In Re Jascalevich License Revocation

442 A.2d 635, 182 N.J. Super. 455
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 27, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 442 A.2d 635 (In Re Jascalevich License Revocation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Jascalevich License Revocation, 442 A.2d 635, 182 N.J. Super. 455 (N.J. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

182 N.J. Super. 455 (1982)
442 A.2d 635

IN THE MATTER OF THE SUSPENSION OR REVOCATION OF THE LICENSE OF MARIO E. JASCALEVICH, M.D. TO PRACTICE MEDICINE AND SURGERY IN THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued November 4, 1981.
Decided January 27, 1982.

*457 Before Judges MATTHEWS, PRESSLER and PETRELLA.

Henry F. Furst argued the cause for appellant (Brown, Brown & Furst, attorneys; Raymond A. Brown, Eugenie F. Tendrich and Henry F. Furst on the brief).

Bertram P. Goltz, Jr., Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent (James R. Zazzali, Attorney General of New Jersey; John J. Degnan, former Attorney General of New Jersey; Erminie L. Conley, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Bruce H. Snyder, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by PRESSLER, J.A.D.

Respondent Mario E. Jascalevich, a physician, appeals from an order of the New Jersey Board of Medical Examiners (Board) revoking his license to practice medicine and surgery in this State. We affirm.

*458 These proceedings were commenced by a complaint brought against respondent by the Board charging him with various acts alleged to constitute fraud in the practice of medicine, gross malpractice or gross neglect endangering the health and life of named patients and professional incompetence. See N.J.S.A. 45:9-6, 45:9-16(h), 45:9-16(i). Although the original and supplemental complaints were in 13 counts, only 7 were pursued. The first six of these counts related to Dr. Jascalevich's management of his patient, Julio E. Echeverria. The last, count XIII, related to his record-keeping responsibilities in respect of another patient, Themis Revis. Thirty-three hearing days were devoted to these proceedings by the specially designated hearing officer who thereafter filed an exhaustive statement of factual findings and recommendations.

The hearing officer's ultimate factual finding was that Dr. Jascalevich had deviated from applicable standards of professional practice and conduct. It was his conclusion, however, that these deviations amounted only to ordinary negligence and did not constitute gross malpractice, neglect or incompetence. It was, therefore, his recommendation to the Board that there was no adequate basis for the suspension or revocation of Dr. Jascalevich's license. The Board, in its review of the massive hearing record, generally accepted the hearing officer's basic findings of fact. It rejected, however, his characterization of respondent's conduct as ordinary negligence and determined that the acts he had been found to have committed constituted gross malpractice, negligence and incompetence within the statutory intendment. It also found him to lack the good moral character requisite for the practice of medicine. Accordingly, it ordered the revocation of his license.

The parties do not generally challenge the hearing officer's extensive basic findings. It is in any event clear that they are not only supported by sufficient credible evidence in the record as a whole but also that they are expressed with consummate clarity and completeness. We, accordingly, rely on them to the same extent as did the Board and respondent.

*459 Before considering the substance of these findings and respondent's appellate challenges to the proceedings, there is a preliminary matter we must address. The hearing officer was of the view that these disciplinary proceedings against a physician were subject to a clear-and-convincing standard of proof. His factual findings, therefore, accorded with that standard. The Board, although it noted its disagreement as to the appropriate proof standard and its belief that a preponderance standard generally applied, nevertheless concluded that the distinction in standards was not here relevant since, in accepting the hearing officer's factual findings, it was also thereby necessarily accepting the proof standard pursuant to which those findings were made. This observation under the circumstances here is fair and accurate. We are, therefore, satisfied that Dr. Jascalevich did receive the benefit of that higher standard of proof which, following the conclusion of the proceedings here, was held by us to be required in physician disciplinary proceedings. In re Polk License Revocation, 178 N.J. Super. 191 (App.Div. 1981). Dr. Jascalevich's argument to the contrary is, therefore, without merit.

With respect to the substantive findings, we consider first the charges relating to the patient Echeverria. Dr. Jascalevich removed Echeverria's gall bladder on July 26, 1974, in an apparently routine and unexceptionable operation performed at Christ Hospital in Jersey City. Echeverria did not, however, recuperate well and within several days of the surgery had developed such symptoms as weakness, pain, fever and large amounts of bile draining through the surgical wound. Accordingly, respondent performed a second surgical procedure on August 2, 1974, in which he drained the excess bile from the abdominal cavity. Both the pre- and post-operative diagnosis was subhepatic abscess. In his report of the second operation, which Dr. Jascalevich did not dictate until August 16, 1974, he noted various observations not made during the course of the first operation, including "several lymph nodes palpable in the area of the pancreas" and a "mass in the pancreatic region *460 which was considered to be too hazardous to biopsy." He concluded that "carcinoma in this patient cannot be ruled out on the basis of these findings." Dr. Jascalevich discharged Echeverria from the hospital on August 12. Three days later, on August 15, Echeverria visited Dr. Jascalevich in his office because of the continuing excessive drainage. Dr. Jascalevich aspirated the wound. After so doing he showed Echeverria a piece of tissue which purportedly came from the wound and which he then purportedly sent to the pathology department of the hospital for analysis and report. The pathology report was dated August 16 and its results telephoned that day to Dr. Jascalevich. According to the report, the Echeverria sample was "fibrodipose tissue showing infiltrating, hornifying, well differentiated squamous cell carcinoma." Dr. Jascalevich never, however, treated Echeverria for cancer nor referred him to an oncologist.

Apparently, and despite the cancer diagnosis, Echeverria made relatively good progress on routine antibiotic and other medication until early December 1974, when he was again admitted to Christ Hospital complaining of abdominal pain. Diagnostic tests failed to disclose evidence of any intrinsic biliary disease and, after conservative treatment with antibiotic medication, Echeverria improved sufficiently to be discharged in about a week. There was nothing in the report of this hospitalization suggesting that Echeverria was suffering from any form of cancer. In April 1975 Echeverria was admitted to Jersey City Medical Center again complaining of abdominal pain and jaundice. Dr. Jascalevich's admission note was "obstructive jaundice probably due to recurrence of carcinoma of bile duct diagnosed at time of admission to Christ Hospital." Shortly after the admission Dr. Jascalevich performed a third operation, this one a common duct bypass.

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