Reardon v. Department of Human Services

2003 ME 65, 822 A.2d 1120, 2003 Me. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 5, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2003 ME 65 (Reardon v. Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reardon v. Department of Human Services, 2003 ME 65, 822 A.2d 1120, 2003 Me. LEXIS 72 (Me. 2003).

Opinion

LEVY, J.

[¶ 1] Arthur and Jillayne Reardon appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court (Penobscot County, Mead, J.) affirming the denial by the Department of Human Services (DHS) of the Reardons’ application for an Adult Family Care Home (AFCH) license, and the imposition of a financial penalty by DHS against the Reardons for providing assisted living services to more than two residents without a license. The Reardons assert that DHS (1) improperly rejected the application because the licensing rule it relied upon is unconstitutionally vague, and (2) erroneously found that they provided assisted living services to more than two residents. We disagree and affirm the judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] Arthur and Jillayne Reardon operate Riverside Care Home in a five-bedroom house in Brewer. When DHS began an investigation of the home on July 26, 2000, the Reardons were providing assisted living services without a license to seven elderly residents in violation of 22 M.R.S.A. § 7801(1)(A), (3) (Supp.2002) (restricting unlicensed residential care facilities to caring for no more than two residents). Despite a DHS order to immediately cease and desist from providing *1122 assisted living services to more than two residents, the Reardons did not come into compliance until September 25. On August 8, 2000, the Reardons applied for two types of residential care facility licenses, one of them being an AFCH 1 license. DHS denied the two applications; the hearing officer recommended affirmance of both denials; and the Commissioner accepted the hearing officer’s recommendations in March 2001. The Reardons did not seek appellate review of the Commissioner’s action.

[¶ 3] One month later, the Reardons submitted a new application for an AFCH license. DHS denied the application, and a hearing officer subsequently recommended affirmance, concluding that the Reardons had failed to satisfy the requirement, set forth in 10-144 Code Me. R. ch. 121, § 4.A.6 (1996), that applicants have “a satisfactory record of honest and lawful conduct in business and personal affairs” largely because of the prior finding of fact, adopted just one month before the Rear-dons’ license application, that the Rear-dons had violated DHS’s licensing rules by providing assisted living services to seven residents without a license, and by continuing to .do so, despite a DHS order to immediately cease and desist. The hearing officer also found that Jillayne had improperly represented on the application that she had never previously been denied a license when, in fact, she had been denied two. such licenses within the previous year, and that Jillayne provided a reference from her husband when the application required references from persons unrelated to the applicants.

[IT 4] In a separate administrative proceeding, DHS discovered the Reardons had provided “assisted living residential care services” to three adults for compensation for five days in June 2001 and fined the Reardons $2500 pursuant to 22 M.R.S.A. § 7944(1)(C) (Supp.2002). The hearing officer recommended affirmance. The Commissioner adopted the hearing officer’s findings of fact and accepted her recommendations for both the penalty case and the denial case. The Reardons appealed both decisions, and the Superior Court affirmed DHS’s decisions. This appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

[¶ 5] When the Superior Court has acted in an intermediate appellate capacity for a case involving an agency’s decision, “we directly review an agency’s decision for an abuse of discretion, error of law, or findings not supported by the evidence!,] ... giv[ing] considerable deference to an agency’s interpretation of its own internal rules, regulations, and procedures.... ” Fryeburg Health Care Ctr. v. Dep’t of Human Servs., 1999 ME 122, ¶7, 734 A.2d 1141, 1143 (internal citations omitted).

A. Denial of License Application

[¶ 6] One of DHS’s requirements for AFCH license applicants is that they have “a satisfactory record of honest and lawful conduct in business and personal affairs” (hereinafter, the satisfactory record rule). 10-144 Code Me. R. ch. 121, § 4.A.6 (1996). The Reardons contend that the satisfactory record rule is unconstitutionally vague and, as applied, effectively bars them from ever getting a license. Their challenge is centered on the rule’s failure to specify the length of time a prior adverse administrative finding by DHS may be considered when DHS deter *1123 mines, for purposes of a subsequent license application, whether an applicant has demonstrated a satisfactory record.

[¶ 7] When the language of a regulation sets forth a requirement “ ‘in terms so vague that people of common intelligence must guess at its meaning,’” the regulation is impermissibly vague. Town of Baldwin v. Carter, 2002 ME 52, ¶ 10, 794 A.2d 62, 67 (quoting City of Portland v. Jacobsky, 496 A.2d 646, 649 (Me.1985)). However, a rule that uses general language and does not objectively quantify, for example, the number of instances of proscribed conduct, is not unconstitutionally vague provided that it informs the public of the proscribed conduct. Carter, 2002 ME 52, ¶ 7 n. 2, 794 A.2d at 66. In Maine Real Estate Commission v. Kelby, we found that the statute proscribing “‘bad faith,’ ‘incompetency,’ ‘untrustworthiness,’ and ‘dishonest, improper or fraudulent dealings’ ” by real estate brokers and salespeople was “sufficiently definite to apprise those in the profession of the line between permissible and forbidden conduct.” 360 A.2d 528, 532 (Me.1976) (quoting 32 M.R.S.A. § 4056(1)(N) (repealed 1987)).

[¶ 8] Contrary to the Reardons’ contention, the absence in the satisfactory record rule of a specified amount of time an applicant must be free of violations does not render the rule unduly vague. People of common intelligence could agree that the Reardons’ serious violation of the licensing statute in 2000 demonstrates that they lacked “a satisfactory record of honest and lawful conduct in business and personal affairs” as of the date of their application in April 2001. The satisfactory record rule is sufficiently definite to apprise those people who seek and hold AFCH licenses that licensure is dependent upon the conduct of their business affairs in an honest and lawful manner. 2

[¶ 9] Title 22, section 7802(4)(B) (1992), 3 permits an unsuccessful license applicant to submit subsequent applications after correcting the deficiencies identified by DHS. The amount of time an applicant must be free of violations before he or she can transform an unsatisfactory record into a satisfactory record is necessarily case specific, because the amount of time must be assessed in conjunction with a variety of factors such as the nature and severity of a prior violation, the steps taken by the applicant to discontinue the violation and mitigate its effects, and the applicant’s post-violation performance record.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 ME 65, 822 A.2d 1120, 2003 Me. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reardon-v-department-of-human-services-me-2003.