Marleau v. Maine State Board of Nursing

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 6, 2015
DocketCUMap-14-35
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marleau v. Maine State Board of Nursing (Marleau v. Maine State Board of Nursing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marleau v. Maine State Board of Nursing, (Me. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

( [NI£R£D JAN 1 4 2015 ;· (\1\t· STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION Docket No. AP-14-35 :SAW-[Mm-OJ-ob-1-r;' JAMES E. MARLEAU,

Petitioner ORDER ON SOC APPEAL v. MAINE STATE BOARD STATE OF MAINE OF NURSING, C!lllmbeMnd, ~. Clerk'sOb JAN 07 2015 Respondent. IRECE~VED Before the court is petitioner's Rule SOC appeal of a decision of the State

Board of Nursing ("the Board"). The Board imposed a warning, a three-year

probationary period, and costs of the hearing on petitioner as discipline for

unprofessional conduct. For the following reasons, the Board's decision is

affirmed.

Background

Petitioner James Marleau has been a registered nurse since September

2011. (R. at 14.) In March 2012, Marleau began working at Marshall Health

Care-a long-term care facility for the elderly (R. at 15.) At Marshall, Marleau

was allegedly involved in two incidents with patients for which he was

disciplined by the Board. (R. at 15.) The relevant facts for each incident are

described below. The patients are identified by their initials as "CT" and "MV".

Patient CT

Patient CT had cognitive impairments, and according to Marleau she was

"sexually aggressive." (R. at 18.) Marleau testified that on multiple occasions CT

attempted to grab his penis. (R. at 17.) CT's patient care plan included a note that CT "likes male attention." (R. at 17.) Marleau interpreted this to mean that she

had a baseline behavior of sexual inappropriateness towards male staff. (R. at

17.) Susan Weaver, a certified nursing assistant ("CNA") at Marshall confirmed

that CT had a history of acting sexually towards males. (R. at 26.)

Weaver testified about an interaction with CT on November 7, 2012. (R. at

26.) On that day, Weaver told CT that she would go get the charge nurse because

CT had a headache. (R. at 26.) After learning that Marleau was the charge nurse,

CT became upset and told Weaver that she did not want him brought to her

room. (R. at 26.) CT went on to state that Marleau had previously entered her

room and fondled himself in front of her. (R. at 26.) Weaver did not personally

witness any inappropriate behavior between CT and Marleau. Marleau denies

that anything inappropriate occurred.

Patient MY

Patient MV was blind and also had cognitive impairments. (R. at 15.)

According to Josee McFarlane, another nurse who worked at Marshall, MV was

in a wheelchair and would often feel for people with her hands because she

could not see. (R. at 27.) According to the testimony of the staff at Marshall,

inch:ding Marleau, MV was generally not sexually aggressive or inappropriate

with staff. (R. at 19, 28, 29, 32.)

On November 8, 2012, Marleau was involved in an incident with MV.

According to McFarlane, Marleau was standing at a cart preparing medications

for another patient when MV came up behind Marleau sweeping her arms back

and forth. (R. at 28.) When she reached Marleau, she hung on to him. (R. at 28.)

McFarlane observed this and removed MV from Marleau and locked MV' s

wheelchair so she could not bother Marleau again. (R. at 28.) Somehow, MY's

2 wheelchair became unlocked because a little while later, McFarlane noticed that

she was again grabbing Marleau. (R. at 28.) As McFarlane was removing MV for

the second time, Marleau made a comment that "she was at the right height." (R.

at 28.) McFarlane interpreted Marleau's statement as an offensive sexual remark.

(R. at 28.)

Becky Sue Guptill, a housekeeper at Marshall, also testified about the

incident. She said she observed MV wheel up behind Marleau and put her hand

up the back of his shirt. (R. at 29.) She overheard Marleau say, "look, she's

coming around the front." (R. at 29.) Marleau then turned around to face MV and

started running his fingers through her hair "in kind of a Mohawk fashion" and

Marleau said "she's at the right height now." (R. at 29.) Guptill interpreted

Marleau's actions as very inappropriate and sexual behavior and that his

comment was demeaning. (R. at 29.)

Shannon Todd, Director of Nursing at Marshall at the time, testified

about the subsequent investigation of the incident. As part of the investigation,

he interviewed Marleau. (R. at 31.) During the interview, Todd testified that

Marleau admitted that his comment was sexually inappropriate. (R. at 31.)

According to Marleau, he was fixing MV's hair because it was disheveled.

(R. at 22.) The second time MV grabbed him, Marleau testified that she went for

the drawstring on his pants. (R. at 22.) Marleau claims that when he said "she's at

the right height" he meant that she was at the right height to touch his genitalia.

When he told Todd that "it was sexually inappropriate" Marleau claims he was

referring to MV touching him and not to his comment. (R. at 33.)

3 The Board's Conclusions

In a written decision dated May 15, 2014, the Board concluded that

Marleau "engaged in unprofessional conduct in violation of 32 M.R.S. § 2105-

A(2)(F) by making inappropriate sexual comments about and gestures towards

patient M.V. on November 8, 2012." (R. at 6.) The Board dismissed the allegations

regarding patient CT. (R. at 6.)

Procedural History

The Board initiated a complaint against Marleau by letter dated January 1 30, 2014. Marleau filed a brief written response on March 6, 2014. The Board

held an adjudicatory hearing on April 3, 2014 and issued an oral decision at the

hearing. The Board subsequently issued a written decision on May 15, 2014,

which also explained Marleau's appeal rights.

Discussion

1. Standard of Review

The court reviews decisions of an administrative agency "for errors of law,

abuse of discretion, or findings of fact not supported by the record." Save Our

Sebasticook, Inc. v. Bd. of Envtl. Prot., 2007 ME 102, err 13, 928 A.2d 736. "That the

evidence supports two inconsistent conclusions does not prevent an

administrative agency's finding from being supported by substantial evidence."

Jones v. Town of Warren, 1997 ME 200, err 3, 704 A.2d 1210. The party seeking

review of the administrative agency's decision bears the burden of

demonstrating that error to the court. Kelley v. Me. Pub. Employees Ret. Sys., 2009

ME 27, err 16, 967 A.2d 676.

1 Marleau acknowledged that his response was one day late. The Board did not exclude his statement.

4 2. The Board's Factual Findings

Marleau argues that the Board's factual findings are not supported by

substantial evidence in the record. In its written decision, the Board found

unprofessional conduct based on Marleau making inappropriate sexual

comments and gestures towards patient MV. The Board's findings are supported

by the testimony of witnesses McFarlane (R. at 28) and Guptill (R. at 29).

Shannon's testimony that Marleau admitted the comment was inappropriate also

supports the Board's findings. (R. at 31.) Although Marleau disagreed with these

contentions, the court will not choose between two supported but inconsistent

factual accounts on an SOC appeal. The Board's factual findings will not be

disturbed.

3. The Board's Legal Conclusions

Having determined that the Board's factual findings are supported by the

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Related

Save Our Sebasticook, Inc. v. Board of Environmental Protection
2007 ME 102 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2007)
Kelley v. Maine Public Employees Retirement System
2009 ME 27 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2009)
Jones v. Town of Warren
1997 ME 200 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1997)

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