[Cite as In re Avery Health Care Ctr., 2020-Ohio-3383.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
In the Matter of: :
Avery Health Care Center, : No. 19AP-539
(ODH File No. 9115-01-17A)
(Avery Road Realty, LLC et al., :
(REGULAR CALENDAR)
Appellants). :
D E C I S I O N
Rendered on June 18, 2020
On brief: Vorys, Sater, Seymour & Pease LLP, Victor A.
Walton, Jr., and Jeffrey A. Miller; Webster & Associates Co.,
LPA, and Geoffrey E. Webster, for appellants Avery Health
Care Center and Avery Road Realty, LLC.
On brief: Dave Yost, Attorney General, and Henry G. Appel,
for appellee Ohio Department of Health.
On brief: Rolf Goffman Martin Lang LLP, Ira S. Goffman,
and Joseph F. Petros, III, for appellees Vrable Land Holding
Dublin, LLC, Vrable VI, Inc., Dublin Geriatric Care Co., and
Healthcare Ventures of Ohio, LLC.
APPEAL from the Ohio Department of Health
SADLER, P.J.
{¶ 1} Appellants-appellants, Avery Health Care Center and Avery Road Realty,
LLC (collectively "Avery"), appeals from an adjudication order issued by appellee-appellee,
the director of the Ohio Department of Health, denying Avery's application for a certificate
of need ("CON"). For the reasons that follow, we reverse.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
{¶ 2} Harold Sosna is the owner and/or operator of a number of nursing homes in
Ohio, and he is a licensed Ohio nursing home administrator. In 1998, Sosna and a partner
No. 19AP-539 2
formed a company known as 72 Ventures LLC ("72 Ventures"). There is no dispute that
Sosna owns half of the ownership units in 72 Ventures. In 2013, 72 Ventures purchased an
existing nursing home known as Bryden Place. Several residents of Bryden Place were
registered sex offenders and many others were individuals struggling with substance abuse
and mental health issues. Because neither Sosna nor his partner had experience operating
a non-traditional nursing home, 72 Ventures leased Bryden Place to a company by the name
of Carrington. Another company, Provider Services, subsequently purchased Carrington
and became the lessee and operator of Bryden Place.
{¶ 3} The evidence shows Bryden Place began having serious regulatory problems
while being operated by Provider Services, and it was subsequently designated as a "special
focus facility" by the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services ("CMS"). Sosna testified that
on learning in February 2017 that Bryden Place had been designated as a "special focus
facility" by CMS, 72 Ventures terminated the lease agreement with Provider Services and
entered into a lease agreement with Embassy Health Care ("Embassy"), whereby Embassy
became operator of Bryden Place as Embassy Bryden Place.
{¶ 4} According to Sosna, though Embassy corrected many of the deficiencies cited
by CMS, on July 21, 2017, Bryden Place received an R.C. 3721.03 notice from the Ohio
Department of Health ("ODH") of a proposed license revocation. When a subsequent
inspection by ODH revealed Bryden Place had not resolved a number of the deficiencies by
the August 1, 2017 deadline, Bryden Place closed.
{¶ 5} On August 2, 2017, Avery submitted an application to ODH for a CON which
would allow Avery to "purchase 115 beds from Regency Manor Nursing Home &
Rehabilitation and 23 beds from Bryden Place to relocate to a newly constructed facility on
Avery Road in Dublin, Ohio." (Joint Ex. 1 at 2.) A CON is written approval from the director
of ODH authorizing a "reviewable activity." R.C. 3702.51(C). "Reviewable activities"
include construction or replacement of a long-term care facility, renovation of an existing
facility that involves a capital expenditure of two million dollars or more, an increase in bed
capacity, or a relocation of beds. See R.C. 3702.511. The Avery CON application identified
Sosna as the President/CEO and sole owner of the proposed new facility.
No. 19AP-539 3
{¶ 6} On December 22, 2017, ODH denied the application. In denying the
application, ODH claimed the July 21, 2017 notice to Bryden Place triggered the application
of R.C. 3702.59(B)(1), which provides in relevant part as follows:
The director [of ODH] shall not approve an application for a
certificate of need for the addition of long-term care beds to
an existing long-term care facility or for the development of a
new long-term care facility if any of the following apply:
***
(b) During the sixty-month period preceding the filing of the
application, a notice of proposed license revocation was
issued under section 3721.03 * * * for * * * a nursing home
owned or operated by the applicant or a principal participant,
unless in the case of such a nursing home the notice was
issued solely because the nursing home had already closed or
ceased operations.
{¶ 7} Pursuant to the 60-month prohibition, a CON application shall not be
approved if a "principal participant" of the CON applicant also owned or operated a nursing
home that has been issued a notice of proposed license revocation in the 60 months prior
to the applicant's submission of a CON application.
{¶ 8} Avery appealed the denial of the CON application and requested a hearing.
R.C. 3702.60(A). On October 1, 2018, an evidentiary hearing was conducted by a hearing
examiner. Vrable Land Holdings, LLC, Vrable VI, Inc., Dublin Geriatric Care Co., and
Health Care Ventures of Ohio, LLC ("Vrable") intervened in the appeal as an "affected
person" under R.C. 3702.51(M). At the hearing, Debra Walsh, supervisor of the Health Care
Services Program and the CON program for ODH, testified the sole reason for the initial
denial of Avery's CON application is set forth in the staff recommendation section of the
CON staff report submitted December 20, 2017. The staff recommendation provides in
relevant part as follows:
On August 2, 2017, this CON application was filed. The
applicant, Avery Road Realty, LLC, is 100% owned by Harold
Sosna. As defined in §3702.51(R), Harold Sosna is a principal
participant because he is a "person who has an ownership or
controlling interest of at least five percent in an applicant."
***
Because Mr. Sosna is the owner of the long-term care beds and
the building for Bryden Place, which is the subject of a
No. 19AP-539 4
proposal to revoke its license, and a principal participant in
the applicant, Avery Road Realty, LLC., the director is
prohibited from granting this application.
(Joint Ex. 1 at 262-63.)
{¶ 9} On January 8, 2019, the hearing examiner issued a report and
recommendation concluding that "Avery's CON application should not have been denied
under R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b)." (Report & Recommendation at 3.) The hearing examiner
agreed with Avery that Sosna was neither an owner or operator of Bryden Place. The
hearing examiner's report and recommendation provides in relevant part as follows:
2. * * * The Director's letter that denied Avery's CON
application is expressly, based on a staff report, and the staff
report concluded that Harold Sosna was a "principal
participant" of Avery and that he owned the Bryden Place
nursing home in 2017. In 2017 Bryden Nursing Home was
served with a revocation notice under R.C. 3721.03. The staff
report therefore concluded that Avery's application was
precluded under R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b).
3. Although Avery concedes that Harold Sosna was its
"principal participant" in 2017, it has shown, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that Sosna did not own or
operate Bryden Place during the sixty-month period
preceding Avery's CON application date.
***
6. In 2017 Bryden Place was owned by 72 Ventures.
7. In 2017 Harold Sosna owned 50% of the ownership units
in 72 Ventures.
8. In 2017 Harold Sosna was not the owner of Bryden Place.
9. Under R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b), the moratorium provision
does not apply to a "principal participant" of an applicant
merely because that person is a shareholder of an entity that
owned or operated a nursing home cited under R.C. 3721.03.
10. The moratorium provision of R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b) was
incorrectly applied to deny Avery's August 2, 2017, CON
application.
(Emphasis added.) (Report & Recommendation at 21-22.)
{¶ 10} Both ODH and Vrabel filed objections to the hearing examiner's report and
recommendation. In an adjudication order dated August 1, 2019, ODH rejected the hearing
examiner's recommendation and upheld the denial of Avery's CON application. The
No. 19AP-539 5
adjudication order provides the following reasons for rejecting the hearing examiner's
recommendation and denying Avery's CON application:
In rendering his decision, the Hearing Examiner failed to
recognize and give weight to the responses on the CON
application. Question 9.12 asks for the name of the
individuals or organizations having direct or indirect
ownership interests amounting to an ownership interest of 5
percent or more (principal participants) in the disclosing
entity (the applicant). Harold Sosna was identified as the
100% owner of the applicant, Avery Road Realty, LLC.
Question 9.15 directs the Applicant to list the name of other
Ohio nursing homes in which any of the persons identified in
section 9.12 or 9.13 also have an ownership or interest of 5%
or more. Applicant listed Bryden Place as one of the Ohio
nursing homes in which Harold Sosna has an ownership or
interest of 5% or more.
In July 2017 the Operator of Embassy Bryden Place (Bryden
Place) received a notice of proposed license revocation.
Bryden Place is a nursing home in which Sosna stated he had
an ownership interest of 5% or more at the time the CON
application was submitted by Avery, meeting the definition
of principal participant in R.C. 3702.51(R).
R.C. 3702.59(B)(1) prohibits the Director from approving an
application for CON, for the development of a new long-term
care facility if:
(b) During the sixty-month period preceding
the filing of the application, a notice of proposed
license revocation was issued under section
3721.03 of the Revised Code for the existing
long-term care facility in which the beds are
being placed or a nursing home owned or
operated by the applicant or a principal
participant, unless in the case of such a nursing
home the notice was issued solely because the
nursing home had already closed or ceased
operations.
Based on the foregoing, I uphold the initial denial of Avery
Health Care Center's application for certificate of need
decided December 22, 2017.
(Emphasis added and omitted.) (Aug. 1, 2019 Adjudication Order at 2.)
{¶ 11} On January 22, 2018, Avery filed an appeal to this court, pursuant to R.C.
3702.60(A) and 119.12, from the August 1, 2019 adjudication order.
No. 19AP-539 6
II. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
{¶ 12} Avery assigns the following as trial court error:
[1.] The Director of the Ohio Department of Health ("ODH")
misapplied R.C. § 3702.59(B)(1)(b) in wrongfully denying
Avery Health Care Center's ("Avery") application for a
Certificate of Need ("CON").
[2.] R.C. § 3702.59(B)(1)(b) violates Avery's due process
rights and is unconstitutional, both as applied by the Director
and as written.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
{¶ 13} R.C. 3702.60(E) sets forth the standard of review on appeal in relevant part
as follows:
(2) In hearing the appeal, the court shall consider only the
evidence contained in the record certified to it by the
director. * * *
(3) The court shall affirm the director’s order if it finds, upon
consideration of the entire record and any additional evidence
admitted under division (E)(2) of this section, that the order
is supported by reliable, probative, and substantial evidence
and is in accordance with law. In the absence of such a finding,
it shall reverse, vacate, or modify the order.
IV. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Avery's First Assignment of Error
{¶ 14} In Avery's first assignment of error, Avery contends that ODH misapplied
statutory law in denying Avery's CON application. R.C. 3702.52(C) provides as follows:
All of the following apply to the process of granting or denying
a certificate of need:
(1) If the project proposed in a certificate of need application
meets all of the applicable certificate of need criteria for
approval under sections 3702.51 to 3702.62 of the Revised
Code and the rules adopted under those sections, the director
shall grant a certificate of need for all or part of the project
that is the subject of the application by the applicable deadline
specified in division (C)(4) of this section or any extension of
it under division (C)(5) of this section.
{¶ 15} The parties agree that if R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b) does not apply and if the
project proposed in a CON application meets all the applicable criteria for approval, R.C.
3702.52(C)(1) requires ODH to approve it.
No. 19AP-539 7
1. Principal Participant in Bryden Place
{¶ 16} ODH argues that Sosna's ownership interest in 72 Ventures makes him a
"principal participant" in Bryden Place as that term is used in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b).
Accordingly, ODH contends the denial of Avery's CON application is required by the 60-
month prohibition in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1). We disagree.
{¶ 17} In construing a statute, a court's paramount concern is the legislature's intent
in enacting it. State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Jones-Kelley, 118 Ohio St.3d 81, 2008-
Ohio-1770, ¶ 17; State ex rel. Russell v. Thornton, 111 Ohio St.3d 409, 2006-Ohio-5858,
¶ 11. " 'The court must look to the statute itself to determine legislative intent, and if such
intent is clearly expressed therein, the statute may not be restricted, constricted, qualified,
narrowed, enlarged or abridged; significance and effect should, if possible, be accorded to
every word, phrase, sentence and part of an act * * *.' " State ex rel. McGraw v. Gorman,
17 Ohio St.3d 147, 149 (1985), quoting Wachendorf v. Shaver, 149 Ohio St. 231 (1948),
paragraph five of the syllabus. "In construing the terms of a particular statute, words must
be given their usual, normal, and/or customary meanings." Washington Cty. Home v. Ohio
Dept. of Health, 178 Ohio App.3d 78, 2008-Ohio-4342, ¶ 28 (4th Dist.), quoting Proctor v.
Kardassilaris, 115 Ohio St.3d 71, 2007-Ohio-4838, ¶ 12. To determine legislative intent,
R.C. 1.42 dictates that statutory "[w]ords and phrases shall be read in context and construed
according to the rules of grammar and common usage." R.C. 1.42 further provides that
"[w]ords and phrases that have acquired a technical or particular meaning, whether by
legislative definition or otherwise, shall be construed accordingly."
{¶ 18} The relevant language of R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b) provides that "[t]he director
shall not approve an application for a certificate of need * * * for the development of a new
long-term care facility if * * * [d]uring the sixty-month period preceding the filing of the
application, a notice of proposed license revocation was issued under section 3721.03 * * *
[to] a nursing home owned or operated by the applicant or a principal participant."
(Emphasis added.) We do not believe it is reasonable to interpret the language used by the
General Assembly in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b) as prohibiting approval of a CON application
submitted by a person who might be considered a "principal participant" of the owner or
operator of the nursing home that was issued a notice of proposed license revocation. It is
No. 19AP-539 8
clear from the statutory language that the term "principal participant" refers exclusively to
a person associated with the applicant.
{¶ 19} Even if we were to agree that the operative language of R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b)
might be reasonably construed in the manner advocated by ODH, the statutory definition
of "principal participant" forecloses such a construction. The term "principal participant,"
for purposes of R.C. 3702.51 to 3702.62, is defined in R.C. 3702.51(R) as follows:
"Principal participant" means both of the following:
(1) A person who has an ownership or controlling interest of
at least five per cent in an applicant, in a long-term care
facility that is the subject of an application for a certificate of
need, or in the owner or operator of the applicant or such a
facility;
(2) An officer, director, trustee, or general partner of an
applicant, of a long-term care facility that is the subject of an
application for a certificate of need, or of the owner or
operator of the applicant or such a facility.1
(Emphasis added.)
{¶ 20} "Principal participant," as defined in R.C. 3702.51(R) and Ohio Adm.Code
3701-12-01(V) is a term used only in reference to a "person" who has an ownership interest
in the CON "applicant."2 This definition is consistent with the statutory language in R.C.
3702.59(B)(1)(b) and is inconsistent with the interpretation adopted by ODH in the
adjudication order. By inserting the statutory definition of "principal participant" into R.C.
3702.59(B)(1)(b), in place of the term "principal participant," the intent of the General
Assembly in drafting the 60-month prohibition is apparent. When the definition is added
in place of the term "principal participant," the prohibition reads in relevant part: "The
director shall not approve an application for a certificate of need * * * if * * * [d]uring the
sixty-month period preceding the filing of the application, a notice of proposed license
revocation was issued under section 3721.03 * * * for * * * a nursing home owned or
operated by the applicant or [[a] person who has an ownership or controlling interest of at
least five per cent in an applicant, in a long-term care facility that is the subject of an
1R.C. 3102.51(R) and Ohio Adm.Code 3701-12-01(V) contain identical definitions of "principal participant."
2Under R.C. 3102.51(A), "applicant" means any person that submits an application for a CON and who is
designated in the application as the applicant. Under R.C. 3102.51(B), "person" means any individual,
corporation, business trust, estate, firm, partnership, association, joint stock company, insurance company,
government unit, or other entity.
No. 19AP-539 9
application for a certificate of need, or in the owner or operator of the applicant or such a
facility]." (Emphasis added.) R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b). When R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b) is
properly applied to the facts of this case, the prohibition reads in relevant part: "The
director shall not approve an application for a certificate of need * * * if * * * [d]uring the
sixty-month period preceding the filing of the application, a notice of proposed license
revocation was issued under section 3721.03 * * * for * * * a nursing home owned or
operated by [Avery] or [Sosna]."
{¶ 21} There is no question Sosna is a "principal participant" of the applicant, Avery.
There is also no dispute that on July 21, 2017, Sosna held a 50 percent ownership interest
in 72 Ventures and that 72 Ventures owned the building and grounds associated with
Bryden Place, the long-term care beds in Bryden Place, and the operating rights to Bryden
Place. Sosna would clearly fit the definition of a "principal participant" of 72 Ventures if 72
Ventures were to file a CON application. However, 72 Ventures is not the applicant in this
case. The applicant in this case is Avery.
{¶ 22} We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo. Turner v.
CertainTeed Corp., 155 Ohio St.3d 149, 2018-Ohio-3869, ¶ 11. The problem with
construction of the statute adopted by ODH is that it ignores the plain language of the
statutory definition of "principal participant." See id. at ¶ 19 ("The problem with Turner's
reading of the statute is that it ignores the plain language of the statutory definition of
'smoker.' "); Xyovest, Inc. v. Limbach, 62 Ohio St.3d 469 (1992) (the Tax "Commissioner
had interpreted the governing statute incorrectly and had ignored a part of the statutory
definition of the word 'price' "); Sims Bros., Inc. v. Tracy, 83 Ohio St.3d 162, 166 (1998)
(Supreme Court of Ohio refused to accept taxpayer's definition of the statutory term
"manufacturing operation," for purposes of the exemption because it "would * * * disregard
this earlier part of the statutory definition, and would be in violation of our duty to give
meaning to all portions of a statute"). Because "principal participant," as used in R.C.
3702.59(B)(1)(b) and as defined in R.C. 3702.51(R), relates exclusively to CON applicants
and because the CON applicant is Avery, it is not reasonable to consider Sosna a "principal
participant" in Bryden Place. Thus, the prohibition in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1) does not apply to
Sosna, and it could not be relied on by ODH as the basis for denying Avery's CON
application.
No. 19AP-539 10
{¶ 23} ODH nonetheless argues that this court is required to defer to the director's
interpretation of the term "principal participant" in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b). As a general
rule, "[a] reviewing court, in interpreting a statute, 'must give due deference to an
administrative interpretation formulated by an agency which has accumulated substantial
expertise, and to which the legislature has delegated the responsibility of implementing the
legislative command.' " In re 138 Mazal Health Care, Ltd., 117 Ohio App.3d 679, 685 (10th
Dist.1997), quoting State ex rel. McLean v. Indus. Comm., 25 Ohio St.3d 90, 92 (1986). See
also In re Manor Care, 10th Dist. No. 05AP-398, 2005-Ohio-5703, ¶ 16. "[I]in order to
sustain an agency's application of a statutory term, a reviewing court ' "need not find that
its construction is the only reasonable one or even that it is the result we would have reached
had the question arisen in the first instance in judicial proceedings." ' " In re 138 Mazal at
685, quoting Udall v. Tallman, 380 U.S. 1, 16 (1965), quoting Unemp. Comp. Comm. of
Territory of Alaska v. Aragon, 329 U.S. 143, 153 (1946). See also In re Certificate of Need
Application for Project "Livingston Villa," 10th Dist. No. 15AP-1146, 2017-Ohio-196, ¶ 39;
Northside Amateur Boxing School Bingo Club v. Hamilton Cty. Gen. Health Dist., 184
Ohio App.3d 596, 2009-Ohio-5122, ¶ 17 (10th Dist.).
{¶ 24} In re 138 Mazal is an example of the application of the general rule of
deference in a case involving ODH. In that case, a nursing home administrator, Bruce
Bable, challenged an ODH order granting a CON to a competing healthcare agency for a
proposed project to establish a new 100-bed nursing home. A hearing examiner issued a
decision recommending the director grant the CON and the director accepted the hearing
examiner's recommendation. On appeal, Bable argued the decision was not supported by
reliable, probative, and substantial evidence, and it was not in accordance with law because
the director misapplied the statutory law. The relevant provision permitted relocation of
"existing beds," and Bable argued that in order to relocate beds under the relevant statutory
law, the beds had to actually have been in use before the director could approve relocation.
Id. at 684, citing R.C. 3702.68.
{¶ 25} The applicable Ohio Administrative Code provision defined "existing and
approved beds." Id. at 684-85. In granting the CON, the director determined that the term
"existing beds," as used in the statute and rule, included beds that had been previously
No. 19AP-539 11
approved but had not been put into use. Id. at 686. In affirming the adjudication order,
this court concluded:
[W]hile the statute at issue is silent regarding a definition of
"existing beds," we have previously noted that the
administrative rule defining "existing and approved beds" is
susceptible to more than one interpretation, including a
construction consistent with a broader reading of R.C.
3702.68 than the interpretation suggested by appellant.
While ODH's interpretation of the relevant statute and rules
may not be the only plausible one, we conclude that the
agency's construction of the statute, finding that the beds at
issue (long-term care beds for which a CON was previously
approved) " 'exist' and were capable of being relocated," is not
unreasonable.
Id. at 686.
{¶ 26} In reaching this determination, we applied the general rule of statutory
construction that requires this court give " 'due deference to an administrative
interpretation formulated by an agency which has accumulated substantial expertise, and
to which the legislature has delegated the responsibility of implementing the legislative
command.' " In re 138 Mazal at 685, quoting McLean at 92. See also In re Manor Care at
¶ 16.
{¶ 27} Here, ODH asks this court to defer to its construction of the term "principal
participant" for purposes of the prohibition in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b). As discussed above,
however, the term "principal participant" is clearly defined both in R.C. 3702.51(R) and
Ohio Adm.Code 3701-12-01(V). As also discussed above, those definitional sections make
clear that the term "principal participant" describes a person associated with the applicant,
not a person associated with the nursing home that was issued a notice of proposed license
revocation. Unlike the administrative code provision at issue in In re 138 Mazal, we find
that the statutory and administrative definition of "principal participant" is not reasonably
susceptible to more than one interpretation. This court is not required to defer to an
administrative construction of a term that is not reasonable in light of the definition in the
statute or administrative rule. In re Acubens, LLC, 10th Dist. No. 17AP-870, 2018-Ohio-
2607, ¶ 13.
{¶ 28} For the foregoing reasons, we hold that ODH erred when it denied Avery's
CON application based on the director's determination that Sosna was a ''principal
No. 19AP-539 12
participant" of Bryden Place. Though Sosna is clearly a principal participant in the
applicant, Avery, the 60-month prohibition in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b) may be applied to
Sosna only if he was either an owner or operator of Bryden Place.
2. Operator of Bryden Place
{¶ 29} At the hearing on Avery's appeal from the initial denial of the CON
application, Greg Glass, Chief of the Bureau of Regulatory Operations at ODH, explained
why ODH applied R.C. 3702.59 to Avery's CON application:
Q. How does licensure law apply to the lessor of a nursing
facility?
A. Well, again, if – we license the operator of the facility.
However, anybody with a 5 percent or greater interest in the
entity that is the licensor, for example, is subject to some
licensing provisions and prohibitions.
In Mr. Sosna's case, as to Bryden, he owned the operating
rights to the beds. He was not the operator, per se, but he
owned the operating rights and he owned the building, as I
recall, all of which was with substantial involvement that, in
our view, made him subject to the provision.
(Oct. 1, 2018 Tr. at 84.)
{¶ 30} ODH did not find that Sosna was the operator of Bryden Place for purposes
of the prohibition in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b). In this appeal, however, ODH argues that 72
Ventures could be considered the operator of Bryden Place and that the 60-month
prohibition should be to Sosna because he was a "principal participant" in 72 Ventures.3 In
light of our determination that "principal participant" refers exclusively to a person
associated with the applicant and not a person associated with the owner or operator of the
nursing home that was issued the notice of proposed license revocation, the question
whether 72 Ventures operated Bryden Place is immaterial to Avery's CON application.
3. Owner of Bryden Place
{¶ 31} In support of the August 1, 2019 adjudication order, Vrable argues that this
court should adopt a definition of a nursing home "owner" for purposes of the 60-month
prohibition in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b) that includes a person who is an "indirect owner" of
3 ODH claims that 72 Ventures was an operator of Bryden Place by virtue of a provision in its lease with
Embassy that permitted 72 Ventures to terminate the lease with Embassy in the event lessee is guilty of
"waste." (Joint Ex. 1 at 213.) Under the definitional sections of the lease, "waste" includes "imminent threat
of loss of licensure." (Joint Ex. 1 at 209.)
No. 19AP-539 13
the nursing home that was issued the notice of proposed license revocation. Sosna argues
that because Sosna owns a 50 percent interest in 72 Ventures and 72 Ventures wholly owns
Bryden Place, it was reasonable for ODH to consider Sosna an "owner" of Bryden Place for
purposes of the prohibition. We disagree.
{¶ 32} Initially, we note ODH, in the August 1, 2019 adjudication order, determined
the 60-month prohibition barred the director from approving Avery's CON application
based on the director's determination that Sosna was a "principal participant" in Bryden
Place. However, as set out above, Sosna could not be considered a "principal participant"
in Bryden Place because neither 72 Ventures nor Bryden Place are CON applicants.
Nevertheless, because ODH, in denying Avery's CON application, made a finding that
Sosna had an ownership interest in Bryden Place, we will consider Vrable's argument.
{¶ 33} Vrable claims that R.C. 3702.59(B)(1) prohibited ODH from approving
Avery's CON application because Sosna was an "owner" of Bryden Place when ODH issued
the notice of proposed license revocation on July 21, 2017. Avery counters that the evidence
conclusively establishes that 72 Ventures was the sole owner of Bryden Place, not Sosna.
The hearing examiner, in rejecting Vrable's ownership argument, found as follows:
4. During the sixty-month period preceding Avery's CON
application Bryden Place was owned by 72 Ventures, Ltd., an
Ohio limited liability company. As an Ohio limited liability
company, 72 Ventures has the authority to acquire, hold, and
transfer property in its own name. R.C. 1705.03. This is also
set forth in R.C. 1705.34 as follows: "Real and personal
property owned or purchased by a limited liability company
shall be held and owned in the name of the company.
Conveyance of that property shall be made in the name of the
company." Therefore, property held by 72 Ventures,
including Bryden Place, was its property and not the property
of its individual members, including Harold Sosna.
5. A limited liability company is a separate entity from its
members. The debts, assets, and liabilities of a limited
liability company are separate from those of its members. A
managing member of a limited liability company does not
become personally liable for the debts and obligations of a
limited liability company when acting in that capacity. R.C.
1705.48. Therefore, although Harold Sosna was a unit holder
and the managing member of 72 Ventures, that did not make
him an owner of Bryden Place in his personal capacity.
(Report & Recommendation at 21-22.)
No. 19AP-539 14
{¶ 34} In our view, the hearing examiner reached the only reasonable conclusion
supported by the law and facts in this case, and we agree with the hearing examiner's
determination. The word "owner," for purposes of the CON legislation, is not defined either
in R.C. 3702.51 or Ohio Adm.Code 3701-12-01. This court has previously noted that
"ownership * * * is commonly understood to mean '[t]he collection of rights allowing one
to use and enjoy property, including the right to convey it to others.' " Regency Plaza, LLC
v. Morantz, 10th Dist. No. 06AP-837, 2007-Ohio-2594, ¶ 29, quoting Black's Law
Dictionary 1131 (7th Ed.1999). As the hearing examiner noted, R.C. 1705.34 provides
"[r]eal and personal property owned or purchased by a limited liability company shall be
held and owned in the name of the company [and] [c]onveyance of that property shall be
made in the name of the company."
{¶ 35} Where a statute is silent regarding the definition of a particular term and the
administrative agency has adopted a rule consistent with a broader reading of a statutory
term, this court will generally defer to the agency interpretation of its own statutes and rules
so long as the interpretation is not unreasonable. In re 138 Mazal, 117 Ohio App.3d at 686.
Words in an unambiguous statute, however, should be applied in accordance with common
usage, not interpreted. Ohio ex rel. Shisler v. Ohio Pub. Emps. Retirement Sys., 10th Dist.
No. 07AP-946, 2008-Ohio-4830, ¶ 9, aff'd, 122 Ohio St.3d 148, 2009-Ohio-2522. We do
not perceive ambiguity in the word "owner," as it is used in R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b). Thus,
there was no need for ODH to interpret the word "owner" as it is used in the statute.
{¶ 36} Vrable claims that support for an expansive definition of ownership can be
gleaned from the questionnaire distributed to CON applicants by ODH. We agree that the
questionnaire reflects an unwritten policy on the part of ODH to apply the 60-month
prohibition to any person who has an indirect ownership interest in a nursing home that
was issued a notice of proposed license revocation in the 60-month period immediately
preceding the CON application. An unwritten administrative policy, however, does not
have the force and effect of a legally promulgated statute or administrative rule.
{¶ 37} As previously noted, In re 138 Mazel is a case where this court deferred to
ODH's interpretation of statutes and rules pertaining to CON applications. The statute and
rule at issue in that case involved the transfer of "existing beds" among long-term health
care facilities. In affirming the ODH adjudication order, this court deferred to the director's
No. 19AP-539 15
interpretation of "existing beds" as there was no question that ODH had accumulated
substantial expertise in the regulation of long-term health care facilities, and the General
Assembly delegated to ODH the responsibility of implementing the legislative command
with respect to the type of beds that may be transferred in connection with a CON
application. In this case, however, the General Assembly has not expressed a similar
delegation of responsibility to ODH regarding ownership of real and personal property by
a limited liability company. Nor has the General Assembly by the enactment of R.C.
3702.59(B)(1)(b) clearly expressed an intent to broaden the definition of "owner" to include
a person who is an indirect owner of a nursing home that was issued a notice of proposed
license revocation in the 60-month period immediately preceding the CON application.
The question whether ODH could adopt an administrative rule consistent with R.C.
3702.01 to 3702.99 that extends the definition of "owner," for purposes of R.C.
3702.59(B)(1)(b), is not a question before this court in this appeal.
{¶ 38} Vrable contends that failing to adopt a definition of "owner," for purposes of
the 60-month prohibition, that includes an indirect owner "would entirely defeat the
purpose of Revised Code Section 3702.59(B)(1) and of Ohio’s CON scheme in general,
which aims to ensure the quality and commitment of the principal participants involved in
proposed nursing-home projects." (Vrable Brief at 18.) We disagree.
{¶ 39} The statute, as written, extends the 60-month prohibition to minority and
fractional owners of an "applicant" by including a "principal participant" within its scope.
See R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b), 3702.51, and Ohio Adm.Code 3701-12-01. In this instance, for
example, had Sosna owned or operated Bryden Place, the prohibition would have barred
ODH from granting Avery's CON application even though Sosna was not the applicant. In
our view, the General Assembly has not clearly expressed an intent to further extend the
scope of the 60-month prohibition to include a person who has an indirect ownership
interest in the nursing home that was issued a notice of proposed license revocation.4
4 By way of analogy, we note that a member of a limited liability company has no personal liability by reason
of being a member or manager of the company. R.C. 1705.48. However, a limited exception to this general
rule has been established in the common law whereby members may be held liable for their own bad acts
notwithstanding the protections afforded by the corporate form when they use the corporation for criminal or
fraudulent purposes to the detriment of a third party. Ettayem v. Ramsey, 10th Dist. No. 17AP-155, 2019-
Ohio-675, appeal not accepted, 156 Ohio St.3d 1498, 2019-Ohio-3505. "Piercing the corporate veil is a 'rare
exception' and only used 'in the case of fraud and certain other exceptional circumstances.' " Id. at ¶ 29, citing
No. 19AP-539 16
{¶ 40} For the foregoing reasons, we conclude ODH misapplied R.C.
3702.59(B)(1)(b) when it determined the 60-month prohibition applied to Sosna and
denied Avery's CON application on that basis. Thus, on consideration of the entire record,
we do not find the adjudication order is supported by reliable, probative, and substantial
evidence and is in accordance with law. In the absence of such a finding, this court is
obligated to reverse and vacate the adjudication order. R.C. 3702.60(E).
{¶ 41} For the foregoing reasons, Avery's first assignment of error is sustained.
B. Avery's Second Assignment of Error
{¶ 42} In Avery's second assignment of error, Avery contends that R.C.
3702.59(B)(1)(b) violates Avery's due process rights and is unconstitutional, both as
applied by the director and as written. Because we have sustained Avery's first assignment
of error on finding ODH misapplied R.C. 3702.59(B)(1)(b) in denying Avery's CON
application, we need not reach Avery's constitutional claims. State ex rel. Lieux v.
Westlake, 154 Ohio St. 412 (1951), paragraph one of the syllabus ("Constitutional questions
will not be decided until the necessity for their decision arises."); Interstate Motor Freight
Sys. v. Bowers, 164 Ohio St. 122 (1955), paragraph two of the syllabus ("Where a case can
be determined upon any other theory than that of the constitutionality of a challenged
statute, no consideration will be given to the constitutional question."). See also
Champaign Cty. Nursing Home v. Tompkins, 10th Dist. No. 98AP-255, 2003-Ohio-1706,
¶ 51 (this court will not issue a declaration of appellant's constitutional rights where a
favorable decision on the statutory claims in a subsequent administrative hearing or an
appeal under R.C. Chapter 119 may render the constitutional issues moot). Our
determination that Avery is entitled to the relief sought under the relevant statutory law
moots Avery's assignment of error challenging the constitutionality of the statute as written
and as applied to Avery. Accordingly, Avery's second assignment of error is moot.
V. CONCLUSION
{¶ 43} Having sustained Avery's first assignment of error and having mooted
Avery's second assignment of error, we reverse the adjudication order of the director of the
Dombroski v. WellPoint, Inc., 119 Ohio St.3d 506, 2008-Ohio-4827, ¶ 17, quoting Dole Food Co. v. Patrickson,
538 U.S. 468, 475 (2003), superseded in part by statute on other grounds.
No. 19AP-539 17
Ohio Department of Health, vacate the order denying Avery's CON application, and remand
the matter to ODH to issue the appropriate CON to Avery.
Judgment reversed;
cause remanded with instructions.
BROWN and KLATT, JJ., concur.
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