In re Jemsek ( 2014 )


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  • An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute
    controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance
    with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    NO. COA13-801
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed:     20 May 2014
    IN RE: PETITION OF JOSEPH JEMSEK,
    JEMSEK M.D., LICENSE NO. 23386,
    Petitioner,
    Wake County
    No. 12-CVS-9321
    BEFORE THE NORTH CAROLINA
    MEDICAL BOARD
    Appeal by petitioner from order entered 18 January 2013 by
    Judge Donald W. Stephens in Wake County Superior Court.                       Heard
    in the Court of Appeals 20 November 2013.
    Law Office of Matthew I. Van Horn, by Matthew I. Van Horn,
    and Jacques G. Simon, pro hac vice, for petitioner-
    appellant.
    Elizabeth     R.    Suttles   and   Marcus    Jimison     for   respondent-
    appellee.
    DAVIS, Judge.
    Dr. Joseph Jemsek (“Dr. Jemsek”) appeals from the trial
    court’s order dismissing his petition for judicial review of the
    order of the North Carolina Medical Board (“the Board”) denying
    his    request     for     a   declaratory      ruling     regarding      a    2006
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    disciplinary         order    against         him.       After    careful     review,       we
    affirm.
    Factual Background
    In June of 2006,              the Board         held a disciplinary hearing
    concerning Dr. Jemsek’s treatment of ten patients who came to
    him    exhibiting      symptoms          of    fatigue,      achiness,     and    decreased
    concentration.         The Board determined that Dr. Jemsek diagnosed
    each of these ten patients with Lyme disease “in a manner that
    departed      from    acceptable         and       prevailing    standards       of   medical
    practice,      including           making      a     diagnosis    with     scant      or    no
    supporting historical, physical, serological or other laboratory
    evidence supporting [the] diagnosis of Lyme disease.”                             The Board
    also concluded that Dr. Jemsek’s course of treatment — which
    consisted of administering oral or intravenous antibiotics to
    the    patients      over    extended         periods     of    time   —   departed        from
    acceptable and prevailing standards of practice in that there
    was    “an    absence        of    any      research      or    clinical     evidence       of
    efficacy” for such treatments.                     The Board further found that Dr.
    Jemsek had failed to adequately educate and inform his patients
    that    his    methods        of    diagnosing         and     treating    Lyme       disease
    deviated from recognized standards.
    -3-
    By order dated 21 August 2006, the Board concluded that
    these   departures    from   acceptable   and   prevailing      standards    of
    practice   amounted     to   unprofessional     conduct   and    constituted
    grounds to suspend Dr. Jemsek’s medical license for 12 months.
    In   its   order,    however,    the    Board   immediately      stayed     the
    suspension    of     Dr.     Jemsek’s   license    upon    the     following
    conditions:
    a. Dr. Jemsek shall develop an informed
    consent form approved by the North
    Carolina Board President.
    b. If a patient’s diagnosis is not
    supported   by  current   Center   for
    Disease Control    (“CDC”) criteria,
    then   the   patient   must   have   a
    consultation or second opinion by a
    North Carolina licensed infectious
    disease physician approved by the
    Board President before treatment.
    c. Any treatment of Lyme Disease either
    by oral or intravenous antibiotics
    for greater than two months total
    time must be included in a formal
    research protocol with institutional
    review   board   (“IRB”)   supervision
    approved by the Board President.
    d. Any complications of treatment must
    be addressed . . . immediately.
    Dr. Jemsek did not appeal the 21 August 2006 order.
    On 27 April 2012, Dr. Jemsek filed a petition with the
    Board seeking a declaratory ruling that its 21 August 2006 order
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    be declared “null and void.”                      The petition asserted that the
    Board should issue such a ruling because the 21 August 2006
    order (1) had expired on its own terms in 2007; (2) was moot
    based on the theory that the conditions set forth in the order
    had been fully complied with; (3) “was issued in excess of the
    disciplinary subject matter jurisdiction and authority of the
    Board conferred upon it by 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 90-14
    (a)(6)”; (4)
    bypassed         the       rulemaking        process     of      the     North        Carolina
    Administrative             Procedure    Act      (“APA”);      (5)    used     an    erroneous
    standard of care; (6) deserved to be vacated based upon the
    recent      scientific          developments          recognized        in     the     medical
    community        for    diagnosing        and    treating      Lyme    disease;       and   (7)
    “impermissibly preclude[d] judicial appeal and review.”
    On   29    May       2012,   the    Board      issued    an     order    denying     Dr.
    Jemsek’s request for a declaratory ruling.                           On 28 June 2012, Dr.
    Jemsek      filed      a    petition      for    judicial      review    of     the    Board’s
    denial in Wake County Superior Court.                       The Board filed a motion
    to dismiss and a motion to strike his petition on 6 August 2012.
    On 9 January 2013, Dr. Jemsek’s petition for judicial review was
    heard by the Honorable Donald W. Stephens.                           On 18 January 2013,
    the trial court entered an order (1) ruling “as a matter of law
    that   the    Medical         Board    did      not   commit    error    in     denying     the
    -5-
    request       for    a    declaratory     ruling”;          and    (2)    dismissing    the
    petition       for       judicial     review    with        prejudice.       Dr.    Jemsek
    appealed to this Court.
    Analysis
    “In reviewing a superior court order entered upon review of
    an administrative agency decision, this Court has a two-fold
    task:    (1)    determine          whether     the    trial       court   exercised    the
    appropriate scope of review . . . ; [and] (2) decide whether the
    court did so             properly.”     Cty. of Wake v. Dep’t of Env’t &
    Natural Res., 
    155 N.C. App. 225
    , 233-34, 
    573 S.E.2d 572
    , 579
    (2002)    (citation         and     quotation       marks    omitted),      disc.   review
    denied, 
    357 N.C. 62
    , 
    579 S.E.2d 386
     (2003).
    The agency decision before the trial court in the present
    case    was    the       Board’s    denial     of    Dr.    Jemsek’s      request   for   a
    declaratory ruling pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-4.                               N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 150B-4 provides, in pertinent part, that
    [o]n request of a person aggrieved, an
    agency shall issue a declaratory ruling as
    to the validity of a rule or as to the
    applicability to a given state of facts of a
    statute administered by the agency or of a
    rule or order of the agency. Upon request,
    an agency shall also issue a declaratory
    ruling    to   resolve    a    conflict   or
    inconsistency within the agency regarding an
    interpretation of the law or a rule adopted
    by the agency.    The agency shall prescribe
    in its rules the procedure for requesting a
    -6-
    declaratory ruling and the circumstances in
    which rulings shall or shall not be issued.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-4(a) (2013).
    In 2007, the Board adopted the following rule regarding the
    disposition   of   requests   for   declaratory   rulings     and   the
    circumstances under which such rulings shall — or shall not — be
    issued:
    (a)   Upon   receipt    of    a  Request   for
    Declaratory   Ruling,     the   Board    shall
    determine whether a ruling is appropriate
    under the facts stated.
    (b) When the Board determines that the
    issuance   of  a   declaratory  ruling  is
    inappropriate, the Board shall notify, in
    writing, the person requesting the ruling,
    stating the reasons for the denial of the
    request.
    (c) The Board shall decline        to   issue   a
    declaratory ruling where:
    (1)   there    has  been   a    similar
    controlling factual determination
    made by the Board in a contested
    case;
    (2)   the rule-making record shows that
    the factual issues raised by the
    request      were     specifically
    considered prior to adoption of
    the rule; or
    (3)   the subject-matter of the request
    is involved in pending litigation
    in any state or federal court in
    North Carolina;
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    (4)    the petitioner fails to show that
    the circumstances are so changed
    since the adoption of the statute
    or   rule   that   a   ruling  is
    warranted.
    21 N.C.A.C. 32A.0112 (2013) (emphasis added).                   In its denial of
    Dr. Jemsek’s request for a declaratory ruling, the Board cited
    21 N.C.A.C. 32A.0112(c)(1)          —   that   “there has been a similar
    controlling     factual       determination    made      by   the   Board    in    a
    contested case” — as the basis for its decision.
    An agency’s denial of a request for a declaratory ruling is
    not a decision on the merits of the case.                 See Equity Solutions
    of the Carolinas, Inc. v. N.C. Dep’t of State Treasurer, ___
    N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    754 S.E.2d 243
    , 249 (2014) (explaining that
    when agency declines to issue declaratory ruling, “there has
    been no agency decision on the merits [of the] case”).                      Because
    the agency does not reach the merits of the request when it
    declines   to   issue     a    declaratory     ruling,    the    merits     of    the
    party’s petition for a declaratory ruling are not before the
    superior court and thus are not before this Court.                   See 
    id.
     at
    ___, 754 S.E.2d at 249          (“offer[ing] no opinion on the merits of
    [petitioner’s] request for a declaratory ruling [because] [t]hat
    issue was not before the trial court and is not before this
    Court”).
    -8-
    Instead,    our    review    is   limited      solely     to    the      agency’s
    decision to deny the request.             Because Dr. Jemsek contends that
    the Board committed an error of law in denying his request for a
    declaratory ruling, we review the denial de novo.                   Craven Reg’l
    Med. Auth. v. N.C. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 
    176 N.C. App. 46
    , 51, 
    625 S.E.2d 837
    , 840 (2006) (“Where a party asserts an
    error of law occurred [in an administrative agency decision], we
    apply a de novo standard of review.”).
    In this case, we believe that the trial court correctly
    dismissed Dr. Jemsek’s petition challenging the Board’s refusal
    to issue a declaratory ruling.                 In 21 N.C.A.C. 32A.0112, the
    Board   has   made    clear   that    it       “shall   decline     to       issue   a
    declaratory   ruling     where   .    .    .    there   has    been      a    similar
    controlling    factual    determination          made   by    the   Board      in    a
    contested case.”       21 N.C.A.C. 32A.0112(c)(1) (emphasis added).
    Here, the Board’s 21 August 2006 order — entered after a two-day
    disciplinary hearing on Dr. Jemsek’s diagnostic and treatment
    methods for Lyme disease — clearly constitutes a prior Board
    decision on a similar factual determination in a contested case.
    See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-2(2) (2013) (defining contested case
    as “an administrative proceeding . . . to resolve a dispute
    between an agency and another person that involves the person’s
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    rights, duties, or privileges, including licensing or the levy
    of a monetary penalty . . . .”).
    Thus, while Dr. Jemsek contends that his petition for a
    declaratory ruling presented issues that did not exist at the
    time of the initial hearing in 2006, he cannot dispute that
    there    was,    in   fact,     a     prior     determination    by       the   Board
    concerning his approach to diagnosing and treating patients with
    putative diagnoses of Lyme disease.                 Indeed, the bulk of Dr.
    Jemsek’s petition for a declaratory ruling centered around his
    request for a determination by the Board that its 21 August 2006
    disciplinary     order    was       improper.      Specifically,      Dr.       Jemsek
    sought a ruling from the Board declaring that it had utilized
    the incorrect standard of care and improperly disciplined him
    for exercising his medical judgment, which, in his view, did not
    establish a departure from accepted practices.
    As    this    Court   has       previously     explained    in    a    different
    context, an agency may properly deny a request for a declaratory
    ruling when the request is based upon a factual situation that
    the agency has already decided in a prior case.                  See Charlotte-
    Mecklenburg Hosp. Auth. v. Bruton, 
    145 N.C. App. 190
    , 192-93,
    
    550 S.E.2d 524
    , 526-27 (2001) (holding that denial of request
    for declaratory ruling regarding Medicaid eligibility of legal
    -10-
    aliens was appropriate given that agency “had previously decided
    the    actual     cases     from      which    petitioners        drew   their          facts”),
    disc. review denied, 
    355 N.C. 210
    , 
    559 S.E.2d 798
     (2002).                                         We
    reasoned that “[t]o hold otherwise would be to require an agency
    to twice decide the same case, between the same parties, by
    applying the same statute to the same facts.”                            
    Id. at 193
    , 550
    S.E.2d at 526 (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    In    this     case,     Dr.    Jemsek’s      petition      for     a    declaratory
    ruling essentially sought to relitigate the Board’s conclusion
    set out in its 21 August 2006 order that Dr. Jemsek’s practices
    departed from acceptable and prevailing standards regarding the
    diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease and requested that the
    Board       rescind       its   2006    order.        The        trial    court’s            order
    dismissing          Dr.     Jemsek’s          petition      for      judicial               review
    specifically ruled that “[t]he matters requested for such ruling
    have    been      previously       adjudicated       by     the    Board       in       a    final
    decision by the Medical Board which was not appealed” and that
    “[t]he current request by Petitioner is no more than an attempt
    to untimely appeal the Medical Board’s 2006 disciplinary order.”
    We    agree.         The    Board’s      denial      of    the    request            for   a
    declaratory ruling conformed with 21 N.C.A.C. 32A.0112(c)(1) and
    was    in    no   way     inconsistent        with   N.C.    Gen.       Stat.       §    150B-4.
    -11-
    Therefore,   we   hold   that   the   trial   court   did   not   err   in
    dismissing Dr. Jemsek’s petition.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm the trial court’s
    order.
    AFFIRMED.
    Judges ELMORE and McCULLOUGH concur.
    Report per Rule 30(e).
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-801

Filed Date: 5/20/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014