Department of Health v. Poss

45 So. 3d 510, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 14075, 2010 WL 3655931
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 22, 2010
Docket1D10-3280
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 So. 3d 510 (Department of Health v. Poss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Health v. Poss, 45 So. 3d 510, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 14075, 2010 WL 3655931 (Fla. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

MARSTILLER, J.

Petitioner, the Department of Health (“Department”), seeks review of a nonfinal discovery order from the Division of Administrative Hearings requiring production of certain documents that are confidential and exempt from disclosure under Florida’s Public Records Act. The Department has instituted license disciplinary proceedings against Respondent, Kenneth D. Poss, D.P.M., and the presiding Administrative *511 Law Judge (“ALJ”) entered the discovery-order at issue when the Department moved to quash a subpoena duces tecum Dr. Poss served on the Department’s expert witness. For the reasons that follow, we conclude the ALJ erred by requiring production of documents deemed confidential under section 456.073(10), Florida Statutes, concerning health care practitioners other than Dr. Poss.

The Department filed an administrative complaint against Dr. Poss on February 25, 2010, alleging failure to practice podia-tric medicine with the level of care, skill, and treatment recognized by a reasonably prudent physician as being acceptable, and failure to keep medical records justifying the course of treatment given to a patient. During discovery, Dr. Poss noticed the Department’s expert, Stephen M. Meritt, D.P.M., for a deposition and served him with a subpoena duces tecum listing twenty-five categories of documents he was to produce at the deposition. As pertinent to the case before us, Dr. Poss sought production of the following documents in Dr. Meritt’s possession:

4. Any correspondence received from the Department referencing Dr. Poss or related to any matter involving Dr. Poss.
5. Copies of any letters written by you regarding Dr. Poss, or related in any way to Dr. Poss.
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17. Copies of any opinion letters written by you in the past ten years for any regulatory agency or related to any malpractice case.

In its motion to quash, the Department asserted as to categories 4, 5, and 17, that

Dr. Poss’s subpoena would require violating section 456.078(10), Florida Statutes, where the information sought concerned disciplinary investigations by the Department in which there had been neither a finding of probable cause nor a waiver of confidentiality by the subject of the investigation.

The ALJ issued an Order on Motion to Quash requiring Dr. Meritt to produce, inter alia, the following documents:

c. Category 4: Any correspondence received from the Department referencing Dr. Poss or related to any matter involving Dr. Poss.
d. Category 5: Copies of any letters written by you regarding Dr. Poss, or related in any way to Dr. Poss.
* * *
g. Category 17: Copes [sic] of any opinion letters written by you in the past 10 years to the Florida Board of Podiatry related to standards of care and treatment of medical conditions.

This Court granted the Department’s motion to stay the ALJ’s order pending review insofar as it requires production of documents related to cases in which there has been no finding of probable cause and no waiver of confidentiality. 1

The issue before us is whether the Department’s confidential investigative records are subject to discovery by Dr. Poss for use in cross-examining the Department’s expert witness in the disciplinary proceedings against him. The records are public records as defined in section 119.011(12), Florida Statutes. Section *512 119.07(1), Florida Statutes, permits any person to inspect and copy public records held by a state agency unless a statutory exemption applies. Section 456.073(10), Florida Statutes (2009), provides such an exemption for information the Department obtains during a disciplinary investigation:

The complaint and all information obtained pursuant to the investigation by the department are confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1) until 10 days after probable cause has been found to exist by the probable cause panel or by the department, or until the regulated professional or subject of the investigation waives his or her privilege of confidentiality, whichever occurs first.

(Emphasis added.) Thus the Department’s investigative records remain confidential and exempt from chapter 119 unless probable cause is found to prosecute the licensee or the licensee affirmatively waives confidentiality. Exemption from disclosure under section 119.07(1) does not also exempt a public record from discovery in administrative proceedings. See Dep’t of Prof'l Reg. v. Spiva, 478 So.2d 382, 383 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985) (unsuccessful applicant for a position as state pilot for the Port of Miami was entitled under discovery rules to exam grade reports for successful applicants where the requested reports were exempt from section 119.07(1) but were relevant and material to the applicant’s administrative challenge). Where confidentiality has been at issue, however, our decisions have turned on the presence or absence of statutory language limiting or defining the types of proceedings in which confidential public records may be disclosed and used, and a balancing of the parties’ interests or competing public policies.

in Florida State University v. Hatton, 672 So.2d 576 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996), an administrative law judge ordered the university to produce two years’ worth of orders in student conduct code violation cases with all personal identifying information redacted. The student seeking discovery of the orders had filed a rule challenge aimed at invalidating one of the university’s disciplinary rules. Id. at 577. The requested orders constituted confidential student records under section 228.093, 2 Florida Statutes, and were exempt from section 119.07(1). Section 228.093 specified such records could be released only upon the written consent of the student or the student’s parent or guardian, or to certain enumerated persons or entities without consent, including a “court of competent jurisdiction in compliance with an order of that court or the attorney of record pursuant to a lawfully issued subpoena.” Id. at 577-78. We determined that neither the student prosecuting the rule challenge without an attorney nor the Division of Administrative Hearings were among the persons or entities to whom confidential student information could be released without written consent, even with redaction. Id. at 579. We reasoned further that the student’s “interest in obtaining the confidential documents is outweighed by the substantial privacy interest in the documents which the legislature has accorded to the subject students and their parents, and the interest of the University in avoiding penalties which may ensue from disclosure.” Id. at 580.

By contrast, in H.J.M v. B.R.C., 603 So.2d 1331 (Fla. 1st DCA 1992), we held that medical malpractice plaintiffs were entitled to discover confidential informa *513

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Bluebook (online)
45 So. 3d 510, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 14075, 2010 WL 3655931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-health-v-poss-fladistctapp-2010.