GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES v. ADDISON

304 Ga. 425
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 10, 2018
DocketS18A0803
StatusPublished

This text of 304 Ga. 425 (GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES v. ADDISON) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES v. ADDISON, 304 Ga. 425 (Ga. 2018).

Opinion

304 Ga. 425 FINAL COPY

S18A0803. GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES et al. v. ADDISON et al.

NAHMIAS, Presiding Justice.

This case involves a variety of constitutional challenges to Georgia’s

Child Abuse Registry that a group of high school teachers and administrators

filed directly in superior court after their names were put on the Registry. We

cannot properly reach the merits of those challenges, however — and neither

could the trial court — because some of the claims are barred by sovereign

immunity and the remaining ones should have been raised in the then-pending

administrative proceeding also initiated by the teachers and administrators.

Accordingly, we reverse the part of the trial court’s order concluding that the

court could decide the merits of the challenges, vacate the part of the order

declaring the Registry statutes and rules to be unconstitutional and granting

injunctive relief, and remand with direction to dismiss the case.

1. The plaintiffs (now appellees) — Loy Addison, Archie Chatmon, Lucinda Cooper, Erical Hall, and Kerrie Miller — are teachers and

administrators who work with special education students at Albany High School

in Dougherty County. After two alleged incidents of sexual abuse by some

students against others, the plaintiffs were accused of child neglect for failing

to provide adequate supervision to various numbers of students in the classroom

and lunchroom. The accusations were investigated by Tammy Frazier, an

investigator for DFCS — the Division of Family and Children Services of the

Georgia Department of Human Services. She found the allegations to be

“substantiated,” and DFCS therefore added the plaintiffs’ names to the Child

Abuse Registry.1

DFCS then mailed to each of the plaintiffs two to four separate notices

“regarding the substantiated case” as to individual children, informing the

plaintiff of his or her right to a hearing to appeal the determination and the

1 The Registry, which is also known as the Child Protective Services Information System, is maintained by DFCS. See OCGA § 49-5-181 (a). The Registry “receive[s] notices regarding substantiated [child abuse] cases occurring on and after July 1, 2016,” and the goal of the Registry is “to enable abuse investigators to: (1) Immediately identify and locate substantiated cases; and (2) Maintain and produce aggregate statistical data of substantiated cases.” Id. (a) & (b). Access to the Registry is limited to certain groups, including “abuse investigator[s],” government agencies that license entities that have interactions with children, and “licensing entit[ies].” OCGA § 49-5-185.

2 procedure for obtaining a hearing. OCGA § 49-5-183 (a).2 The notices

identified each allegedly neglected child only by initials and a number in

parentheses that might indicate age. In most of the notices, the alleged neglect

was said to have occurred during the broad time frame of October 2016 through

February 2017; two notices said nothing at all about when the alleged neglect

occurred.

Following the procedure to initiate administrative review set forth in

OCGA § 49-5-183 (c), each appellee filed a written request for a hearing within

ten days of receipt of his or her notices.3 The administrative law judge (ALJ)

2 OCGA § 49-5-183 (a) says: Upon receipt of an investigator’s report of a substantiated case pursuant to Code Section 49-5-182 naming an alleged child abuser, the division [i.e., DFCS]: (1) Shall include in the child abuse registry the name of the alleged child abuser, the classification of the abuse as provided in paragraph (4) of Code Section 49-5-182, and a copy of the investigator’s report; and (2) Shall mail to such alleged child abuser in such report a notice regarding the substantiated case via certified mail, return receipt requested. It shall be a rebuttable presumption that any such notice has been received if the return receipt has been received by the division. The notice shall further inform such alleged child abuser of his or her right to a hearing to appeal such determination. The notice shall further inform such alleged child abuser of the procedures for obtaining the hearing and that an opportunity shall be afforded all parties to be represented by legal counsel and to respond and present evidence on all issues involved. 3 OCGA § 49-5-183 (c) says: In order to exercise such right to a hearing, the alleged child abuser shall file a written request for a hearing with the division within ten days after receipt of such notice. The written request shall contain the alleged child abuser’s current residence address and, if he or she has a telephone, a telephone number at which he or she may

3 be notified of the hearing. The process for the administrative hearing and for judicial review of the agency’s decision, both of which are generally governed by the Georgia Administrative Procedure Act (APA), OCGA §§ 50- 13-1 to 50-13-44, is specified in the rest of OCGA § 49-5-183, which says: (d) If the division receives a timely written request for a hearing under subsection (c) of this Code section, it shall transmit that request to the Office of State Administrative Hearings within ten days after such receipt. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Office of State Administrative Hearings shall conduct a hearing upon that request in accordance with Chapter 13 of Title 50, the “Georgia Administrative Procedure Act,” and the rules of the Office of State Administrative Hearings adopted pursuant thereto, except as otherwise provided in this article. The hearing shall be for the purpose of an administrative determination regarding whether, based on a preponderance of evidence, there was child abuse committed by the alleged child abuser to justify the investigator’s determination of a substantiated case. The Office of State Administrative Hearings shall give notice of the time and place of the hearing to the alleged child abuser by first-class mail to the address specified in the written request for a hearing and to the division by first-class mail at least ten days prior to the date of the hearing. It shall be a rebuttable presumption that any such notice is received five days after deposit in the United States mail with the correct address of the alleged child abuser and the division, respectively, and proper postage affixed. Unless postponed by mutual consent of the parties and the administrative law judge or for good cause shown, such hearing shall be held within 30 business days following receipt by the Office of State Administrative Hearings of the request for a hearing, and a decision shall be rendered within five business days following such hearing. A motion for an expedited hearing may be filed in accordance with rules and regulations promulgated by the Office of State Administrative Hearings.

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Bluebook (online)
304 Ga. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-department-of-human-services-v-addison-ga-2018.