Court Opinion

ID: 2815859
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-07-09 16:25:09.307168+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:28:16.305870
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON STATE HOSPITAL     )
ASSOCIATION,                  )
                              )
             Respondent,      )                        No. 90486-3
                              )
    v.                        )                        EnBanc
                              )
WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF)
HEALTH,                       )
                              )
             Appellant.       )                        Filed ___lUi   0 9 2015
                              )
·-------·---                  )

      GONZALEZ, J.-Under Washington law, Department of Health approval is
                                                                      ')

required for certain types of hospital ownership changes. We are asked today whether

the department exceeded its authority when it, by rule, significantly expanded the

types of ownership changes that require department approval. Finding that it did, we

affirm.

                                          FACTS

          The Washington Legislature enacted the certificate of need program in 1979 to

"promote, maintain, and assure the health of all citizens in the state, provide

accessible health services, health manpower, health facilities, and other resources
Wash. State Hasp. Ass 'n v. Wash. Dep 't ofHealth, No. 90486-3

while controlling increases in costs." RCW 70.38.015(1). Under this program, those

seeking to enter the health care market have long been required to establish there is a

need for their services. See Univ. of Wash. Med. Ctr. v. Dep 't of Health, 164 Wn.2d

95, 100, 187 P .3d 243 (2008). The department administers the certificate of need

program and is authorized to adopt rules to implement the certificate of need statute.

RCW 70.38.105(1), .135(3)(c).

       In 1984, the legislature adopted RCW 70.38.105(4)(b), which, in its current

form, provides that certificate of need review is also triggered by

       [t ]he sale, purchase, or lease of part or all of any existing hospital as defined in
       RCW 70.38.025 including, but not limited to, a hospital sold, purchased, or
       leased by a health maintenance organization or by a combination of health
       maintenance organizations except as provided in subsection (7)(b) of this
       section.

The terms "sale," "purchase," and "lease" are not det1ned in the statute.

       To assist parties in determining whether a certificate of need is required for a

transaction, parties may "submit a written request to the certificate of need program

requesting a formal determination of applicability of the certificate of need

requirements to the action." WAC 246-310-050(1). The department's responses to

those requests are "binding upon the department'' for that transaction. WAC 246-310-

050(5). Since 1984, the department often ruled that a certificate of need is required

for only "sale, purchase, or lease" transactions, not other forms of changes of control.

In one such ruling, the department stated certificate of need

       review is required for the sale, purchase, or lease of a hospital. The terms

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Wash. State Hosp. Ass 'n v. Wash. Dep 't of Health, No. 90486-3

       "purchase" and "sale" are not defined in either the [certificate of need] statute
       or rule. However in RCW 70.37 ... "acquisition" is defined to include
       acquiring by "purchase, merger, lease, joint venture, or otherwise;" Therefore,
       its [sic] reasonable to assume that had the [certificate of need] law been
       intended to apply to mergers it would have specifically so stated. The
       department concludes that the [certificate of need] law was not intended to
       apply to merger transactions.

Clerk's Papers at 87. The department's interpretation of"sale, purchase, or lease,"

however, has not been uniform: the department issued several binding opinions that

concluded "sale, purchase, or lease" did not extend to other forms of change of

control, but the department also reviewed six hospital related mergers through the

certificate of need process between 1979 and 1989.

       On June 28,2013, Governor Inslee, noting that the certificate of need process

"has not kept current with the changes inthe health care delivery system," directed the

department to

       consider how the structure of affiliations, corporate restructuring, mergers, and
       other arrangements among health care facilities results in outcomes similar to
       the traditional methods of sales, purchasing, and leasing of hospitals,
       particularly when control of part or all of an existing hospital changes from one
       party to another.

Admin. Record (AR) at 1. The department initiated rule making on July 3, 2013. The

department proposed an expansive rule defining "sale, purchase, or lease" of part or

all of any existing hospital as "any transaction in which the control, either directly or

indirectly, of part or all of any existing hospital changes to a different person

including, but not limited to, by contract, affiliation, corporate membership

restructuring, or any other transaction." Id. at 154 (underline omitted) (now codified

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Wash. State Hasp. Ass 'n v. Wash. Dep 't of Health, No. 90486-3

at WAC 246-310-010(54) (hereinafter New Rule). The department received over

1,000 comments on its proposal. In its response to the comments, the department

explained that certificate of need review should be performed in relation to hospital

transactions ''regardless of the terms used in the transactional documents." !d. at

1188. After considering the comments, the department adopted the New Rule as

proposed.

       The Washington State Hospital Association (the Association) is a not-for-profit

corporation that advocates for its members on issues that affect health care. Its

members include 98 Washington hospitals. The Association challenged the New Rule

in Thurston County Superior Court, arguing, among other things, that the department

exceeded its statutory authority in promulgating the New Rule. The trial court found

that the department exceeded its statutory authority in promulgating the New Rule and

invalidated it on that basis without reaching the Association's other arguments. The

department appealed directly to this court. We granted review. Order Granting

Review, Wash. State Hasp. Ass'n v. Dep't ofHealth, No. 90486-3 (Dec. 3, 2014).

                                          ANALYSIS

       Our review is de novo because "[i]n reviewing administrative action, this court

sits in the same position as the superior court." Tapper v. Emp 't Sec. Dep 't, 122

Wn.2d 397, 402, 858 P.2d 494 (1993) (citing Macey v. Dep 't of Emp 't Sec., 110

Wn.2d 308, 312, 752 P.2d 372 (1988)). We also review questions of statutory

interpretation de novo. State v. Wentz, 149 Wn.2d 342, 346, 68 P.3d 282 (2003)

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Wash. State Hasp. Ass 'n v. Wash. Dep 't of Health, No. 90486-3

(citing City ofPasco v. Pub. Emp 't Relations Comm 'n, 119 Wn.2d 504, 507, 833 P .2d

381 (1992)).

       An agency's rules are presumed valid. St. Francis Extended Health Care v.

Dep 't of Soc. & Ilealth Servs., 115 Wn.2d 690, 702, 801 P.2d 212 (1990). The

Association bears the burden of proving that the New Rule is invalid. RCW ·

34.05.570(1 )(a). The court may declare the New Rule invalid "only if it finds that:

The rule violates constitutional provisions; the rule exceeds the statutory authority of

the agency; the rule was adopted without compliance with statutory rule-making

procedures; or the rule is arbitrary and capricious." RCW 34.05.570(2)(c).

       We conclude the New Rule is invalid because it interprets terms in RCW

70.38.105(4)(b) in a maru1er that is too broad to be consistent with the statute. As we

have recently summarized,

       Administrative "[r]ules must be written within the framework and policy of the
       applicable statutes/' Dep't o.fLabor &.Indus. v. Gongyin, 154 Wn.2d 38, 50,
       109 P.3d 816 (2005), and so long as the rule is "reasonably consistent with the
       controlling statute[s]," an agency does not exceed its statutory authority. Wash.
       Pub. Ports Ass'n v. Dep 't ofRevenue, 148 Wn.2d 637,646,62 P.3d 462
       (2003). However, '"[a]dministrative rules or regulations cannot amend or
       change legislative enactments."' Dep 't ofEcology v. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC,
       146 Wn.2d 1., 19, 43 P.3d 4 (2002) (quoting Dep 't ofEcology v. Theodoratus,
       135 Wn.2d 582, 600, 957 P.2d 1241 (1998)). Rules that are not consistent with
       the statutes that they implement are invalid. Bostain v. Food Express, Inc., 159
       Wn.2d 700, 715, 153 P.3d 846 (2007).
                     '       '                       .                .   .      '

Swinomish Indian Tribal Cmty. v. Dep 't ofEcology, 178 Wn.2d 571, 580-81, 311 P.3d

6 (2013) (alterations in original). The overriding purpose of the certificate of need

program is to "'promote, maintain, and assure the health of all citizens in the state,

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Wash. State Hasp. Ass 'n v. Wash. Dep 't o.fHealth, No. 90486-3

[and] provide acc~ssible health services~ health manpower, [and] health facilities.'"

Overlake Hasp. Ass 'n v. Dep 't ofHealth, 170 Wn.2d 43, 55, 239 P.3d 1095 (2010)
               .                                .

(second alteration in original) (quoting RCW 70.38.015(1)). We acknowledge that the

New Rule may further the purpose of the certificate of need program and that broad

dictionary definitions of"sale" and "purchase" 1 support the department's review of

transactions beyond those that are .described in the transactional documents as "sales,"

"purchases," or "leases," such as mergers. The New Rule, however, interprets "sale,

purchase, or lease" in RCW 70.38.105(4)(b) to mean "any transaction in which the

control, either directly or indirectly, of part or all of any existing hospital changes to a

different person,', which encompasses much more than just mergers. WAC 246-310-

010(54). As the Association correctly points out, the New Rule applies to any change

of control because "[a]n indirect change of control would include things like changes

in the stock ownership of a publicly-held corporation, or a simple change in the

composition of a board of directors managing the affairs of an entity." Corrected

Answering Br. ofResp't Wash. State Hospital Ass'n at 21. 2 Hence, as one example

1 11
   Sale" has been defined to mean "the act of selling : a contract transferring the absolute or
general ownership of property from one person or corporate body to another for a price (as a sum
of money or any other consideration)." WEBSTER'S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
2003 (2002). 11 Purchase" has been defined to mean 11to get into one's possession ... by any
means other than descent or inheritance," WEBSTER'S, supra, at 1844, and ~'[t]he act or an
instance of buying," BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 1429 (10th ed. 2014).
2 The department contends that the New Rule is not "intended to reach these ancillary aspects of

hospital administration." Reply Br. of Appellant at 8. Nonetheless, the New Rule does reach
such aspects because, by its plain language, it applies to "any transaction in which the control,
either directly or indirectly, of part or all of any existing hospital changes to a different person."
WAC 246-310-010(54).

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Wash. State Hasp. Ass 'n v. Wash. Dep 't of Health, No. 90486-3

of why the New Rule's interpretation of"sale, purchase, or lease" is too broad, the

New Rule requires that any change in the board of directors of a hospital is subject to

certificate of need review, which is not consistent with RCW 70.38.105(4)(b)'s

requirement that a 'Gsale, purchase, or lease" of part or all of a hospital is subject to

certificate of need review. Accordingly, the New Rule interprets "sale, purchase, or

lease" in RCW 70.38.105(4)(b) in a manner that departs too far from the plain

meaning oJthose terms. See Swinomish, 178 Wn.2d at 586-87; Bostain, 159 Wn.2d at

713, 715-16. Therefore, the department exceeded its scope of authority by

promulgating the New Rule because the New Rule expands the meaning of terms in

RCW 70.38.105(4)(b) in a manner that is not consistent with the statute.

                                         CONCLUSION

       We hold that the department exceeded its statutory authority in promulgating

the New Rule and the New Rule is consequentially invalid. Accordingly, we affirm.

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    Wash. State Hosp. Ass 'n v. Wash. Dep 't of Health, No. 90486-3

    WE CONCUR:

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