Deol v. Cal. Veterinary Medical Bd.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 24, 2025
DocketA172274
StatusPublished

This text of Deol v. Cal. Veterinary Medical Bd. (Deol v. Cal. Veterinary Medical Bd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deol v. Cal. Veterinary Medical Bd., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 11/21/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

GURDEEP DEOL, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. A172274 CALIFORNIA VETERINARY MEDICAL BOARD, (Riverside County Defendant and Appellant. Super. Ct. No. CVPS2402058)

After an administrative hearing, the California Veterinary Medical Board (Board) revoked Gurdeep Deol’s veterinary license based on findings of negligence, incompetence, and unprofessional conduct. He petitioned the trial court for a writ of administrative mandate to compel the Board to set aside its decision. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5.) The court granted the petition as to the unprofessional conduct charge but denied it as to the other two charges. Both parties appealed. We reverse the judgment with respect to the unprofessional conduct charge, concluding Business and Professions Code section 4883, subdivision (g) (section 4883(g)) concerns more than just substance abuse. (Undesignated statutory references are to this code.) We otherwise affirm. 1

1 The California Supreme Court transferred this matter from the

Fourth Appellate District to this court on January 15, 2025.

1 BACKGROUND In April 2018, Zoe — an eight-year-old cocker spaniel — arrived to Deol’s veterinary practice for a routine wellness exam, which included blood work and administration of the DA2PP and Bordetella vaccines. Deol administered the vaccines despite learning that Zoe had a fever of 103.4 degrees Fahrenheit; he did not inform her owners — who were present — about the fever or that administering vaccines to a febrile dog could cause serious disease and death. Zoe’s health rapidly deteriorated over the next few days. Her owners returned after she became unresponsive and began urinating blood. Deol did more blood work, which revealed that vital blood markers had dropped to life-threatening levels. He did not tell Zoe’s owners about the seriousness of her condition or recommend blood transfusions. She died within 24 hours. In May 2018, Zoe’s owners filed a complaint with the Board. In September 2019, Dr. Beth Parvin reviewed the complaint. She determined Deol departed from the standard of care by failing to communicate Zoe’s condition to her owners and by failing to refer her to a veterinarian who could care for her, and Parvin further determined that his failure demonstrated insufficient knowledge. Although she found the administration of the vaccines did not depart from the standard of care, she did not know that Zoe had a fever. In November 2022, the Board initiated disciplinary proceedings, accusing Deol of negligence, incompetence, and unprofessional conduct. It alleged that administering vaccines to Zoe while she was febrile — and his treatment of her when she returned — constituted negligence. It also alleged his failure to appreciate the severity and urgency of her condition and appropriately treat it constituted incompetence, and his failure to inform

2 Zoe’s owners of her prognosis constituted unprofessional conduct. Moreover, it noted it had previously disciplined him for the death of another animal, which also resulted from his failure to identify, treat, and appreciate the seriousness of a life-threatening condition and to communicate that condition to the animal’s owners. Deol filed a notice of defense. An administrative hearing took place in November 2023. One expert — Dr. James Howard — testified. He based his opinions on his 40 years of veterinary experience, his education, and data derived from textbooks, publications, and scientific articles that existed at the time of the incident. He defined the standard of care as “what a similar practitioner in a similar position” would do “when faced with a similar case.” He also noted he had personally been under similar circumstances on numerous occasions. The administrative law judge also admitted Parvin’s report into evidence. Howard opined that Deol violated the standard of care. He opined it is “well outside . . . the . . . standard of practice to administer vaccines to a febrile animal” and explained why. He also opined “it was below the standard of care to have not offered” a blood transfusion as a treatment after Zoe’s blood markers dropped so low, “that the average practicing general practitioner would have made the call to recommend transfusion therapy to stabilize this patient,” and that the failure to do so constituted negligence and incompetence. Finally, he opined that failing to provide a transfusion violated a basic rule of veterinary medicine — designed to stabilize patients whose blood markers fell to life-threatening levels regardless of the cause — and “the average veterinarian” would have followed it. In December 2023, the administrative law judge found clear and convincing evidence of negligence, incompetence, and unprofessional conduct, and her proposed decision determined Deol’s license should be revoked. In

3 January 2024, the Board adopted the proposed decision, and it subsequently denied Deol’s petition for reconsideration. In March 2024, Deol filed a petition for writ of administrative mandate in the trial court. He argued the Board imposed discipline without cause, that essential elements of the violations were not supported by clear and convincing proof, and the discipline imposed constituted an abuse of discretion. For the first time, he argued that only evidence of substance abuse could support the unprofessional conduct charge. The trial court denied the petition with respect to the negligence and incompetence charges, but it granted the writ as to the unprofessional conduct charge. In doing so, the court concluded it could consider Deol’s new statutory interpretation argument. It also concluded that section 4883(g) — the provision concerning unprofessional conduct — only refers to substance abuse so Deol’s failure to communicate could not be a basis for discipline under that subdivision. But the court concluded that clear and convincing evidence otherwise supported the administrative law judge’s findings of negligence and incompetence. DISCUSSION We address the Board’s and Deol’s appeals in turn and begin with the Board’s appeal. I. At the outset, the Board contends Deol forfeited his argument that section 4883(g) only encompasses substance abuse by failing to raise it in the administrative hearing and instead raising it for the first time in his writ petition. We disagree. Ordinarily, “a litigant must raise all issues before an administrative agency in order to raise them on writ review.” (Richman v. Santa Monica

4 Rent Control Bd. (1992) 7 Cal.App.4th 1457, 1463.) But there are instances when a reviewing court will exercise its discretion to consider an issue not previously raised, “including when the issue relates to a question of law only.” (Air Machine Com SRL v. Superior Court (2010) 186 Cal.App.4th 414, 421, fn. 7.) Because the interpretation of section 4883(g) involves a question of law — and the facts are not in dispute — the trial court validly exercised its discretion to consider the issue, and we do so as well. (Air Machine, at p. 421, fn. 7.) The Board next argues that section 4883(g) applies to more than just substance abuse. On this point, we agree. “When construing a statute, we determine the Legislature’s intent and effectuate the law’s purpose by examining the statutory language, giving the words their plain and ordinary meaning.” (De Martini v. Superior Court (2024) 98 Cal.App.5th 1269, 1275 (De Martini).) “If the statutory text is unambiguous, the plain meaning controls.” (Ibid.) “But if the language ‘supports more than one reasonable construction,’ ‘we may look to extrinsic aids,’ such as the legislative history.” (Ibid.) We “independently review legal issues, such as those involving statutory interpretation.” (Id. at p.

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