Texas Department of Family and Protective Services v. Jennifer Jean Drozd and the State Office of Administrative Hearings

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2010
Docket03-09-00507-CV
StatusPublished

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Texas Department of Family and Protective Services v. Jennifer Jean Drozd and the State Office of Administrative Hearings, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-09-00507-CV

Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Appellant

v.

Jennifer Jean Drozd and the State Office of Administrative Hearings, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 353RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-GN-08-004209, HONORABLE LORA J. LIVINGSTON, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

After the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (the Department)

denied appellee Jennifer Jean Drozd’s application for a non-expiring permit to operate a child-care

facility, Drozd requested a contested-case hearing before the State Office of Administrative Hearings

(SOAH). The Department has ceded the final decision in such matters to SOAH. See Tex. Gov’t

Code Ann. § 2001.058(f) (West 2008); 40 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 745.353, .8849 (2010). Following

the hearing, a SOAH administrative law judge (ALJ) overturned the Department’s denial and ordered

that it issue Drozd the permit. The Department sought judicial review of the ALJ’s order in the

district court, which affirmed the order. The Department now appeals the district court’s judgment

to this Court. In three issues, the Department urges that the ALJ’s order is not supported by

substantial evidence because the ALJ’s ultimate findings or conclusions are not supported by its underlying fact findings, because the ALJ relied on legally impermissible factors, and because

the ALJ’s decision is arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable. We will affirm the district court’s

judgment.

BACKGROUND

Because the Department’s appellate issues arise in the context of Texas’s statutory

and regulatory regime governing child-care facilities, it is helpful to begin with a brief summary

of pertinent features of that regime. Under chapter 42 of the human resources code, the legislature

has charged the Department with regulating “child-care facilities” in the state. See generally

Tex. Hum. Res. Code Ann. §§ 42.041-.078 (West 2001 & Supp. 2010); see also id. § 42.002(3)

(West Supp. 2010) (defining “child-care facility”). Among other regulatory responsibilities, the

legislature required the Department to “make rules to carry out the provisions of this chapter,”

establish complaint procedures, promulgate various required forms, and “promulgate minimum

standards that apply to licensed child-care facilities . . . and that will: (1) promote the health, safety,

and welfare of children attending a facility . . . ; (2) promote safe, comfortable, and healthy physical

facilities . . . for children; (3) ensure adequate supervision of children by capable, qualified,

and healthy personnel; (4) ensure adequate and healthy food service where food service is offered;

(5) prohibit racial discrimination by child-care facilities . . . ; (6) require procedures for parental

and guardian consultation in the formulation of children’s educational and therapeutic programs; and

(7) prevent the breakdown of foster care and adoptive placement.” Id. § 42.042(e). The Department

has since promulgated by rule several thousand “minimum standards” for child-care facilities

2 that address everything from clerical and record-keeping requirements, to detailed specifications

regarding the physical condition of the facilities, to qualifications and continuing education for the

facilities’ personnel, to the sorts of activities that are deemed appropriate for particular age groups.

See generally 40 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 746.101-.5621 (2010). These minimum standards are found

in chapter 746 of title 40, Texas Administrative Code, which is titled, “Minimum Standards for

Child-Care Centers.” See id.

The legislature has also imposed a general requirement that any person operating

a child-care facility must have a Department-issued license. See id. § 42.041(a). The legislature has

mandated that the Department “shall issue a license after determining that an applicant has satisfied

all requirements,” and that the license “must be issued if the department determines that a facility

meets all requirements.” Id. § 42.048(a), (e). If these requirements are not met, the Department

has discretion to deny the license, although it is not required to. Id. § 42.072(a) (Department

“may” deny license to child-care facility that “does not comply with the requirements of this chapter

[or] the standards and rules of the department”); see also Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 311.016(1)-(3)

(West 2005) (When used in codes, “‘[s]hall’ imposes a duty” and “‘[m]ust’ creates or recognizes

a condition precedent,” while “‘[m]ay’ creates discretionary authority or grants permission

or a power.”).

The Department’s rules governing licensing of child-care facilities are found in

chapter 745 of title 40, Texas Administrative Code. See generally 40 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 745.1-

.9161 (2010). These rules provide that the Department issues child-care facility operators either

a “non-expiring” permit or an “initial permit” (also termed an “initial license”). 40 Tex. Admin.

Code § 745.341. A non-expiring permit remains effective so long as the permit holder pays required

3 licensing fees; the facility remains at the same location and under the same ownership; the permit

is not suspended, revoked, or surrendered; and the permit holder “compl[ies] with the minimum

standards, rules and statutes.” Id. § 745.343. Chapter 745 defines “minimum standards” in relevant

part to include “[t]he rules contained in . . . 746 of this title (relating to Minimum Standards for

Child-Care Centers) . . . which are minimum requirements for permit holders that are enforced by

DFPS to protect the health, safety, and well-being of children.” Id. § 745.21(25).

An “initial permit” or license, by contrast, is effective for six months, subject to

renewal up to an additional six months. Id. § 745.347. The Department “must issue” an initial

permit when the applicant meets the Department’s “Licensing minimum standards, rules, and

statutes,” and (1) the facility is not currently in operation “but meet[s] the appropriate minimum

standards, except those with which compliance cannot be determined in the absence of children”;

(2) the facility is operating but not currently licensed; (3) the facility has relocated and has made

changes to the types of child-care services it provides; (4) an existing licensee has applied for a

license for another type of child care; or (5) there is a change in ownership of the facility resulting

in changes in policy and procedure or in the staff who have direct contact with the children. Id.

§ 745.345. An applicant “will be eligible for a non-expiring permit when: (1) [the applicant’s]

initial permit has been in effect for at least three months; (2) [the applicant has] met all licensing

minimum standards on a continuing basis; (3) the Licensing staff has made three inspections, unless

supervisory approval is obtained to make fewer visits; and (4) [the applicant has] paid [her] non-

expiring license fee.” Id. § 745.351. Although chapter 745 defines “minimum standards” to include

the “minimum standards for child-care centers” contained in chapter 746, it does not specify the

meaning of “the appropriate minimum standards” in section 745.345 or “licensing minimum

4 standards” in sections 745.345 or 745.351, nor does it explain what it means to meet “all licensing

minimum standards on a continuing basis” under section 745.351.

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