Faulkenstein v. District of Columbia Board of Medicine

727 A.2d 302, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 61, 1999 WL 144111
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 18, 1999
Docket97-AA-1868
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 727 A.2d 302 (Faulkenstein v. District of Columbia Board of Medicine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faulkenstein v. District of Columbia Board of Medicine, 727 A.2d 302, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 61, 1999 WL 144111 (D.C. 1999).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

Petitioner challenges the decision of the District of Columbia Board of Medicine (the “Board”) revoking his license to practice acupuncture in the District of Columbia. See D.C.Code § 2-3305.14 (1994). The Board found six separate, but partly overlapping, grounds for revocation under § 2-3305.14(a). These included, most notably, professional incompetence for failure to meet the educational and training requirements for licen-sure (subsection (a)(5)); fraudulently and deceptively using a license (subsection (a)(2)); discipline by a licensing authority of another jurisdiction (subsection (a)(3)); and failing to conform to standards of acceptable conduct (subsection (a)(26) (1998 Supp.)).

The Board argues here that if the evidence was sufficient to support any one of these findings and the proceedings were otherwise marred by no impropriety, we must affirm. But in Salama v. District of Columbia Bd. of Medicine, 578 A.2d 693 (D.C.1990), we applied a more restrictive test, which was that error affecting one or more of multiple grounds on which revocation was based requires a remand “unless we can be sure that the Board would have based its ruling on a lesser number.” Id. at 700. We thus choose to review each basis for the Board’s decision.

I.

Petitioner, who is not a medical doctor, was licensed to practice acupuncture in the District of Columbia in May 1992. In April 1996, the Board served him an amended notice of intent to take disciplinary action, citing four grounds later supplemented by two more. After an evidentiary hearing, the Board revoked petitioner’s license in November 1996, but then — following his petition for review in this court — did not oppose a remand to allow his claim to be reviewed by the full Board in compliance with D.C.Code § l-1509(d). In November 1997, the Board again revoked his license based on all six specified charges, stating findings of fact and conclusions of law. Petitioner again seeks review.

*305 ii.

Petitioner first disputes the Board’s finding that he lacked the education and training required for licensure as an acupuncturist, set forth in 17 DCMR § 4702 (1990). His primary argument is that he met the second alternative route for licensure by completing two academic years at a chartered school of acupuncture in Sri Lanka, and, in addition, spent 1500 hours there as an apprentice under the direct supervision of a licensed “preceptor” acupuncturist. 17 DCMR § 4702.2(b)(2). The Board, however, disbelieved the evidence of petitioner’s presence in Sri Lanka during key portions of the time he claimed to have been there. 1 Since that determination — and the Board’s resultant conclusion that he had not met the academic requirement — is supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole, we must sustain it. See Williamson v. District of Columbia Bd. of Dentistry, 647 A.2d 389, 394 (D.C.1994). 2

Petitioner further asserts, though only in a footnote, that as a result of his practice experience in Georgia, he met the “grandfather” standards of 17 DCMR § 4702.4, which allows licensure of one who has had “three (3) years of practice” consisting of at least 100 patients a year with a minimum of 500 patient visits, before the effective date of 17 DCMR Chapter 47 (i .e., October 1989). The Board made findings which explain satisfactorily why it rejected this claim of practice. See Eilers v. District of Columbia Bureau of Motor Vehicles Sens., 583 A.2d 677, 686 (D.C.1990) (agency must articulate “with reasonable clarity” its reasons for decision) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted); Aquino v. Knox, 60 A.2d 237, 240 (D.C.1948) (reviewing court must be able “to follow the path” leading to decision on review). The Board did not appear to question petitioner’s claim that he had treated over 100 patients with 500 patient visits in Georgia during each of more than three years before 1989. It expressly found, however, that he “has never been licensed to practice acupuncture in the State of Georgia,” and as a result had signed a cease and desist order in 1987 agreeing to stop practice there until he became properly licensed. It further found that he had “continued to practice acupuncture in the State of Georgia after he had signed the voluntary cease and desist order.” Although the Board was not explicit in its legal conclusion, these findings lead to the natural inference that it rejected petitioner’s reliance on his Georgia practice because it was unlawful in that state, carried on without a license. 3 The Board, charged with administering its own regulations, could reasonably interpret the practice-based alternative for qualification to mean licensed practice, or at least practice under the supervision of a licensed practitioner or physician, in another jurisdiction. Cf. Superior Beverages, Inc. v. District of Columbia Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd., 567 A.2d 1319, 1325 (D.C.1989) (where governing language is ambiguous, court “defer[s] to any *306 reasonable construction of a statute or regulation”). Neither condition describes petitioner’s Georgia experience. 4

III.

An acupuncturist who is not a licensed physician (petitioner is not) may practice only in general collaboration with a physician, 17 DCMR § 4712.1, and they must register that collaboration with the Board on a prescribed form. 17 DCMR § 4715.1. The requirements are important because an acupuncturist may not treat a patient without authorization from the collaborating physician and must comply with any restrictions or conditions the physician places on treatment. 17 DCMR §§ 4712.3, 4712.4. Petitioner admittedly did not file the registration form until July 1995, and the non-filing formed the second basis for revocation of his license.

Petitioner argues that this failure “was a bureaucratic one only,” since Dr. Spencer Johnson, a psychiatrist, testified that he began acting as his collaborating physician in July 1993, around the time when petitioner claimed to have begun his practice in the District. The Board disputes the evidentiary basis for this claim that he did not begin practice until over a year after receiving his license, and the record supports a finding that, by any account, at least a short period of time existed during which petitioner practiced without a collaborative physician.

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Bluebook (online)
727 A.2d 302, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 61, 1999 WL 144111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faulkenstein-v-district-of-columbia-board-of-medicine-dc-1999.