Maryland State Board of Nursing v. Sesay

121 A.3d 140, 224 Md. App. 432, 2015 Md. App. LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 27, 2015
Docket0393/14
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 A.3d 140 (Maryland State Board of Nursing v. Sesay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland State Board of Nursing v. Sesay, 121 A.3d 140, 224 Md. App. 432, 2015 Md. App. LEXIS 112 (Md. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

LEAHY, J.

In this appeal, we address the obligations of the Maryland State Board of Nursing (“the Board”) to provide a practical nurse with notice of an evidentiary hearing concerning her violations of the Nurse Practice Act. In 2010, Mabinty Sesay, a licensed practical nurse, was alleged to have committed several violations of the Nurse Practice Act, and the Board, in 2011, issued charges against Ms. Sesay. The Board mailed notice of the charges and instructions on how to request an evidentiary hearing to Ms. Sesay. Ms. Sesay received notice of the charges, requested an evidentiary hearing and provided an address to which she directed the Board to send further correspondence. In 2013, the Board mailed Ms. Sesay notice of the evidentiary hearing to the address she provided, via certified and first-class mail. Ms. Sesay did not receive the notices because she had not provided the Board with her current address, as she was required to do by statute, and the notices were returned to the Board. The Board held a hearing regarding Ms. Sesay’s license, without Ms. Sesay’s presence, concluded that Ms. Sesay had violated the Nurse Practice Act, and ordered discipline for Ms. Sesay, including probation. Ms. Sesay filed a notice for petition of review of the Board’s decision in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. After a hearing, the court concluded that that the Board did not comply with due process requirements and was required to take further reasonable steps upon the return of *436 both mailings. The court vacated the Board’s decision and order.

In its timely appeal, 1 Appellant Maryland State Board of Nursing (“the Board”) raises two questions for our review:

I. Did the Board provide Ms. Sesay with legally sufficient notice of an evidentiary hearing concerning her violations of the Nurse Practice Act, when the Board sent notice to the last address that Ms. Sesay had provided the Board, and after Ms. Sesay failed to comply with a duty imposed on her by Maryland law to inform the Board of any change of address?

II. Did substantial record evidence support the Board’s findings that, by falling asleep while caring for a quadriplegic child and later falsifying that child’s medical record to bill for time in which she was not working, Ms. Sesay violated the Maryland Nurse Practice Act?

We hold that the Board provided Ms. Sesay with legally sufficient notice of an evidentiary hearing and further hold that substantial evidence supported the Board’s findings that Ms. Sesay violated the Maryland Nurse Practice Act. Our holding recognizes the State’s responsibility to protect the public health and instructs professionals licensed by the State that they may not, especially in the midst of administrative proceedings in which charges have been brought against them, fail to update their address "with the appropriate regulatory body and thereby avoid accountability. 2 Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County.

*437 BACKGROUND

A. Ms. Sesay’s Provision of Nursing Care in November, 2010

In November 2010, Mabinty Sesay was a practical nurse licensed by the State of Maryland and employed by Maxim Health Care Services (“Maxim”). On the dates of November 27-28, Ms. Sesay was assigned to provide in-home, overnight nursing care to E.C., a young man with quadriplegia who has no movement, aside from weak use of his biceps and triceps, from the chest down. He also has autonomic dysreflexia, which can cause a dangerous, rapid increase in blood pressure when he has a full bladder.

E.C.’s mother (“Ms. C.”) had several grievances regarding Ms. Sesay’s performance. According to Ms. C., on the night of November 27, Ms. Sesay failed to wash her hands until asked, had difficulty performing tasks, and was observed sleeping at 4:00 a.m. On the night of November 28, at around 11:00 p.m., E.C. had been calling out for Ms. Sesay because he needed to urinate, but Ms. Sesay had fallen asleep and did not respond. At around 2:00 a.m., E.C. began calling out again for Ms. Sesay for about 15 minutes, but Ms. Sesay did not respond because she had fallen asleep in a bed she made for herself on the living room floor. Upon waking Ms. Sesay at around 2:15 a.m., Ms. C. dismissed her for sleeping. Ms. C. noticed, however, that Ms. Sesay had documented on her flow chart that she provided nursing care for E.C. at 5 a.m. and left at 6:30 a.m. She also noticed that Ms. Sesay had signed Ms. C’s name on the document. Ms. Sesay, on the other hand, maintained that she had not been sleeping while working and that she was permitted to stay until her shift was over at 6 a.m.

Ms. C. thereafter called Maxim about the events at the C. residence, and, Maxim, after unsuccessfully trying to meet with Ms. Sesay about the situation, terminated Ms. Sesay’s employment on November 30, 2010. The following week, on December 6, 2010, Ms. C. filed a complaint against Ms. Sesay with the Board. Attached to her complaint was a photograph *438 that she claimed she took of Ms. Sesay sleeping on their living room floor. Also attached to the complaint were signed, handwritten statements from E.C., E.C.’s father, and E.C.’s brother detailing Ms. Sesay’s poor performance.

B. The Board Files Charges Against Ms. Sesay and Provides Notice of the Evidentiary Hearing

After conducting an investigation into the complaint, the Board issued formal charges against Ms. Sesay on September 21, 2011. The document alleged that she “[wjillfully and knowingly (i) [f]ile[d] a false report or record of an individual under the licensee’s care”; that she acted “inconsistently] with generally accepted professional standards in the practice of registered nursing or licensed practical nursing”; that she “[s]ubmit[ted] a false statement to collect a fee”; and that she “[e]ngage[d] in conduct that violates the professional code of ethics” set forth in COMAR 10.27.19.02, requiring a nurse to “[a]ssume responsibility and accountability for individual nursing judgments and actions;” and “[not pjractice nursing if unfit to perform procedures or make decisions because of physical or mental impairment^.]”

That same day, the Board sent a “NOTICE OF AGENCY ACTION-Charges under the Maryland Nurse Practice Act” via first-class and certified mail 3 to two known addresses for *439 Ms. Sesay: (1) 7333 New Hampshire Ave. # 3, Takoma Park, MD 20912; and (2) 601 # 3 Silver Spring Ave., Silver Spring, MD 20910. The letter explained how to request an evidentia-ry hearing before the Board took any disciplinary action against her license and provided that “[i]f you request a hearing, the Board will notify you in writing, at your address last known to the Board, of the date, time and location of the hearing.”

Ms. Sesay timely requested an evidentiary hearing before the Board on September 26, 2011. She listed her then-current mailing address as:

11407 July Dr. Apt 203

Silver Spring MD 20904

(“the July Drive address”). She also provided two phone numbers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 A.3d 140, 224 Md. App. 432, 2015 Md. App. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-state-board-of-nursing-v-sesay-mdctspecapp-2015.