Genova v. Oregon Veterinary Medical Examining Board

386 P.3d 40, 282 Or. App. 234, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 1452
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 16, 2016
Docket070024; A148617
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 386 P.3d 40 (Genova v. Oregon Veterinary Medical Examining Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Genova v. Oregon Veterinary Medical Examining Board, 386 P.3d 40, 282 Or. App. 234, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 1452 (Or. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

ORTEGA, P. J.

Petitioner, a licensed veterinarian, seeks judicial review of a final order issued by the Oregon Veterinary Medical Examining Board (the board) in which it concluded that petitioner engaged in “unprofessional conduct,” ORS 686.1201 and ORS 686.130,2 and, as a sanction, ordered him to pay a $750 penalty and $5,594.28 for the costs of the proceedings, ORS 686.150. We “review for substantial evidence, substantial reason, and errors of law.” Papas v. OLCC, 213 Or App 369, 371, 161 P3d 948 (2007). Because we conclude that the board’s order lacks substantial reason, we reverse and remand the order.

We summarize the facts, which are undisputed, from the record and as found in the board’s final order. In the summer of 2007, petitioner agreed to participate in a mentoring program for veterinary students at Oregon State University.3 As part of that program, petitioner hired F, a veterinary student, to work as an assistant at his hospital that summer. F performed a variety of tasks under petitioner’s supervision, including, in relevant part, administering rabies vaccinations. The record reflects that F performed her duties more than adequately.

In January 2008, the board sent petitioner a notice of proposed discipline after receiving complaints related to F’s work at the hospital, though the nature of the complaints is unclear. Following its initial notice, the board sent petitioner two amended notices of proposed disciplinary action. In the operative notice, the board alleged that petitioner was subject to discipline for unprofessional conduct under ORS 686.130(6) by “having [a] professional connection with the illegal practice of veterinary medicine”4 and under [236]*236OAR 875-011-0010(24) by “violating] *** other state laws relating to veterinary practice.”5 The board claimed that, by allowing F to administer up to 10 rabies vaccinations, petitioner had violated OAR 333-019-0017(2)(a) - (c), which provides that rabies vaccinations are “valid only when performed” by a licensed veterinarian, a veterinary technician under the direct supervision of a licensed veterinarian, or another person approved by the State Public Health Veterinarian.6 The board claimed that petitioner was responsible for F’s failure to comply with the rabies rule because of OAR 875-015-0005(3), which makes a practitioner responsible for any noncompliant condition in his clinic.

In November 2010, an administrative law judge (ALJ) held a contested case hearing on the matter. After hearing testimony by petitioner and Dr. Emilio DeBess (the State Public Health Veterinarian), the ALJ issued a proposed order in which he concluded that “[petitioner’s] allowance of a veterinary student to administer rabies vaccinations did not constitute unprofessional conduct under ORS 686.130.” The ALJ opined that the rabies rule addressed only the validity of a rabies vaccination and was unrelated to the practice of veterinary medicine. That is, the ALJ opined that the only consequence for failure to comply with the requirements of the rabies rule was that the vaccination was invalid. Therefore, the ALJ concluded that F could not be considered an “illegal practitioner” and, thus, petitioner could not be disciplined for having a “professional connection with” an illegal practitioner under ORS 686.130(6) and that, “even if [petitioner] allowed [F] to perform rabies vaccinations that turned out to be invalid, he did not ‘violate’ the law” for the purposes of OAR 875-011-0010(24).

Following the ALJ’s order, the board issued and withdrew a series of orders. A complete recitation of that procedural history and the substance of those orders is not necessary to our analysis. In its final order, the board rejected [237]*237the ALJ’s determination and concluded that petitioner “did engage in professional conduct under ORS 686.130 and OAR 875-011-0010(24) when he allowed a veterinary student to administer rabies vaccinations in his clinic in violation of [the rabies rule]The board stated, in part:

“The factual record is indisputable that [petitioner] allowed [F] to administer rabies vaccines under his direct control within his clinic in 2007, in violation of OAR 333-019-0017. This rule qualifies as an ‘other state law relating to veterinary practice.’ The Board observes that this rule is well known in the profession, and the underlying need for the rule is grounded in the necessity to protect public health and safety. As a result, [petitioner] violated OAR 875-011-0010(24), which defines unprofessional or dishonorable conduct, ORS 686.130. Clearly, [petitioner] did violate ‘other laws’ when he allowed [F] to administer the rabies vaccine under his direct control in 2007. Licensees are responsible for noncompliant conditions in their clinics pursuant to OAR 875-015-0005(3).”

The board then addressed the exceptions that petitioner had filed in response to the board’s proposed order, ultimately rejecting them. In relevant part, petitioner had challenged the board’s legal conclusions by pointing to ORS 686.040(13) (2007),7 which he claimed had provided statutory authority for P to administer rabies vaccinations. In addressing that exception, the board stated:

“In [petitioner’s] other written exception, that was received March 4, 2011, he contends that ORS 686.040(13), as it existed in 2007, serves to exempt [F] from being considered an ‘illegal practitioner.’ The Board concedes that ORS 686.130(6) is not applicable to this case. Nevertheless, this argument does not address the fact that [petitioner] allowed the student *** to administer rabies vaccines to animals in his clinic, something that she lacked the legal [238]*238authority to do, whether or not she was working under his direct supervision and whether or not she was working under the auspices of an approved educational program.”

Having concluded that petitioner engaged in unprofessional conduct by violating OAR 875-011-0010(24), the board assessed a civil penalty of $750 against petitioner, as well as $5,594.28 in costs.

On appeal, petitioner reprises his challenge to the board’s order. In his first assignment of error, he contends that the board erred by concluding that petitioner engaged in unprofessional conduct under OAR 875-011-0010(24).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
386 P.3d 40, 282 Or. App. 234, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 1452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genova-v-oregon-veterinary-medical-examining-board-orctapp-2016.