¶ 1 Rоbert Wyatt and the Estate of Helen Wyatt, and Patricia Kuhfuss and the Estate of Karl H. Kuhfuss, Jr. (collectively, Appellants) filed separate lawsuits against two different acute care hosрitals, alleging, among other claims, a violation of the Adult Protective Services Act (APSA). In each case, the trial court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the hospital, holding thаt APSA is not applicable to acute care hospitals. Appellants timely appealed. We have jurisdiction over both appeals under Arizona Revised Statutes (AR.S.) sеctions 12-120.21.-A.1 (2003) and-2101.A.l (Supp.2012).
¶ 2 We have consolidated the two cases on appeal because they involve the same issue: whether APSA applies to acute care hоspitals. Finding that APSA does apply, we reverse and remand both cases for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
DISCUSSION
¶ 3 “APSA provides a statutory cause of action for incapacitated or vulnerable adults who are the victims of neglect, abuse or exploitation.” In re Estate of Wyttenbach,
¶ 4 We review questions of statutory construction de novo. In re Estate of Winn,
¶ 5 Arizona Revised Statute § 46-455 was designed to create a cause of action for a vulnerable individual who was injured as a result of abuse, neglect or exploitation. Estate of McGill v. Albrecht,
¶ 6 The provision of APSA at issue in this appeal provides:
A vulnerable adult whose life or health is being or has been endangered or injured by neglect, abuse or exploitation may file an action in superior court against any person or enterprise that has been employed to provide care, that has assumed a legal duty to provide care or that has been appointed by a court to provide care to such vulnerable adult for having caused or permitted such conduct.
AR.S. § 46-455.B.
Provide Care
¶ 7 The Hospitals first argue that because “care” or “provide care” are ambiguous, this court must look to legislative history to determine the legislature’s intent. We disagree and find both terms unambiguous.
¶ 8 “Care” is generally defined as “charge, supervision, management: responsibility for or attention to safety and wellbeing.” State v. Jones,
The Facility
¶ 9 Arizona Revisеd Statutes § 46-455.B states that “any person or enterprise that has been employed to provide care” to a vulnerable adult is liable under APSA for neglect, abuse or exploitаtion that endangers or injures that person’s life or health. The Hospitals contend the legislature intended this provision to apply to long-term care facilities that provide care to a vulnerable adult, such as assisted living centers and adult care homes, but not to acute care facilities that may have a vulnerable adult as a patient. Spеcifically, the Hospitals argue that pursuant to AR.S. § 46-455.B.1, APSA’s enumerated facilities are “a nursing care institution, an assisted living center, an assisted living facility, an assisted living home, an adult day health сare facility, a residential care institution, an adult care home, a skilled nursing facility or a nursing facility.”
¶ 10 The Hospital’s reliance on A.R.S. § 46-455.B.1 is misplaced. The first sentence in subsection B dеscribes in very general terms the cause of action that may be brought. The second sentence indicates who is specifically exempted from the statute, e.g., a physician, podiatrist, registered nurse practitioner, or physician assistant. The facilities listed in A.R.S. § 46-455.B.1 are exceptions to the exemptions listed in the second sentence of subsectiоn B. In other words, a physician cannot be sued under APSA unless he works in one of the facilities listed in subsection B.l.
¶ 11 If we were to find that “provide care” was ambiguous, then an argument could be mаde that perhaps the legislature intended APSA to apply only to the facilities listed in subsection B.l. However, having determined that “provide care” is unambiguous, to hold that acute care hospitals are exempt from APSA would ignore the plain and unambiguous language of the statute. It also superimposes upon the statute the Hospitals’ interpretation of the legislature’s intent in enacting APSA by reading in limitations that the legislature could have included, but did not. Had the legislature intended to limit the application of APSA to certain types of facilities, such as adult long-term health care facilities, it could have easily done so in its definition of “enterprise.” Instead, the legislature broadly defined “enterprise” to mean “any сorporation, partnership, association, labor union or other legal entity, or any group of persons associated in fact although not a legal entity, that is involved with рroviding care to a vulnerable adult.” AR.S. § 46-455. Q.
¶ 12 Construing APSA in the manner urged by the Hospitals would limit the remedies available to vulnerable or incapacitated individuals who have been harmed by thеir caregivers.
¶ 13 Phoenix Baptist Hospital argues that to construe “care” and “provide care” in this manner results in an absurdity. See Preston v. Kindred Hosps. W., L.L.C.,
¶ 14 Just as not every negligent act that occurs in a nursing home gives rise to liability under APSA, some negligent acts that take place in a hospital setting may trigger a claim under APSA The key fact is not the type of facility where the negligent, abusive or exploitative act occurs, but the nature of the act and its connection to the relationship between the caregiver and the recipient.
¶ 15 Moreover, even if we were to hold that the language of APSA is ambiguous as the Hospitals suggest, and we were to examine the legislative history to try to disсern legislative intent, our conclusion would nonetheless be the same. Nowhere in the legislative history is there any suggestion that an acute care hospital is exempt from liability undеr APSA
CONCLUSION
¶ 16 For the above stated reasons, we reverse the trial courts’ orders granting partial summary judgment in favor of the Hospitals, and remand both cases for further proceedings cоnsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Absent material revisions, we cite to the current version of applicable statutes.
. The Hospitals do not assert that they are not enterprises, as that term is defined in APSA. Similarly, the Hospitals do not argue that they fall within any of the five exceptions to the exemptions to liability under APSA, as expressly delineated in A.R.S. § 46-455.B.1.
