Court Opinion

ID: 9899658
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-17 15:06:55.053517+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:20:45.536660
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: Summary decisions issued by the Appeals Court pursuant to M.A.C. Rule
23.0, as appearing in 97 Mass. App. Ct. 1017 (2020) (formerly known as rule 1:28,
as amended by 73 Mass. App. Ct. 1001 [2009]), are primarily directed to the parties
and, therefore, may not fully address the facts of the case or the panel's
decisional rationale. Moreover, such decisions are not circulated to the entire
court and, therefore, represent only the views of the panel that decided the case.
A summary decision pursuant to rule 23.0 or rule 1:28 issued after February 25,
2008, may be cited for its persuasive value but, because of the limitations noted
above, not as binding precedent. See Chace v. Curran, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 258, 260
n.4 (2008).

                       COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS

                                 APPEALS COURT

                                                  22-P-884

                                HILARY A. AROKE

                                       vs.

                    BOARD OF REGISTRATION IN MEDICINE.

               MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0

       The plaintiff, Hilary A. Aroke, filed an action in the

 nature of certiorari in the Superior Court after the Board of

 Registration in Medicine (board) rejected his petition for

 reinstatement of his medical license.           See G. L. c. 249, § 4.

 After first remanding the matter to the board for further

 findings, a judge ruled on the parties' cross motions for

 judgment on the pleadings, entering judgment in favor of the

 board.    On appeal, we affirm.

       Background.     Except as noted, the following facts are not

 disputed.    In 2009, the board initiated disciplinary proceedings

 against Aroke based on the reports of three patients (Patients

 A, B, and C) alleging that he had engaged in inappropriate

 sexual conduct with them.        Aroke has consistently denied that he

 engaged in any misconduct as to any of those patients.
     In 2012, the matter was tried before an administrative

magistrate.   The magistrate concluded that the board had met its

burden of proving that Aroke had committed sexual misconduct as

reported by Patients B and C,1 and recommended that the board

impose some form of discipline.        The board adopted the

magistrate's recommendations as its findings and, in 2014,

revoked Aroke's medical license.

     In 2020, Aroke petitioned for reinstatement of his license.

In doing so, he acknowledged the board's conclusion that he had

committed the misconduct described by Patients B and C, but

maintained his position that the misconduct did not happen.       In

support of his petition, Aroke highlighted the fact that despite

having continued to practice in the five years between the time

of the allegations and the suspension of his license, no other

complaints were made against him.       He also included an account

of his ongoing scholarship since the suspension of his license

and incorporated a series of highly complimentary character

references from peers and mentors whose experience with him

spanned his entire career, from his days as a student in his

native Cameroon to the filing of his reinstatement petition.

1 The administrative magistrate concluded that the evidence did
not support the allegations made by Patient A.

                                   2
       On February 25, 2021, after a hearing, the board denied

Aroke's petition in a written order comprising a single

paragraph.2

       As we have noted, Aroke sought judicial review of the

board's decision in the Superior Court.     Shortly thereafter,

Aroke moved for judgment on the pleadings and the board cross-

moved for the same relief.     After a hearing, the judge remanded

the matter to the board and ordered it to provide a supplemental

decision "that sets forth some findings, reasons, and/or a

rationale for the decision."    The board subsequently issued a

"supplemental order" stating that its denial of Aroke's petition

for reinstatement of his license turned on the "particular

egregiousness" of Aroke's sexually exploiting "vulnerable

patients"; his "[l]ack of remorse" for that misconduct; the fact

that rather than "tak[ing] responsibility for his actions,"

Aroke portrayed himself to the board as "a victim who was

2   The order, in its entirety, read:

       "At its meeting on February 25, 2021, the Board of
       Registration in Medicine ('Board') heard from Hilary Aroke,
       M.D., ('Respondent') and considered the Respondent's
       Petition for Reinstatement and Complaint Counsel's
       September 16, 2020 letter. The Board concluded that the
       Respondent did not demonstrate that reinstatement of his
       license would be in the public interest, as required by 243
       CMR 1.05(4). Therefore, the Board DENIES the Respondent's
       petition. Pursuant to 243 CMR 1.05(4), the Respondent may
       not submit a new Petition for Reinstatement to the Board
       for two years from the date of this Order."

                                  3
wrongly accused of something terrible"; Aroke's lack of concern

for how Patients B and C had fared in the wake of his

misconduct; and what the board characterized as his strategy of

"running the clock" by emphasizing "the mere passage of time

without recurrence [of any misconduct]."     On consideration of

the board's supplemental decision, the judge determined that the

board was entitled to judgment on the pleadings in its favor,

where the board's conclusion that reinstatement of Aroke's

license would not advance the public interest rested on its

consideration of both "the nature of his past sexual misconduct,

and his lack of remorse and insight into the misconduct"

(emphasis added).    This appeal followed.

    Discussion.     We review the judge's ruling de novo.   See

Mederi, Inc. v. Salem, 488 Mass. 60, 67 (2021).    As we have

noted, Aroke challenged the board's decision by an action in the

nature of certiorari.    See G. L. c. 249, § 4.   "[T]he proper

standard of review under the certiorari statute is flexible and

case specific, but . . . as with review under G. L. c. 30A,

§ 14, the disposition must ultimately turn on whether the

agency's decision was arbitrary and capricious, unsupported by

substantial evidence, or otherwise an error of law" (citation

omitted).   Langan v. Board of Registration in Med., 477 Mass.

1023, 1025 (2017).    See 243 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.05(4) (2012).

We will reverse the board's decision only if the decision "lacks

                                  4
any rational explanation that reasonable persons might support,"

or displays a "clear error of judgment in weighing relevant

factors such that [it] falls outside [the] range of reasonable

alternatives" (citation omitted).    Frawley v. Police Comm'r of

Cambridge, 473 Mass. 716, 729 (2016).

     The board may reinstate a medical license if, in its

discretion, it "determines that doing so would advance the

public interest."3   243 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.05(4) (2012).   Aroke

analogizes to legal precedent stemming from bar discipline

matters, and specifically to Matter of Hiss, 368 Mass. 447

(1975) (Hiss), to argue that the board abused its discretion by

conditioning his eligibility for reinstatement of his medical

license to his admission of guilt and "repentance" for the

misconduct against Patients B and C.     Assuming without deciding

that Hiss, which considered an attorney's challenge to the Board

of Bar Overseers' denial of his petition for reinstatement to

the bar, applies to the board's disciplinary proceedings for a

physician, Aroke's argument fails.   As the judge aptly noted,

nothing in Hiss precluded the board from considering Aroke's

lack of repentance for the misconduct found by the magistrate

and accepted as fact by the board.     In Hiss, the Supreme

3 In light of this clear regulatory statement, we are not
persuaded by Aroke's argument that the question whether to
reinstate his license was committed to the unfettered discretion
of the board.

                                 5
Judicial Court ruled that a disbarred attorney's petition for

reinstatement of his license to practice law could not be

rejected "solely" because of his failure to admit to the

misconduct on which his disbarment was based.   See id. at 459.

In doing so, however, the Court expressly provided that

"[r]epentance or lack of repentance is evidence, like any other,

to be considered in the evaluation of a petitioner's character

and of the likely repercussions of his requested reinstatement."

Id.   Accord Palmer v. Board of Registration in Med., 415 Mass.

121, 124-125 (1993) ("Once the board accepted the administrative

magistrate's conclusions of wrongdoing in deciding the

physician's present fitness to practice medicine, the board

could properly consider the failure of [the physician] to

acknowledge that he had acted improperly").

      Although the standard for reinstatement to the bar turns on

the petitioning attorney's "present good moral character," Hiss,

368 Mass. at 455 -- a question not before the board in this case4

-- we see no reasoned distinction between the Board of Bar

4 As we have noted, the board's regulations provide for
reinstatement if, in its discretion, the board determines that
"[reinstating the respondent] would advance the public
interest." 243 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.05(4) (2012). Because the
"present good moral character" requirement, Hiss, 368 Mass. at
455, was not a mandated part of the board's review here, we do
not agree with Aroke's argument that either the board or the
judge was required to apply the factors articulated in Matter of
Cappiello, 416 Mass. 340, 343 (1993), for assessing a
petitioner's moral fitness for reinstatement to the bar.

                                 6
Overseers' ability to consider a respondent's failure to accept

responsibility for misconduct in assessing an attorney's

suitability for reinstatement of a professional license and the

board's ability in the present context to consider such evidence

in assessing whether to reinstate Aroke's medical license.

Where the board's basis for denying Aroke's petition for

reinstatement included not only Aroke's failure to acknowledge

responsibility for the misconduct but also the "egregious"

nature of the misconduct itself, the board's decision was not

solely or improperly based on Aroke's refusal to admit to the

misconduct.5   For that reason, we conclude that the board's

supplemental order after remand was minimally adequate to show

that its decision was not arbitrary or capricious.6   See Frawley,

5 In its brief, the board suggests that there were three other
considerations supporting its decision. In our view, those
additional reasons -- Aroke's reliance on the "passage of time
without recurrence," his provision of "scant other bases for
finding reinstatement advances the public interest," and his
"manifest lack of 'insight as to why his touching of patients
without a legitimate medical reason is a serious wrong'" -- are
all conditioned on Aroke's admission that he committed the
misconduct found by the magistrate and adopted by the board.
6 We note that our confidence in the board's review would have

been enhanced by a clearer indication in its orders that it had
given fair consideration to the evidence mitigating in Aroke's
favor. Cf. Fisch v. Board of Registration in Med., 437 Mass.
128, 140 (2002) (rejecting argument that board failed to
consider mitigating evidence where, despite lack of specific
reference to that evidence, "the sanction imposed by the board
clearly reflected the consideration of mitigating factors and
was not unduly harsh"). Neither the order nor the supplemental
order explicitly addressed evidence that Aroke (1) had spent the
time since the revocation of his license "learning to understand

                                 7
473 Mass. at 729.   Discerning no abuse of discretion on this

basis, and in the absence of any other challenge to the board's

decision, we are constrained to affirm the judgment.

                                     Judgment affirmed.

                                     By the Court (Blake,
                                       Massing & Hand, JJ.7),

                                     Clerk

Entered:   November 17, 2023.

why his perception of events may be vastly different from his
patients" and to sympathize with his patients' feelings, (2)
"[took] courses to help him better understand what went wrong
and how he could evolve," or (3) that he could and did admit to
mistakes when called upon to do so. Where the board quoted from
at least one of the supporting letters in its decision, however,
we cannot say that Aroke demonstrated that the board failed in
its duty to consider his evidence.
7 The panelists are listed in order of seniority.

                                 8