Fussell v. Department of Commerce, Division of Occupational & Professional Licensing

815 P.2d 250, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 101, 1991 WL 132024
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 18, 1991
Docket900291-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 815 P.2d 250 (Fussell v. Department of Commerce, Division of Occupational & Professional Licensing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fussell v. Department of Commerce, Division of Occupational & Professional Licensing, 815 P.2d 250, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 101, 1991 WL 132024 (Utah Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

GREENWOOD, Judge:

Petitioner Juanita J. Fussell appeals the order of the Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing, Utah Department of Commerce (the Division), denying her application for licensure as a psychologist. Because the rule upon which the denial was based improperly exceeds the relevant statutory requirements, we reverse, and remand to the Division for determination of whether Dr. Fussell meets the statutory requirements, and is therefore eligible to take the psychologist licensing examination.

BACKGROUND

Dr. Fussell received a Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) degree from Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, in 1985. 1 Her doctorate is in the field of human development counseling, rather than psychology. Upon attaining her degree, however, Dr. Fussell obtained employment as a counseling psychologist at Weber State College in Ogden, Utah. 2

In August 1987, Dr. Fussell applied to the Division for psychologist licensure. *252 Her application was denied, because her doctorate had not been obtained through a course of study that was clearly labeled as a psychology program.

The labeling requirement that formed the basis for the rejection of Dr. Fussell’s application was promulgated by the Division under the former Utah code provisions governing psychologist licen-sure, Utah Code Ann. §§ 58-25-1 through -12 (1986). The provision under which the labeling requirement was promulgated provided:

(1) Each applicant for a license to practice as a psychologist shall:
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(b) produce transcripts of credit ... which demonstrate that the candidate for licensing has received a doctoral degree based on a program of studies whose content was primarily psychological from an accredited educational institution recognized by the division.

Utah Code Ann. § 58-25-2 (1986) (emphasis added). 3

The labeling requirement appears in Rule 4, Utah Admin. Code R153-25-8 (1987), which defines the statutory term, “program of studies whose content was primarily psychological,” to mean, among other things, that “[t]he program wherever it may be administratively housed, must be clearly identified and labeled as a psychology program. Such a program must specify in pertinent institutional catalogues and brochures its intent to educate and train professional psychologists.” Rule 4(b), Utah Admin.Code R153-25-8 (1987) (emphasis added).

Dr. Fussell challenged the denial of her license application, arguing that her program of studies had been primarily psychological in content, and therefore met the statutory requirement. At Dr. Fussell’s request, the Division held a formal hearing before an administrative law judge (AU) and a special appeals board, in April 1990. 4

At the hearing, three Division psychologists testified that they had reviewed Dr. Fussell’s license application. 5 All three testified that, based upon review of the Vanderbilt catalog descriptions of its human development counseling program, that program was neither labeled as psychology nor generally intended to train psychologists. 6 Thus the Division psychologists agreed that Fussell’s license application should be denied.

Dr. Fussell, however, testified that although her field of study was labeled “human development counseling,” her actual program, designed with assistance from her academic advisors, had been primarily psychological in content. In so designing her program, it had been Dr. Fussell’s intent to practice as a counseling psychologist. 7 Dr. Fussell also testified that her dissertation had been prepared in the style *253 approved by the American Psychological Association (APA). She had also taken a psychology practicum at Vanderbilt and had completed a one year psychology internship at the University of Utah, both of which programs were APA approved. As evidence of the psychological orientation of her individual program, Fussell also submitted syllabi of many of her Vanderbilt classes.

Other witnesses testified on Dr. Fussell’s behalf. A professor on the University of Utah psychology internship committee stated that Dr. Fussell had been admitted into the internship upon the committee’s assessment that her studies had been primarily in psychology. The professor opined that Dr. Fussell’s courses and dissertation, if completed at the University of Utah, would have earned a doctorate in counseling psychology from that university. Dr. Fussell’s supervisor at Weber State College also testified, stating that he had “no qualms” about Dr. Fussell’s academic background.

Of the three Division psychologists, only one had reviewed Dr. Fussell’s Vanderbilt transcript. That witness opined that Dr. Fussell had “probably” taken more psychology courses than she needed to become a licensed psychologist. Another Division psychologist, upon scanning Dr. Fussell’s application, testified that she had apparently met all the core course requirements for licensure, as listed in Rule 4(i), Utah Admin.Code R153-25-8 (1987).

Based on the testimony and exhibits, the AU found, as indicated in his findings of fact, that fifty-eight percent of Dr. Fus-sell’s Vanderbilt courses had been taught in the psychology department, and that altogether, eighty to ninety percent of her courses had been at least cross-listed in the psychology department. The AU also found that Dr. Fussell had, as she had testified, completed a one year psychology internship at the University of Utah, completed a dissertation under the supervision of psychologists, and was employed as a counseling psychologist at Weber State College. The AU also found that the catalog description of Vanderbilt’s human development counseling program did not label that program as one in psychology, and did not indicate an intent to train professional psychologists.

The AU then examined the statutory educational requirement for psychologist li-censure and the Rule 4(b) definition of the requirement. He concluded, as a matter of law, that Rule 4(b)’s psychology labeling requirement appropriately defined the statutory requirement of “a program of studies whose content was primarily psychological.” Utah Code Ann. § 58-25-2(l)(b). Therefore, because the human development counseling program, as described in the Vanderbilt catalog, did not satisfy the labeling requirement, the AU concluded that Dr. Fussell had not completed a program of studies whose content was primarily psychological. Based upon that conclusion, the Division again denied Dr. Fussell’s license application.

On appeal, Dr.

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815 P.2d 250, 165 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1991 Utah App. LEXIS 101, 1991 WL 132024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fussell-v-department-of-commerce-division-of-occupational-professional-utahctapp-1991.