Court Opinion

ID: 4551439
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-07-28 13:07:59.479136+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:40:36.230475
License: Public Domain

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS
                   WESTERN DISTRICT
DAWN RENEE FURMAN,           )
                Respondent, )
                             )
v.                           )               WD83385
                             )
BOARD OF NURSING HOME        )               FILED: July 28, 2020
ADMINISTRATORS,              )
                  Appellant. )
                Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County
                   The Honorable Daniel R. Green, Judge
              Before Division Four: Cynthia L. Martin, C.J., and
                  Alok Ahuja and W. Douglas Thomson, JJ.
      The Board of Nursing Home Administrators denied Dawn Renee Furman’s

application for licensure as a nursing home administrator after finding that she had

acted as the administrator of a Missouri assisted living facility for two months

without first obtaining a Missouri license. On Furman’s application for

administrative review, the Administrative Hearing Commission (the “AHC” or

“Commission”) likewise denied her application. On judicial review, the circuit court

found that the AHC had abused its discretion by denying Furman’s license

application, and reversed the Commission’s decision. The Board appeals. We

reverse the circuit court’s judgment, and reinstate the AHC’s decision denying

Furman’s license application.

                                Factual Background
      Dawn Furman has been licensed by the State of Illinois as a registered nurse

since 1996 and as a nursing home administrator since 2001. Neither license has
ever been disciplined. At the time of the AHC hearing, Furman was employed as

Vice President of Clinical and Operations with Saba Healthcare, which manages a

number of skilled nursing homes. Furman testified that she was responsible for

overseeing several separate facilities. Furman’s responsibilities included overseeing

the staff and residents of the facilities; ensuring regulatory compliance and the

safety of the residents; and supervising the licensed nursing home administrator

(the senior management employee) at each facility.

       In 2015, Saba Healthcare purchased Brook Chateau, a large assisted living

facility in Kansas City. Furman assumed responsibility for Brook Chateau, and the

nursing home administrator at the facility “became one of [her] subordinates.”

       On October 15, 2016, the licensed nursing home administrator for Brook

Chateau, Jacqueline Taylor, unexpectedly stopped reporting to work. Furman

testified that while Taylor initially gave 30-days’ notice of her resignation on

October 5, 2016, she left on October 15 without further notice. Furman testified

that Brook Chateau had experienced significant turnover in the nursing home

administrator position since Saba Healthcare’s purchase of the facility; she testified

that Taylor was the fifth administrator she had worked with in 2015-2016. Furman
also testified that, at the time of Taylor’s departure, the facility did not have an

assistant administrator. At the time, the facility’s license had been placed in

“immediate jeopardy” by state regulators based on a complaint, meaning that if the

regulatory issues were not promptly resolved, “the State will close the doors of the

facility.”

       On October 20, 2016, the Board received an application from Furman for a

Missouri nursing home administrator’s license. At the AHC hearing, Furman

testified that she had applied for a temporary emergency license at the same time

that she submitted her application for full licensure. Although Furman testified

that her application for a temporary emergency license was “bundled . . . up” with

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her application for permanent licensure, and that she had “retained a copy of the

full licensure application for [her] own record,” she was unable to produce a copy of

any temporary emergency license application.

      Furman testified at the AHC hearing that “the Board eventually contacted

[her] and told [her] that they didn’t receive any temporary emergency license

application.” Furman claimed that “I offered to submit another one at that point”

(although she apparently never did so).

      Furman e-mailed the Board inquiring about her temporary emergency license

application on October 25, 2016. A member of the Board’s staff responded the next

day, stating that “[a]t this time our office has not received a [temporary emergency

license application] for Brook Chateau. You can fax or email to our office.” Furman

testified that this e-mail was “the last time that [she] kn[e]w anything about this.”

Although Furman testified that she was aware that the Board had not received her

temporary emergency license application in late October 2016, she apparently made

no further effort to follow-up with the Board, or submit (or re-submit) an emergency

license application.

      Furman never received a temporary emergency license from the Board
authorizing her to serve as Brook Chateau’s nursing home administrator.

      On October 31, 2016, Heather Duncan began working at Brook Chateau.

Although Duncan was hired to serve as the facility’s administrator, she did not have

a nursing home administrator’s license at the time, and began work at Brook

Chateau in a different capacity. On November 5, 2016, Furman e-mailed

information to Duncan concerning her application for a nursing home administrator

license and a temporary emergency license.

      The Board received Duncan’s one-page application for a temporary

emergency license, along with her application for full licensure, on December 14,

2016 – two months after Taylor’s departure, and more than six weeks after Duncan

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had begun working at Brook Chateau. (Furman testified that Duncan had delayed

submitting her license application in order to have additional time to prepare for

the licensing examination.) Duncan’s emergency license application listed Furman

as the “Administrator who is or will be vacating the position,” and indicated that

Furman would leave that position on December 21, 2016. Duncan’s application

explained that the reason for her emergency license application was that “Jackie

Taylor resigned and did not forfill [sic] her 30 day notice. Dawn Renee Furman has

been sitting as the administrator.” The application indicated that Duncan would

“continue as administrator after exam and licensure.” In addition to Duncan’s

signature as the applicant, Furman signed Duncan’s emergency license application

as the “Facility Authority,” and listed her title as “VP Clinical Services.”
      In her testimony before the AHC, Furman denied that she was identified as

Brook Chateau’s nursing home administrator in Duncan’s temporary emergency

license application. Furman testified that she was merely identified in Duncan’s

emergency license application as Brook Chateau’s “administrator,” not as its

“nursing home administrator.” She testified that she executed the form which

identified her as Brook Chateau’s “administrator” because she “ha[d] administrative

responsibilities for that . . . organization.” She denied that Duncan’s application for

an emergency license identified Furman as the “nursing home administrator,” or

that she “intend[ed] to convey to anyone at any time that [she] w[as] the nursing

home administrator.” Furman admitted, however, that in the emergency license

application which she claimed to have submitted on her own behalf in October 2016,

she listed Jacqueline Taylor – Brook Chateau’s departed nursing home

administrator – as the “Administrator who is or will be vacating the position.”

      After receiving Duncan’s temporary emergency license application, Danielle

Calvin, a Health Program Representative with the Board, began an investigation.

Calvin was concerned that Furman was listed in Duncan’s emergency license

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application as Brook Chateau’s existing administrator, even though she was not

then licensed in Missouri as a nursing home administrator.

      On December 15, 2016, Calvin called Brook Chateau to verify the name of the

facility’s administrator. A staff member told Calvin that Duncan was the current

administrator, and transferred her call to Duncan. Duncan told Calvin that

Furman “is and has been the facility’s Administrator since the previous

Administrator’s [sic] (Jacqueline Taylor) left.” Duncan transferred Calvin’s call to

Furman. Calvin’s written record of the telephone conversation stated that Furman

twice confirmed that she had been working as the nursing home administrator for

the facility since October 15, 2016 (when Taylor left). When Calvin asked for

Furman’s Missouri license number, Furman stated that she had her Illinois license

and a Missouri temporary emergency license, although she acknowledged to Calvin

that she had never received notification from the Board “that any paperwork had

been received or approved.” Calvin told Furman that the Board had not received or

approved a temporary emergency license application for Furman, and that Brook

Chateau would need to immediately put in place a fully licensed nursing home

administrator.
      On March 2, 2017, the Board denied Furman’s application for licensure as a

nursing home administrator, “based on [Furman] acting or serving as the

administrator of Brook Chateau from October 15, 2016 through December 14, 2016

without being properly licensed by the Board.”

      Furman filed a complaint with the AHC to contest the Board’s denial of her

license application. After a hearing, the AHC issued a written decision denying

Furman’s application for a nursing home administrator license. In its decision, the

AHC found that Furman acted as a nursing home administrator without a license

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in violation of § 344.020. 1 On that basis, the AHC found cause to deny Furman’s

application under § 344.050.2(6) (for violating a provision of chapter 344 of the

Revised Statutes of Missouri). The AHC found that Furman’s testimony “contained

internal inconsistencies and was also inconsistent with the documentary evidence

and the testimony of the Board’s witnesses,” and that “the timeline of events belies

her claim that she did not act as the nursing home administrator for the facility.”

The Commission found that Furman inappropriately “attempt[ed] to minimize her

actions” by “focusing on the word ‘administrator’ on the [temporary emergency

license] application,” a position the Commission found “disingenuous.” The

Commission determined that Furman’s unlicensed practice was plainly “contrary to

the purpose of the Board’s professional licensing laws.” It also noted that § 344.100

defines unlicensed practice as a nursing home administrator as a misdemeanor,

“demonstrat[ing] the importance the legislature ascribed to acting without a

license.” Based on these considerations, the AHC held that denial of Furman’s

license application, rather than any lesser sanction, was appropriate.

       Furman sought judicial review of the AHC’s decision in the Circuit Court of

Cole County. The circuit court issued its amended judgment on November 21, 2019,

finding that the Commission abused its discretion in denying Furman’s license

application. The circuit court emphasized Furman’s nearly twenty-year

unblemished history as an Illinois-licensed registered nurse and nursing home

administrator. It also noted that “[t]here is no complaint regarding the competency

of [Furman’s] professional activities.” Although the court noted that Furman

“would have been better served by more aggressively pursuing her Missouri

license,” it found that “the delay in doing so caused no substantive harm.” It

      1      Statutory citations refer to the 2016 edition of the Revised Statutes of
Missouri, updated through the 2019 Cumulative Supplement.

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ordered the Board to permit Furman to sit for the licensing examination, and if she

passed, to issue her a nursing home administrator’s license.

      The Board appeals.

                                 Standard of Review
             On appeal from a circuit court’s review of an AHC decision, this
      Court reviews the AHC’s decision, not the judgment of the circuit
      court. In reviewing the commission’s decision, the Court may not
      determine the weight of the evidence or substitute its discretion for
      that of the administrative body; the Court’s function is to determine
      primarily whether competent and substantial evidence upon the whole
      record supports the decision, whether the decision is arbitrary,
      capricious, or unreasonable, and whether the commission abused its
      discretion. Questions of law, however, are reviewed by this Court de
      novo.
Prescott v. Mo. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 464 S.W.3d 560, 565 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015)

(citations and internal quotation marks omitted); see also, e.g., O’Brien v. Dep’t of

Pub. Safety, 589 S.W.3d 560, 565 (Mo. 2019). The Commission is the “sole judge of

the credibility of witnesses and the weight and value to give to the evidence,” and

this Court defers to its credibility determinations. Cash v. Mo. Dep’t of Revenue,

461 S.W.3d 57, 60 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015). The AHC abuses its discretion when its

decision “is clearly against the logic of the circumstances then before the

[Commission] and is so arbitrary and unreasonable as to shock the sense of justice

and indicate a lack of careful consideration.” Kerwin v. Mo. Dental Bd., 375 S.W.3d
219, 232 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).

                                      Discussion
      The Board of Nursing Home Administrators is authorized to deny a nursing

home administrator’s license to any applicant who has acted as the administrator of

a Missouri nursing home without the appropriate licensure. Section 344.050.1

provides that the Board “may refuse to issue . . . any . . . license required pursuant
to this chapter for one or any combination of causes stated in subsection 2 of this

section.” (The statute also provides that, “[a]s an alternative to refusal to issue . . .

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any . . . license, the board may, at its discretion, issue a license which is subject to

probation for any one or any combination of causes stated in subsection 2 of this

section.” Id.) As relevant here, § 344.050.2(6) provides that cause for denial of a

license includes “[v]iolation of . . . any provision of this chapter.” Section 344.020

provides that “[n]o person shall act or serve in the capacity of a nursing home

administrator without first procuring a license from the Missouri board of nursing

home administrators as provided in sections 344.010 to 344.108.” Indeed, as the

AHC noted, § 334.100 provides that “[a]ny person who acts or serves in the capacity

of a nursing home administrator without being properly licensed by the Missouri

board of nursing home administrators as provided in sections 344.010 to 344.100 is

guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, shall be punished as provided by

law.”

        Although she denied it in her sworn testimony before the AHC, on appeal

Furman does not challenge the Commission’s factual finding that she acted as the

administrator of Brook Chateau for two months without having obtained a

permanent or temporary Missouri nursing home administrator’s license. Nor does

Furman dispute that, based on her unauthorized service as Brook Chateau’s
administrator, the Board and the Commission had sufficient cause to deny her

application for a nursing home administrator’s license. Furman’s sole argument on

appeal is that, although it had the power to do so, the AHC abused its discretion in

denying her application for a nursing home administrator’s license, rather than

imposing a lesser sanction.

        As described above, under the statutory scheme governing nursing home

administrators, the Board has discretion to either deny a license or, alternatively,

issue a probationary license, where an applicant has violated the provisions of

chapter 344. On administrative review of the Board’s decision to deny a license, the

AHC “exercise[s] the full measure of discretion initially vested with the Board,

                                            8
without deference to the Board’s decision.” State Bd. of Registration for the Healing

Arts v. Trueblood, 368 S.W.3d 259, 267 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012); see also Mo. Real

Estate Comm’n v. Held, 581 S.W.3d 668, 674-75 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019); Dep’t of Soc.

Servs. v. Mellas, 220 S.W.3d 778, 782-83 (Mo. App. W.D. 2007). “[T]he function of

the AHC in administrative review proceedings is to render the agency’s final

decision, exercising the same authority as the underlying agency.” Trueblood, 368
S.W.3d at 266 & n.4 (collecting cases).

      In arguing that the Commission abused its discretion, Furman relies

primarily on this Court’s decisions in Boyd v. State Board of Registration for

Healing Arts, 916 S.W.2d 311 (Mo. App. E.D. 1995), and in Gard v. State Board of

Registration for the Healing Arts, 747 S.W.2d 726 (Mo. App. W.D. 1988). Both cases

are plainly distinguishable.
      In Boyd, the Eastern District reversed the Board of Registration for the

Healing Arts’ imposition of a six-month suspension on a physician’s medical license,

holding instead that the Board should have imposed a term of probation on the

physician. 916 S.W.2d at 317-18. In Boyd, the Court held that the AHC had

properly determined that cause for discipline existed based on the physician’s

practice of medicine in Missouri for approximately two months without a Missouri

medical license (after moving from the District of Columbia). Id. at 313. While this

misconduct is similar to that which Furman was found to have committed, Boyd

presents a markedly different factual scenario. First, although the Court upheld

the AHC’s determination that the physician had practiced without a license, it

reversed two other findings of cause for discipline made by the Commission. Id. at

316. Thus, in Boyd, the Court rejected two of the three bases for discipline on which

the Commission and the Board had relied.

      Further, in Boyd, the physician stipulated that she had practiced in Missouri

without a Missouri license. Id. at 313 (“Dr. Boyd consented to the issuance of an

                                          9
order by the AHC that cause existed for the Board to take disciplinary action

against her medical license because she knowingly practiced medicine in Missouri

without a Missouri license.”). This stands in sharp contrast to the present case, in

which Furman denied that she had ever functioned as Brook Chateau’s nursing

home administrator (despite her attestation that she was the facility’s

administrator on Duncan’s emergency license application, and her confirmation

that she was functioning as the facility’s administrator when asked by the Board’s

investigator). Further, in this case Furman was expressly advised by the Board

that she had submitted no application for a temporary emergency license in late

October 2016; she testified that she had offered to submit a new application; and yet

she apparently did nothing to rectify her licensing status until her unlicensed

service was discovered by the Board.

         In deciding whether Furman should be eligible for licensing, the AHC

justifiably placed substantial weight on Furman’s unsubstantiated claim that she

had in fact submitted an emergency license application, and on her denials that she

had acted as Brook Chateau’s nursing home administrator (despite her written and

oral representations to the contrary). An applicant’s failure to acknowledge
mistakes, and to accept responsibility for those mistakes, gives important insight

into the applicant’s attitude toward the regulatory process, and can serve as a

powerful predictor of how the applicant will conduct themselves if a license is

issued. There is a significant difference between Furman’s denials of responsibility,

and the physician’s acknowledgement that cause for discipline existed in Boyd; the

difference in the applicant’s conduct justifies the different outcomes in the two

cases.

         Gard is similarly distinguishable. In that case, the AHC found cause to

discipline a doctor’s medical license after the doctor was convicted in California of

felony possession and sale of controlled substances and his California medical

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license was revoked (although it was later reinstated with a probationary term).

Gard, 747 S.W.2d at 726-27. After the AHC found cause to discipline the doctor’s

Missouri license, the Board of Registration for the Healing Arts revoked his license

under § 334.100. Id. at 728. On appeal, this Court reversed the license revocation.

The Court found that the Board had erred by “ignor[ing] the facts and

circumstances of appellant’s rehabilitation” as established by substantial evidence

in the record, and by instead treating “a single subjective fact, that of appellant's

California conviction, [as] conclusive in itself.” Id. at 729, 730; see also, e.g., Brown

v. State Bd. of Accountancy, 588 S.W.3d 519, 526 (Mo. App. E.D. 2019) (agency

abused its discretion in imposing discipline without considering the mitigating

evidence presented by the licensee). In this case, Furman does not contend that the

AHC failed to consider any similar mitigating evidence.

      Notably, the Missouri Supreme Court recently distinguished both Boyd and

Gard on the basis that those decisions were necessarily fact-dependent, and were

“of little persuasive value” in subsequent license-discipline cases. In O’Brien v.

Department of Public Safety, 589 S.W.3d 560 (Mo. 2019), the Court concluded that a

decision by the Department of Public Safety to discipline a police officer’s license
was supported by substantial evidence. Id. at 566. The Court continued by

observing:

             Nothing in Boyd v. State Board of Registration for the Healing
      Arts, 916 S.W.2d 311 (Mo. App. 1995), [or] Gard v. State Board of
      Registration for the Healing Arts, 747 S.W.2d 726 (Mo. App. 1988), . . .
      compels a contrary conclusion. In such a highly fact-dependent
      analysis as this must necessarily be, such cases – which involve
      dissimilar professions and dissimilar crimes . . ., in which different
      agency heads exercised their discretion in wholly dissimilar
      environments in order to meet their shared obligation to adequately
      safeguard the public – are of little persuasive value.
Id. at 566 n.10.

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      In this case, the Commission had evidence that Furman knowingly acted as

Brook Chateau’s nursing home administrator without a Missouri license for almost

two full months. Although Furman claimed that she had submitted a temporary

emergency license application, she could never produce a copy of that application,

even though she claimed that she had submitted it together with her application for

full licensure – of which she had retained a copy. Furman admitted that she had

been told by the Board in late October 2016 that it had not received an emergency

license application from her, yet she did nothing thereafter to rectify the situation.

Furman also denied under oath that she had, in fact, acted as Brook Chateau’s

nursing home administrator, even though she had admitted acting in that capacity

to a Board investigator, and had signed Duncan’s emergency license application

(which identified Furman as the facility’s current administrator). Furman then

offered “disingenuous” explanations to attempt to avoid the clear implications of the

license application she had signed. (Notably, on appeal Furman has abandoned her

earlier denials that she had acted as nursing home administrator at Brook Chateau,

or that she ever told the Board that she had acted as nursing home administrator.)

The Commission could fairly conclude that Furman’s actions deliberately flouted

Missouri’s licensing scheme, and justified the denial of her license application.

      Furman emphasizes her nearly twenty years’ experience as both a registered

nurse and a nursing home administrator licensed under Illinois law, and her lack of

any professional discipline during her career. She also emphasizes that there was

no evidence that her actions in the Fall of 2016 endangered any of the residents of

Brook Chateau, or that she was unqualified to oversee the facility’s operations.

      We recognize that there are circumstances in this case which pull in opposing

directions: on the one hand, evidence of Furman’s deliberate disregard of Missouri’s

licensing scheme for nursing home administrators, and her offering of hyper-

technical and untruthful testimony to avoid responsibility for her actions; on the

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other hand, evidence of Furman’s long-standing, unblemished service in senior

nursing-home management positions, the lack of any direct effect on patient safety,

and the fact that Furman was responding to unexpected and difficult circumstances

at Brook Chateau. The Commission’s decision makes clear that it weighed these

countervailing considerations, and chose the responsive action it deemed most

appropriate. We cannot find an abuse of discretion in these circumstances. As the

Missouri Supreme Court emphasized in O’Brien:

      The authority to choose, after careful deliberation, between two
      reasonable alternatives, both of which are supported by the evidence,
      is the essence of discretion, and this Court will not substitute its choice
      for the choice made by the agency . . . in which Missouri statutes
      expressly vest that discretion.
589 S.W.3d at 566 n.11. The question is not whether this Court would have arrived

at the same conclusion as the Commission, but instead whether the Commission’s

decision is so arbitrary and unreasonable as to shock our sense of justice and

indicate a lack of careful consideration. Our answer to the latter question is “no.”

                                     Conclusion
      We reverse the judgment of the circuit court, and reinstate the decision of the

Administrative Hearing Commission denying Furman’s application for a nursing

home administrator’s license.

                                        _______________________________________
                                        Alok Ahuja, Judge
All concur.

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