Sletten v. Briggs

448 N.W.2d 607, 1989 N.D. LEXIS 226, 1989 WL 142697
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1989
DocketCiv. 890084
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 448 N.W.2d 607 (Sletten v. Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sletten v. Briggs, 448 N.W.2d 607, 1989 N.D. LEXIS 226, 1989 WL 142697 (N.D. 1989).

Opinion

VANDE WALLE, Justice.

Brian E. Briggs, M.D., has appealed from a district court judgment affirming an order of the North Dakota Board of Medical Examiners (the Board) suspending his license to practice medicine for a period of one year. We affirm.

In 1983, the Minnesota Board of Medical Examiners revoked Dr. Briggs’s license to practice medicine in Minnesota. Among its many findings and conclusions, the Minne *608 sota Board made the following finding of fact:

“11. Dr. Briggs prescribed chelation therapy for patients who had arthosclero-sis, heavy metal poisoning, and some stroke victims. The therapy consists of an intravenous infusion of three grams of a chemical called EDTA three times a week_ The potential problems associated with this procedure include renal failure and electrolyte imbalance.... EDTA has not been shown to be effective in the treatment of arthosclerosis or heart disease.... The use of chelation therapy for anything other than heavy metal poisoning is inconsistent with prevailing medical practice in Minnesota.”

The Minnesota Board concluded:

“5. That the Respondent has violated Minn.Stat. § 147.021, subd. 1(K), which prohibits unprofessional conduct including any departure from or the failure to conform to the minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing medical practice, by virtue of his prescription of unapproved, ineffective and unsafe drugs, chemicals and supplements, his use of diagnostic tests which are not scientifically valid, his use of therapy, procedures and techniques which have no demonstrated effectiveness in the treatment of disease and which create a risk of harm for patients, and his use of, and failure to supervise, personnel lacking proper training.”

Upon revocation of Dr. Briggs’s license to practice medicine in Minnesota, the Board investigated Dr. Briggs’s North Dakota practice. That investigation resulted in Dr. Briggs’s execution of a settlement stipulation on July 20, 1984, by which he stipulated:

“8. The respondent ... will not initiate the use of any diagnostic or treatment methodology found by the Minnesota Board of Medical Examiners to be outside of the range of reasonably acceptable medical practice in the State of Minnesota as reflected in its Order on file herein (copy attached).
* * * Jfc * *
“5. The violation of any of the terms of this stipulation by the respondent shall be ipso facto grounds for the revocation of his license to practice medicine in the State of North Dakota....”

In 1988, Rolf Sletten, Executive Director of the Board, alleged that Dr. Briggs “used chelation therapy with ethylenediamine tet-racetate (EDTA) to treat patients with general arteriosclerosis, atherosclerosis, cardiac arrhythmia, or hypertension, or combinations of these diseases,” and requested that the Board revoke Dr. Briggs’s license to practice medicine in North Dakota. In his answer, Dr. Briggs admitted the allegation. The parties stipulated to waive their rights to a hearing and to submit briefs and exhibits to the Board, which, the parties stipulated, “shall make its decision in this matter based upon the written briefs in the same manner as if an actual hearing on the merits took place.”

In its findings of fact, the Board recited the 1984 settlement stipulation provisions quoted above and the Minnesota Board’s finding quoted above, and found that Dr. Briggs used chelation therapy with EDTA as alleged in the complaint. The Board concluded that “[t]he initiation of chelation therapy by the respondent with patients during the years 1985, 1986, and 1987, was in direct violation of the terms of the stipulation entered by him with this Board in July, 1984.” The Board suspended Dr. Briggs’s license to practice medicine for a period of one year. On appeal, the district court affirmed the Board’s decision. On further appeal, Dr. Briggs has advanced a number of arguments asserting that the Board erred:

“A. The United States Food and Drug Administration does not approve or disapprove the uses of drugs and any reliance upon such by the North Dakota Board of Medical Examiners is unwarranted;
“B. The Board’s sanction of Dr. Briggs is based on an invalid stipulation;
“C. Dr. Briggs was denied constitutionally and statutorily protected rights of substantive and procedural due process;
*609 “D. The Board’s findings of fact, conclusions of law and order are contrary to law;
“E. The Board’s sanction upon Dr. Briggs unconstitutionally interferes with his property right to pursue his profession.”

To begin our analysis, we note that the North Dakota Legislature has enacted Chapter 43-17, N.D.C.C., for the purpose of licensing physicians and surgeons. The Legislature has established the Board and empowered it to issue licenses to practice medicine and to revoke or suspend those licenses for the various reasons set forth in Section 43-17-31, N.D.C.C. Subsection 9 of that section provides that disciplinary action may be imposed against a physician for the violation of any provision of a medical practice act or the rules and regulations of the Board or “any action, stipulation, condition, or agreement imposed by the board.” (Emphasis supplied.) Section 43-17-30.1, N.D.C.C., authorizes the Board to, among other disciplinary sanctions, suspend a physician’s license if the Board finds it appropriate.

By definition the Board is an administrative agency. Section 28-32-01(1), N.D.C.C. On appeal we review the Board’s decision rather than the district court’s and, like the district court, we apply the standards of review for a decision of an administrative agency as set forth in Section 28-32-19, N.D.C.C. See Wisdom v. State, N.D. Real Estate Comm’n, 403 N.W.2d 19 (N.D.1987); N.D. Real Estate Comm’n v. Allen, 271 N.W.2d 593 (N.D.1978).

We consider the issues raised by Dr. Briggs in the order set forth above.

A

We agree with the observation of counsel for the Board: “A review of the order of the Board ... shows no reliance of any kind upon any action of the Food and Drug Administration.”

B

Dr. Briggs contends that there is no rule or law prohibiting the use of chelation therapy for conditions other than heavy metal toxicity; that courts are not bound by parties’ erroneous stipulations; that “[s]ince there is no valid rule or law prohibiting the use of EDTA in Minnesota, the Board’s attempt to bootstrap this rule into the North Dakota Stipulation is invalid and thereby erroneous,” and that a court has “the duty to relieve a party from a stipulation when necessary to avoid manifest injustice.”

We do not determine the efficacy of che-lation therapy, which is, according to the evidence, at best controversial.

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Bluebook (online)
448 N.W.2d 607, 1989 N.D. LEXIS 226, 1989 WL 142697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sletten-v-briggs-nd-1989.