In the Matter of the Appeal by Kehinde Yusuf and Caring for Adults of the Order of License Revocation of the Adult ...

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 18, 2024
Docketa240430
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Appeal by Kehinde Yusuf and Caring for Adults of the Order of License Revocation of the Adult ... (In the Matter of the Appeal by Kehinde Yusuf and Caring for Adults of the Order of License Revocation of the Adult ...) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of the Appeal by Kehinde Yusuf and Caring for Adults of the Order of License Revocation of the Adult ..., (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A24-0430

In the Matter of the Appeal by Kehinde Yusuf and Caring for Adults of the Order of License Revocation of the Adult Foster Care and Home and Community-Based Services Licenses.

Filed November 18, 2024 Affirmed Larson, Judge

Minnesota Department of Human Services File No. 23-1800-38774

Jason Steck, Law Office of Jason Steck, St. Paul, Minnesota (for relators Kehinde Yusuf and Caring for Adults)

Keith Ellison, Attorney General, Drew Bredeson, Assistant Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent Minnesota Department of Human Services)

Brian J. Melton, Clay County Attorney, Kathleen M. Stock, Assistant County Attorney, Moorhead, Minnesota (for respondent Clay County)

Considered and decided by Larson, Presiding Judge; Worke, Judge; and Bjorkman,

Judge.

NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

LARSON, Judge

In this certiorari appeal, relators Kehinde Yusuf and Caring for Adults challenge

respondent Minnesota Department of Human Services’ (DHS) order revoking their family-

adult-foster-care license. Relators argue DHS made legal errors when it determined the

family-adult-foster-care home was not Yusuf’s “primary residence” and issued an arbitrary and capricious decision. Because the record does not show that DHS legally erred or acted

arbitrarily or capriciously when it revoked relators’ license, we affirm.

FACTS

In 2016, relators received licenses to operate a family-adult-foster-care home and

provide home and community-based services (HCBS) at a residence Yusuf rented in

Moorhead, Minnesota (the foster-care home). To qualify for a family-adult-foster-care

license, the foster-care home was required to be Yusuf’s “primary residence.” 1 See Minn.

Stat. § 245A.03, subd. 7(a) (Supp. 2023). 2 DHS issued a guidance document that lists

some of the factors DHS may consider when deciding whether a family-adult-foster-care

home is the licensee’s “primary residence” (the guidance document). The guidance

document provides:

The home in which the adult foster care services are provided must be the primary residence of the applicant for a family adult foster care license. Factors to consider in determining primary residence of an applicant may include any of the following:

• What is the address on their driver’s license/state ID? • Where do they live and sleep the majority of the time? • Where do they spend time with other immediate family members? • Where do they have their clothing and personal objects? Having a bedroom, some clothing and some personal

1 The “primary residence” requirement only applies to “family” adult-foster-care licenses, the type of license DHS issued to relators. See Minn. Stat. § 245A.03, subd. 7(a). The statute does not have a similar requirement for “corporate” adult-foster-care licenses. See id. 2 The 2024 amendments made to Minn. Stat. § 245A.03, subd. 7, do not impact the outcome of this case. See 2024 Minn. Laws ch. 80, art. 2, § 37, at 193-95; 2024 Minn. Laws ch. 85, § 53, at 381-83; 2024 Minn. Laws ch. 115, art. 18, § 11, at 1382-84; 2024 Minn. Laws ch. 125, art. 1, § 4, at 1957-59; 2024 Minn. Laws ch. 127, art. 46, § 4, at 2636-37.

2 effects in a home, does not necessarily indicate that it is their primary residence. • What is their primary residence as indicated on their tax return? • Where do they receive their mail? • Where are they registered to vote? • What is their homestead status with the county assessor’s office? • Who owns the home as indicated on property tax records? • If the applicant owns more than one home, where do they spend more of their time? Ownership of a home in and of itself, does not indicate primary residence. • If the home is a duplex, where do they sleep and spend more of their time? • If the applicant is married, what is the status of the current relationship? For example, is it reasonable that a married couple would live in two separate dwellings?

In November 2021, an HCBS licensor conducted a license review and made

observations suggesting the foster-care home was not Yusuf’s primary residence,

including: (1) the foster-care home had a sterile environment with nothing on the walls

other than instructional and facility signs; (2) the bathroom had basic cleaning supplies and

no personal toiletries; (3) the closet in Yusuf’s bedroom had roughly five articles of

clothing and a small suitcase; and (4) Yusuf’s bed and desk were covered with boxes, office

items, and cleaning supplies that appeared to have been unmoved for a while. The HCBS

licensor relayed these concerns to Clay County (the county). The county subsequently sent

a letter to all family-adult-foster-care licensees in January 2022, which included a reminder

about the primary-residence requirement.

In March 2022, DHS requested that the county follow-up on relators’ license

review. Through its investigation, the county discovered Yusuf’s vehicle registration listed

3 an apartment other than the foster-care home. When a county licensor visited the address

listed on Yusuf’s vehicle registration, she observed that Yusuf’s name appeared on the door

buzzer and in the apartment directory as a current resident.

The county licensor then made two unannounced visits to the foster-care home in

March 2022, the first at 7:45 a.m. one day and the second the following night at 10:16 p.m.

Yusuf was not present at either visit. The resident was present during the first visit and

allowed the county licensor into the foster-care home. The resident informed the county

licensor that Yusuf did not stay in the foster-care home most overnights. While inside, the

county licensor made similar observations to the HCBS licensor, including multiple

instructional signs on the walls, the absence of personalized decorations, a lack of personal

hygiene products in the bathroom, a few articles of clothing in Yusuf’s closet, and it did

not appear Yusuf had recently slept in his bed.

Following an announced third visit to the foster-care home the next morning, the

county licensor recommended DHS revoke relators’ family-adult-foster-care license on the

basis that the foster-care home was not Yusuf’s primary residence. In September 2022,

DHS issued an order revoking relators’ family-adult-foster-care license. 3 The revocation

order stated, in relevant part, that relators had failed to comply with the licensing

requirement that the foster-care home be Yusuf’s primary residence.

Relators appealed the revocation order, and an administrative-law judge (ALJ) held

a contested-case hearing in May 2023. At the contested-case hearing, DHS called multiple

3 DHS also revoked relators’ HCBS license for failure to comply with separate licensing requirements. Relators do not challenge DHS’s decision to revoke their HCBS license.

4 witnesses who testified to the facts described above. DHS also elicited testimony

explaining why the primary-residence requirement is in the best interest of residents.

Specifically, a DHS employee testified that risks to physical health are presented when a

resident lives alone, and it can harm a resident’s physiological health when they are “not

receiving potential supervision or care that they need or the companionship that one would

expect in a family adult foster home.” Relators offered several documents into the record

to support their claim that the foster-care home was Yusuf’s primary residence, including

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