Sonnheim v. State Board of Marriage Counselor Examiners in Division of Professional Boards of Department of Law

450 A.2d 1331, 186 N.J. Super. 1, 1982 N.J. Super. LEXIS 887
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 23, 1982
StatusPublished

This text of 450 A.2d 1331 (Sonnheim v. State Board of Marriage Counselor Examiners in Division of Professional Boards of Department of Law) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sonnheim v. State Board of Marriage Counselor Examiners in Division of Professional Boards of Department of Law, 450 A.2d 1331, 186 N.J. Super. 1, 1982 N.J. Super. LEXIS 887 (N.J. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

FRITZ, P. J. A. D.

The facts in this matter are essentially undisputed. The sole substantive question presented, i.e., the right of a certified social worker to advertise himself as a marriage counselor, is purely a legal one. The trial judge held plaintiff had such a right. The State Board of Marriage Counselor Examiners (Board) has appealed. We affirm, but not wholly for the reasons set forth by the trial judge in her articulate opinion.

Simply put, plaintiff has a graduate degree in social work and is a member of the Academy of Certified Social Workers. However, he is not and has never been a licensed marriage counselor pursuant to statute in New Jersey. He contends that his qualifications and the discipline entitle him to advertise himself as a marriage counselor. The Board insists that such an advertisement under the classification “marriage and family [3]*3counselors” implicitly suggests licensure and is in fact misleading and deceptive.

Prior to November 1976 plaintiff had listed his name in the yellow pages classified telephone directory under the category “Marriage and Family Counselors.” During August 1976 the Board wrote plaintiff requesting that he remove his name from that classification in the yellow pages. He refused. Thereafter the New Jersey Bell Telephone Company (company), a defendant in this action, refused to accept plaintiff’s listing in this classification without proof of his licensure as a marriage counselor.

Plaintiff brought an action for declaratory judgment and damages. Answers by the Board and the company were filed in due course. All parties moved for summary judgment, plaintiff moving “as to liability only.” In a substantial written opinion, containing detailed fact finding, the trial judge came to the conclusion that “plaintiff as a social worker falls within a class of professions deemed qualified by the Legislature to practice marriage and family counseling and that his licensing by the Academy of Certified Social Workers satisfies the provisions of N.J.S.A. 45:8B-16.” To this she added an acknowledgment of plaintiff’s challenge of “this statute on constitutional grounds.” She found it unnecessary to reach “these issues” “[bjecause of the ... finding that plaintiff may not be prohibited from practicing in the field of marriage counseling and, therefore from advertising his services in the Yellow Pages of the New Jersey Bell Telephone directories and otherwise.” She concluded this portion of her opinion with the statement, “Summary judgment as to liability is granted to plaintiff against the State Board of Marriage Counselors.” She denied the cross-motion of the company, predicated on the assertion that as a corporation, it is not a “person” and therefore is not amenable to suit under “this section.” She also opined that since the company denied the allegations of plaintiff that the Board “unlawfully prevailed upon or conspired with” the company, a determination of the “State action issue,” concerning which a resolution of these facts [4]*4is critical, was not yet ripe for summary judgment. She denied the motions for summary judgment “between plaintiff and New Jersey Bell Telephone Company.”

At the outset we turn to two procedural problems, convinced that neither should get in the way of our disposition at this time of the important substantive question presented. The first of these has to do with the undoubted fact that this appeal is from an interlocutory determination, brought without leave and subject to summary dismissal on that account. Frantzen v. Howard, 132 N.J.Super. 226 (App.Div.1975). Quite obviously not all issues as among all parties have been determined and no amount of calling the judgment below as one “final” on liability will save that judgment from being interlocutory in nature. The Board did not move for leave to appeal. Rather it commented, somewhat cavalierly in our judgment, by means of a footnote appended to its procedural history. It noted that “[i]t might be suggested that the judgment as to ‘liability’ can not technically be certified as a final judgment,” adding that since the issues are substantial immediate appellate review is warranted and that “should a motion for leave to appeal be deemed necessary” that the notice of appeal and brief be treated as such a motion. Such a procedure is not to be condoned and our willingness to grant leave to appeal nunc pro tunc at this time and consider the merits of the appeal should not be deemed to be anything but disapproval of this conduct.

The second procedural matter actually constitutes the first ground for appeal raised in the Board’s brief. There the problem is stated thusly:

This matter should have proceeded as an appeal from the Board’s directive not to advertise as a marriage counselor or as an application for a license under the provision of N.J.S.A. 45:8B-16, therefore, the trial court lacked jurisdiction over the complaint and the trial court further erred to the extent its award of liability against the Board contemplates an award of damages.

Actually, this point which purports to be a single point challenging the jurisdiction of the trial court or, at best, that and an additional point complaining of the “contemplation” of an award [5]*5of damages (see R. 2:6-2(a)(5)) is, in fact the presentation in a somewhat undisciplined manner of no less than six points. The complaint against trial court jurisdiction is forwarded both in terms of a disregarding of “[t]he responsibility for administering and enforcing the requirements imposed upon the practice of marriage counseling ... delegated to the defendant Board of Marriage Counselor Examiners,” and as a substitution of the trial courts’ “interpretation for that of the Board of the pertinent provisions of the marriage counseling practice act.” Additionally, there are complaints in this point that (a) the action constitutes a collateral attack on a decision of an administrative agency, although no discussion appears respecting the availability of prerogative writs review; (b) the trial court should have deferred its action in any event “so that the Board could properly exercise its statutory mandates,” an obvious reliance on the doctrine of the exhaustion of statutory remedies, which is not a true jurisdictional argument; (c) the action of the court “impermissibly intrudes upon the Board’s statutory responsibilities,” which may or may not be a jurisdictional issue, and (d) in any event the “determination that plaintiff should be deemed qualified as a marriage counselor ... is not supported by the record,” a pure weight of the evidence question. We observe also that to the extent this plethora of issues permits of a collective characterization, the Board concedes that that which is encompassed by Point I in its brief was not raised below. At the same time it asks us to undertake a determination nevertheless. We need not, at least respecting all the issues except the weight of the evidence issue. Nieder v. Royal Indemnity Ins. Co., 62 N.J. 229, 234 (1973). We are tempted to respond at length. However, we are content with the observation, reflected in the Board’s point heading, that since we have review jurisdiction over the administrative agency and the trial court, and since the Board is sufficiently concerned about the matter to have filed an appeal from an interlocutory order without seeking leave, we should get on with it. See Washington Tp. v. Burke, 178 N.J.Super. 325, 328-329 (App.Div.1981), certif. den. [6]

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Bluebook (online)
450 A.2d 1331, 186 N.J. Super. 1, 1982 N.J. Super. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sonnheim-v-state-board-of-marriage-counselor-examiners-in-division-of-njsuperctappdiv-1982.