State ex rel. Maddox v. Garner

459 S.W.2d 40, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 546
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1970
DocketNo. 8979
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 459 S.W.2d 40 (State ex rel. Maddox v. Garner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Maddox v. Garner, 459 S.W.2d 40, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 546 (Mo. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

STONE, Judge.

Relator, Kate Maddox, an applicant for a license to operate a nursing home in Joplin, Missouri [§§ 198.021, 198.031], filed a petition captioned as one for judicial review [§ 536.100; Rule 100.03] of certain (hereinafter-detailed) action, more properly denominated as nonaction, of the Division of Health with respect to her application.1 Upon motion by respondent, Dr. L. M. Garner, Acting Director of the Division, relator’s petition was dismissed and judgment was entered accordingly. Relator appeals.

The material facts, insofar as they are disclosed by the transcript on appeal, which contains only relator’s petition, respondent’s motion, the judgment of dismissal, and the trial judge’s joint letter to counsel of even date therewith (included by agreement of the parties), are as follows. Since 1952, relator had operated a nursing home in Joplin, which had been licensed “subsequent to 1957 and each and every year thereafter through December 21, 1968.” About November 25, 1968, relator submitted to respondent “her usual application for license to operate a nursing home” with the annual license fee of $25 [§ 198.031] and thereafter “many times requested respondent to make such investigation and inspection as [was] required” [§ 198.051], which respondent “failed . . . and now refuses to do.” About September 9, 1969, respondent informed relator “that it (sic) was not going to act on said application and that said application was going to be ‘held off’ and returned to [relator] her aforesaid $25 license application fee, and has declined to give the notice and opportunity for hearing on this application, all as is required by Section 198.140 . ” The reason assigned by respondent for this course of conduct was, to quote the obfuscating aver-ments of relator’s petition, “that Case #61259 in the Circuit Court of Jasper County . . . must be .first finalized; [42]*42this said case is the prior administrative appeal and is still pending; and that there are some vague and indefinite and minor items on an inspection by respondent in pursuance to the prior case, which was made on or about April, but no notice or hearing was given or set thereon by respondent.”

The prayer of relator’s petition was that the court “make and enter its order to: Command [respondent] to receive and file [relator’s] application for license to operate a nursing home, that he receive the $25 sum heretofore tendered to him as fees . that said respondent immediately cause an inspection to be made of [relator’s] premises . . . and that he not again deny or refuse to renew said license application aforesaid . . . without full compliance with Section 198.140.”2

Relator’s theory of the case is that respondent’s course of conduct constituted “a final decision in a contested case” 3 [§ 536.100; Rule 100.03]; that she was entitled to judicial review thereof under § 536.140 [Rule 100.07]; and that the venue of the case on such review was properly in the circuit court of Jasper County, Missouri, the county of relator’s residence. § 536.110(3); Rule 100.04(a). Respondent’s position is that there was no “final decision in a contested case,” so relator was not entitled to judicial review under § 536.140 [Rule 100.07]; that her petition sounded in mandamus and instituted an action of that character; and that, since the Division of Health is one of the divisions “within” the Department of Public Health and Welfare [§ 192.010], a state agency required to maintain its office in Jefferson City [§ 191.030], the venue of such action was in Cole County. § 508.010; State ex rel. State Board of Registration for Healing Arts v. Elliott, Mo. (banc), 387 S.W.2d 489 (1); State ex rel. State Tax Com’n v. Walsh, Mo. (banc), 315 S.W.2d 830, 834 (1).

The fragmentary, meager, spare, and (in some respects) enigmatic averments of relator’s petition, coupled with the initial importunity of the prayer thereof, i. e., that the court “command” respondent “to receive and file [relator’s] application for license . . . . ”, leave room for doubt as to whether a “contested case” actually was “commenced” before the Division of Health.4 But so assuming for the purposes of this opinion, we must remain mindful that the right to judicial review under § 536.140 [Rule 100.07] is accorded only to one “who is aggrieved by a final decision in a contested case.” § 536.100; Rule 100.03. (All emphasis herein is ours.)

Nothing in relator’s petition in the instant case indicates that the Division of Health either (a) regarded or handled the matter as a “contested case” or (b) rendered a “final decision” therein. No “number” was assigned to it [§ 536.067, subds. (2) (a), (3) (a)]; no notice of hearing was given and no hearing was held [§ 536.067, subd. (3) ]; no evidence was taken [§ 536.-070] ; and there was no decision and order [43]*43in writing which included or was accompanied by findings of fact and conclusions of law, as required in all “contested cases.” 5

Section 536.130, subd. 1 [Rule 100.06(a)] requires that: “Within thirty days after the filing of the petition [for judicial review] or within such further time as the court may allow, the record before the agency shall be filed in the reviewing court. Such record shall consist of any one of the following: (1) Such parts of the record, proceedings and evidence before the agency as the parties by written stipulation may agree upon; (2) An agreed statement of the case, agreed to by all parties and approved as correct by the agency; (3) A complete transcript of the entire record, proceedings and evidence before the agency .... The decision, order and findings of fact and conclusions of law shall in every case be included.”

In the case at bar, no “record before the agency” was filed in circuit court. Relator’s counsel here argues that “the record on review consists of a record, that is, the undenied statement that there was no record below — that is the record, which with the petition for [judicial] review succinctly places the factual situation before the reviewing court.” In the case of In re Village of Lone Jack, Mo. (banc), 419 S.W.2d 87, involving judicial review of a county court order approving a petition for incorporation of the village, a record was filed in the circuit court but it did not include the testimony taken at a hearing before the county court. After noting the above-quoted provisions of Section 536.130 [Rule 100.06], our Supreme Court held that “[t]his record does not meet the requirements of the statute or rule; its deficiency or shortcoming will not permit that review required by § 536.140” [419 S.W.2d at 90 (1)] and admonished that “[p]arties desiring that their interests be reviewed in accordance with § 536.140 will see to it that the full record necessary for proper review is certified to the initial reviewing court * * *.” 419 S.W.2d at 90(2). And in State ex rel. State Board of Registration for Healing Arts v. Elliott, supra, 387 S.W.2d at 492, we find the statement that “[t]he provisions of § 536.140, restricting the court in review proceedings to the record made before the agency,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
459 S.W.2d 40, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-maddox-v-garner-moctapp-1970.