Berezoski v. Ohio State Medical Board

549 N.E.2d 183, 48 Ohio App. 3d 231, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 1917
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1988
Docket87 CA 92
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 549 N.E.2d 183 (Berezoski v. Ohio State Medical Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berezoski v. Ohio State Medical Board, 549 N.E.2d 183, 48 Ohio App. 3d 231, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 1917 (Ohio Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Wolff, J.

The Ohio State Medical Board has appealed, and Robert N. Berezoski has cross-appealed, from the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Greene County. In an administrative appeal pursuant to R.C. 119.12, the trial court reversed the board’s revocation of Berezoski’s license to practice medicine and surgery, and imposed lesser sanctions: a one-year suspension and a requirement of forty hours community service annually for five years. The one-year suspension was imposed retroactively to run concurrently with the year and two days Berezoski had spent in the state penitentiary as a result of seven felony convictions.

The board advances three assignments of error; Berezoski advances one cross-assignment of error.

Before addressing the assignments of error urged upon this court, we must sketch the history of this case.

Berezoski was a licensed physician and surgeon. For a time, he was married to Diane Berezoski, who was the mother of Erin Rothwell, the child of a prior marriage. Berezoski’s marriage to Diane Berezoski ended in divorce in June 1984.

On January 16, 1985, Berezoski was indicted on ten counts of rape and seven counts of gross sexual imposition, all felonies, and all involving Erin Rothwell. A jury found Berezoski not guilty of the ten alleged rapes and guilty of the seven alleged gross sexual impositions. Berezoski was sentenced to seven consecutive one-year sentences in the penitentiary. Berezoski appealed these convictions.

After the criminal proceedings were concluded at the trial level, the State Medical Board initiated proceedings to discipline Berezoski pursuant to R.C. 4731.22(B)(9), which then, and at all times pertinent to this case, provided:

“The board, by a vote of not less than six members, shall, to the extent permitted by law, limit, revoke, or suspend a certificate, refuse to register or refuse to reinstate an applicant, or reprimand or place on probation the holder of a certificate for one or more of the following reasons:

<<* * *

“(9) Conviction of a felony whether or not committed in the course of his practice.”

Eventually, a hearing was conducted before a hearing examiner for the board, Lauren Lubow, Esq.

The state’s evidence was confined to the fact of the seven felony convictions. Berezoski’s evidence consisted of the fact of the ten not guilty findings on the rape charges, together with testimony from Berezoski’s present wife Barbara, her daughter Christine *233 Collins, and Jeffrey Doyle. The testimony of these witnesses tended to show that the felony convictions were the product of an untruthful Erin Rothwell, manipulated by her vindictive and avaricious mother, Diane Berezoski. Berezoski’s appellate brief attacking the convictions was also accepted into evidence.

In urging administrative action short of revocation, Berezoski’s counsel urged the hearing examiner to consider the base motivation behind the prosecution, and the likelihood that the convictions would be reversed.

In her report and recommendation to the board, the hearing examiner’s single finding was confined to the fact of the seven felony convictions. Her conclusion stated in part:

“Dr. Berezoski currently stands convicted of seven (7) counts of gross sexual imposition involving a girl under the age of thirteen. Dr. Berezoski had his hearing before a jury in Montgomery County and that jury, after careful deliberation, did render seven guilty verdicts against Dr. Berezoski. The State Medical Board must presume that the Court of Common Pleas carefully addressed all the issues before it and that the jury and the court carefully assessed the credibility of all the witnesses before it. Dr. Berezoski’s conviction establishes conclusively that the crimes alleged took place and it is inappropriate to retry this sexual imposition case.”

She recommended that Berezo-ski’s license be revoked. In a letter to his counsel she stated:

“Pursuant to Section 119.09, Ohio Revised Code, please find enclosed a copy of the Report and Recommendation of Lauren Lubow, Esquire, Hearing Examiner, State Medical Board of Ohio, concerning the matter of Doctor Berezoski’s adjudication hearing on February 21, 1986.

“Within ten (10) days of receipt of this copy of the written Report and Recommendation, you may file with the State Medical Board of Ohio written objections to the Report and Recommendation, and the written objections shall be considered by the State Medical Board at its July 9,1986 meeting before approving, modifying, or disapproving the Recommendation.”

Berezoski’s counsel did file written objections with the board. The objections complained of the hearing examiner’s failure to make findings as to the credibility of Berezoski’s witnesses and the significance of their testimony. It was again urged that this evidence, which strongly suggested the unreliability of the convictions, should result in less severe discipline than revocation:

“It is submitted that the testimony of the witnesses which the Hearing Examiner has apparently wholly ignored, together with the content of the exhibits introduced or proferred [sic] by Dr. Berezoski, disclose that there was substantial question with respect to the convietion[s] of Dr. Berezoski. In light of this question, it was argued to the Hearing Examiner, and again to this Board, that a more appropriate action for the Board to take would have been to suspend Dr. Berezoski’s license conditioned upon the reversal of his conviction[s]. Under the Hearing Examiner’s recommendation, even if Dr. Berezoski’s conviction[s are] reversed, his license stands revoked. As evidence submitted to the Board tends to establish, the probability of reversal is significant and in such case, there would be no basis for any limitation upon his license to practice medicine, let alone a revocation. Consequently, suspending his license, which in all events prevents him from practicing medicine just as effectively as does a permanent revocation, but conditioned upon a reversal, both protects the *234 public interest and the rights of Dr. Berezoski by assuring him the right, to continue in his profession if, and only if, his convictionfs are] reversed.

“For the foregoing reasons, it is submitted that the Hearing Examiner's recommendation of a revocation is not justify [sic] nor is it necessarily based upon the evidence before the Board. The public would be protected just as effectively, without unnecessary trampling of Dr. Berezoski’s rights, by a suspension conditioned upon reversal of the criminal convic-tionfs] as suggestedby Dr. Berezoski.”

The board met July 10, 1986, and its minutes, as they relate to Berezoski, reveal the following:

“Dr. Rauch asked if each member of the Board had received, read, and considered the hearing record, the proposed findings and order, and any objections filed to the proposed findings and order in the matter of Robert N. Berezoski, M.D. A roll call was taken:

“ROLL CALL:

Dr. Cramblett — aye;
Dr. Lancione — aye;
Dr. Buchan — aye;
Ms. Rolfes — aye;
Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
549 N.E.2d 183, 48 Ohio App. 3d 231, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 1917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berezoski-v-ohio-state-medical-board-ohioctapp-1988.