Voelz v. BD. OF ENGINEERING EXAMINERS, ETC.

568 P.2d 700, 30 Or. App. 889, 1977 Ore. App. LEXIS 1743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 6, 1977
DocketCA 8140
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 568 P.2d 700 (Voelz v. BD. OF ENGINEERING EXAMINERS, ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Voelz v. BD. OF ENGINEERING EXAMINERS, ETC., 568 P.2d 700, 30 Or. App. 889, 1977 Ore. App. LEXIS 1743 (Or. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

*891 FORT, S. J.

Petitioner Voelz seeks review of an order of respondent Board of Engineering Examiners suspending his license as a registered land surveyor for a period of two years.

The charges, some 24 in number, were alleged to arise under ORS 672.200(2), which authorizes the Board of Engineering Examiners to "suspend or revoke” a registration to practice engineering or land surveying based upon "gross negligence or incompetence in the practice of engineering or land surveying.”

Following the filing and serving of notice of charges upon petitioner, who chose to represent himself, a hearing was held before a hearing officer who made exhaustive findings based on extensive evidence and in her report to the Board recommended a 60-day suspension. The Board adopted her findings and conclusions in their entirety, but rejected the recommended penalty and itself imposed a two-year suspension, subject to a right to take the eight-hour Professional Land Surveying Examination and, if passed successfully, restoration of the license to be permitted after six months from the suspension date. Petitioner appeals to this court pursuant to ORS 672.215(1). That statute provides such appeals are to be reviewed "in accordance with the procedure for contested cases provided by ORS 183.310 to 183.500,” commonly known as the Administrative Procedures Act.

Petitioner challenges the sufficiency of the allegations of several of the charges. Each charge is separately set forth and each is identified with sufficient clarity, including date of work, name of person for whom the work was done, description of alleged errors or omissions, location of work involved, and, where appropriate, statutory or Bureau of Land Management regulations claimed to have been violated. See ORS *892 209.070(6) and (7), 1 ORS 209.120 and ORS 209.130. The allegations were most adequate to advise petitioner concerning the nature and grounds of each of the 24 charges. Stacey v. Board of Accountancy, 26 Or App 541, 553 P2d 1074, Sup Ct review denied (1976); Campbell v. Bd. of Medical Exam., 16 Or App 381, 387, 518 P2d 1042, Sup Ct review denied (1974). This assignment is without merit.

Petitioner next challenges the sufficiency of the findings, ultimate findings and conclusions. We have examined the 36-page opinion of the hearing officer and note therein that each of the charges is discussed, findings and ultimate findings made as to each, and that the order sufficiently describes the criteria applied whether statutory, regulatory or established practice to indicate the basis of each conclusion. Eleven of the charges were dismissed by the hearing officer as not established by the evidence, and of those which were found established, adequate rationales are set forth to support the respective findings of ultimate fact.

Petitioner admitted with respect to certain of the charges that errors or omissions were in fact made by him, including in six instances a failure to apply his official seal to a survey as required by ORS 672.025(2) and (3), and also his failure to sign a survey as required therein. Additionally, for example, in Charge 1 he admitted his map failed to show the basis for accepting a fence line as the official line. In Charge 19 he was charged with furnishing insufficient detail on the drawing to retrace the work done, and admits in his brief that the charge was correct. Concerning Charge 18, petitioner concedes in his brief that insufficient information appeared on his survey and that he should have shown a fence line on the map. As such, it is clear that the foregoing each constitutes substantial *893 evidence of the respective charges mentioned within the meaning of ORS 183.482(8)(d). See Bernard v. Bd. of Dental Examiners, 2 Or App 22, 36, 465 P2d 917 (1970). We think it unnecessary to discuss in detail those of the remaining charges found to be established by the Board other than to say that there was likewise substantial evidence offered to support the findings.

As pointed out above, ORS 672.200(2) authorizes suspension or revocation of a license for either incompetence or gross negligence. In Stacey at 544-45, we discussed the meaning of "gross negligence” in connection with the practice of public accounting. The rule announced there applies here. Under the public accounting statute, ORS 673.170(2), incompetence was not a ground for suspension or revocation, as it is in the present case. Here petitioner was expressly charged with both incompetence and gross negligence. Establishment of either by substantial evidence is sufficient to warrant suspension. Stacey at 544.

It is true that none of the hearing officer’s findings of facts nor the conclusions in their entirety set forth any express finding or conclusion that the proven conduct of the petitioner constituted gross negligence or incompetence.

The hearing officer, at the end of her lengthy findings of fact, stated only:

"IN CONCLUSION
"Mr. Voelz is a good citizen of his home town who appeared without a lawyer. I have attempted to view the evidence most favorably to Mr. Voelz in reaching my findings.
"Throughout the hearing Mr. Voelz demonstrated an attitude that the requirements of the law, which include a reference to the BLM Manual as a standard, were superseded by other authorities, such as cases and books on surveying. He clung to his concepts with real dedication.
"Those concepts do not excuse his various omissions, because the ORS [Oregon Revised Statutes] supersedes all cases and all authorities which predated it.
*894 "The only cases which would justify not following the ORS would be recent cases from this jurisdiction which would say that the ORS need not be followed or the BLM Manual need not be followed. There are no such cases.
"The cases and authorities on which Mr. Voelz relies do not justify the position he has taken.
"The ORS raised the standard in the field from what it was when Mr.

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Related

Hambleton v. Board of Engineering Examiners
594 P.2d 416 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1979)
Hambleton v. BD. OF ENG. EXAM'RS, ETC.
594 P.2d 416 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1979)
Stalder v. Board of Medical Examiners
588 P.2d 659 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1978)
Voelz v. BOARD OF ENGINEERING EXAMINERS, ETC.
586 P.2d 807 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
568 P.2d 700, 30 Or. App. 889, 1977 Ore. App. LEXIS 1743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voelz-v-bd-of-engineering-examiners-etc-orctapp-1977.