Paley v. Connecticut Medical Examining Board

115 A.2d 448, 142 Conn. 522, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 27, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 115 A.2d 448 (Paley v. Connecticut Medical Examining Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paley v. Connecticut Medical Examining Board, 115 A.2d 448, 142 Conn. 522, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 201 (Colo. 1955).

Opinion

O'Sullivan, J.

On December 7, 1953, the state department of health, a defendant to which we shall refer as the department, filed with the named defendant, herein called the board, two charges against the plaintiff. The first recited that the plaintiff was addicted to the use of habit-forming drugs; the second, that he had been guilty of immoral or unprofessional conduct by administering habit-forming drugs to his wife. Hearings thereon were held on January 6 and February 3, 1954. The board found the plaintiff not guilty on the second charge but guilty on the first and recommended to the department that his license to practice medicine and surgery in Connecticut be revoked. On February 18, 1954, the department issued an order revoking it. The plaintiff then appealed to the Superior Court from the actions of the board and of the department. The court dismissed the appeal, and the plaintiff has now appealed to this court.

The assignments of error readily resolve themselves into the following propositions: First, the board acted arbitrarily and illegally in finding on the evidence before it that the plaintiff had been addicted to the use of a habit-forming drug, and, *524 second, the board, in recommending the revocation of his license, and the department, in ordering the revocation, abused their respective discretions because such a penalty was too severe.

The record discloses that there was evidence before the board from which it could reasonably have found these facts: Robert C. Grieb entered the employ of the state as a narcotics agent in 1952. On June 5, 1953, he was sent to interview the plaintiff at Norwalk, where the latter maintained an office for the practice of medicine. The reason for seeking the interview was to inquire about a large number of prescriptions for demerol, a habit-forming drug, which had been issued by the plaintiff for Arthur Magnan. Magnan was the father of a secretary-receptionist who worked for the plaintiff. Upon being asked about the matter, the plaintiff told Grieb that Magnan had an inoperable cancer and needed large quantities of drugs to alleviate pain and that he, the plaintiff, was prescribing demerol for that purpose. Although Grieb noticed that the plaintiff had lost considerable weight since they had previously met and that his health seemed to have failed, and although he, Grieb, was suspicious of the plaintiff’s explanation, he accepted it and so reported to his superior.

Later, as a result of a complaint from a patient that, while she was consulting the plaintiff professionally, he had fallen asleep and had to be aroused several times by the nurse, Grieb again interviewed him at his office on August 5, 1953. On that occasion, the plaintiff admitted that he had been using demerol for about a year and that he was consuming it daily at the rate of thirty cubic centimeters. Grieb, noting that the plaintiff appeared drowsy and hesitant and had difficulty in speaking and in *525 moving about, was of the opinion that he was, at the time, under the influence of a drug. The plaintiff expressed worry about the possibility of criminal action being taken against him, but Grieb assured him that no prosecution would occur if he cooperated fully by entering a sanitarium for treatment. The plaintiff agreed to this and on that very evening made arrangements to be hospitalized the following week at an institution in New York.

After discussing the case with the federal authorities, Grieb, at their request, obtained from the plaintiff his federal license to write prescriptions for narcotics. Grieb left the license with the federal agent in Bridgeport. On August 17, the plaintiff entered a sanitarium in New York City where he remained until September 7.

Grieb visited the plaintiff on September 28 and had a long conversation with him. The plaintiff discussed his background, his past experiences, the nature of his practice, his interest in laboratory work and like matters. He remarked that he had a medicine to cure cancer. The drawback to the medicine, he related, was the unpredictability of its reaction upon the patient and the accompaniment of generalized pain when it was taken. He went on to say that demerol was injected to overcome the ensuing pain. To check on the toxicity of any particular dose of the medicine when he decided to attempt the cure, he was accustomed to give himself a trial dose, he said, and at the same time he would administer demerol to himself. In this manner, he continued, he had become addicted to the drug.

On October 26, the plaintiff asked Grieb to have his federal license returned and on November 30 he went to Grieb’s home for the same purpose. On each occasion the plaintiff justified the request by saying *526 that he had a patient who was suffering from cancer and that he wanted to he able to prescribe drugs to ease the patient’s pain.

At the conclusion of the second hearing, the board went into executive session. After reviewing the evidence, the members voted to find the plaintiff not guilty under the second charge, which was therefore dismissed, but guilty under the first. The minutes respecting the latter charge recite: “In arriving at this decision, it was the Board’s opinion that that charge had been sustained largely on the testimony of Robert Grieb, narcotic agent for the State Department of Health. Mr. Grieb was present and testified at both hearings. . . . The Board was impressed with Grieb’s straightforward recital of the facts. To be sure, [Dr. Paley] and Miss Magnan [his secretary] did deny many of the statements made by Mr. Grieb, but the denials were not impressive to the Board.”

One of the plaintiff’s most urgently pressed claims is that the board’s conclusion of guilt was arbitrary and illegal in that it was based largely upon the uncorroborated testimony of Grieb. Stated somewhat differently, the contention is that the board merely substituted Grieb’s opinion for its own conclusion. The board is an administrative agency acting in a quasi-judicial capacity. Adam v. Connecticut Medical Examining Board, 137 Conn. 535, 537, 79 A.2d 350. It is required to weigh evidence and reach conclusions. Ibid. But in so doing, it should be circumspect about accepting uncorroborated testimony which consists, in the main, of a statement of oral admissions claimed to have been made by the person summoned to answer charges of professional illegalities or improprieties. Somewhat analogous to the method of proof of the corpus delicti in criminal *527 cases is the rule that the board, as an administrative tribunal, should not ordinarily find a professional man guilty of a charge leveled against him where proof of the act of wrongdoing is based solely on the uncorroborated evidence of persons testifying to claimed admissions by the party under attack. There is, however, nothing in the statute which precludes the board from accepting such evidence as support for its conclusions. General Statutes, Cum. Sup. 1953, § 1658c. But the fact is that, in the case at bar, the testimony of Grieb was confirmed in several particulars.

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Bluebook (online)
115 A.2d 448, 142 Conn. 522, 1955 Conn. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paley-v-connecticut-medical-examining-board-conn-1955.