Brady v. Commonwealth, State Board of Chiropractic Examiners

471 A.2d 572, 79 Pa. Commw. 608, 1984 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1140
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 18, 1984
DocketNo. 1921 C.D. 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 471 A.2d 572 (Brady v. Commonwealth, State Board of Chiropractic Examiners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brady v. Commonwealth, State Board of Chiropractic Examiners, 471 A.2d 572, 79 Pa. Commw. 608, 1984 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1140 (Pa. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Craig,

This case is a proceeding in the nature of an action in equity addressed to our original jurisdiction by ADIO Institute of Straight Chiropractic, Inc. and students of that school, including some who took examinations administered in November, 1982 by the respondent, the -State Board of Chiropractic Examiners.

The -suit has asked the court to decide whether the ADIO graduates who passed the board’s examinations, while ADIO held an interim -approval granted by -the board, are entitled to be licensed as chiropractic doctors, with particular reference to the fact that the board had earlier granted licenses to fifty-two of their fellow ADIO graduates.

This case is a companion case to Coder v. State Board of Chiropractic Examiners, No. 1902 C.D. 1982, in which this court has refused to hold invalid the fifty-two licenses which the board had voluntarily granted to earlier ADIO graduates by a board order of July, 1982. Although each of the two cases has had its -separate evidentiary hearing, the evidence, stipulations and exhibits in the two cases overlap.

[610]*610In this Brady case, the court issued an adjudication and decree nisi. Both sides have filed exceptions. Except for Petitioners ’ Exception 7, neither party has taken exception to the findings of fact in the Brady adjudication, which contains nineteen findings of fact, of which the first fifteen are ■substantially the same as fifteen of the findings of fact adopted in the Coder case and affirmed in the Coder case panel decision disposing of exceptions, to which cross-reference is made.1 Although certain of the exceptions from both sides refer to failure to “find” (e.g., Petitioners’ Exceptions 3 and 4, Board Exception 13), they relate to legal conclusions and not to matters of fact — the only ■possible departure being the above-noted Petitioners’ Exception 7, which is discussed below.

[611]*611Facts

The history ,of the case includes ADIO’s process of seeking board approval as a school of chiropractic, beginning in 1978, when ADIO’is first class of students began. The board accorded “provisional approval” to ADIO during periods between 1979 and January, 1980 and between February, 1980 and the grant of interim approval, noted below. During the period of provisional approval, the board did not authorize the licensing of any ADIO graduates and did not permit ADIO students or graduates to isit for board examinations until this court ordered that the taking of examinations (¡but not licensure) be allowed, in order that the students could be tested before their education and training became stale by the passage of time.2

The particular chronology crucial to this Brady case is as follows:

May, 1982 — ADIO graduates .and last semester .students, as allowed by law, took board examinations, and fifty-two of them passed.
June, 1982 — The board granted interim approval for one year and voted to issue licenses to all ADIO students passing .the examination during that period.
July, 1982 — Without rescinding the interim approval, the board ordered the issuance of licenses only to students who had by that date passed the board’s examinations.
September, 1982 — The board permitted ADIO graduates and last .semester students to sit for examinations during the period of interim approval, until June 30,1983, but negated any further licensing.
[612]*612November, 1982 — ADIO graduates aud students took board examinations and all but two passed.
.May, 1983 — Additional ADIO graduates and students took and passed the board examinations.
June, 1983 — The interim approval expired by its terms.

Excepting the fifty-two licenses which the board has issued, the board has not granted licenses to any ADIO graduates or students who passed the November, 1982 and May, 1983 examinations.

Issues and Discussion

The petitioners earlier contended that the board’s actions in July and September of 1982 could and should be interpreted to bar from licensure only students graduated from ADIO after the expiration of the one-year interim approval, thus to be read as a board authorization for the licensure of all those who passed the examinations during the one-year period. On the basis of the wording of the board actions, and the board’s unequivocal administrative interpretation of its actions since their adoption, the court rejected that contention, and the petitioners have not preserved that issue at this exceptions stage.

Therefore, the only remaining issues are two questions of law:

1. Did the board’s refusal to license those petitioners who passed the November, 1982 examinations violate the due process rights of those petitioners?
2. Are the petitioners who passed the November, 1982 examinations entitled to licensure under equal protection of laws, in that they are not in a class meaningfully different from the [613]*613fifty-two ADIO graduates whom the board has licensed?

1. Due Process Rights

Petitioners first contend 'that, by virtue of the board action of June 17, 1982 — granting licensure to all ADIO graduates passing the examination during the interim approval period — petitioners acquired property .rights in their prof eission which could not be divested by the subsequent orders of the board on July 8 and September 9,1982.

Of course, the right to practice a profession, once acquired, does constitute a property right in the licensee. In Re Shigon, 462 Pa. 1, 329 A.2d 235 (1974); Schlesinger Appeal, 404 Pa. 584, 596,172 A.2d 835, 840 (1961). However, no property right exists when the right to practice the occupation or profession has not accrued and therefore has not yet been acquired. The inchoate prospect of licensure which the board dangled before ADIO students, in its action of June 17, never crystallized before the adoption of the board July and September order which took that prospect ■away; petitioners did not acquire the indispensable successful examinee qualification until later, in November.

Therefore, there is no basis for holding that these petitioners acquired a property right in their professional status before July, 1982.

2. Entitlement to Licensure on the Rasis of Equal Protection

Petitioners’ other argument is based on the view that petitioners do not constitute a class any different from that group of fifty-two students to whom the board granted licenses pursuant to 'the July 8 order. The fortunate fifty-two ADIO graduates received education at ADIO in a period during most of which ADIO was under the board’s provisional approval, [614]*614and the board actually issued those licenses after the provisional approval was replaced in June of 1982 by interim approval. In the companion Coder

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Bluebook (online)
471 A.2d 572, 79 Pa. Commw. 608, 1984 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-commonwealth-state-board-of-chiropractic-examiners-pacommwct-1984.