Yvonne N. Robertson v. Tennessee Board of Social Worker Certification and Licensure

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 15, 2005
DocketM2004-00647-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Yvonne N. Robertson v. Tennessee Board of Social Worker Certification and Licensure (Yvonne N. Robertson v. Tennessee Board of Social Worker Certification and Licensure) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yvonne N. Robertson v. Tennessee Board of Social Worker Certification and Licensure, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE March 4, 2005 Session

YVONNE N. ROBERTSON v. TENNESSEE BOARD OF SOCIAL WORKER CERTIFICATION AND LICENSURE, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 02-2869-II Carol L. McCoy, Chancellor

No. M2004-00647-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 15, 2005

The Tennessee Board of Social Worker Certification and Licensure appeals from the decision of the Chancery Court to set aside its disciplinary ruling revoking a licensed clinical social worker’s license for two years for engaging in a dual relationship with a client. The Chancellor set aside the Board’s ruling on the grounds the sanctions constituted an abuse of discretion and were arbitrary and capricious. We reverse the decision of the Chancery Court and reinstate the Board’s order of revocation.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed

FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., joined. PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., filed a dissenting opinion.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; and Sara E. Sedgwick, Assistant Attorney General, for the appellant, Tennessee Board of Social Worker Certification and Licensure and Tennessee Department of Health.

Michael E. Terry, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Yvonne N. Robertson.

OPINION

Prior to seeking licensure as a licensed clinical social worker, Yvonne Robertson worked in the health care field as a certified master social worker. She had been certified as such by the Tennessee Board of Social Worker Certification and Licensure since October of 1994. In 1996, Robertson sought to advance her career and economic status in the health care industry by making application to become a licensed clinical social worker, independent practitioner of social work, by examination. Robertson’s application, however, and the right to take the requisite examination for licensure, were denied because of a 1982 felony conviction for three counts of forgery.1 Robertson appealed the denial of her application. A contested evidentiary hearing was conducted after which

1 Robertson was convicted on three counts of forging payroll checks. the Board reversed the prior decision and approved Robertson’s application “to sit for the licensure examination.” Pursuant to the Board’s order, entered February 26, 1997, Robertson took the examination, which she passed. As a result, Robertson was granted a Clinical Social Worker license in 1997.

In September of 1997, Robertson was employed to work in the Great Starts program at Child and Family, Inc., a nonprofit community agency providing in-patient and out-patient services for persons in need. Great Starts had three shelters and provided advocates for women in need of protection from abusive relationships. It also operated a residential treatment facility for persons with addictions and offered classes, group therapy, and transportation to Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous.

In early 1998, a client, D.W.,2 came to the Great Starts program. She was enrolled in the program, and Robertson was assigned as her individual, primary therapist. The client left the program shortly thereafter but returned in December 1998. When the client returned, a different social worker was assigned to be her individual, primary therapist, and Robertson was assigned to be her group therapist.

During the client’s time at Great Starts, Robertson developed a personal relationship with the client, one of companionship and friendship that went beyond permissible professional boundaries. Dual relationships, as they are called, are expressly and strictly prohibited. Neither the social worker nor the client may become involved in the other’s personal life. The duty is on the social worker to maintain a professional boundary to avoid possible adverse consequences to the client. Due to the likely adverse effect on the client, dual relationships are expressly proscribed as unethical conduct by a social worker in Tenn. Comp. R. & Reg. 1365-1-.13. Moreover, a clinical social worker’s license may be revoked for such unethical conduct. Tenn. Code Ann. § 63-23-106(a).

The prohibition against dual relationships notwithstanding, Robertson developed a significant personal relationship with the client between July and October of 1999. They spent a great deal of time together on numerous occasions away from work over the four-month period. The meetings and activities that violated the dual relationship prohibition included the two of them attending sporting events in which Robertson’s son participated, the client spending Christmas with Robertson and her family, and the client staying the night at Robertson’s house on at least two occasions. Other prohibited activities that took place away from work included Robertson and the client going on walks together and attending Alcoholics Anonymous meetings together.

Robertson explained that she engaged in the extracurricular personal relationship with the client in an effort to help the client stay sober. Though perhaps well intended, the proscribed dual relationship constituted unethical conduct.

2 The identity of D.W . is irrelevant to the issues; therefore, we shall refer to D.W . hereafter as the client.

-2- Not unexpectedly, the personal relationship between Robertson and the client came to a tumultuous and tragic ending. The beginning of the end occurred when Robertson’s supervisor observed Robertson with the client away from work.3 Sometime thereafter, the supervisor discussed the matter with Robertson. Robertson had meetings with her supervisor and senior staff at Great Starts during which she admitted the relationship with the client, though she did not disclose the extent of the relationship. It was not until later, when the client more fully disclosed the relationship to the staff at Great Starts, that Robertson was forthcoming about the extent of the relationship.

Shortly after the supervisor discussed the matter with Robertson, Robertson informed the client their relationship was inappropriate and could not continue. The client took the news badly. Not only did the client become emotionally traumatized, she acted out by making threats against other staff members at Great Starts, including a threat to kill a staff member whom she believed reported the relationship. The termination of the dual relationship also produced a significant depression, one the client suffered for several months.

Robertson’s dual relationship with the client was reported to the Tennessee Department of Health, Division of Health Related Boards, which investigated the matter. In November of 2001, the Department of Health initiated the proceedings at issue by serving a Notice of Charges on Robertson, informing her it was seeking suspension or revocation of her license. The Notice of Charges contained “Allegations of Fact” and “Allegations of Law.” The Allegations of Fact included the specifics of the dual relationship and that Robertson’s application for licensure was originally denied because of a 1982 criminal conviction and granted thereafter following a contested hearing; the 1982 criminal conviction, however, was not mentioned in the Allegations of Law.

A contested administrative hearing before the Tennessee Board of Social Worker Certification and Licensure was held on May 6, 2002. The Department of Health contended that Robertson violated patient-therapist boundaries and sought revocation of Robertson’s license. Robertson admitted she violated the boundaries between patient and therapist. She also admitted her behavior caused harm to the client.

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