Florida Department of Children and Families v. Herstein

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 2, 2025
Docket1D2022-4024
StatusPublished

This text of Florida Department of Children and Families v. Herstein (Florida Department of Children and Families v. Herstein) 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
Florida Department of Children and Families v. Herstein, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D2022-4024 _____________________________

DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES,

Appellant,

v.

RICHARD HERSTEIN,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County. John C. Cooper, Judge.

January 2, 2025

RAY, J.

Dr. Richard Herstein served as Chief Hospital Administrator and Chief Medical Officer at the Florida Department of Children and Families. After he was discharged from that position, he sued the Department alleging whistleblower retaliation. Relevant to this appeal, the trial court granted his request for temporary reinstatement pending resolution of his complaint and awarded him back pay and attorney’s fees and costs. The Department challenges this award of temporary relief.

After careful review of the parties’ arguments, we conclude that the trial court erred in granting temporary reinstatement because the statements made by Herstein during routine meetings with his supervisors were not protected disclosures under Florida’s Whistle-blower Act (“FWA”). Even if Herstein were entitled to temporary reinstatement, he had no right to back pay and reasonable costs before proving that the Department acted unlawfully.

I

In his petition for reinstatement and in the evidentiary hearing that followed, Herstein explained that his duties at the Department included operational and strategic oversight for the state’s mental health treatment facilities and management of their staff. According to Herstein, his employment was terminated in retaliation for making protected disclosures related to an internal investigation into patient abuse and neglect.

As background, in 2020, a patient at one of the mental health facilities suffered severe physical abuse by another patient. This prompted an investigation by the Department’s Adult Protective Services Unit (APS), which is authorized to investigate certain allegations of abuse involving vulnerable adults.

Roy Carr, the Director of APS, testified that the investigation was “woefully inadequate.” At Carr’s request, APS conducted a second investigation. This report, submitted in August of 2021, implicated four individuals, two nurses and two risk managers. Based on these findings, the employees were restricted from providing direct patient care. After the employees complained to Herstein, Herstein contacted Carr about their options. Carr agreed to conduct an executive review of the investigation, which he completed in September of 2021. Carr’s findings cleared the four employees of any wrongdoing while identifying two new individuals as responsible.

While the APS investigation was ongoing, the Department’s Office of the Inspector General (“IG”) began its own investigation. The IG is under the general supervision of the Department’s Secretary for administrative purposes but reports to the Governor’s Chief Inspector General to maintain independence from the agency. See § 20.055(3)(b), Fla. Stat. During the IG review process, which concluded in March of 2022, the four initially accused employees remained on restricted duty.

2 The Department terminated Herstein from his position on December 29, 2021. In his whistleblower lawsuit that followed, he alleged that he was fired in retaliation for making several protected disclosures relating to the APS investigations. The Department contends that Herstein’s termination was for legitimate, non-retaliatory reasons.

On Herstein’s petition for temporary reinstatement, the trial court determined that none of his emails or written communications about the investigations qualified as protected disclosures under the FWA. However, it concluded that his oral disclosures made during meetings on September 30 and December 7, 2021, were protected.

For context, Herstein had regular meetings with his direct supervisor, Erica Floyd-Thomas, or her deputy, Meghan Collins, to discuss hospital operations and projects at the facilities. On September 30, Herstein was called into a meeting with Floyd- Thomas to discuss staffing generally and the four employees specifically. According to Herstein, there was a critical staffing shortage at the time of the meeting, particularly with nurses. Herstein said he was eager to get the four employees back to work since he believed they had been exonerated. Floyd-Thomas did not agree that the employees should return to work. She told Herstein to stay out of the APS investigation.

On December 6, Herstein sent an email to Collins and Carr, asking for an update on the APS investigation. The next day, Herstein was called into an impromptu meeting with Collins. According to Herstein, the first thing Collins said when he went to her office was, “I thought we told you to stay out of this.” Counsel asked Herstein, “when you showed up in her office, what was the purpose of her inquiry?” Herstein responded, “Her inquiry, her statement, ‘I thought we told you to stay out of this,’ was in reference to the e-mail that I had sent the evening before regarding the APS investigation.” Herstein testified that he told Collins there was a critical staffing shortage and that the four employees should not be on restrictive duty. Carr arrived at a later point during the meeting. In response to Collins’ concerns about interference in the APS investigation, Carr interjected that Herstein had not interfered.

3 The trial court determined that at both meetings “[H]erstein responded to an inquiry into the results of the APS investigation.” And the court concluded that the “misfeasance [Herstein] complained of at the meetings was [the Department’s] negligent APS investigation and negligent failure to timely correct the findings of the investigation.” From these findings, the court concluded that Herstein made disclosures protected under the FWA and ordered the Department to reinstate Herstein to his former position, or to an equivalent position, pending the outcome of his whistleblower lawsuit. The court also ordered the Department to compensate Herstein for lost wages from the date of his termination to the date of his temporary reinstatement, and for payment of reasonable costs, including attorney’s fees.

This appeal follows. We have jurisdiction. See Fla. R. App. P. 9.130(a)(3)(B). *

* The Department brought this case as an appeal from a final

order, relying on State, Department of Transportation v. Florida Commission on Human Relations, 842 So. 2d 253 (Fla. 1st DCA 2003). Although this court found that an order granting temporary reinstatement was a final order in DOT, that case was in a different procedural posture than the one before us. There, the Florida Commission on Human Relations (“FCHR”) sought temporary reinstatement on behalf of an employee pending the outcome of its investigation into the employee’s whistleblower complaint before the FCHR. 842 So. 2d at 254–55. Once the circuit court granted temporary reinstatement, there was nothing more for the court to do in that case. If the employee elected to later bring a civil action after exhausting her administrative remedies, it would be “separate and distinct” from FCHR’s reinstatement case. Id. at 255. Here, the petition for reinstatement seeks statutorily authorized relief as part of the employee’s whistleblower complaint before the circuit court. The civil action remains pending. Unlike in DOT, the circuit court’s work in this case is not done. We thus treat this as an appeal of a non-final order having the effect of injunctive relief.

4 II

A

The FWA was enacted “to prevent agencies . . .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Williams
553 U.S. 285 (Supreme Court, 2008)
Walker v. Department of Veterans Affairs
925 So. 2d 1149 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2006)
Hutchison v. Prudential Ins. Co.
645 So. 2d 1047 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1994)
O'Neal v. Fla. a & M University Ex Rel. Bd. of Trustees
989 So. 2d 6 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2008)
MCI Worldcom Network Services, Inc. v. Mastec, Inc.
995 So. 2d 221 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2008)
State, Dot v. Fla. Com'n on Human Relations
842 So. 2d 253 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2003)
Hanna v. Martin
49 So. 2d 585 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1950)
Irven v. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHAB.
790 So. 2d 403 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2001)
McDonnell v. United States
579 U.S. 550 (Supreme Court, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Florida Department of Children and Families v. Herstein, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-department-of-children-and-families-v-herstein-fladistctapp-2025.