Apoian v. State

235 N.W.2d 641, 89 S.D. 539, 1975 S.D. LEXIS 173
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1975
DocketFile 11590
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 235 N.W.2d 641 (Apoian v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Apoian v. State, 235 N.W.2d 641, 89 S.D. 539, 1975 S.D. LEXIS 173 (S.D. 1975).

Opinion

DUNN, Chief Justice.

On May 8, 1974, the South Dakota Board of Examiners in the Basic Sciences, after notice and hearing, revoked and declared *541 null and void all grades received by petitioner in his June 2, 1973 examination because of cheating. Petitioner sought a rehearing before the Board which was denied. He appealed to the Circuit Court of the Sixth Judicial Circuit which affirmed the actions of the Board. Appeal is now made to this court contending that (1) the defendant Board, a majority of which are practicing-physicians, could not act as prosecutor and as trier of the facts in revoking his passing grades, (2) the notice of hearing was insufficient to apprise petitioner of the charges against him, and (3). the defendant Board acted in excess of its statutory and regulatory powers thus denying petitioner due process. We affirm.

In the spring of 1973 petitioner was in his final year of study at the Kansas City College of Osteopathic Medicine in Kansas-City, Missouri. He applied to the Board to take the examination for a basic sciences certificate. The examination is in five parts. Once the basic sciences certificate is achieved, the applicant has to pass another examination in order to be licensed in his particular area of the healing arts.

The defendant Board is composed of five members: one’ doctor of medicine, one doctor of osteopathy, one doctor of chiropractic, and two professors who teach the basic sciences at the college level. The Board is charged with administering the examination and passing on the results. See SDCL 36-3.

Petitioner and a classmate, Elliott Hershel Klain from Kansas City, journeyed to South Dakota and took the basic sciences examination in Vermillion on June 2, 1973. Defendant, Dr. Lynn, was present during the examination and remembered that the two men sat side by side during the examination.

Petitioner was subsequently notified that he had passed the bacteriology, chemistry, pathology, and physiology sections of the. exam, but that he had failed the anatomy section. In order to guard against cheating, there were three examination question booklets. The questions in each booklet were the same, but the multiple choice answers were in different order. The answers were supposed to be written on a computer-graded answer sheet. Petitioner called Dr. Lynn about the possibility that his answer *542 sheet had been graded against the wrong set of answers in anatomy thus accounting for his failing grade.

Dr. Lynn reexamined petitioner’s test in anatomy and was satisfied that it had been graded correctly; however, during his investigation he became suspicious that petitioner and Mr. Klain had compared answers during the examination. He got out all their test booklets and answer sheets and became convinced that they had cheated. Dr. Lynn voiced his suspicions to the Board and on December 16, 1973, the Board passed a resolution setting a hearing on the matter for January 26, 1974. Notice of the charges and the hearing was mailed to petitioner, and he retained South Dakota counsel. Petitioner’s attorney asked that the hearing be postponed for the convenience of petitioner and the Board agreed. He also requested copies of the examination booklets and answer sheets and the Board complied. On April 1, 1974, petitioner’s attorney informed the Board that petitioner was no longer retaining him and that petitioner himself would not be present at the hearing.

The hearing was held on April 21, 1974; petitioner was not present. Dr. Lynn disqualified himself from sitting on the Board and was the only witness. The test booklets and answer sheets were introduced into evidence. Following the hearing, the three members of the Board who had heard the evidence entered findings of fact and conclusions of law and voted unanimously to revoke and declare null and void petitioner’s passing grades received in the June 2, 1973 examination.

Petitioner’s first contention is that defendants denied him due process of law in revoking his passing grades. He claims that the Board was involved in both prosecuting him and in judging his case on the merits. He relies for authority on this court’s holding in Mordhorst v. Egert, 1974, 88 S.D. 527, 223 N.W.2d 501. In that case we held that the actions of the State Board of Examiners in Optometry violated due process in proceedings concerning the alleged unprofessional conduct of certain optometrists.

Keeping in mind the words of Lord Coke in 1610 in Bonham’s Case that “no man shall be a judge in his own cause,” *543 we shall compare the facts of Mordhorst with the facts of this case to determine if defendants’ actions violated due process. The controlling facts of Mordhorst were stated by this court at 223 N.W.2d 505:

“Dr. Corwin, the person who signed the formal complaints filed with the Board, admitted that he h¿d no personal knowledge with respect to the specific charges, that he made no effort to verify the contentions, and that he executed the instruments at the request of those attending a meeting of the directors of the South Dakota Optometric Association. This meeting included officers of the Association and members of the South Dakota State Board of Examiners in Optometry. It was Dr. Corwin’s testimony that the guilt of the accused optometrists was agreed upon by those present before the complaints were offered for signing. It must be noted that the complaints had been prepared by the attorney who served as counsel for both the Association and the Board.”

The facts of the instant case are considerably different. Dr. Lynn initiated his investigation of the petitioner’s test papers at the request of the petitioner. During the course of his investigation he discovered what he believed to be evidence that petitioner and Elliott Hershel Klain had cheated on the basic sciences examination. This suspicion was compounded when he recalled that he had seen petitioner and Klain sitting within one seat of each other during all five portions of the examination. Without revealing any of the evidence to the other Board members, Dr. Lynn presented his suspicions to the Board and it passed a resolution on December 16, 1973, alleging that petitioner had conspired with Klain to cheat in the examination and setting an evidentiary hearing for January 26, 1974. When the hearing was eventually held on April 21, 1974, Dr. Lynn disqualified himself from considering the case and acted only as a witness at the hearing. The decision to revoke petitioner’s grades was made by the three voting members who attended the hearing.

We find in these facts nothing analogous to the procedures which were condemned in Mordhorst v. Egert, supra. There it *544 was painfully obvious that the members of the Board of Optometry had preconceived notions of the guilt of the accused. The man who signed the complaint had no knowledge relating to the alleged guilt of the accused. Here, Dr. Lynn made a thorough investigation of the evidence. This evidence was not made available to the other Board members until the formal hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
235 N.W.2d 641, 89 S.D. 539, 1975 S.D. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apoian-v-state-sd-1975.