
There is a narrowly defined exception to this statement permitting a private citizen to enter into an insurance contract with a nonadmitted insurer (Ins. Codе, § 1760) or through certain licensed surplus line brokers (Ins. Code, § 1760.5 et seq.).
We note that several courts in other states have upheld such statutes in the face of various attacks:
Pollock
v.
Methodist Hospital
(E.D.La. 1975)
We note that the law is continuing to be liberalized to permit recovery against hospitals for staff doctors’ malpractice. For example, in the recent case of
Elam
v.
College Park Hospital
(1982)
Kugler
v.
Yocum, supra,
Appellant argues the hospital’s requirement that the medical staff have insurance with a “recognized insurance company” is arbitrary and vague. He contends that the term is so indefinite that the hospital may arbitrarily exclude any doctor it does not want on its staff. This contention is meritless.
As has been pointed out, the requirement that insurance be obtained from a company authorized to transact an insurance business in California is entirely consistent with the purpose оf section 1319, which is to protect the financial integrity of the hospital and its patients. The protection authorized by section 1319 would be entirely illusory if a doctor could obtain insurance from a carrier which was or became unable to pay off claims. Viewed in this light, the hospital’s rule is neither irrational nor susceptible of arbitrary application.
(Miller
v.
Eisenhower Medical Center, supra,
Despite these statutory limitations on insurers’ conduct, appellant asserts countless times that insurance companies commonly deny coverage on the basis of arbitrary or whimsical reasons. (Also see
Rosner
v.
Peninsula Hospital Dist., supra,
Pragmatically, if a doctor could not obtain malpractice insurance because of numerous claims and malpractice judgments made against him, the existence of such claims and judgments might have some bearing upon the doctor’s competence. At least, it would not be unreasonable for a hospital or potential claimant to so view the existence of such judgmеnts and claims.
We hasten to add that there is no suggestion or intimation in this record that Dr. Wilkinson is not a fully competent doctor or that he has claims or judgments against him.
42 United States Code section 1395a provides: “Any individual entitled to insurance benefits under this subchapter may obtain health services from any institution, agency, or person qualified to participate under this subchapter if such institution, agency, or person undertakes to provide him such services.’’
42 United States Code section 1395 prоvides: “Nothing in this subchapter shall be construed to authorize any Federal officer or employee to exercise any supervision or control over the practice of medicine or the manner in which medical services are provided, or over the selection, tenure, or compensation of any officer or employee of any institution, agency, or person providing health services; or to exercise any supervision or control over the administration or operation of any such institution, agency, or person.”
