Full opinion text
POWERS, Justice. Presbyterian Hospital North and Presbyterian Medical Center of Dallas, appellants, are non-profit corporations organized and existing under the laws of the State of Texas. They applied jointly to the Texas Health Facilities Commission for a certificate of need that would authorize their construction and operation of a new acute-care general hospital in southwest Collin County, Texas. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4418h, Texas Health Planning and Development Act, §§ 3.01-3.15 (1976 and Supp. 1982). The Commission consolidated appellants’ application with those of five other applicants who had requested similar authority to build and operate hospitals in the same vicinity. After a contested-case hearing, the Commission issued final orders concurrently denying appellants’ application and granting certificates of need to each of the other applicants. Appellants sued in a district court of Travis County for judicial review of the Commission’s final order denying their application. They now appeal to this Court from a district court judgment that affirms the agency order. Tex.Rev. Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 6252-13a, Texas Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (APTRA), §§ 19, 20 (Supp.1982). We will reverse the judgment of the district court and direct that the cause be remanded to the Commission for proceedings consistent with this opinion. APPELLANTS’ POINT OF ERROR The Commission’s final order contains findings of fact expressed in statutory language, that is, findings of ultimate fact or conclusions of law. The denial of appellants’ application rests upon these findings of ultimate fact or conclusions of law. In purported compliance with APTRA § 16(b), the final order also sets out findings of “underlying fact” to “support” the findings of fact expressed in statutory language. In appellants’ view, the findings of underlying fact are not sufficient to support the findings of fact expressed in statutory language, that is, the agency’s findings of ultimate fact or conclusions of law. Based upon this asserted insufficiency, appellants charge that the final order is “arbitrary or capricious” and that it requires reversal and remand to the agency because their “substantial rights” have been “prejudiced.” APTRA § 19(e)(6). Because we agree with appellants’ contentions in this regard, we need not address their remaining points of error. THE APPLICABLE REGULATORY STATUTE AND AGENCY. RULES The applicable statutory provisions, as they existed at the time of the Commission’s final order, required that appellants obtain from the agency, before constructing the proposed hospital, a certificate of need that authorized the work. Texas Health Planning and Development Act, supra, §§ 1.03(4), (7), (9), (15), 3.01(a)(2), 3.12. This statute is administered by the Commission and requires the agency to promulgate the criteria by which it shall determine whether to issue such certificates of need. Id., § 3.10(a). While the act does not foreclose the agency’s promulgation of other or more specific criteria, the act does specify certain minimum criteria that the Commission must establish and apply in making its decision to issue or deny a certificate of need. Id., § 3.10(b). At the times material to the present case, the Commission had promulgated agency rules that established the following criteria among others: [The proposed] project must be necessary to meet the health care requirements of the community or population to be served. [T]he medical service area for the project must contain sufficient current and future population to require the additional facility. [T]he project’s [sic] approach to providing health care services should be less costly, or more effective or more appropriate than other methods which are available, or which have been approved to be developed. When a project compares unfavorably with one or more of the criteria against which it is properly measured, the application for a certificate of need may be denied. Texas Health Facilities Comm., Rules 315.-19.01.010, .020, .030, .050, 3 Tex.Reg. 1362-64 (1978), as amended 4 Tex.Reg. 2949 (1979); now codified as amended at 25 Tex. Admin.Code § 513.1-.21. In the present case, the Commission denied appellants’ application for a certificate of need because the agency determined that the health facility proposed by them failed to meet each of the foregoing criteria. THE DECISIONAL PRINCIPLES APPLICABLE ON APPEAL In our view, the present case is controlled squarely by the principles discussed and applied in our opinion in Charter Medical-Dallas, Inc. v. Texas Health Facilities Commission, 656 S.W.2d 928 (Tex.App.1983, writ pending). The final order now under review, issued by the same administrative agency, is invalid for the same vices identified in Charter Medical — primarily the vice of attempting to make mere summaries of the evidence do service for the findings of “underlying fact” required by the express terms of APTRA § 16(b). We were informed in oral argument, on submission of the present appeal, that the Commission routinely composes its findings of underlying fact as mere summaries of the evidence; and that the agency intentionally does so for the reason that it wishes not to appear “arbitrary” by declaring to be true any particular facts about which there is conflicting evidence. This may or may not be the policy of the agency and the irony is self-evident. In any event, we now review a second appeal where the Commission has merely summarized the evidence in purports ed compliance with the requirements of AP-TRA § 16(b). More sobering still is appellees’ claim that our decision in Charter Medical was unprecedented and ushered in a “new day” in the judicial review of the final orders of administrative agencies. This is incorrect. The principles discussed and applied in Charter Medical, relative to findings of fact and conclusions of law made by administrative agencies in contested cases, and to the “substantial evidence rule” as a standard of judicial review, are quite literally “horn-book law” and the elementary principles familiar to all students of basic administrative law. 2 Cooper, State Administrative Law at 465-81 (1965); Davis, Administrative Law Text, §§ 16.01-16.10 (1972). These principles have been applied repeatedly in numerous and unvarying decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas, which decisions we have re-emphasized for the interested practitioner by way of a footnote. That these principles are apparently unfamiliar to an important State agency, and that they are attacked at this late date, not on the basis that they are inapplicable but on the basis that they are unprecedented, suggests the necessity of such re-emphasis and the desirability of summarizing them once again before we apply them to the findings of fact made by the Commission in the present case. As mentioned previously, APTRA § 16(b) requires that the final orders issued by administrative agencies contain findings of “underlying facts” when the order would otherwise rest upon findings of fact expressed merely “in statutory language.” Findings of “underlying fact” are often referred to as “findings of basic fact”; findings expressed “in statutory language” are often referred to as “findings of ultimate fact” or conclusions of law stated in the factual terms employed in a statute governing agency decisions. See Cooper, supra. While findings of basic fact are inferred by the agency from the evidence adduced in the contested case, findings of ultimate fact or conclusions of law expressed in factual terms are inferred from the findings of basic fact previously made by the agency. The reasoning may not be reversed, that is, “findings of basic fact cannot be presumed from findings of a conclusional nature.” Morgan Drive Away v. Railroad Commission, 498 S.W.2d 147, 148-49 (Tex.1973) (emphasis added). The statutory requirement for findings of basic fact is not a mere formality. The purposes which lie behind the requirement go to the very essence of the quasi-judicial power exercised by administrative agencies and the judicial review of their decisions. Those purposes are as follows: (1) to ensure that an administrative agency, in its adjudication of successive contested cases, arrives at a precise meaning to be assigned the broad and abstract legal standards which govern its actions, such as those standards expressed in statutes administered by the agency, in order that those standards may be applied with exactness and consistency; (2) to compel the agency to ascertain the policies intended to be effectuated by such legal standards; and to consider, directly and fully, how and if those policies are implicated in the facts of a particular contested case, by any action intended by the agency therein, so that agency actions in the end will not be taken in a purely intuitive and necessarily inconsistent manner; (3) to apprise the parties of the grounds for the agency’s decision in a particular contested case in order that they might fairly formulate, prepare for, and join issue on the points in dispute between them, whether in a motion for rehearing in the agency or in any subsequent suit for judicial review of the agency’s final order; and (4)to enable a reviewing court to apply properly all the applicable standards for judicial review, whether those contained in APTRA § 19(e) or those contained in a constitutive statute applicable to the particular case alone. Miller v. Railroad Commission, supra note 3; 2 Cooper, supra. It is for the agency, and not the courts, to determine in the first instance the precise meaning to be assigned the abstract legal standards contained in a statute that the agency is required to administer — for example those standards the Commission is required to administer by the terms of the Texas Health Planning and Development Act. It is therefore the task of that agency to determine in the first instance what precise sets of factual circumstances warrant the legal conclusions the agency is required to draw before it takes an action authorized by the statute; for example, before issuing a certificate of need, the Commission must settle upon and declare the precise sets of factual circumstances that enable it to conclude (a) that a proposed facility is “necessary to meet the health care needs of the community or population to be served”; (b) that it “can be adequately staffed and operated” on its completion; (c) that it is “economically feasible”; and so forth. Texas Health Planning and Development Act, supra, § 3.10(b). These tasks are placed initially upon the agency because it is charged by the Legislature to administer the applicable regulatory statute. The agency is in a far better position than a reviewing court to know: (a) the policies which underlie the broad and abstract legal standards contained in a statute; (b) when and how those policies are implicated in a given set of factual circumstances by any particular agency action that might be taken in those circumstances; (c) what legal conclusions are required to implement those policies; and (d) if any accommodation or adjustment of conflicting policies is required in the circumstances, what legal conclusions and agency actions will best be suited to effectuate the policies and the accommodation or adjustment. For the foregoing reasons, it is absolutely essential that the agency, in a contested case, make findings of underlying or basic fact which demonstrate the logic that supports the agency’s corollary findings of intermediate or ultimate fact. If the agency makes only findings of ultimate or intermediate fact, conclusions of law really, without also making findings of basic or underlying fact to support them, the agency’s final order provides no guidance whatever with respect to the proper interpretation to be placed upon a legal standard implicated by the agency’s findings of ultimate or intermediate fact. The very purposes of APTRA § 16(b) are nullified if that is not done. Similarly, when the agency’s final order sets forth, as purported findings of basic fact, only the undeterminative and somewhat pretentious statements that particular witnesses testified to certain facts or opinions they may have, the agency has totally abdicated its statutory function and duty to assign meaning to the ultimate legal standards by which its actions are to be reviewed and judged. From findings of that character, one cannot ascertain the precise set of basic facts which the agency settled upon as being true and with respect to which the agency made its determinative legal conclusions or findings of ultimate fact. The impossibility of doing so results because one is unable to identify which, if any, of the factual propositions, found or implied in the mass of conflicting testimony and documentary evidence, were those actually held to be true and from which the agency inferred the correctness of the findings of ultimate fact expressed in its final order. Thompson v. Railroad Commission, 150 Tex. 307, 240 S.W.2d 759, 761-63 (1951). The following paragraph may be instructive: Sometimes, apparently seeking to avoid the hard work and the necessity of disciplined weighing of the testimony that is required in making definite findings on all the relevant basic facts, an agency merely summarizes the testimony of all the witnesses, and then (implying that the testimony in ways not particularized supports its conclusions) set forth the ultimate conclusions of fact and law in statutory language. The courts agree that this is not a sufficient compliance with the mandate to make findings of fact. 2 Cooper, supra, at 478. The judicial review provisions of APTRA illustrate the absurdity of attempt ing to review an agency final order that recites as “findings of fact” simply the testimony given by witnesses in the contested case, and no more. Under APTRA § 19(e)(6), for example, the reviewing court is required to evaluate the reasonableness of the agency’s legal or normative conclusions, that is, its findings of ultimate or intermediate fact. This may only be done in reference to a set of basic facts which the agency has settled upon and declared to be true under the evidence adduced. Or, under APTRA § 19(e)(5), the reviewing court may be required to ascertain from the testimony and documents introduced in evidence whether there is substantial evidence to support the basic facts the agency settled upon as being true and therefore supportive of its findings of ultimate or intermediate fact. But unless the basic facts are stated, how may it be determined whether they are supported by “substantial evidence?” Therefore, whether the agency fails entirely to make findings of basic fact, or whether it rests its legal conclusions solely upon “findings of fact” that are mere summaries of the evidence, the result is the same. The agency, when it defends a final order of that character, is simply asking the reviewing court to uphold the order if the reviewing court is able to imagine any set of basic facts, suggested by the mass of the evidence and assumed to be true, which might justify the agency’s legal conclusions or its findings of ultimate or intermediate fact. As we have stated, however, courts lack the expertise to know what such a set of facts might be and, more importantly, the Legislature has for obvious reasons placed that task upon the agency that hears the evidence and possesses the requisite experience and special knowledge. Appellees contend that the Commission’s final order in the present case does, in effect and by implication, select certain factual propositions and deem them true because the order lists the agency’s summaries of the evidence under the heading “Findings of Fact” and states that the agency’s findings of ultimate fact were determined “because” of the “Findings of Fact” so listed, even if they are only summaries of the evidence; and among those “Findings of Fact” are summaries of the evidence which support the agency’s findings of ultimate fact. This argument has very little weight indeed. Were we to adopt such reasoning, we would, for example, be bound equally to the summaries of contrary evidence also listed under the heading “Findings of Fact” and the agency’s declaration that its findings of ultimate fact were determined “because” of them. Such reasoning is sterile. It produces only a deadlock in the findings of fact so that the order makes no resolution at all in the parties’ contest about the facts of the case, upon which should rest the agency’s conclusions of law or findings of ultimate fact. Second, appellees argue that we may presume from the result in the case, or the Commission’s findings of ultimate fact, that the agency adopted those particular summaries of the evidence which support the final result and that the agency rejected all other summaries of the evidence listed in the final order under the heading “Findings of Fact.” This suggestion requires, of course, a reversal in the functions of findings of ultimate fact and findings of basic fact, so that truth is drawn not from the inherent nature of facts adduced — instead, the attribute of truth is assigned arbitrarily to given facts as necessary to support a result reached in a purely subjective manner. This is the opposite of reasoned decision making and the very purposes which underlie APTRA § 16(b) are nullified as a result. In any event, the Supreme Court of Texas rejected in Morgan Drive Away v. Railroad Commission, supra, an argument almost identical to that advanced by appel-lees, saying: We may consider only what was written by the Commission in its order, and we must measure its statutory sufficiency by what it says. That is the teaching of Miller, Hovey, Thompson, supra; and cf. Alamo Express, Inc. v. Union City Transfer, 158 Tex. 234, 309 S.W.2d 815 (1958). The orders in Hovey and Thompson contained exhaustive summations of the evidence and it could have been inferred that the Commission subjectively relied thereon in the approval orders. But Thompson stands for the propositions that to be valid an order must contain more than references to the testimony of witnesses or to what their testimony may have included; and that summaries of the evidence are not findings of fact. Miller says further that findings of basic facts cannot be presumed from findings of a conclusional nature. 498 S.W.2d at 152 (emphasis supplied). We may not make the inferences suggested by appellees; we may measure the sufficiency of the Commission’s order, as against the requirement of APTRA § 16(b), only by what the order says. Bearing in mind the foregoing principles, we turn to a discussion of whether any of the Commission’s findings of ultimate fact, expressed in statutory language, are supported by findings of basic fact recited in the agency’s final order. COMMUNITY HEALTH CARE REQUIREMENTS The criterion applied by the Commission was derived from § 3.10(b) of the Texas Health Planning and Department Act and the agency’s former rule 315.19.01.-020, both of which are in almost identical language. The rule provides: .020 Community Health Care Requirements. The project must be necessary to meet the health care requirements of the community or population to be served. The Commission found that “the proposed project is not necessary to meet the health care requirements of the Medical Service area because of the following Findings of Fact.” The final order then lists 147 purported “findings of fact.” It is suggested that these “findings of fact” support the finding of ultimate fact. The 147 “findings of fact” may be categorized and summarized as follows: 1. The first 91 are identical to the first 91 “findings of fact” listed under the heading “Community Health Care Requirements” in those final orders wherein the Commission determined that the proposed project was necessary to meet the health care requirements in the community or population to be served, and wherein the agency issued certificates of need in the consolidated proceedings. 2. “Findings of fact” numbered 92 through 135 essentially set out the testimony adduced in support of appellants’ application and its position that there existed a need for their proposed facility in the community to be served. 3. The remainder of the agency’s “findings of fact,” numbered 136 through 147, essentially summarize the testimony in opposition to appellants’ application and their position relative to the need for their proposed project. When one examines the “findings of fact” pertaining to the finding of ultimate fact now under review, one discovers that almost every one of them is prefaced by the phrase “in the opinion of” a named witness or the phrase “according to” a named witness. These “findings,” for the reasons we have stated, can provide no “support” for the finding of ultimate fact that appellants’ proposed facility is not “necessary to meet the health care requirements of the medical service area.” Thompson, supra; Morgan Drive Away, supra. The only findings of fact not so prefaced are “findings of fact” numbered 138 through 140. Numbers 138 and 139 recite expected hospital-bed occupancy rates for certain areas “as defined by Mr. Short.” From this phrase, we cannot determine whether or not the Commission believed that the areas “defined by Mr. Short” were areas relevant and probative in the contested case before the agency; and these “findings” suffer from the same defect as the “findings” already discussed, although the defect is manifested in another form. “Finding” number 140 states a projected occupancy rate for licensed acute care beds in a certain area; however, this fact alone obviously does not address the whole issue made by the applicable criterion and does not, standing alone, provide a reasonable basis for the Commission’s finding of ultimate fact. None of the “findings of fact” purport to declare as true any identifiable specific and contested fact logically related to the abstract legal standard or criterion contained in the statute and the Commission’s rule. And if one were to assume that the Commission adopted all of the testimony summarized in the agency’s final order, which is prefaced by the phrases “in the opinion of” and “according to,” the findings of basic fact contained in the order still do not state a reasonable basis for the Commission’s conclusion or finding of ultimate fact. The substance of the testimony recited in “findings of fact” 136 through 147 appears to be that the medical service area, designated by someone for Presbyterian Hospital North, would have a surplus of beds through 1986; that there are several hospitals on the periphery of this designated medical service area; that if all applications for certificates of need were granted, the occupancy rates for certain designated areas would be considerably lower than “the target occupancy level for general acute care facilities to perform in an optimally efficient manner”; and that two hospitals in the vicinity of the proposed Presbyterian Hospital North have occupancy rates considerably lower than this “target occupancy level.” And if we disregard the fact that findings numbered 92 through 135 are mere summaries of the testimony as well, they show that the hospital proposed by appellants would be built on donated land; that it would provide comprehensive, high-quality, low-cost health care services by virtue of its affiliation with the Presbyterian “network”; and that existing hospitals and the proposed Presbyterian Hospital North would be operating at or above the optimally efficient occupancy rate in 1986 as a result of growth in the area population. The “findings” that certain areas would temporarily incur low occupancy rates if all applications were granted do not contradict a need for Presbyterian Hospital North. The occupancy rates would understandably be higher if only some but not all applications were approved, but there is nothing in these findings to indicate why Presbyterian Hospital North should not be among the approved projects, particularly in light of the companion “findings” that it would provide low-cost and high-quality care. The findings of basic fact therefore do not reasonably lead to the conclusion that Presbyterian Hospital North is not necessary to meet the health care requirements of the medical service area. The finding of ultimate fact, or conclusion of law, relative to the first criterion applied by the Commission is therefore arbitrary and capricious and in violation of APTRA § 19(e)(6) because it is not accompanied by a sufficient statement of underlying facts as required by APTRA § 16(b). Charter Medical, supra. SERVICE AREA POPULATION The criterion applied by the Commission was also derived from § 3.10(b) of the Texas Health Planning and Development Act and the agency’s former rule 315.-19.01.030, which requires that “[t]he medical service area for the project must contain sufficient current and future population to require the additional facility or service.” The Commission found that the “proposed project does not contain sufficient current and future population to require the project because of the following Findings of Fact.” The agency’s final order then sets out twenty-five “findings of fact” which purportedly support this finding of ultimate fact or conclusion of law. The first nineteen of them summarize testimony showing a need for the project proposed by appellants; they are quoted below. This testimony estimates the population and projected population of an area designated as the medical service area of Presbyterian Hospital North, and various census tracts within that area, for the years 1977 and 1986, as well as the mortality rates estimated for various diseases in the Texas Health System Agency Area 5. “Findings of fact” twenty through twenty-five summarize the testimony adverse to appellant’s application; these are also quoted below. An examination of the twenty-five “findings of fact” reveals the same defects found in those “findings of fact” which relate to community health care requirements and which have been discussed above: they are either prefaced by the phrase “according to” a named witness or they relate to “the area Mr. Ashworth defines as a [particular] medical service area.” For these reasons alone, the “findings of fact” do not support the Commission’s findings of ultimate fact or its conclusion of law, to the effect that the “proposed project does not contain sufficient current and future population to require the project .... ” Again, the “findings” relating to the 243 beds to be added are not probative because no findings indicate that these proposed projects should be approved in preference to Presbyterian Hospital North. The Commission’s finding of ultimate fact or conclusion of law is therefore not reasonably supported by findings of underlying fact and is arbitrary and capricious. APTRA §§ 16(b), 19(e)(6). Charter Medical, supra. LESS COSTLY, MORE EFFECTIVE AND MORE APPROPRIATE ALTERNATIVES The criterion applied by the Commission was derived from the agency’s former Rule 315.19.01.050 which provided in part as follows: .050. Less Costly, More Effective, and More Appropriate Alternative. The project’s [sic] approach to providing health care services should be less costly, or more effective or more appropriate than other methods which are available, or which have been approved to be developed. The project should integrate with the existing health care services and facilities in the medical service area. The applicant shall address the following: [there follows a list of factual propositions pertaining to the projects covered by the two sentences preceding.] The Commission found that the project proposed by appellants “is not less costly, more effective, nor more appropriate than other facilities or services which are available or which have been approved to be developed because of the following findings of fact.” The agency’s final order then lists the six “findings of fact” quoted below. The first three summarize testimony favorable to appellants’ application; the last three conclude that building the project proposed by appellants is not “less costly, more effective, and more appropriate” because the project is simply not needed at all based upon the “findings of fact” we have discussed previously in this opinion under the “community health care requirements” criterion first applied by the agency. The Commission necessarily based its finding of ultimate fact or conclusion of law, relative to the criterion expressed in Rule 315.19.01.-050, upon its last three findings of basic fact for the first three would favor the granting of appellants’ application. It is obvious that this finding of ultimate fact or conclusion of law cannot be sustained. The criterion which it purports to apply is by its terms independent of the criterion dealing with “community health care requirements”; and because we have determined that the Commission’s finding of ultimate fact or conclusion of law relating to “community health care requirements” is invalid, the asserted basis for the Commission’s finding of ultimate fact or conclusion of law relative to “less costly, more effective and more appropriate alternatives” must be held invalid as well, for it purports to rest upon no other basis than the Commission’s former determination. Because we hold invalid all the findings of ultimate fact upon which the Commission based its final order, that order cannot stand. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the cause to that court with instructions that it be remanded to the Commission for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. . The five applicants intended different healthcare facilities to be erected and operated under a certificate of need issued by the Commission: a. Appellants intended a facility that would “contain 96 medical-surgical beds” and provide certain specified “support services”; b. Brookhaven Medical Center and Farmers Branch Hospital Authority of Farmers Branch, Texas intended the expansion and renovation of an existing medical care facility by replacing 86 beds and adding 14 new beds, so that the remodeled facility would contain “160 medical/surgical beds, 10 ICU [intensive-care unit] beds, and 100 psychiatric beds”; c.Carrollton General Hospital and Farmers Branch Hospital Authority of Farmers Branch, Texas intended the construction of “a new 100-bed general acute-care hospital in Carrollton, Texas ... to contain 61 medical/surgical, 18 obstetrical, 14 pediatric, and 7 intensive care beds”; d. Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas, not to be confused with either of the appellants, intended construction of a new seven-floor structure “in order to relocate and expand” certain of its existing facilities, and to expand other services in the existing facility, by adding 138 licensed beds, including “91 medical/surgical beds, 29 obstetrical beds, 8 neurological intensive care unit beds and 10 cardiac care unit beds”; e. Humana of Texas, Inc., under the trade name “Medical City Dallas,” and Medical City Dallas, Limited, intended renovation of an existing facility and the construction of “a new 7-floor building addition,” resulting in the addition of 196 new beds, including “116 medical/surgical beds, 68 obstetrical beds, and 12 CCU [critical care unit] beds”; and f. Richardson Medical Center/B.B. Owen Memorial Hospital of Richardson, Texas intended renovation of an existing facility and the construction of a new three-floor building addition, resulting in the addition of 126 new beds, including 113 medical and surgical beds, five beds for a combined intensive-care and critical-care unit, and eight psychiatric beds. . Appellants’ suit in district court challenged only the Commission’s action in refusing the certificate of need for which they had applied; they did not seek reversal of the Commission’s action in granting certificates of need to the other five applicants. The Commission and the Texas Area 5 Health System Agency appeared and answered in appellants’ suit. The latter was dismissed from the suit. Four of the successful applicants were permitted to intervene in the district court suit: Humana of Texas, Inc. and Medical City Dallas, Limited; Brookhaven Medical Center; Carrollton General Hospital; and Richardson Medical Center/B.B. Owen Memorial Hospital of Richardson, Texas. Two other parties were permitted to intervene in behalf of the Commission’s order: Lewisville Memorial Hospital and Plano General Hospital. Before trial, the district court consolidated appellants’ suit with two related suits pending in the court: Cause No. 324,321, styled “Presbyterian Medical Center of Dallas and Presbyterian Hospital North v. Texas Health Facilities Commission and Farmers Branch Hospital Authority/Carrollton General Hospital”; and Cause No. 324,343, styled “Lewisville Memorial Hospital v. Texas Health Facilities Commission and Farmers Branch Hospital Authority dba Car-rollton General Hospital.” On appeal to this Court, briefs have been filed by appellants, the Commission, Humana of Texas, Inc., Plano General Hospital, and “Car-rollton General Hospital.” The last-named entity has, however, subsequently withdrawn as a party to the appeal. . Section 16(b) of APTRA is not the first Texas statute to require that an administrative agency make findings of fact in the exercise of its quasi-judicial power. Before the enactment of APTRA, and its applicability to most State administrative agencies, two other statutes, the first dealing with the regulation of motor carriers and the second with the regulation of savings and loan associations, required that the administering agency make findings of fact and conclusions of law to support its final orders. The statutory construction placed upon these earlier statutes bears directly upon the proper interpretation to be given APTRA § 16(b), for the principles relied upon by the Supreme Court are fundamental principles as the following analysis makes abundantly clear. The Texas Motor Carrier Act Among the oldest of the State administrative agencies, the Texas Railroad Commission is an agency of great tradition and wide authority. The Texas law interpreting a statutory requirement for the making of findings of fact developed initially under a statute administered by that agency: Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 911b, § 5a(d), the Texas Motor Carrier Act. That section governs the Commission in its issuance of certificates of convenience and necessity to “specialized motor carriers” and provides as follows: The Commission shall not have authority to grant any application for a certificate of convenience and necessity authorizing operation as a “specialized motor carrier” or any other common carrier unless it is established by substantial evidence (1) that the services and facilities of the existing carriers serving the territory or any part thereof are inadequate; (2) that there exists a public necessity for such service, and (3) the public convenience will be promoted by granting said application. The order of the Commission granting said application and the certificate issued thereunder shall be void unless the Commission shall set forth in its order full and complete findings of fact pointing out in detail the inadequacies of the services and facilities of the existing carriers, and the public need for the proposed service, [emphasis added] In Thompson v. Hovey Petroleum Co., 149 Tex. 554, 236 S.W.2d 491 (1951), the Court reviewed a Commission order granting a specialized-motor-carrier certificate to transport designated chemicals in “tank trucks.” The application was protested by existing railroads and motor carriers. The agency order set out the testimony of the witnesses called by the applicant. Their testimony tended to show that the service provided by existing rail lines, in transporting the designated chemicals in “tank cars”, was inadequate, and that tank truck service was needed for various reasons. The Commission held the order did not comply with the fact-finding requirements of § 5a(d) because “there is no finding that these ends cannot be accomplished by use of tank trucks available from existing motor carriers.” Id. 236 S.W.2d at 496. In Thompson v. Railroad Commission, 150 Tex. 307, 240 S.W.2d 759 (1951), the Court was confronted with agency orders which were “substantially identical with those in the Hovey case,” but the Court could not hold the orders void on the precise ground relied upon in Ho-vey because this error had not been assigned by the petitioner railroads. The order contained two kinds of findings. First, the order contained findings that the applicant called witnesses who testified to certain facts, and that the rail lines offered evidence of certain facts. The Court held that these findings were not sufficient to comply with § 5a(d). The Court, quoting with approval from opinions in other jurisdictions, stated: An order of the Commission must contain more than a mere reference to the evidence. A valid order ... must contain a finding of fact ... upon which the order is founded Many of the [agency’s findings] are preceded by such phrases as ‘complainant alleges,’ ‘complainant’s witnesses allege,’ ‘complainant also points out,’ ‘it was stated,’ ‘respondent submits,’ ‘respondent by its witnesses and in its brief argues,’ ‘testimony submitted by complainant indicates,’ and the like, leaving it uncertain whether the department intended to affirm or disaffirm the matters contained in the recitals following the phrases, or intended the matters merely as argument in support of the conclusions reached. [Id 240 S.W.2d at 762-63.] The agency order also contained findings that the services and facilities of the existing carriers were inadequate, and that the public convenience would be promoted by granting the application. The Court stated: Obviously, that is not a finding of fact, but is only a finding of an ultimate conclusion, partly in the words of the statute. We are referred to many authorities from other jurisdictions construing orders of public service commissions under statutes similar to ours. Without exception, so far as our investigation goes, they all hold that a general conclusion like the one copied next above is not a compliance with the statutory requirement that the Commission file findings of fact. [Id. at 762.] In Texas & New Orleans Railroad Co. v. Railroad Commission, 155 Tex. 323, 286 S.W.2d 112, 125 (1955), the Court held that a Commission ratemaking order could not be invalidated on the basis that it failed to contain a finding that the old rates were unreasonable and a finding that the new rates were reasonable. The Court reasoned that the finding of fact requirement of art. 911b, § 5a(d) pertained only to orders granting specialized-motor-carrier certificates and not to rate orders. In Railroad Commission v. Union City Transfer, 158 Tex. 234, 309 S.W.2d 815, 825-26 (1958), the Court reviewed a Commission order amending specialized-motor-carrier certificates to authorize the holders to transport large and heavy equipment for sulphur mining. Without elaboration, the Court held that “the order [was] sufficiently specific and definite in its findings of fact and the recitations in such order as to comply with” art. 911b § 5a(d). The order of the Commission was set out by this Court in its opinion at 298 S.W.2d 914, 923-24 (Tex.Civ.App.1956). The order contained findings of fact to the effect that neither rail lines nor regular route common carriers could adequately perform the services authorized by the certificate, because neither could dismantle, load, unload, and install the equipment in question as could the specialized carriers, and that the former carriers would have to hire the specialized carriers to do so for them, causing delay and expense to shippers; because the points of origin and destination were in sulphur fields and off the routes of regular rate common motor carriers and rail lines, etc. In Miller v. Railroad Commission, 363 S.W.2d 244 (Tex.1962) the Court vacated an order of the Commission (granting a specialized-motor-carrier certificate) on the ground that the order failed to set out the findings of fact required by § 5a(d). The Commission found that “the existing specialized motor carrier service is inadequate in that the service is not available when needed, ... that trucks and facilities are not available when needed,” and that the proposed service was not rendered by regular route common motor carriers or by rail lines. The Court stated: There is purpose in [§ 5a(d) ]. One purpose no doubt is to restrain any disposition on the part of the Commission to grant a certificate without a full consideration of the evidence and a serious appraisal of the facts. Another is to inform protestants of the facts so that they may intelligently prepare and present an appeal to the courts. Still another is to assist the courts in properly exercising their function of reviewing the order. If an order is to accomplish these purposes, it must contain findings of basic facts as distinguished from mere factual, or mixed factual and legal, conclusions. Findings of basic facts cannot be presumed from findings of a conclusional nature. ‡ ‡ * * * ‡ We hold that the findings do not meet the requirements of the statute. The statements that “service is inadequate in that the service is not available when needed” and “trucks and facilities are not available when needed” do not provide sufficient findings of basic facts from which the courts can determine if reasonable grounds existed for issuance of the order. This court has neither the right nor the ability to lay out a precise form of findings to be made by the Commission. They should be such that a court upon reading them can fairly and reasonably say that they either do or do not support the required ultimate statutory findings of inadequacy of the services and facilities of existing carriers and a genuine public need for the proposed service.... The sufficiency of findings to meet the requirements of the statute must be related to the issues and the evidence in each case separately. [Id. at 245-46.] In Alamo Express v. Railroad Commission, 407 S.W.2d 479 (Tex.1966), the court reviewed a Commission order amending a common carrier certificate to authorize the holder to transport goods over a shorter route between Houston and San Antonio, connecting with the carrier’s authorized routes west of San Antonio and east of Houston. In addition to its ultimate conclusions of inadequate services, public need, and public convenience, the Commission found that the population, industry, and economy of the cities of Houston and San Antonio had increased and would continue to increase, and that the freight tonnage moving through and between these cities and demands for expedited and improved common carrier service had increased; that the proposed new route was over a much better highway and 78 miles shorter than the applicant’s previous route, and its use would provide much safer, improved, and expedited service, and would save the applicant $22,000 a year; that the pickup and delivery service of existing carriers was slow, irregular, and inconsistent; that the amendment would permit the applicant to transport goods directly between points west of San Antonio and east of Houston, without having to change carriers at either city, preventing delays and inconvenience; that granting of the application would have no substantial adverse effect on existing carriers and that any nominal competitive effect on existing carriers was outweighed by the public need and public convenience requiring the service. The Court held that the fact-finding requirement of § 5a(d) did not apply to the Commission’s order granting an application to amend a common carrier certificate, but that this order was governed instead by art. 911b § 12(a) which required the Commission to file along with its order “a concise written opinion setting forth the facts and grounds for its action.” The Court held that this requirement was satisfied by the Commission order. Moreover, the Court held that “even applying the rule of [Miller, Thompson, and Hovey — cases in which § 5a(d) did apply], the order here in question would not be governed by those decisions.” [Id. at 485-86.] In Morgan Drive Away v. Railroad Commission, 498 S.W.2d 147 (Tex.1973), the only findings of fact set forth in the order to support the conclusion that the service and facilities of existing carriers were inadequate, were contained in the following paragraphs: Virtually all of applicant’s public witnesses complain of a lack of equipment availability from protestants ... The public witness testimony includes specific testimony regarding instances wherein protestants have been unable to supply appropriate equipment when and as needed for the movement of traffic ... The evidence further indicates that in some instances protestants have relied upon foreign-based power units, not properly registered with the ... Commission, for the handling of intrastate traffic ..., contrary to the Commission’s regulations. In consideration of the above, the Examiner [whose report was adopted by the Commission] concludes that protestants are not providing a fully adequate service .... Applicant has established by substantial evidence that the service proposed is required by the public convenience and necessity, and has established further that the services it proposes will result in a material improvement in existing transportation service. [Id. at 151.] The Court stated: We recognized in [Miller ] that assistance to the Courts in exercising their function of reviewing [agency] orders is a statutory function of the fact finding requirement, and that the sufficiency of findings to meet the requirements of the statute must be related to the issues and the evidence in each case separately. This is but to recognize the logic that determination of the validity vel non of an administrative order under the precepts of the substantial evidence rule should be made in the light of the findings of fact upon which the order of the Commission is predicated It is ... clear that the conclusions in the second of the two quoted paragraphs do not qualify as fact findings under the rationale of Miller, ... where we held that [similar] statements ... do not provide sufficient ñndings of basic facts from which the Court can determine if reasonable grounds existed for issuance of the order; as well as under the rationale of Thompson, ... where similar statements were recognized as no more than a finding of an ultimate conclusion, partly in the words of the statute. Each of [the] three sentences [in the first quoted paragraph] is no more than a reference to the evidence with no stated findings of fact .... Even [as a finding of fact, the last sentence] implies no more than an adverse criticism of the actions of the protesting carriers “in some instances.” ... Appellees say, however, that the first sentence in the next succeeding paragraph [which begins “in consideration of the above, the examiner concludes ... ”] converts the foregoing into acceptable and sufficient findings of fact .... It may well be that the Commission relied upon the recited evidence in reaching its conclusions; but there are no findings of fact pertaining to what may have been “included” in the public witness testimony, or to any inadequacies in the existing services. Quite clearly, there are no findings of fact that are full and complete in pointing out such inadequacies in detail.... Were we to reach the substantial evidence point, we would look in vain for findings to test against the evidence in such respects. [Id. at 150-52; emphasis added.] In Auto Convoy Co. v. Railroad Commission, 507 S.W.2d 718 (Tex.1974), the Commission granted a specialized-motor-carrier certificate authorizing the transport of used automobiles and pickup trucks to and from Grand Prairie, where auctions of such vehicles were held, one for late-model used vehicles and another later in the day for older used vehicles. The Commission found that existing services for transporting the older cars to and from the appropriate auction were inadequate because shippers “are being forced to use tow bars and illegal carriers to transport their vehicles at the present time.” The Commission further found that existing services for transporting the newer used cars to and from the appropriate auction were also inadequate; that several specific witnesses had been unable to obtain service without seven to ten-day delays on several occasions; that such delays caused loss of revenue to these shippers and were unreasonable; that the proposed service was needed and would cause more prompt movement of the newer used cars and reduce the losses in revenues caused by delays; and that limitation of the certificate to authorize transportation of only the newer used cars would be impractical, difficult to police and enforce and, therefore, administratively undesirable and unduly burdensome to the sellers who auction both the new and older used cars at the same place on the same day. The Court held that these findings satisfied § 5a(d): These findings are clear and explicit. They point out in sufficient detail the inadequacies of the services and facilities of the existing carriers and the public need for the proposed service. The findings are not couched in terms other than as findings; neither are they mere conclusions, references to, recitals or summation of the evidence, or otherwise insufficient for reasons set forth in [Morgan Drive Away, Miller, Thompson, and Hovey]. On the contrary, they are findings upon the material issues to be reviewed and tested under the substantial evidence rule. [Id. at 721.] The Texas Savings And Loan Act Another pre-APTRA statutory fact-finding requirement is found in the Texas Savings and Loan Act (TSLA), Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 852a (1964). TSLA § 2.08 provides that the Savings and Loan Commissioner shall not approve any charter application unless he affirmatively finds that (1) the applicant has complied with certain designated provisions of the Act; (2) the character, responsibility and general fitness of the persons named in the articles of incorporation of proposed association are such as to command confidence and warrant belief that the business of the proposed association will be honestly and efficiently conducted in accordance with the intent and purpose of the Act, and that the proposed association will have qualified full time management; (3) there is a public need for the proposed association and the volume of business in the community in which the proposed association will conduct its business is such as to indicate profitable operation; (4) the operation of the proposed association will not unduly harm any existing association. The agency has promulgated rules providing that the Commission shall approve an application for a branch office if he makes certain affirmative findings. Several of these required findings are simply those which § 2.08 requires the Commissioner to make. The other findings required by the rules are that (1) the aggregate amount of the loss reserves, surplus, and permanent reserve fund stock, if any, of the applying association is equal to three (3%) of its savings liability; (2) the applying association has had a profitable operation for the three year period next preceding the filing of such application; (3) the applying association has had no serious supervisory problems which would affect its ability to operate such office properly; (4) a separate enclosed office area will be provided; and (5) a proposed branch office will be located in the same county or metropolitan area as the home office or no association is adequately serving the community where the branch office is proposed to be located. TSLA § 11.11(4) provides, in language very similar to that contained in APTRA § 16(b): A decision or order adverse to a party who has appeared and participated in a hearing shall be in writing and shall include findings of fact and conclusions of law, separately stated, on all issues material to the decision reached. Findings of fact, if set forth in statutory language, shall be accompanied by a concise and explicit statement of the underlying facts supporting the findings. In Lewis v. Gonzales County Savings and Loan Ass’n, 474 S.W.2d 453 (Tex.1971), the Commissioner had made all the requisite findings of fact necessary to his approval of a branch office application, that is, those findings mandated by TSLA § 2.08 as well as those findings mandated by the rules promulgated by the agency. None of the findings were accompanied by a statement of the underlying facts also determined by the Commissioner and which might support the findings expressed in terms of the statute and the rules. The Court held the Commissioner’s order invalid because there were no findings of underlying facts to support the statutory criteria, that is, those stated in § 2.08 of TSLA. Notwithstanding that this holding was entirely sufficient to support the Court’s decision, the Court proceeded by way of obiter dicta to consider whether the findings required by, and expressed in terms of, the agency’s rules were also required to be supported by a statement of the underlying facts found by the Commissioner. On this point, the Court stated broadly: We are of the view that this requirement applies only to findings of fact in the Commissioner’s orders which are “set forth in statutory language.” When findings are made in the language of the rules and regulations that do not embody statutory language, they need not be accompanied by a concise and explicit statement of the underlying facts. [Id. at 457.] The Court then held that four of the findings required by the rules were “set forth in statutory language.” These findings contained language similar or identical to that found in TSLA § 2.08. The court explained: The remaining findings are in the language of the Rules and Regulations rather than the statutes. These findings are largely of a factual nature capable of precise, objective measurement They include and carry with them the supporting underlying facts. These underlying facts either exist or they do not There is no real need for findings of this nature to be supported by a more concise statement of the underlying facts. These factual matters can be readily measured against the record by reference to a financial statement or a few lines of testimony. On the other hand, the Rules and Regulations contemplate a number of findings be expressed in statutory language. These ñndings require discretion or judgment on the part of the Commissioner that are based on a multitude of factors. These are the findings which must be accompanied by concise and explicit statements of the underlying supporting facts. [Id. at 457; emphasis added]. We think that by this language the Supreme Court of Texas held that findings of fact “which require discretion or judgment ... based on a multitude of factors" are findings “set forth in statutory language” and must be accompanied by a statement of underlying facts supporting them, regardless of whether the language of the finding corresponds to a statutory or a rule-based standard. Findings are not “set forth in statutory language” and need not be accompanied by a statement of supporting underlying facts when they are “of a factual nature” and “can be readily measured against the record,” regardless of whether the language of the finding corresponds to a statutory or rule-based standard. Our conclusion is supported by the fact that both TSLA §11.-11(4) and APTRA § 16(b) were taken virtually verbatim from § 12 of the Model State Administrative Procedure Act, and the comment to this section of the Model Act states that “an attempt is here made to require the agency to go beyond a mere statement of a general conclusion in the statutory language ... or in language of similar generality.” (emphasis added). Also, if findings of fact stating a legal or normative conclusion need not be supported by findings of basic fact, merely because the legal standard involved is not statutory, an agency could easily frustrate effective review of its decisions merely by basing its decisions on regulatory as opposed to statutory standards. Regulatory statutes often do not exclusively specify the ultimate standards for agency action, but rather leave this up to the agency; sometimes the statutes do not specify any of the ultimate standards for agency action. See, e.g. Texas Health Planning and Development Act § 3.10; Tex.Water Code §§ 26.023, 26.027 (Supp.1982). In Bay City Federal Savings and Loan Ass’n v. Lewis, 474 S.W.2d 459 (Tex.1971), the Court held that under TSLA § 11.11(4) the agency order is invalid where findings made in statutory language are not accompanied by a statement of the underlying facts supporting the findings, even though the finding of ultimate fact was not disputed in the agency hearing, and even though the appellants do not contend that the ultimate findings were not supported by substantial evidence. In Lewis v. Jacksonville Building and Loan Ass’n, 540 S.W.2d 307 (Tex.1976), and Lewis v. Nacogdoches Savings and Loan, 540 S.W.2d 313 (Tex.1976), the Court held that the agency orders under review, approving charter applications, complied with the requirements of TSLA § 11.11(4). However, the Court did not explain this conclusion and neither the opinions of the Court nor those of the Court of Civil Appeals describe any of the findings of fact. Therefore, these opinions provide no guidance on the proper interpretation of TSLA § 11.11(4) or APTRA § 16(b). Texas Administrative Procedure And Texas Register Act We now reach the decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas construing APTRA § 16(b). In Imperial American Resources Fund v. Railroad Commission, 557 S.W.2d 280 (Tex.1977), the Supreme Court reviewed the Commission’s order granting a permit to drill a gas well, closer to the property line than permitted under the Commission’s spacing rules. The Commission concluded in its final order that the permit was necessary to give the lessee a reasonable opportunity to recover the hydrocarbons underlying its lease, to protect the lessee’s correlative rights, and to prevent confiscation of its property. The court held that the Commission’s order did not violate APTRA § 16(b). The Commission found that a well previously drilled on the lease was incapable of production sufficient to allow recovery of hydrocarbons underlying the lease; that producing wells drained the lease from every direction, with good producing wells to the north and east; that the lease was suffering net uncompensated drainage; that the proposed drilling site was a reasonable location in an area of better productivity, affording the lessee a reasonable opportunity to recover the hydrocarbons underlying the lease; and that a well could be drilled on a site permitted by the Commission’s spacing rules at a certain depth but this site would be in the direction of poorly producing wells and would not afford the lessee a reasonable opportunity to produce the hydrocarbons underlying the lease because of lower production rates. In holding these findings of fact sufficient, the Court closely tracked its language in Auto Convoy: We have carefully examined these findings and tested them against the more stringent requirements of Article 911b, Sec. 5a(d) ... and Article 852a, Sec. 11.11(4) ... and decisions thereunder ... [The Court then sets out verbatim the language from Auto Convoy which we have set out previously]. The findings are not set forth in statutory language, and therefore it is not required that they be accompanied by a concise