Masyk v. Parshley

180 A.2d 314, 94 R.I. 282, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 70
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 24, 1962
DocketM. P. No. 1450
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 A.2d 314 (Masyk v. Parshley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Masyk v. Parshley, 180 A.2d 314, 94 R.I. 282, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 70 (R.I. 1962).

Opinion

*283 Roberts, J.

This is a petition for certiorari brought to review a decision of the personnel appeal board of the division of personnel administration denying an appeal taken by the petitioner from an order of an appointing authority terminating his employment as a senior physician at the Dr. Joseph H. Ladd School, an institution operated by the department of social welfare. The writ issued, and pur *284 suant thereto the respondent board has certified to this court all the records in the case.

It appears therefrom that petitioner, having the status of a temporary employee, was employed by the department of social welfare to perform medical services at the Dr. Joseph H. Ladd School from November 1955 until this employment was terminated on February 28, 1961 by the order that is the subject matter of the instant appeal. It further appears from the record that petitioner had practiced medicine at the school pursuant to authority conferred upon him by a certificate of limited registration issued under the provisions of G. L. 1956, §5-37-16. Such a certificate of limited registration under the terms of the statute may be revoked by the division of professional regulation of the department of health at any time. Such a limited registration permits the recipient thereof to practice medicine in a hospital or institution specified therein and outside of such an institution only for the purpose of treating-persons accepted as patients by that institution and then “under the supervision of one of its medical officers who is a duly registered physician * *

The petitioner was dismissed from his employment on February 28, 1961 on the ground that his dismissal was for the good of the service and for lack of essential requirements. On that same day he was notified in writing of the revocation of his certificate of limited registration to engage in the practice of medicine. The reason stated for this revocation was the refusal of the duly registered physician who had been supervising his activities under his certificate of limited registration to continue such supervision. It is not disputed that thereafter petitioner took and perfected an appeal to the respondent board pursuant to the terms of the statute relating to such appeals then in effect. That statute, G. L. 1956, §36-4-42, read in pertinent part: “Any person who feels aggrieved by an action of an appointing authority resulting in * * * or dismissal * * * may * * * ap *285 peal in writing to the personnel appeal board for a review or public hearing.”

Subsequent to the taking of this appeal by petitioner here the legislature amended §36-4-42 so as to limit the appeal contemplated therein to those employees in the classified service who had acquired either a probationary or a permanent status. In its amended form the statute reads in pertinent part: “Any person with probationary or permanent status who feels aggrieved by an action of an appointing authority * * *” may take the appeal to the board of personnel appeals “for a review or public hearing.” This amendatory legislation took effect on April 12, 1961.

In August 1961 the board, apparently having concluded that petitioner’s appeal had not been vitiated by the amendatory legislation of April 12, notified him in writing that it would “give Dr. Gregor Masyk a preliminary review prior to a Public Hearing on Thursday, August 10, 1961 * * It is not disputed that pursuant to this notice petitioner and his counsel conferred with the board of appeals, counsel for the department of health, and the administrator of the division of professional regulation, hereinafter referred to as the division.

It appears from the record that at that meeting a thorough examination was made of the circumstances surrounding the dismissal of petitioner. It is clear therefrom that the board concluded that the validity of the dismissal depended primarily upon the question of whether petitioner lacked an essential requirement for his employment, that is, a certificate of limited registration authorizing him to engage in the practice of medicine at the school. Equally clear therefrom is the board’s recognition that it lacked jurisdiction to inquire into the propriety of the division’s action in revoking petitioner’s certificate of limited registration and that any right of petitioner to have that action reviewed would arise from the provisions of G. L. 1956, *286 chap. 37 of title 5, which chapter relates to the regulation of the practice of medicine. The administrator of the division thereupon informed the board that an appeal procedure was available to petitioner and that any decision made pursuant thereto was appealable to the superior court pursuant to §6-37-7. The board thereupon continued the instant case pending a prosecution of such an appeal by petitioner, the continuance being subject to “no qualification and no prejudice.”

It is not disputed that on September 20, 1961 the board of examiners in medicine of the division held a hearing on petitioner’s appeal from the revocation of his certificate of limited registration. Thereafter in a letter to the board dated October 18, 1961 the administrator of the division informed the respondent board that the board of examiners in medicine had decided that it “cannot and should not question or overrule” a duly registered physician’s decision that he would not continue to supervise the activities of one holding a limited registration, and for that reason it denied petitioner’s appeal. On October 31, 1961 the board notified petitioner of the decision of the board of examiners in medicine and, in substance, stated that it therefore found him to be without an essential requirement for the position from which he had been dismissed and denied the appeal here under consideration.

The contention of petitioner in this court is predicated on the view that he takes concerning the validity of his appeal from the order of dismissal. He asserts that he is entitled as of right to have the appeal heard and determined because it vested in him prior to the effective date of the amendatory legislation and therefore was not vitiated by that enactment. Thus positing a valid appeal, he argues that under the pertinent provisions of the statute he was entitled to have a review or public hearing on the order of dismissal and that, the board having decided his appeal *287 without either a review or a public hearing, the decision is illegal.

The respondent board, on the other hand, argues that the appeal taken by petitioner was vitiated by the amendatory legislation. It supports this contention by reference to our holding in the recently decided case of Rounds v. Parshley, 94 R. I. 99, 178 A.2d 444. However, in our opinion the decision in that case is not in point inasmuch as the appeal that was being considered therein by this court had been taken after the effective date of the enactment of the amendment. This argument of the respondent board would raise a question as to the retrospective operation of the amendatory statute, that is, whether an appeal taken prior to the date of its enactment would be affected thereby.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 A.2d 314, 94 R.I. 282, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masyk-v-parshley-ri-1962.