{
  "id": 2538759,
  "name": "CHARLOTTE-MECKLENBURG HOSPITAL AUTHORITY, d/b/a CAROLINAS MEDICAL CENTER; CHARLOTTE INSTITUTE OF REHABILITATION AND UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL; CAROLINA MEDICORP, INC.; FORSYTH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, INC.; MEDICAL PARK HOSPITAL, INC.; DUKE MEDICAL CENTER; HIGH POINT REGIONAL HOSPITAL, INC.; MEMORIAL MISSION HOSPITAL, INC.; MOSES H. CONE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL; and NORTH CAROLINA BAPTIST HOSPITALS, INC. v. NORTH CAROLINA INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION and JAMES J. BOOKER, J. HAROLD DAVIS and J. RANDOLPH WARD, in their official capacities as its Chairman and Members",
  "name_abbreviation": "Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority v. North Carolina Industrial Commission",
  "decision_date": "1994-05-06",
  "docket_number": "No. 60PA93",
  "first_page": "200",
  "last_page": "229",
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        {
          "parenthetical": "The federal agency administering Medicare and Medicaid has established 460 diagnostically related groups, and thus 460 rates to effect the Congressional mandate therein to establish prospective hospital charges for each hospital participating in the program."
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          "page": "375",
          "parenthetical": "\"We may assume the law-making body is satisfied with the interpretation this Court has placed upon its Workers'] Compensation Act [when it has convened numerous times following that interpretation and failed to make any change in the statute].\""
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          "parenthetical": "\"An issue as to the existence of power or authority in a particular administrative agency is one primarily of statutory construction.\""
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    "judges": [
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    "parties": [
      "CHARLOTTE-MECKLENBURG HOSPITAL AUTHORITY, d/b/a CAROLINAS MEDICAL CENTER; CHARLOTTE INSTITUTE OF REHABILITATION AND UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL; CAROLINA MEDICORP, INC.; FORSYTH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, INC.; MEDICAL PARK HOSPITAL, INC.; DUKE MEDICAL CENTER; HIGH POINT REGIONAL HOSPITAL, INC.; MEMORIAL MISSION HOSPITAL, INC.; MOSES H. CONE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL; and NORTH CAROLINA BAPTIST HOSPITALS, INC. v. NORTH CAROLINA INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION and JAMES J. BOOKER, J. HAROLD DAVIS and J. RANDOLPH WARD, in their official capacities as its Chairman and Members"
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        "text": "WHICHARD, Justice.\nThe primary question is whether adoption of a per diem reimbursement rule and concomitant repeal of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina rule exceeded the North Carolina Industrial Commission\u2019s statutory authority to review and approve hospital charges for services rendered to patients entitled to care under the Workers\u2019 Compensation Act, N.C.G.S. Chapter 97 (1991) (\u201cAct\u201d). For reasons hereinafter stated, we hold that adoption of the per diem rule exceeded the Commission\u2019s statutory authority, but that repeal of the Blue Cross Blue Shield rule did not.\nI.\nThe General Assembly enacted the Act in 1929 to both \u201cprovide swift and sure compensation to injured workers without the necessity of protracted litigation,\u201d and to \u201cinsure[] a limited and determinate liability for employers.\u201d E.g., Rorie v. Holly Farms, 306 N.C. 706, 709, 295 S.E.2d 458, 460 (1982).\nThe philosophy which supports the Workers\u2019] Compensation Act is \u201cthat the wear and tear of human beings in modern industry should be charged to the industry, just as the wear and tear of machinery has always been charged. And while such compensation is presumably charged to the industry, and consequently to the employer or owner of the industry, eventually it becomes a part of the fair money cost of the industrial product, to be paid for by the general public patronizing such products.\u201d\nVause v. Equipment Co., 233 N.C. 88, 92, 63 S.E.2d 173, 176 (1951) (quoting Cox v. Kansas City Refining Co., 108 Kan. 320, 195 P. 863 (1921)); see also Barber v. Minges, 223 N.C. 213, 216, 25 S.E.2d 837, 839 (1943) (\u201cThe primary purpose of legislation of this kind is to compel industry to take care of its own wreckage.\u201d).\nThe basic operating principle of the Act is that an employee is automatically entitled to certain benefits whenever he suffers either a personal injury by accident occurring in the course of the employment and arising out of it, or incurs an occupational disease. Those benefits include both wage-based disability and medical compensation. \u201cMedical compensation\u201d includes hospital services \u201cas may reasonably be required to effect a cure or give relief and for such additional time as, in the judgment of the Commission, will lessen the period of disability.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-2(19) (1991). \u201cMedical compensation shall be provided by the employer.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-25 (1991). Medical compensation may be ordered by the Commission if not provided by the employer. Id. The pecuniary liability of the employer therefor \u201cshall be limited to such charges as prevail in the same community for similar treatment of injured persons of a like standard of living when such treatment is paid for by the injured person.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-26 (1991). \u201c[C]harges of hospitals for medical compensation . . . shall be subject to the approval of the Commission.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-90(a) (1991). The General Assembly created the Industrial Commission, see N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-77, to administer the provisions of the Act, Hanks v. Utilities Co., 210 N.C. 312, 319, 186 S.E. 252, 257 (1936), and authorized the Commission to \u201cmake rules, not inconsistent with [the Act], for carrying out the provisions [thereof].\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-80(a) (1991).\nOn 1 June 1992 the Industrial Commission announced that hospital charges for medical compensation rendered on or after 1 January 1993 would be approved, pursuant to N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-90(a), under two alternative rules: a pre-existing fee schedule, which provided reimbursement according to a published schedule of uniform charges for inpatient services, and a per diem methodology. Charges in excess of these fees so scheduled or calculated would not be approved unless the hospital received prior approval thereof, or upon appeal to the full Commission.\nIn a memorandum dated 18 March 1992, the Commission described the per diem rule: the per diem \u201crate\u201d would be set for each hospital by establishing the average daily hospital charge for five categories of inpatient services rendered to workers\u2019 compensation patients. Excluding any charges for treatment or services rendered to workers\u2019 compensation patients which are not paid or payable under the law, Category I aggregates all general, medical, and surgical charges, including rehabilitation, rendered to workers\u2019 compensation patients other than those covered by Categories II and III. Category II aggregates all intermediate or intensive care charges for medical intensive care unit or surgical intensive care unit services, including cardiac care, rendered to workers\u2019 compensation patients. Category III aggregates high cost specialty unit charges such as those for burn units, dialysis units, heart surgery or other specialty units. Category IV aggregates pain therapy care charges for pain therapy services, and Category V aggregates psychiatric care charges for psychiatric services rendered to workers\u2019 compensation patients. The first-year base per diem charge would be calculated for each category of cases by dividing the total workers\u2019 compensation inpatient charges for each separate category by the total number of workers\u2019 compensation inpatient days in each category for the most recent and complete fiscal year preceding the effective date, 1 January 1993. The resultant quotient, after adjustment for inflation by a factor equal to the Hospital Market Basket Index\u2019s annualized medical cost indicator for the South Atlantic Region, would be the per diem rate chargeable for such category during the first year. In subsequent years, that base year per diem would be adjusted for inflation by the Hospital Market Basket Index\u2019s indicator for the most recent year, not by an individual hospital\u2019s experience.\nFurther, the Commission advised, the per diem reimbursement system would replace a reimbursement rule in effect since 1 January 1990 whereby the Commission, furnished with a list of normal charges for services for that hospital by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, Inc. (\u201cBCBSNC\u201d), would approve charges for services rendered a workers\u2019 compensation patient which were the same as those for a BCBSNC patient.\nPlaintiffs, a group of not-for-profit hospitals, addressed the Commission by letter on 14 July 1992, requesting an administrative forum by which they could \u201ccontest the regularity of the procedures used to adopt [the above] changes and the legal authority of the Commission to adopt or enforce a Per Diem or a Hospital Fee Schedule reimbursement system.\u201d The Commission did not respond to this letter.\nProceeding under the Declaratory Judgment Act, N.C.G.S. \u00a7\u00a7 1-253 to -267 (1983 & Supp. 1992), plaintiff hospitals then instituted this action in the Superior Court, Wake County, alleging that the Commission\u2019s actions in terminating the BCBSNC option and adopting the per diem option (1) failed to comply with applicable rulemaking procedures; (2) were arbitrary and capricious; (3) exceeded the Commission\u2019s statutory authority and were inconsistent with the Act, which provides that an employer\u2019s liability for medical services \u201cshall be limited to such charges as prevail in the same community for similar treatment of injured persons\u201d; and (4) deprived plaintiff hospitals of property without due process of law. Plaintiff hospitals requested that the court, pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment Act, declare the actions of the Commission null and void and enjoin the Commission from establishing or enforcing a reimbursement methodology for approval of inpatient hospital service charges except for the purpose of limiting such charges to the statutory standard contained in N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-26, so that plaintiffs would be paid for inpatient hospital services provided to workers\u2019 compensation patients on the basis of the same schedule of charges applicable to the general patient population.\nThe trial court heard the case without a jury. It concluded that it had personal and subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment Act. It found that the Commission\u2019s actions exceeded its statutory authority to review and approve charges for hospital services based on prevailing community standards under the Act, and accordingly enjoined the Commission from implementing or enforcing the proposed changes in reimbursement options. It specifically excepted \u201cthe . . . continued use of those hospital inpatient reimbursement mechanisms in effect prior to defendants\u2019 adoption of [the per diem option],\u201d including the extant fee schedule. In a subsequent order, the trial court clarified that it was enjoining both adoption of the per diem rule and repeal of the BCBSNC rule.\nFrom this judgment, defendants appealed to the Court of Appeals and petitioned this Court for discretionary review prior to a determination by the Court of Appeals. On 11 March 1993, we allowed defendants\u2019 petition. We now affirm the determination that defendants\u2019 adoption of the per diem rule exceeded their statutory authority, but we reverse the determination that defendants\u2019 repeal of the BCBSNC rule exceeded that authority.\nII.\nWe first address three jurisdictional issues brought forward by defendants. They posit that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because (1) defendants are entitled to sovereign immunity, (2) plaintiffs failed to exhaust available administrative remedies, and (3) plaintiffs did not present an actual controversy as required under the Declaratory Judgment Act. We reject these arguments and conclude that plaintiff hospitals were entitled to seek declaratory and injunctive relief under the Declaratory Judgment Act.\nA.\nThe doctrine of sovereign immunity \u2014 that the state cannot be sued in its own courts without its consent \u2014 is firmly established in North Carolina law. E.g., Ferrell v. Dept. of Transportation, 334 N.C. 650, 654, 435 S.E.2d 309, 312 (1993). It is also well established that a suit against a state commission or members thereof to prevent it or them from performing official duties is a suit against the state within the meaning of this doctrine. See, e.g., Lewis v. White, 287 N.C. 625, 643, 216 S.E.2d 134, 146 (1975), superseded on other grounds by statute as recognized in Corum v. University of North Carolina, 330 N.C. 761, 786, 413 S.E.2d 276, 292 (1992); Insurance Co. v. Gold, Commissioner of Insurance, 254 N.C. 168, 172-73, 118 S.E.2d 792, 795 (1961); Insurance Co. v. Unemployment Compensation Com., 217 N.C. 495, 500, 8 S.E.2d 619, 622 (1940).\nOn the other hand, the official status of the defendants, standing alone, does not immunize them from suit. . . . \u201cWhen public officers whose duty it is to supervise and direct a State agency attempt to enforce an invalid ordinance or regulation, or invade or threaten to invade the personal or property rights of a citizen in disregard of law, they are not relieved from responsibility by the immunity of the State from suit, even though they act or assume to act under the authority and pursuant to the directions of the State.\u201d\nLewis v. White, 287 N.C. at 643, 216 S.E.2d at 146 (quoting Schloss v. Highway Commission, 230 N.C. 489, 492, 53 S.E.2d 517, 519 (1949)) (emphasis added) (citation omitted) (plaintiff taxpayers alleged that the members of a State commission, in excess of their statutory authority or contrary to law, proposed a diversion of state tax funds from the purpose for which such funds were appropriated; held, doctrine of sovereign immunity does not authorize dismissal of complaint). See also Shingleton v. State, 260 N.C. 451, 458-59, 133 S.E.2d 183, 188-89 (1963) (individual may sue state under Declaratory Judgment Act to determine extent of easement granted to the individual by the state); Teer v. Jordan, 232 N.C. 48, 51, 59 S.E.2d 359, 362 (1950) (citizen-taxpayer may maintain action against members of government agency to restrain unlawful use of public funds to his injury); Schloss v. Highway Commission, 230 N.C. 489, 492, 53 S.E.2d 517, 519 (\u201ccourts are open\u201d to party injured by acts of public officers that invade party\u2019s personal or property rights, and \u201che may there obtain prompt and adequate relief\u201d).\nThere is no difference in principle between an attempt to enforce an invalid regulation and the initial adoption or enactment of such a regulation; both are in excess of the authority granted the agency under the statute and invade or threaten to invade personal or property rights of a citizen in disregard of the law. We therefore hold that the doctrine of sovereign immunity does not authorize the dismissal of plaintiff hospitals\u2019 complaint alleging that defendant Commission and its members, in excess of their statutory authority, adopted an invalid regulation.\nB.\nThe next question is whether plaintiff hospitals\u2019 claim should be dismissed for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Defendants contend that where there is an adequate and complete statutory remedy, plaintiffs are not entitled to seek nonstatutory remedies pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment Act. Defendants characterize N.C.G.S. \u00a7\u00a7 97-83 to -86 as providing such a remedy.\nIn Worley v. Pipes, 229 N.C. 465, 50 S.E.2d 504 (1948), this Court held that the exclusive remedy of a physician to recover for services rendered to an injured employee in cases where the employer and employee are subject to the Act is by application to defendant Commission in accordance with sections 97-83 through -86 of the Act, with right of appeal to the courts for review. Id. at 471, 50 S.E.2d at 508. Defendants contend that Worley is equally applicable here, and plaintiff hospitals have not availed themselves of that exclusive remedy \u2014 i.e., that plaintiffs must choose the per diem reimbursement option; seek approval of charges for services rendered an injured worker in excess of the per diem-, and, when denied, appeal to the full Commission for review of the disapproved charges. Only then, they argue, can plaintiffs appeal the Commission\u2019s decision to the Court of Appeals. Instead, plaintiffs requested a forum and, when ignored, immediately sought declaratory relief.\n\u201c[W]hen an effective administrative remedy exists, that remedy is exclusive.\u201d Lloyd v. Babb, 296 N.C. 416, 428, 251 S.E.2d 843, 852 (1979). \u201cWhen statutory provision has been made for an action against the State, the procedure prescribed by statute must be followed, and the remedies thus afforded are exclusive. . . . Our Court has not permitted the Declaratory Judgment Act to supplant or substitute for the specific statutory proceeding for testing a . . . statute.\u201d Insurance Co. v. Gold, Commissioner of Insurance, 254 N.C. at 173-74, 118 S.E.2d at 795-96; see also Porter v. Dept. of Insurance, 40 N.C. App. 376, 378-80, 253 S.E.2d 44, 46-47, cert. denied, 297 N.C. 455, 256 S.E.2d 808 (1979) (plaintiff collection agency was not entitled to seek a declaratory judgment in the superior court as to the validity and applicability of a regulation of the Department of Insurance prohibiting collection agencies from instituting judicial proceedings on behalf of other persons where plaintiff failed to exhaust available administrative remedies).\nWe agree with defendants that Worley is equally applicable to charges for hospital services rendered to employees in workers\u2019 compensation cases. Section 97-90(a) provides that both \u201c[f]ees for . . . physicians and charges of hospitals for medical compensation under this Article shall be subject to the approval of the Commission.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-90(a) (emphasis added). \u201c[T]he General Assembly has prescribed an adequate remedy [in N.C.G.S. \u00a7\u00a7 97-83 through -86] by which any matter in dispute and incident to any claim under the provisions of the Workers\u2019] Compensation Act may be determined and settled.\u201d Worley v. Pipes, 229 N.C. at 471, 50 S.E.2d at 508 (emphasis added).\nPlaintiff hospitals, however, do not seek review of an award of any specific claims for compensation before defendant Commission; rather, they seek a declaratory ruling that the per diem reimbursement rule is invalid, and injunctive relief therefrom. Sections 97-83 through -86 only provide for hearings, awards, and review of awards in disputes between employees and employers with respect to specific claims for compensation, and do not address challenges to rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission pursuant to the Act.\nNor has the General Assembly provided procedures to challenge an invalid rule or regulation in any other section of the Act. Thus, the General Assembly has not provided, within the Act, an adequate remedy for plaintiffs. Nonetheless, plaintiff hospitals requested, by letter, an administrative hearing at which they could \u201ccontest the regularity of the procedures used to adopt and the legal authority of the Commission to adopt or enforce a Per Diem or a Hospital Fee Schedule reimbursement system.\u201d Defendants did not respond to the letter.\nUnder these circumstances we cannot hold that plaintiff hospitals were not entitled to seek relief under the Declaratory Judgment Act on the ground that they have not exhausted their administrative remedies. To the extent that Wake County Hospital v. Industrial Comm., 8 N.C. App. 259, 174 S.E.2d 292 (1970), determined that an action by a nonprofit hospital which challenged the validity of a schedule of hospital charges approved by the industrial Commission in the treatment of workers\u2019 compensation cases presents a question arising under the Act which is determinable by the Commission, it is overruled.\nC.\nThe third and final jurisdictional question is whether plaintiff hospitals have stated a controversy justiciable under the Declaratory Judgment Act. Section 1-264 of that act states: \u201cThis Article is declared to be remedial; its purpose is to settle and to afford relief from uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights, status, and other legal relations, and it is to be liberally construed and administered.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 1-264 (1983). Section 1-254 provides:\nAny person . . . whose rights, status or other legal relations are affected by a statute ... may have determined any question of construction or validity arising under the . . . statute . . ., and obtain a declaration of rights, status or other legal relations thereunder.\nN.C.G.S. \u00a7 1-254 (1983).\nCourts have stated on numerous occasions that declaratory judgment proceedings are particularly useful in determining the rights of individuals vis-a-vis administrative agencies; a judicial determination as to the power of public regulatory agencies and the validity of their rules and regulations enables the private individual to avoid uncertainty as to his rights and duties. 22A Am. Jur. 2d Declaratory Judgments \u00a7 89 (1988). See, e.g., Avery Freight Lines v. White, 245 Ala. 618, 624, 18 So. 2d 394, 400 (1944) (\u201cA well-known field of jurisdiction under the Declaratory Judgment Law is the adjudication of legal rights in controversy between the citizen and public officials, including members of administrative agencies, in advance of threatened and erroneous action to the injury of the party plaintiff.\u201d).\nDeclaratory judgments will be denied, however, where no actual controversy exists.\nAn actual controversy between the parties is a jurisdictional prerequisite for a proceeding under the Declaratory Judgment Act in order to \u201cpreserve inviolate the ancient and sound juridic concept that the inherent function of judicial tribunals is to adjudicate genuine controversies between antagonistic litigants with respect to their rights, status, or other legal relations.\u201d\nAdams v. Dept. of N.E.R. and Everett v. Dept. of N.E.R., 295 N.C. 683, 703, 249 S.E.2d 402, 414 (1978) (quoting Lide v. Mears, 231 N.C. 111, 118, 56 S.E.2d 404, 409 (1949)). \u201cIt is not necessary for one party to have an actual right of action against another for an actual controversy to exist which would support declaratory relief. However, it is necessary that the Courts be convinced that the litigation appears to be unavoidable.\u201d Consumers Power v. Power Co., 285 N.C. 434, 450, 206 S.E.2d 178, 189 (1974).\nWe do not require that the challenged regulation have taken effect, only that it have been enacted or adopted by the administrative agency. Cf. City of Raleigh v. R. R. Co., 275 N.C. 454, 463, 168 S.E.2d 389, 395 (1969) (\u201cIndeed, it is unnecessary for the assailed statute to have taken effect in order to entitle one whose rights it affects to contest the same by declaratory action. However, it is well settled that the court will not entertain a declaratory action with respect to the effect and validity of a statute in advance of its enactment.\u201d (quoting 2 Walter Anderson, Actions for Declaratory Judgments \u00a7 621, at 1415 (2d ed. 1951))). Further, we require that plaintiffs be directly and adversely affected by the regulation. Cf. City of Greensboro v. Wall, 247 N.C. 516, 519-20, 101 S.E.2d 413, 416 (1958) (\u201c[T]he validity of a statute, when directly and necessarily involved, may be determined in a properly constituted action under [the Declaratory Judgment Act]; but this may be done only when some specific provision(s) thereof is challenged by a person who is directly and adversely affected thereby.\u201d (citations omitted)).\nPlaintiff hospitals provide inpatient care to employees who are subject to the Act. On 2 June 1992, defendant Commission adopted minutes announcing that hospital charges for services rendered after 1 January 1993 would be approved if less than or equal to the rates calculated under the per diem rule. Plaintiffs petitioned the Commission for a hearing on the new rule; the Commission did not respond to the letter. Plaintiffs alleged that they would receive, under the new per diem rule, less than the amounts they charge the general patient population; in other words, plaintiffs alleged that they would sustain losses under the per diem reimbursement option. Plaintiffs predict that, if denied the declaratory and injunctive relief sought, they will appeal the disallowed charges on a case-by-case basis for review by the Commission and then to the courts.\nDefendants argue it is possible that litigation may not arise. They point out that they have not yet refused to allow, and might ultimately approve, charges above the per diem rate. Defendants refer to defendant Commission\u2019s rules which allow it to approve any given hospital charges in excess of the approved per diem rate when the hospital demonstrates \u201cspecial hardship\u201d therefrom. Defendants also assert that they plan to approve the per diem rate even if the actual charges are less than those set per diem, and notwithstanding the statutory proscription against employers paying more than the prevailing charges; therefore, they argue, the hospitals will be fully reimbursed on average. Defendants predict that neither employers nor their insurance carriers will complain about paying in excess of the actual charges because they realize that the per diem rule will reduce costs.\nThese \u201ccontingencies and possibilities, however, do not make the case nonjusticiable. We do not require the plaintiff to show with absolute certainty that litigation will arise; the plaintiff must merely demonstrate to a \u2018practical certainty\u2019 that litigation will ensue.\u201d Ferrell, 334 N.C. at 656, 435 S.E.2d at 314. Plaintiffs are not required to sustain actual losses in order to make a test case; \u201c[s]uch a requirement would thwart the remedial purpose of the Declaratory Judgment Act.\u201d Bland v. City of Wilmington, 278 N.C. 657, 659, 180 S.E.2d 813, 815 (1971). Plaintiff hospitals have sufficiently demonstrated a \u201cpractical certainty\u201d that litigation will ensue. We thus hold that they have presented an actual controversy justiciable under the Declaratory Judgment Act.\nIII.\nThe substantive question presented is whether the trial court erred in determining that the Commission\u2019s adopting of the per diem reimbursement rule and concomitant repealing of the BCBSNC schedule exceeded its authority under the Act to review and approve hospital charges for medical compensation provided to workers\u2019 compensation patients. To answer this question, we must first clarify the scope of the Commission\u2019s authority under the statute with regard to the measure of hospital charges thereunder. In re Community Association, 300 N.C. 267, 280, 266 S.E.2d 645, 654 (1980) (\u201c[T]he responsibility for determining the limits of statutory grants of authority to an administrative agency is a judicial function for the courts to perform.\u201d). That is primarily a question of statutory construction. See Comr. of Insurance v. Rate Bureau, 300 N.C. 381, 399, 269 S.E.2d 547, 561, reh\u2019g denied, 301 N.C. 107, 273 S.E.2d 300 (1980) (\u201cAn issue as to the existence of power or authority in a particular administrative agency is one primarily of statutory construction.\u201d).\nA.\nThe following statutory provisions are pertinent:\n\u00a7 97-2. Definitions.\n(19) Medical Compensation \u2014 The term \u201cmedical compensation\u201d means medical, surgical, hospital, nursing, and rehabilitative services, and medicines, sick travel, and other treatment, including medical and surgical supplies, as may reasonably be required to effect a cure or give relief and for such additional time as, in the judgment of the Commission, will tend to lessen the period of disability; and any original artificial members as may reasonably be necessary at the end of the healing period.\n\u00a7 97-25. Medical treatment and supplies.\nMedical compensation shall be provided by the employer. In case of a controversy arising between the employer and employee relative to the continuance of medical, surgical, hospital, or other treatment, the Industrial Commission may order such further treatments as may in the discretion of the Commission be necessary.\nThe Commission may at any time upon the request of an employee order a change of treatment and designate other treatment suggested by the injured employee subject to the approval of the Commission, and in such a case the expense thereof shall be borne by the employer upon the same terms and conditions as hereinbefore provided in this section for medical and surgical treatment and attendance.\nThe refusal of the employee to accept any medical, hospital, surgical or other treatment or rehabilitative procedure when ordered by the Industrial Commission shall bar said employee from further compensation until such refusal ceases, and no compensation shall at any time be paid for the period of suspension unless in the opinion of the Industrial Commission the circumstances justified the refusal, in which case, the Industrial Commission may order a change in the medical or hospital service.\nIf in an emergency on account of the employer\u2019s failure to provide the medical or other care as herein specified a physician other than provided by the employer is called to treat the injured employee, the reasonable cost of such service shall be paid by the employer if so ordered by the Industrial Commission.\nProvided, however, if he so desires, an injured employee may select a physician of his own choosing to attend, prescribe and assume the care and charge of his case, subject to the approval of the Industrial Commission.\n\u00a7 97-26. Liability for medical treatment measured by average cost in community; malpractice of physician.\nThe pecuniary liability of the employer for medical, surgical, hospital service, nursing services, medicines, sick travel or other treatment required when ordered by the Commission, shall be limited to such charges as prevail in the same community for similar treatment of injured persons of a like standard of living when such treatment is paid for by the injured person.\n\u00a7 97-80. Rules and regulations ....\n(a) The Commission may make rules, not inconsistent with this Article, for carrying out the provisions of this Article. Processes and procedure under this Article shall be as summary and simple as reasonably may be.\n\u00a7 97-90. Legal and medical fees to be approved by Commission; misdemeanor to receive fees unapproved by Commission ....\n(a) Fees for attorneys and physicians and charges for hospitals for medical compensation under this Article shall be subject to the approval of the Commission; but no physician or hospital or other medical facilities shall be entitled to collect fees from an employer or insurance carrier until he has made the reports required by the Industrial Commission in connection with the case. Unless otherwise provided by the rules, schedules, or orders of the Commission, a request for a specific prior approval to charge shall be submitted to the Commission for each such fee or charge.\n(b) Any person (i) who receives any fee, other consideration, or any gratuity on account of services so rendered, unless such consideration or gratuity is approved by the Commission or such court, or (ii) who makes it a business to solicit employment for a lawyer or for himself in respect of any claim or award for compensation, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall, for each offense, be punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars ($500.00) or by imprisonment not to exceed one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment.\n(e) The fees provided for in subsection (a) of this section shall be approved by the Commission no later than June 1 of the year in which the Commission exercises its authority under subsection (a) of this section, but shall not become effective until July 1 following such approval.\nDefendants apparently perceive in these provisions and numerous others (see infra) unrelated to hospital charges but incorporating the term \u201creasonable,\u201d a broad grant of authority to set maximum hospital charges in order to keep charges \u201creasonable\u201d and contain rising costs of medical compensation. They contend that section 97-26 is either \u201cvague and outdated\u201d because insurance carriers, not injured persons, now pay hospital bills, and hospitals do not charge according to the patient\u2019s \u201cstandard of living\u201d; that it applies only to hospital services ordered by the Commission, not to hospital services voluntarily provided by the employer; or that it denominates the maximum charge per hospital service which may be set by the Commission under its broad grant of authority. According to defendants, the Commission may set rates less than the prevailing community charge described in section 97-26.\nWhile defendants\u2019 interpretation \u201cmay be helpful and [is] entitled to . . . consideration,\u201d it is not controlling; \u201c[i]t is the Court and not the agency that is the final interpreter of legislation.\u201d State ex rel. Utilities Commission v. Public Staff, 309 N.C. 195, 211-12, 306 S.E.2d 435, 444-45 (1983). We reject defendants\u2019 interpretation of these provisions, and conclude that section 97-26 contains the correct measure for employer liability for hospital charges; the authority to approve hospital charges under section 97-90(a) is provided to ensure that hospitals do not provide services not reasonably required to effect a cure or give relief or tend to lessen the period of disability, and that hospital charges therefor do not exceed the prevailing community charge described therein.\nIn construing the laws creating and empowering administrative agencies, as in any area of law, the primary function of a court is to ensure that the purpose of the Legislature in enacting the law, sometimes referred to as legislative intent, is accomplished. The best indicia of that legislative purpose are \u201cthe language of the statute, the spirit of the act, and what the act seeks to accomplish.\u201d In addition, a court may consider \u201ccircumstances surrounding [the statute\u2019s] adoption which throw light upon the evil sought to be remedied.\u201d\nWe should be guided by the rules of construction that statutes in pari materia, and all parts thereof, should be construed together and compared with each other. Such statutes should be reconciled with each other when possible, and any irreconcilable ambiguity should be resolved so as to effectuate the true legislative intent.\nComr. of Insurance v. Rate Bureau, 300 N.C. at 399-400, 269 S.E.2d at 561 (citations omitted).\nApplying the foregoing rules, we conclude that the legislature intended (1) that medical compensation, including, inter alia, hospital services provided by the employer, ordered by the Commission, provided pursuant to emergencies, or chosen by the employee, subject to the approval of the Commission, be limited by the terms and conditions contained in section 97-25; (2) that such medical compensation be reasonably required to effect a cure or give relief or tend to lessen the period of disability; and (3) that the employer not be charged more than his employee would have been had the employee paid for the services. It intended, further, that the Commission\u2019s authority under the statute be limited to review and approval of hospital charges to ensure, first, that the employer is charged only for those reasonably required services, and, second, that the employer is not charged more for such services than the prevailing charge for the same or similar hospital service in the same community.\nDefendants, focusing on the language of section 97-26 limiting charges to \u201csuch charges as prevail in the same community for similar treatment of injured persons of a like standard of living when such treatment is paid for by the injured person,\u201d contend that hospitals no longer charge according to standard of living, and further, that most people have health insurance; therefore, they posit, section 97-26 is \u201cvague and outdated.\u201d We disagree; indeed, this language, read in historical context, is the key to understanding the \u201cevils sought to be remedied.\u201d\nBefore the 1930s, most people did not have private health insurance; the only extensive private health plans offered direct services, usually to employees in an industry. Paul Starr, The Social Transformation of American Medicine 294 (1982) [hereinafter \u201cStarr\u201d]. Hospitals generally provided three classes of service: wards for the poor and working-class, semi-private rooms for the middle-class, and private rooms for the wealthy. Starr at 159. In some communities, hospitals were segregated by race. Anne M. Dellinger, \u201cA History of Hospitals in North Carolina,\u201d in Hospital Law in North Carolina 1-History, 7-History to 8-History (Anne M. Dellinger ed., 1985) [hereinafter \u201cDellinger\u201d] (In Greensboro, L. Richardson Hospital, established in 1927, \u201cremained the only facility open to blacks on a non-discriminatory basis until 1963, when Wesley Long and Cone Memorial hospitals were integrated by court order.\u201d). Physicians and hospitals could increase profits both by providing additional services and by charging according to the patient\u2019s ability to pay. See Starr at 291.\nWhile \u201c[t]he words of a statute must be taken in the sense in which they were understood . . . when the statute was enacted,\u201d this rule does not preclude a statute from applying to things and conditions not in existence at the time of enactment where the language is sufficiently broad to fairly include them. Hedrick v. Graham, 245 N.C. 249, 259, 96 S.E.2d 129, 136-37 (1957) (citation omitted). We find the language of the statute here sufficiently broad to include modern hospital practices; the legislature clearly intended to ensure that employers pay only for those services reasonably required to effect a cure or give relief or tend to lessen the period of disability, and that hospitals not charge employers more for the same services than they charge other patients not covered by workers\u2019 compensation. We note, for example, that the Commission now generally approves only ward and semi-private services. N.C. Industrial Commission, Evaluation of Permanent Physical Impairment: Rating Guide and Fee Schedule for Physicians and Hospitals for Services Rendered Under the North Carolina Workers\u2019 Compensation Act 292 (1990).\nDefendants next focus on the language of the phrase modifying the enumerated treatments, \u201cwhen ordered by the Commission,\u201d apparently arguing that section 97-26 applies only when medical treatment is ordered by the Commission and not when the employer provides hospital services or when, in emergencies, the employee secures hospital services of his own choosing. See N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-25. We also reject this argument.\nWe previously have decided, at least implicitly, that the pecuniary liability of the employer for medical treatment voluntarily provided is to be measured by section 97-26. In Biddex v. Rex Mills, 237 N.C. 660, 75 S.E.2d 777 (1953), we held that even when medical compensation is voluntarily provided by the employer, the bills must be approved based on the standard set forth in section 97-26:\nA commendably large number of our employers provide prompt medical examination, first aid, and hospital care for their employees in case of accident without r\u00e9gard to the nature of the injury, if any, that may result. Frequently, it is purely precautionary. When liability for the medical care of an employee who has suffered an accident is voluntarily incurred by the employer, the bills therefor must be approved by the Commission before the employer can demand reimbursement from its insurance carrier. In this manner such expenditures are kept within the schedule of fees and charges adopted by the Commission [pursuant to] G.S. 97-26.\nId. at 664, 75 S.E.2d at 780-81. We assume that the legislature was satisfied with this interpretation, in that it has since considered and amended both sections 97-25 and 97-26 without altering it. See Hewett v. Garrett, 274 N.C. 356, 361, 163 S.E.2d 372, 375 (1968) (\u201cWe may assume the law-making body is satisfied with the interpretation this Court has placed upon its Workers\u2019] Compensation Act [when it has convened numerous times following that interpretation and failed to make any change in the statute].\u201d).\nDefendants correctly point out that the legislature did not expressly limit the pecuniary liability for medical treatment rendered pursuant to an emergency, or to the proviso allowing an employee to choose his own physician. In Schofield v. Tea Co., 299 N.C. 582, 594-95, 264 S.E.2d 56, 64-65 (1980), we held that fairness requires that such medical treatment be subject to the same limitations, terms, and conditions as apply to medical treatment provided by the employer, as set forth in section 97-25, namely, that such medical treatment be reasonably required to effect a cure, give relief, or tend to lessen the period of disability.\nSimilarly, fairness requires that the employers\u2019 pecuniary liability for such medical treatment also be limited to such charges as prevail in the same community for similar treatment of injured persons of a like standard of living when such treatment is paid for by the injured person, as set forth in section 97-26. The provisions of sections 97-25 and 97-26 are in pari materia and must be construed together.\nDefendants contend, apparently in the alternative, that the legislature impliedly granted them authority to set \u201creasonable\u201d hospital rates at or below the prevailing community charge described in section 97-26, so as to contain rising costs of medical compensation. See In re Community Association, 300 N.C. at 280, 266 S.E.2d at 654 (\u201cThe agency is a creature of the statute creating it and has only those powers expressly granted to it or those powers included by necessary implication from the legislative grant of authority.\u201d). We have stated that \u201cthe Legislature may . . . delegate [ratemaking] authority to an administrative officer provided it prescribes sufficiently clear standards to control his discretion.\u201d Comr. of Insurance v. Rate Bureau, 300 N.C. at 399, 269 S.E.2d at 561. In support of their contention that the legislature gave them the authority to set \u201creasonable\u201d hospital rates, defendants rely on numerous provisions unrelated to hospital charges incorporating the term \u201creasonable\u201d: N.C.G.S. \u00a7\u00a7 97-25 (providing th\u00e1t employers pay reasonable costs for emergency medical services provided their employee); 97-73 (providing for a schedule of reasonable charges for examinations of employees exposed to the hazard of asbestosis or silicosis, which examinations are to be conducted by physicians chosen by the Commission); 97-74 (providing for awards of costs in hearings arising out of claims for disability or death benefits, which costs are to include \u201ca reasonable allowance for the services of members of the advisory medical committee attending such hearings\u201d); 97-88.1 (providing for awards of attorneys\u2019 fees in hearings brought or defended without reasonable grounds); 97-90(c) (providing for approval of attorneys\u2019 fees at the time the Commission renders a decision at the hearing); and 97-100(a) (requiring that rates charged by workers\u2019 compensation insurance carriers be \u201cfair, reasonable and adequate\u201d). We do not perceive in these provisions the \u201csufficiently clear standards\u201d necessary to establish ratemaking authority in the Commission. Cf., e.g., Public Utilities Act, N.C.G.S. \u00a7\u00a7 62-130 to -133 (1989) (providing detailed criteria for setting rates for public utilities). We thus conclude that the legislature did not intend to delegate such authority.\nWhile defendants\u2019 concern about the rising costs of medical compensation is valid, hospital charges not paid by the employer (as self-insurer or by the insurance carrier) are spread to other patients, or, in the case of state or municipal hospitals, to the general taxpaying public. See Dellinger at 12-13. Such a result conflicts with the primary purpose of the Act, i.e., allocating the cost of work-related injuries first to the industry and ultimately to the consumer of the industry\u2019s products. See, e.g., Vause v. Equipment Co., 233 N.C. at 92, 63 S.E.2d at 176; Barber v. Minges, 223 N.C. at 216, 25 S.E.2d at 839. Indeed, such allocation of cost to the employer is fundamental to the American compensation system, \u201clargely private in structure, being a matter between employers, insurance carriers, and employees,\u201d and distinguishes it from the \u201ctypical [European] \u2018socialistic\u2019 schemes\u201d in which \u201cthe government becomes the central figure.\u201d 1 Arthur Larson, The Law of Workmen\u2019s Compensation \u00a7 3.10, at 1-15 (1993).\nUnlike pure social-insurance plans, the American compensation system does not place the cost on the \u201cpublic\u201d as such, but on a particular class of consumers, and thus retains a relation between the hazardousness of particular industries and the cost of the system to that industry and consumers of its product.\n. . . [Thus,] [i]n the United States it is more precise to say that the consumer of a particular product ultimately pays the cost of compensation protection for the workers engaged in its manufacture.\nId. \u00a7 3.20, at 1-16.\nFor these reasons, we decline to adopt defendants\u2019 interpretation that the legislature intended to grant them the authority to set rates for hospital services. Rather, we conclude that the legislature intended (1) that medical compensation, including, inter alia, hospital services provided by the employer, ordered by the Commission, provided pursuant to emergencies, or chosen by the employee, subject to the approval of the Commission, be limited by the terms and conditions contained in section 97-25; (2) that such medical compensation be reasonably required to effect a cure or give relief or tend to lessen the period of disability; and (3) that the employer not be charged more than his employee would have been had the employee paid for the services. We therefore hold that the Commission\u2019s authority under the statute is limited to review and approval of hospital charges to ensure, first, that the employer is charged only for those reasonably required services, and, second, that for such services the employer is not charged more than the prevailing hospital charge for the same or similar hospital service.\nB.\nHaving determined that the Commission\u2019s authority to review and approve hospital charges is thus limited, we turn to the question of whether the per diem rule is consistent with the statute and results in a schedule of prevailing charges.\nDefendants do not argue that the rule calculates a schedule of prevailing charges. Rather, they justify the rule as establishing \u201creasonable rates\u201d to constrain rising medical costs. In the alternative, they contend that under the rule the hospitals will receive their prevailing charge \u201con average\u201d over all workers\u2019 compensation patients or that such a rule is not inconsistent with the \u201cprevailing charge\u201d standard because the Commission can still determine, on a case-by-case basis, that charges assessed do not exceed prevailing charges.\nPlaintiffs essentially respond that the rule is fatally compromised by statistical sampling and aggregation problems. We agree with plaintiffs.\nUnder the per diem rule, the Commission will disapprove prevailing charges for hospital services that are reasonably required under . the statute, thereby relieving employers of their mandatory liability therefor. Thus the rule is inconsistent with the statute, and the Commission has exceeded its authority in promulgating such a rule. See N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-80(a) (authorizing the Commission to \u201cmake rules, not inconsistent with this Article, for carrying out the provisions of this Article\u201d). Cf., e.g., States\u2019 Rights Democratic Party v. Board of Elections, 229 N.C. 179, 186-87, 49 S.E.2d 379, 384 (1948) (\u201c \u2018Administrative rules and. regulations, to be valid, must be within the authority conferred upon the administrative agency. The power to make regulations is not the power to legislate in the true sense, and under the guise of regulation legislation may not be enacted. The statute which is being administered may not be altered or added to by the exercise of a power to make regulations thereunder.\u2019 \u201d (quoting 42 Am. Jur. Public Administrative Law \u00a7 99)).\nThe per diem \u201crate\u201d would be set for each hospital by establishing the average daily hospital charge for five categories of inpatient services, discussed supra, rendered to workers\u2019 compensation patients. The first-year base per diem charge for any of the five categories is, basically, the average of the average daily patient charges over all categories of patients. Such an average daily patient charge would be calculated for each category by totaling the charges for the diverse and distinct services (line items on the hospital bill) provided a patient in that category unit, then dividing that total by the number of days (or fractions thereof) spent in the hospital by the patient. The resulting quotient, the average daily patient charge, is then averaged over all patients in the category. After adjustment for inflation, this average would be the per diem amount chargeable for such category during the first year.\nWe believe the legislature contemplated that the Commission calculate some average charge because it used the phrase \u201csuch charges as prevail\u201d within section 97-26. Also, the section is titled \u201cLiability for medical treatment measured by average cost in community.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-26 (emphasis added); see Raleigh v. Bank, 223 N.C. 286, 290, 26 S.E.2d 573, 575 (1943) (\u201c[W]hen the heading of a section is misleading or is not borne out by the explicit language of the statute itself, it may be disregarded, but where the meaning is not clear or there is ambiguity the heading which the Legislature has adopted in enacting the statute becomes important in determining the legislative intent.\u201d). \u201cPrevail\u201d is defined as \u201cbe frequent,\u201d \u201ccommon or widespread,\u201d or \u201cpredominate.\u201d Webster\u2019s Third New International Dictionary 1797 (1976). Calculating an average charge reaches, in theory, the most common, or the most frequent, or the representative charge, because it mediates the variation over sample charges. Thus, within a modern hospital serving a community, the average charge assessed patients for any of the numerous, diverse services provided a patient \u2014 the line items on a hospital bill \u2014 would constitute \u201csuch charges as prevail in the same community for similar treatment of injured persons of a like standard of living when such treatment is paid for by the injured person.\u201d Indeed, within a modern hospital that charges according to a uniform rate schedule, i.e., that does not price discriminate by charging patients according to their ability to pay, the uniform charge for each such line-item service would be the prevailing charge therefor.\nCalculating an average camouflages variation across patients; in theory, that makes the average a prevailing charge. The per diem rates, however, are set by averaging charges over both similar and dissimilar hospital services. The variation camouflaged and confounded by the per diem rule thus arises from two sources: first, the variation in charges across the patients within the category for the same or similar hospital services, and, second, the variation in services provided patients as dissimilar, for example, as a burn and a heart-surgery patient, both Category III patients. Indeed, in any hospital that charges according to a uniform charge schedule and does not price discriminate or charge patients according to their ability to pay, the variation arises solely from variation in the services provided.\nThe legislature has mandated employer liability for hospital services reasonably required to effect a cure or give relief or tend to lessen the period of disability. Under the per diem rule, however, the Commission will disapprove charges for such reasonably required services, not because the hospital charged the patient more than other patients in the same category for the same or similar services, but because the hospital provided the patient with services that differed from the services provided on average to other patients in the same category; the Commission will thus relieve the employer of its mandated liability for medical compensation. Thus, the per diem rule is inconsistent with the statute. Cf. Evans v. Times Co., 246 N.C. 669, 670-71, 100 S.E.2d 75, 76-77 (1957) (defendant challenged the rule applied by the Industrial Commission for the measurement of disability compensation to be allowed; held, N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-30 required that the employee receive sixty percent of the difference between wages earned before and after the injury, and therefore the rule providing for less than sixty percent was inconsistent with the Act and invalid).\nDefendants attempt to assure us that they would always approve the per diem rate; although some employers (or their insurance carriers) would pay more than the actual or prevailing charges for services rendered their employees, they would not challenge the per diem, defendants say, because they realize that employers\u2019 medical costs, viewed as a whole, would be contained. The hospitals would thus receive \u201con average\u201d prevailing charges for all services rendered; therefore, the per diem rule is consistent with the statute.\nWe reject this argument. It is based on the premise that the Commission, in derogation of its statutory obligation, would review and approve hospital charges that exceeded the actual prevailing charges for services provided a patient. Our workers\u2019 compensation system is not a \u201cone payor\u201d system. Rather, each employer is liable for medical compensation that may be required under the statute for its employees, and chooses thereunder to either self-insure or cover its risk through an approved workers\u2019 compensation insurance carrier, N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-98; rates for such insurance are generally tied to the prior experience of the employer. Nor is our system serviced by \u201cone provider\u201d; that any hospital would receive, on average, its actual prevailing charges, based on that hospital\u2019s historical charges, would be a mere fortuity.\nWe recognize that the per diem rule would simplify the process of approval of hospital charges and that the legislature has authorized the Commission to make rules establishing processes and procedures \u201cas summary and simple as reasonably may be.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-80(a). There may be some level of aggregation over some of the numerous, diverse, and distinct services provided by modern hospitals that is consistent with the statute. Aggregation to a mere five categories, however, does not suffice. Cf. Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. \u00a7 1395ww (1993) (Payments to hospitals for inpatient hospital services) and regulations promulgated pursuant thereto, 42 C.F.R. \u00a7\u00a7 412.1-412.374 (1993) (The federal agency administering Medicare and Medicaid has established 460 diagnostically related groups, and thus 460 rates to effect the Congressional mandate therein to establish prospective hospital charges for each hospital participating in the program.).\nDefendants finally contend that the per diem rule is not inconsistent with the statute because plaintiff hospitals are free to contest, on a case-by-case basis, the \u201creasonableness\u201d of any approved hospital charge. Under the per diem rule, the hospital may appeal the approved hospital charges, first to the Chief Medical Examiner, who institutes a review of the disputed fee using the established per diem schedule. If the hospital disputes that determination, it may request a hearing before a Deputy Commissioner, for which it may submit expert depositions. If dissatisfied with the Deputy Commissioner\u2019s order, it is entitled to review by the Full Commission upon timely application.\nWe again reject defendants\u2019 contention. The right to appeal the application of an invalid rule does not cure its fundamental invalidity.\nWe conclude, for the reasons stated, that the per diem rule is inconsistent with the Act and that defendants exceeded their authority in promulgating it.\nC.\nThe final question is whether the trial court erred in determining that the Commission\u2019s repeal of the BCBSNC option exceeded its authority under the Act to review and approve hospital charges for medical compensation provided workers\u2019 compensation patients. The legislature has authorized the Commission to \u201cmake rules, not inconsistent with this Article, for carrying out the provisions of this Article.\u201d N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-80(a). Defendants conceded in oral argument that the BCBSNC rule is consistent with the statute; they sought to replace the BCBSNC rule with the per diem rule, they say, to contain rising medical costs. However, plaintiff hospitals did not challenge the extant fee schedule. We cannot conclude that the BCBSNC rule is the only rule that results in a schedule of charges consistent with the statute, and we therefore hold that the trial court erred in determining that the Commission exceeded its authority by repealing that rule.\nIV.\nIn summary, we hold that plaintiff hospitals were entitled to seek declaratory and injunctive relief under the Declaratory Judgment Act. We hold, further, that the trial court did not err in adjudging that defendants exceeded their statutory authority in promulgating the per diem rule; under the rule, defendant Commission will disapprove prevailing charges for hospital services reasonably required under the Act, thus relieving the employers from mandatory liability therefor. The trial court did err, however, in adjudging that defendants exceeded their authority in repealing the BCBSNC rule; plaintiffs did not challenge the extant fee schedule, and we cannot conclude that the BCBSNC rule is the only rule consistent with the Act.\nAccordingly, we affirm the determination that defendants' adoption of the per diem rule exceeded their statutory authority. We reverse the determination that defendants\u2019 repeal of the extant BCBSNC rule exceeded their statutory authority. We remand to the Superior Court, Wake County, for entry of a judgment consistent with this opinion.\nAFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.\nJustice Meyer concurs in the result.\n. These sections provide:\n\u00a7 97-83. In event of disagreement, Commission is to make award after hearing.\nIf the employer and the injured employee or his dependents fail to reach an agreement, in regard to compensation under this Article^] within 14 days after the employee has knowledge of the injury or death, or if they have reached such an agreement which has been signed and filed with the Commission, and compensation has been paid or is due in accordance therewith, and the parties thereto then disagree as to the continuance of any weekly payment under such agreement, either party may make application to the Industrial Commission for a hearing in regard to the matters at issue, and for a ruling thereon.\n\u00a7 97-84. Determination of disputes by Commission or deputy.\nThe Commission or any of its members shall hear the parties at issue and their representatives and witnesses, and shall determine the dispute in a summary manner. The award, together with a statement of the findings of fact, rulings of law, and other matters pertinent to the questions at issue shall be filed with the record of the proceedings, within 180 days of the close of the hearing record unless time is extended for good cause by the Commission, and a copy of the award shall immediately be sent to the parties in dispute.\n\u00a7 97-85. Review of Award.\nIf application is made to the Commission within 15 days from the date when notice of the award shall have been given, the full Commission shall review the award, and, if good ground be shown therefor, reconsider the evidence, receive further evidence, rehear the parties or their representatives, and, if proper, amend the award ....\n\u00a7 97-86. Award conclusive as to facts; appeal; certified questions of law.\nThe award of the Industrial Commission, as provided in G.S. 97-84, if not reviewed in due time, or an award of the Commission upon such review, as provided in G.S. 97-85, shall be conclusive and binding as to all questions of fact; but either party to the dispute may, within 30 days from the date of such award or within 30 days after receipt of notice to be sent by registered mail or certified mail of such award, but not thereafter, appeal from the decision of said Commission to the Court of Appeals for errors of law under the same terms and conditions as govern appeals from the superior court to the Court of Appeals in ordinary civil actions. The procedure for the appeal shall be as provided by the rules of appellate procedure.\nSee also Workers\u2019 Compensation Rules of the North Carolina Industrial Commission, Rule 407(1) (1993) (\u201cPersons who disagree with the allowance of such fees in any case may make application for and obtain a full review of the matter before the Commission as in all other cases provided\u201d; the published fees govern \u201cexcept that in special hardship cases where sufficient reason therefor is demonstrated to the Commission, fees in excess of those so published may be allowed.\u201d).\n. Compare the procedures provided in the North Carolina Administrative Procedure Act, Chapter 150B (1991), from which the Industrial Commission is exempted, N.C.G.S. \u00a7 150B-l(c)(4) (1991): an agency must submit a rule adopted by it to the Rules Review Commission before the rule can be included in the North Carolina Administrative Code. N.C.G.S. \u00a7 150B-21.8 (1991). The Commission must determine whether a rule (1) is within the authority delegated to the agency by the General Assembly, (2) is clear and unambiguous, and (3) is reasonably necessary to fulfill a duty delegated to the agency by the General Assembly. N.C.G.S. \u00a7 150B-21.9 (1991). A rule to which the Commission has objected remains under review by the Commission until the agency that adopted the rule decides not to satisfy the Commission\u2019s objections and requests in writing that the Commission return the rule to the agency, and if entered into the North Carolina Administrative Code (\u201cNCAC\u201d), the entry reflects the Commission\u2019s objection. N.C.G.S. \u00a7 150B-21.12(a)(2), (b) (1991). A person aggrieved by a permanent rule entered in the NCAC with an objection by the Commission based on a lack of statutory authority may file an action for declaratory judgment in Superior Court, Wake County, pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment Act; in the action the court determines whether the agency exceeded its authority in adopting the rule. N.C.G.S. \u00a7 150B-21.15(a) (1991). These procedures replaced those provided in N.C.G.S. \u00a7 150B-17 (1987) (repealed 1991), requiring that any party dissatisfied with an administrative rule or regulation petition the agency for a declaratory ruling with regard to the validity of the rule as a condition precedent to review by the courts.\n. New class distinctions could be more sharply delineated. While ward patients were attended by the hospital staff, private patients were attended by doctors of their choice. Ward and private patients usually received two different kinds of food, and ward patients were often not permitted to see friends and relatives as frequently as were private patients.\n. These hospital services, medicines, supplies, and other treatment provided the patient, thus aggregated, are numerous and varied, including ambulance, emergency room, and admission services; room and board; diagnostic procedures; physical and/or occupational therapy; nursing services; laboratory services; and pharmacy services. See, e.g., N.C. Industrial Commission, Evaluation of Permanent Physical Impairment: Rating Guide and Fee Schedule for Physicians and Hospitals for Services Rendered Under the North Carolina Workers\u2019 Compensation Act 292-97 (1990). Indeed, the Commission enumerates more than sixty different services for room and board; eight different services, with no \u201cfee\u201d specified, for general intensive care services; five, with no fee specified, for general coronary care services; seven, with no fee specified, for nursing services including intensive care and coronary care nursing; ten, with no fee specified, for pharmacy, including drugs, non-prescription drugs, drugs incident to radiology, intravenous therapy, etc.; more than thirteen, with no fee specified, for medical supplies, including medical, surgical, non-sterile, medical prosthetic devices, pacemaker, and intraocular lens; and more than thirty-five codes, with no fee specified, for laboratory, pathology, radiology, and nuclear medicine services. Id.\n. In subsequent years, that base year per diem would be adjusted for inflation by the Hospital Market Basket Index\u2019s indicator for the most recent year, not by an individual hospital\u2019s experience.\n. There are three kinds of statistical averages: the mean, median, and mode. The per diem is an arithmetic mean, the sum of the average daily patient charges divided by the number of charges thus summed. A median would be the charge falling midway in the distribution of sample charges. The mode would be the most frequent charge. See generally David W. Barnes and John M. Conley, Statistical Evidence in Litigation 60-61 (1986).\n. N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-90(b) requires that \u201c[a]ny person . . . who receives any fee ... on account of [medical services rendered under the Act], unless such consideration ... is approved by the Commission or . . . court . . . shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.\u201d If the hospital provides services that are not reasonably required to effect a cure or give relief or tend to lessen the period of disability, the employer would not be liable therefor; however, the employee would be liable, and the hospital would be able to seek payment from the employee.\n. The Medicare and Medicaid programs are massiv\u00e9 medical assistance programs involving millions of Americans and billions of dollars. The cost containment system thereof, enacted pursuant to 42 U.S.C. \u00a7 1395ww, establishes a method for paying hospitals for their operating costs of inpatient hospital services on the basis of rates that are prospectively determined and that vary for each patient according to the diagnostic-related group (DRG) in which the patient is classified; direct operating costs, including wages, capital-related costs, and direct medical and nursing education costs for each participating hospital, are considered in determining the hospital-specific prospective rates for each DRG. The regulations promulgated by the Secretary are extensive and detailed. See generally Harvey L. McCormick, Medicare and Medicaid Claims and Procedures \u00a7 24, at 102 (1986).",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "WHICHARD, Justice."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Turner Enochs & Lloyd, P.A., by Wendell H. Ott and Laurie S. Truesdell; and Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, by Roddey M. Lig\u00f3n, Jr., Anthony H. Brett, and Dale E. Nimmo, for plaintiff-appellees.",
      "Michael F. Easley, Attorney General, by Isham B. Hudson, Jr., Senior Deputy Attorney General, for defendant-appellants."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "CHARLOTTE-MECKLENBURG HOSPITAL AUTHORITY, d/b/a CAROLINAS MEDICAL CENTER; CHARLOTTE INSTITUTE OF REHABILITATION AND UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL; CAROLINA MEDICORP, INC.; FORSYTH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, INC.; MEDICAL PARK HOSPITAL, INC.; DUKE MEDICAL CENTER; HIGH POINT REGIONAL HOSPITAL, INC.; MEMORIAL MISSION HOSPITAL, INC.; MOSES H. CONE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL; and NORTH CAROLINA BAPTIST HOSPITALS, INC. v. NORTH CAROLINA INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION and JAMES J. BOOKER, J. HAROLD DAVIS and J. RANDOLPH WARD, in their official capacities as its Chairman and Members\nNo. 60PA93\n(Filed 6 May 1994)\n1. State \u00a7 22 (NCI4th)\u2014 state commission and members \u2014 invalid regulation \u2014 -sovereign immunity inapplicable\nThe doctrine of sovereign immunity did not authorize the dismissal of plaintiff hospitals\u2019 complaint alleging that defendant Industrial Commission and its members, in excess of their statutory authority, adopted an invalid regulation.\nAm Jur 2d, Municipal, County, School, and State Tort Liability \u00a7\u00a7 67-69; States, Territories, and Dependencies \u00a7\u00a7 104-107.\n2. Declaratory Judgment Actions \u00a7 5 (NCI4th)\u2014 validity o\u00ed Industrial Commission rule \u2014 exhaustion of administrative remedies not required\nPlaintiff hospitals were not precluded from seeking a declaratory judgment of the validity of an Industrial Commission rule pertaining to hospital charges for employees in workers\u2019 compensation cases on the ground that they failed to exhaust their administrative remedies since the Workers\u2019 Compensation Act only provides for hearings, awards, and review of awards in disputes between employees and employers with respect to specific claims for compensation and does not address challenges to rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission pursuant to the Act, and the Commission did not respond to plaintiffs\u2019 letter requesting an administrative hearing.\nAm Jur 2d, Declaratory Judgments \u00a7\u00a7 90-92.\n3. Declaratory Judgment Actions \u00a7 13 (NCI4th|\u2014 hospital charges for workers\u2019 compensation patients \u2014 validity of Industrial Commission rule \u2014 justiciable controversy\nPlaintiff hospitals stated a controversy justiciable under the Declaratory Judgment Act as to the validity of a per diem rule adopted by the Industrial Commission for hospital charges for services rendered to employees in workers\u2019 compensation cases and the concomitant repeal of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina rule, although the Commission has not yet refused to allow charges above the per diem rate, where plaintiffs alleged that they would sustain losses under the per diem reimbursement plan, and plaintiffs predict that, if denied the declaratory and injunctive relief sought, they will appeal the disallowed charges on a case-by-case basis for review by the Commission and then by the courts.\nAm Jur 2d, Declaratory Judgments \u00a7\u00a7 68-88.\n4. Master and Servant \u00a7 75 (NCI3d)\u2014 workers\u2019 compensation \u2014 hospital charges \u2014 review by Industrial Commission\nIn enacting N.C.G.S. \u00a7\u00a7 97-25, 97-26, and 97-90(a), the legislature intended (1) that medical compensation, including, inter alia, hospital services provided by the employer, ordered by the Industrial Commission, provided pursuant to emergencies, or chosen by the employee, subject to the approval of the Commission, be limited by the terms and conditions contained in \u00a7 97-25; (2) that such medical compensation be reasonably required to effect a cure or give relief or tend to lessen the period of disability; and (3) that the employer not be charged more than the employee would have been had the employee paid for the services. Furthermore, the Commission\u2019s authority under \u00a7 97-90(a) is limited to review and approval of hospital charges to ensure, first, that the employer is charged only for those reasonably required services, and, second, that the employer is not charged more for such services than the prevailing charge for the same or similar hospital service in the same community.\nAm Jur 2d, Workers\u2019 Compensation \u00a7\u00a7 56, 57.\n5. Master and Servant \u00a7 75 (NCI3d(\u2014 workers\u2019 compensation-hospital charges \u2014per diem rule invalid\nA per diem rule adopted by the Industrial Commission for reimbursement of hospital charges for services rendered to workers\u2019 compensation patients is inconsistent with the \u201cprevailing charge\u201d standard of N.C.G.S. \u00a7 97-26 and thus exceeds the Commission\u2019s statutory authority to review and approve such charges where the per diem rates are set for each hospital by establishing the average daily hospital charge for only five categories of inpatient services; charges for both similar and dissimilar hospital services will be averaged; the Commission will disapprove charges for reasonably required services, not because the hospital charged the patient more than other patients in the same category for the same or similar services, but because the hospital provided the patient with services that differed from the services provided on average to other patients in the same category; and the Commission will thus relieve the employer of its mandated liability for medical compensation.\nAm Jur 2d, Workers\u2019 Compensation \u00a7\u00a7 56, 57.\n6. Master and Servant \u00a7 75 (NCI3d)\u2014 workers\u2019 compensation \u2014 hospital charges \u2014validity of repeal of BCBSNC rule\nThe Industrial Commission did not exceed its statutory authority to review and approve hospital charges for medical compensation provided workers\u2019 compensation patients when it repealed the Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina rule.\nAm Jur 2d, Workers\u2019 Compensation \u00a7\u00a7 56, 57.\nOn discretionary review pursuant to N.C.G.S. \u00a7 7A-31 prior to a determination by the Court of Appeals of a judgment entered on 13 November 1992 by Bailey, J., in the Superior Court, Wake County, allowing plaintiffs\u2019 motion for judgment on the pleadings. Heard in the Supreme Court 10 May 1993.\nTurner Enochs & Lloyd, P.A., by Wendell H. Ott and Laurie S. Truesdell; and Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, by Roddey M. Lig\u00f3n, Jr., Anthony H. Brett, and Dale E. Nimmo, for plaintiff-appellees.\nMichael F. Easley, Attorney General, by Isham B. Hudson, Jr., Senior Deputy Attorney General, for defendant-appellants."
  },
  "file_name": "0200-01",
  "first_page_order": 240,
  "last_page_order": 269
}
