Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure v. Kendall E. Hansen, M.D.
This text of Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure v. Kendall E. Hansen, M.D. (Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure v. Kendall E. Hansen, M.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
RENDERED: AUGUST 25, 2023; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2022-CA-0426-MR
KENTUCKY BOARD OF MEDICAL LICENSURE APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE AUDRA J. ECKERLE, JUDGE ACTION NO. 21-CI-007145
KENDALL E. HANSEN, M.D. APPELLEE
OPINION AND ORDER REVERSING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: EASTON, LAMBERT, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
LAMBERT, JUDGE: The Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure (“the Board”)
appeals from an order of the Jefferson Circuit Court granting a declaratory
judgment and permanent injunction to Kendall E. Hansen, M.D. (“Dr. Hansen”),
which prevents the Board from enforcing an emergency order suspending Dr.
Hansen’s ability to prescribe controlled substances. We reverse without
consideration of the merits because Dr. Hansen failed to file an appellee brief. Dr. Hansen was indicted in federal court in Covington, Kentucky, for
allegedly improperly writing prescriptions for controlled substances. In response,
the Chair of the Board’s Inquiry Panel issued an emergency order which allowed
Dr. Hansen to practice medicine but prohibited him from prescribing or dispensing
controlled substances. That order was designed to last until the criminal charges
were resolved.
At Dr. Hansen’s request, a hearing officer soon thereafter conducted a
hearing regarding the propriety of the emergency order. At that hearing, the Board
predominantly relied upon the indictment. The hearing officer denied as irrelevant
Dr. Hansen’s request to submit evidence regarding his practice’s approach to
prescribing controlled substances. After the hearing officer upheld the emergency
order, Dr. Hansen filed a complaint in the trial court attacking the administrative
regulation governing physicians’ appeals of emergency orders. The gist of Dr.
Hansen’s attack is that the regulation deprives a doctor of a meaningful hearing to
contest an emergency order since the Board may simply rely on the issuance of an
indictment as grounds to issue an emergency order, and a hearing officer is, as a
practical matter, powerless to disturb the order.
The trial court eventually issued a decision wholly favorable to Dr.
Hansen. The court agreed with Dr. Hansen that 201 Kentucky Administrative
Regulation (“KAR”) 9:240 §§ 3 and 5 were unconstitutional because they did not
-2- afford him a meaningful opportunity to be heard. The court also issued a
permanent injunction preventing the Board from enforcing its emergency order,
though the court stayed enforcement of the injunction until this appeal is resolved.
The Board appealed. We granted Dr. Hansen’s counsel’s motion to
withdraw in October 2022. The Clerk of this Court mailed a copy of that order to
Dr. Hansen. The copy of the order sent to Dr. Hansen was not returned to us as
being undeliverable. No counsel subsequently appeared on Dr. Hansen’s behalf.
Dr. Hansen failed to submit an appellee brief by the January 3, 2023, deadline.
Against that procedural backdrop, the Board filed a motion to submit
the appeal for final disposition. That motion asked us to submit the matter for a
final decision and to reverse summarily due to Dr. Hansen’s failure to file a brief.
A motion panel granted the portion of the motion asking for the appeal to be
submitted for a final decision but deferred to a merits panel the Board’s request to
summarily reverse. The copy of that order mailed by our Clerk of Court to Dr.
Hansen was returned as undeliverable. Later, the copy of the order stating that oral
argument would not be conducted in this case was also returned as undeliverable.
Kentucky Rule of Appellate Procedure (“RAP”) 31(H)(3) provides
that if an appellee’s brief is not timely filed, we may “(a) accept the appellant’s
statement of the facts and issues as correct; (b) reverse the judgment if appellant’s
brief reasonably appears to sustain such action; or (c) regard the appellee’s failure
-3- as a confession of error and reverse the judgment without considering the merits of
the case.”1 Having considered the facts and circumstances of this case, we choose
to regard Dr. Hansen’s failure to submit a brief as a confession of error and reverse
the judgment without consideration of the merits.
We decline to expend our scarce judicial resources to resolve issues
about whether Dr. Hansen should be able to prescribe and dispense controlled
substances when he is so disinterested in the appeal’s outcome that he did not
bother to file a brief. Indeed, Dr. Hansen did not keep this Court abreast of his
current address, a failure which also shows a lack of interest in this appeal. Our
conclusion is reinforced by the fact that this appeal also apparently presents
matters of first impression regarding the constitutionality of an administrative
regulation – a topic we are reluctant to address without having the benefit of full
briefing by all interested parties.
Our approach is consistent with precedent involving similar facts.
Specifically, we are guided by Commonwealth, Department of Public Safety v.
Skiadas, 454 S.W.2d 110, 110 (Ky. 1970), the entirety of which reads as follows:
The Department of Public Safety revoked the license of appellee, George K. Skiadas, to operate a motor vehicle. Pursuant to KRS [Kentucky Revised Statute] 186.565(5) he appealed to the circuit court for review. It held the revocation unauthorized and entered
1 RAP became effective on January 1, 2023, shortly before the deadline for submission of Dr. Hansen’s brief. However, a similar provision has been part of Kentucky law for many decades.
-4- judgment directing that the license be reinstated. The Department appeals – we reverse.
Appellant has fully briefed the issues. Skiadas has filed no brief, therefore, we are authorized by [former appellate rule] 1.260 to impose certain penalties. Subsection (c)(3) of that rule authorizes this court to “regard the appellee’s failure as a confession of error and reverse the judgment without considering the merits of the case.” We consider that penalty appropriate in the circumstances.
The judgment is reversed for the entry of a judgment sustaining the revocation of the license.
Obviously, a driver’s license and a license to practice medicine are not
the same. However, Skiadas is otherwise indistinguishable from this case: an
administrative agency revoked a license, a circuit court reversed the agency’s
decision, the agency appealed, and the licensee inexplicably failed to file an
appellee brief. Indistinguishable cases should yield the same result. Thus, we
follow the example of Kentucky’s then-highest court and reverse the judgment
here without consideration of the merits.
For the foregoing reasons, the Jefferson Circuit Court is reversed, and
the matter is remanded for issuance of a judgment sustaining the emergency order
at issue. The motion of the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure to reverse the
Jefferson Circuit Court without consideration of the merits due to Kendall
Hansen’s failure to file an appellee brief is granted.
ALL CONCUR.
-5- ENTERED: August 25, 2023___ JUDGE, COURT OF APPEALS
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT: NO BRIEF FOR APPELLEE.
Sara Farmer Nicole A. King Louisville, Kentucky
-6-
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