Vincent Agbemehia v. Delaware Board of Nursing

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 5, 2024
DocketK23A-04-001 RLG
StatusPublished

This text of Vincent Agbemehia v. Delaware Board of Nursing (Vincent Agbemehia v. Delaware Board of Nursing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vincent Agbemehia v. Delaware Board of Nursing, (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

VINCENT AGBEMEHIA ) ) Respondent-Below/ ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. K23A-04-001 RLG ) DELAWARE BOARD OF NURSING ) ) Petitioner-Below/ ) Appellee. )

Submitted: September 8, 2023 Decided: January 5, 2024

ORDER

Upon Appeal from the Delaware Board of Nursing – AFFIRMED.

Gwendolyn M. Osborn-Gustavson, Esquire, Schwartz & Schwartz, Dover, Delaware. Attorney for Respondent-Below/Appellant.

Jennifer L. Singh, Esquire, Deputy Attorney General, Dover, Delaware. Attorney for Petitioner-Below/Appellee.

GREEN-STREETT, J. 1 I. Introduction

The instant appeal stems from the Delaware Board of Nursing’s (“the Board”)

decision to annul Vincent Agbemehia’s nursing license. In its March 8, 2023

Disciplinary Order (“Order”),1 the Board upheld a prior annulment of Mr.

Agbemehia’s nursing license on the grounds that (1) he never met the educational

requirements for licensure, and (2) he committed fraud in his license application.2

Mr. Agbemehia now appeals the Order, contending that the Board lacked substantial

evidence to support its decision and violated his due process rights.3 The Court’s

review of the record reveals that the Board’s decision is supported by substantial

evidence, lacks legal error, and does not constitute any abuse of discretion.

Therefore, the Board’s Order is AFFIRMED.

II. Factual and Procedural Background

The Board awarded Mr. Agbemehia a license to practice as a registered nurse

in Delaware on April 13, 2022.4 On November 15, 2022, the Board informed Mr.

Agbemehia that his license was annulled because the Board determined his nursing

1 Disciplinary Order of the Del. Bd. of Nursing at 6 (Mar. 8, 2023). 2 Appellant’s Opening Br. at 3-4. 3 Id. at 5. 4 Appellee’s Answering Br. at 1.

2 education was fraudulent.5 The Board based this determination on an affidavit

provided by the Federal Bureau of Investigation that listed students – including Mr.

Agbemehia – who received fraudulent nursing degrees from certain institutions.6

The Board held a review hearing (the “Hearing”) on the matter, and ultimately

upheld its decision to annul Mr. Agbemehia’s nursing license in the Order.7

Mr. Agbemehia’s appeal, at its core, attacks the scope of the Hearing. He

asserts that the Board relied, at least initially, on erroneous grounds to annul his

license. Upon the realization that its original basis for annulment was invalid, Mr.

Agbemehia submits that the Board then searched for other reasons to uphold the

annulment of his license. It is Mr. Agbemehia’s position that the subsequent

investigation and cited basis for annulment exceeded the scope of notice the Board

provided him prior to the Hearing, and thus violated his due process rights.

A. The Napoleon Affidavit

In November 2022, the Federal Bureau of Investigation provided the Board

with an affidavit penned by Johanah Napoleon (the “Napoleon Affidavit”).8 The

Napoleon Affidavit outlined that Mr. Napoleon owned and operated four nursing

5 App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A-0029. 6 Id. 7 Disciplinary Order of the Del. Bd. of Nursing at 6. 8 App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A-0001.

3 schools, all of which provided at least some students with illegitimate nursing

degrees.9 It listed students who received illegitimate degrees, diplomas, and

transcripts from those four schools.10 Mr. Agbemehia’s name, social security

number, and date of birth were listed in the Napoleon Affidavit as a student who

obtained an illegitimate nursing degree.11

B. The Annulment of Mr. Agbemehia’s Nursing License

On November 15, 2022, the Board sent a letter (the “Notice Letter”) to Mr.

Agbemehia advising that it had voted to annul his nursing license for “fraudulent

misrepresentation” regarding his education.12 Specifically, the Board noted that Mr.

Agbemehia did not “meet the statutory requirements for licensure.”13 After

receiving the Notice Letter, Mr. Agbemehia exercised his right to a hearing on the

matter, resulting in the Hearing before the Board on February 8, 2023.14

9 Id. at A0017-18 (the four listed schools are Sunshine Academy, Med-Life Institute, Palm Beach School of Nursing, and Quisqueya Health Care Academy). 10 Id. at A-0019. 11 Appellee’s Answering Br. at 2. 12 App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A-0029. 13 Id. at A-0030. 14 Id. at A-0031.

4 C. The Hearing

Mr. Agbemehia did not attend the Hearing.15 Through counsel, Mr.

Agbemehia submitted a two-page affidavit (“Agbemehia’s Affidavit”) to the

Board.16 Agbemehia’s Affidavit confirmed that Mr. Agbemehia never attended any

of the four schools named in the Napoleon Affidavit. During the Hearing, Mr.

Agbemehia’s counsel explained to the Board, on Mr. Agbemehia’s behalf, that Mr.

Agbemehia did not know why his identifying information appeared in the Napoleon

Affidavit.17 Mr. Agbemehia speculated that his name appeared in the Napoleon

Affidavit in error due to a prior application to Med-Life Institute (“Med-Life”).18

Agbemehia’s Affidavit also outlined Mr. Agbemehia’s nursing education. Mr.

Agbemehia began pursuing his associate degree at Jersey College School of Nursing

(“Jersey College”), but did not complete the program.19 After pausing his education,

Mr. Agbemehia applied to several nursing programs, including Med-Life.20

Although Mr. Agbemehia applied to Med-Life, he never attended Med-Life. He

15 Tr. of Proceedings Before Del. Bd. of Nursing at 10-12 (Feb. 8, 2023). 16 Id. 17 Id. at 11. 18 App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A-0047. 19 Id. at A-0048. 20 Id.

5 opted to attend Suncoast College of Health (“Suncoast”) and graduated from that

program in May 2015.21

When questioned by the Board regarding the inconsistencies in Mr.

Agbemehia’s application for licensure, his attorney clarified that Mr. Agbemehia

committed an “innocent error.”22 With regard to his education, Mr. Agbemehia’s

counsel demystified statements made in Agbemehia’s Affidavit that he obtained

most of his course credits, but had not graduated, from Jersey College, as was

initially indicated on his application.23 Instead, Mr. Agbemehia graduated from

Suncoast.24

With regard to disciplinary action, Mr. Agbemehia’s counsel indicated that he

previously received probation from the Pennsylvania Board of Nursing. To that end,

his attorney posited that Mr. Agbemehia may not have understood that “probation

counts as discipline,” which led him not to report that discipline on his license

21 Id. 22 Id. at 10-12.

App. to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A-0047-48; see also Tr. of Proceedings Before Del. Bd. of 23

Nursing at 11. 24 Tr. of Proceedings Before Del. Bd. of Nursing at 11.

6 application as required.25 Agbemehia’s Affidavit did not address his previous

probationary period at all.26

The Board held public deliberations at the Hearing. First, it discussed the

transfer of Mr. Agbemehia’s credits from Jersey College to Suncoast.27 The Board

noted that the credits Suncoast accepted as complete from Jersey College did not

match the detailed transcript from Jersey College.28 The Board also discussed that

nursing programs usually do not accept transfer credits for classes specific to a

certain college’s nursing curriculum – in other words, that transferring credits

between nursing programs is typically difficult.29 Despite this challenge, Mr.

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Vincent Agbemehia v. Delaware Board of Nursing, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vincent-agbemehia-v-delaware-board-of-nursing-delsuperct-2024.