Court Opinion

ID: 9900407
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-18 22:12:28.602926+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:05.223935
License: Public Domain

48                     July 12, 2023                No. 362

          IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
                  STATE OF OREGON

               Craig CHILDRESS, Psy.D.,
                       Petitioner,
                            v.
           OREGON BOARD OF PSYCHOLOGY,
                      Respondent.
                  Agency/Board/Other
                   2020001; A176119

     Argued and submitted June 2, 2022.
   Janet M. Schroer argued the cause for appellant. Also on
the briefs was Hart Wagner LLP.
   Carson L. Whitehead, Assistant Attorney General,
argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen
F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman,
Solicitor General.
  Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Powers, Judge, and
Hellman, Judge.
     POWERS, J.
     Affirmed.
Cite as 327 Or App 48 (2023)                                  49

         POWERS, J.
         Petitioner seeks judicial review of a final order by the
Oregon Board of Psychology concluding that he engaged in
the unlicensed practice of psychology and imposing a $7,500
penalty. Petitioner, a California resident licensed to practice
psychology in that state but not in Oregon, authored a psy-
chological report provided to individuals in Oregon. Based on
that conduct, the board determined that petitioner engaged
in the practice of psychology in this state, which requires
an Oregon license. On review, he raises three assignments
of error: First, he argues that the board erred as a mat-
ter of law because he provided the report to an organization
and was exempt from the licensing requirement under ORS
675.090(1)(a); second, he contends that the record lacks sub-
stantial evidence to support any link between his report and
Oregon; and third, he argues that the board acted outside
the range of permissible discretion by imposing the $7,500
penalty. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
                 STANDARD OF REVIEW
         We review the board’s order for legal error to deter-
mine whether it erroneously interpreted a provision of law.
ORS 183.482(8)(a). When determining whether the board
correctly interpreted its own rule, we defer to the board’s
interpretation if its interpretation is not inconsistent with
the wording of the rule itself, with the rule’s context, or with
any other source of law. Don’t Waste Oregon Com. v. Energy
Facility Siting, 320 Or 132, 142, 881 P2d 119 (1994).
              PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
         The facts are mostly undisputed. At all mate-
rial times, petitioner was licensed to practice psychology
in California and was not licensed to practice psychology
in Oregon. In his capacity as a psychologist, petitioner
worked as a consultant for the Conscious Co-Parenting
Institute (CCPI), a California-based company that provides
co-parenting strategies to divorcing parents. CCPI offers a
service called the “Custody Resolution Method,” whereby
clients respond to questions and submit records and archi-
val data (e.g., emails or text messages between family mem-
bers) to be compiled in CCPI’s software program. Using
50                           Childress v. Board of Psychology

predetermined categories, CCPI then identifies frequencies
of categories within the data and creates a data profile based
on the submitted information. The data profile and mental
health categories created by CCPI require interpretation by
a psychological professional familiar with pathology and its
treatment. Thus, CCPI sends the data profile—along with
the raw, archival data—to petitioner. Petitioner reviews the
information and produces a “Consultation Report,” which is
his professional opinion and assessment of the pathology in
the family. Petitioner uses the frequency counts to indicate
potential areas of concern and he recommends areas need-
ing additional direct assessment from a mental health pro-
fessional. The report may be used by the client to encourage
resolution of the conflict or as evidence in custody hearings
to convince the court that a clinical psychology assessment
of the pathology in the family is necessary.
         In this case, father, who is an Oregon resident, was
in a high-conflict custody dispute and hired CCPI to conduct
the Custody Resolution Method for himself and his family.
He submitted data and information to CCPI that they used
to create a profile of father, his child, and the child’s mother.
As typical, CCPI sent the profile and submitted data to peti-
tioner, and petitioner reviewed the profile and data, pro-
duced a report, and returned it to CCPI. CCPI passed the
report to father without any changes or commentary. CCPI
paid petitioner directly; he had no contact with father or
other members of the family, and petitioner did not verify
the accuracy of the data submitted. The report included dis-
claimers throughout, including that it was not a diagnosis
and that formal clinical interviews were necessary.
         The report was brought to the attention of the
Oregon Board of Psychology, which subsequently opened
an investigation to determine whether, by producing the
report, petitioner had unlawfully practiced psychology in
Oregon without a license. Ultimately, the board sent peti-
tioner a Notice of Intent to Impose Civil Penalty of $7,500,
and petitioner requested a contested case hearing before
an administrative law judge (ALJ). Prior to the hearing,
the board filed an amended notice detailing the allegations
against petitioner for practicing psychology and represent-
ing himself to be a psychologist in the state without a license
Cite as 327 Or App 48 (2023)                                 51

in violation of ORS 675.020(1)(a), (b). Evidence at the hear-
ing included testimony from both petitioner and the board’s
expert, Dr. Ferder.
         The ALJ issued a proposed order, and the board
issued a final order that concluded—after rejecting peti-
tioner’s exceptions to the ALJ’s order—that petitioner was
subject to the $7,500 penalty because he had engaged in the
practice of psychology in Oregon. Relying on ORS 675.010(4),
which defines the “practice of psychology” to include “ren-
dering or offering to render supervision, consultation, eval-
uation or therapy services to individuals, groups or organi-
zations for the purpose of diagnosing or treating behavioral,
emotional or mental disorders,” the board determined that
petitioner had rendered both “consultation” and “evaluation”
services to father. Under either approach, the board con-
cluded, petitioner had engaged in the practice of psychology.
Petitioner timely sought judicial review of the board’s final
order.
                         ANALYSIS
         We begin with the issue of consultation, which is
defined by the board’s administrative rules. OAR 858-010-
0001(1)(c) provides: “ ‘Consultation’ means conferring or
giving expert advice on the diagnosis or treatment of men-
tal disorders[.]” The board concluded that, in producing
his report, petitioner gave expert advice on the diagnosis
or treatment of mental disorders specific to father and his
family. Petitioner acknowledges that the report he produced
could constitute consultation services but argues that the
consultation was provided to CCPI and did not require a
license because “consulting services to an organization”
are exempt from the licensing requirement under ORS
675.090(1)(a). The board contends that the exemption was
not intended to apply where the consultation services are
passed through an organization but are provided for the
benefit of an individual.
         As framed by the parties’ arguments, the issue
before us is a question of statutory interpretation, which we
resolve by considering the statute’s text, context, and any rel-
evant legislative history to discern the legislature’s intent.
State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 171-72, 206 P3d 1042 (2009)
52                                   Childress v. Board of Psychology

(describing the statutory interpretation methodology). Our
review must determine whether the board’s construction of
the statute comports with the legislature’s intent. We start
with the text and context of the statute, which provide the
best evidence of legislative intent. Papworth v. DLCD, 255
Or App 258, 265, 296 P3d 632 (2013).
         ORS 675.090(1)(a) exempts from licensing “[a] per-
son who teaches psychology, conducts psychological research
or provides consulting services to an organization or institu-
tion, provided that the person does not supervise direct psy-
chological services and does not treat any behavioral, emo-
tional or mental disorder of an individual.” In petitioner’s
view, the text of the statute exempts the report he provided
to CCPI, an organization, from the Oregon licensing require-
ment. He argues that, because he was hired by CCPI, pro-
vided the report to CCPI, and had no contact with father or
any other individual in Oregon, his report constituted “con-
sulting services to an organization.” Nothing in the text of
the statute, petitioner contends, supports the board’s conclu-
sion that CCPI’s passing of the report to father transformed
the consultation with CCPI into a consultation with father.
         The board remonstrates that the legislature intended
the exemption to be a narrow one that applies only when
the person provides consultation services for the benefit of
the organization itself and not when the services are per-
formed for the benefit of an individual. The board asserts
that father was the subject, recipient, and beneficiary of
petitioner’s report; thus, petitioner’s report did not provide
consultation services to an organization and, therefore, the
exemption does not apply. For the reasons that follow, we
agree with the board’s contention that ORS 675.090(1)(a)
does not apply to petitioner under the circumstances of this
case.
         The record shows that father and his family, indi-
viduals living in Oregon, were the subject of petitioner’s
report.1 The report discussed father’s mental health issues,
     1
       Petitioner disputes that the record shows that father and his family lived in
Oregon. As noted below, however, we conclude that his second assignment of error
is not preserved for appellate review. Even if it were, however, the record supports
the board’s finding that the subjects of the report lived in Oregon.
Cite as 327 Or App 48 (2023)                                                  53

mother’s alleged manipulative behavior, how such conditions
could impact the child, and provided possible diagnoses and
treatment options specific to the child. The record further
shows that, despite having no direct contact with the family,
petitioner’s report was passed from CCPI to father with no
changes or commentary, and the report provided no internal
benefit for CCPI itself.2 In our view, it stretches the bounds
of the text of ORS 675.090(1)(a) to conclude that a psycholo-
gist can provide expert advice on the diagnosis or treatment
of mental disorders to individuals within this state without
a license, merely because the psychologist utilized an orga-
nization to pass along such services. That is, petitioner’s
proposed construction of the limited exception appears to
create a loophole that is not consistent with the statutory
framework generally requiring an Oregon license.
         The context of the statute supports this view. The
other two activities that are exempt from licensing under
subsection (1)(a) are teaching psychology and conducting
psychological research. Exempting teachers and research-
ers from the licensing requirement comports with the
legislature’s express purpose for instituting the licens-
ing requirement: “To safeguard the people of the State
of Oregon from the dangers of unqualified and improper
practice of psychology[.]” ORS 675.020. That is, exempting
teachers and researchers—who, under the terms of the
statute, may not supervise direct psychological services
or treat any behavioral, emotional, or mental disorders of
individuals—seems unlikely to disturb the purpose of the
Oregon licensing requirement. Exempting petitioner’s
conduct of providing expert advice about the treatment of
mental disorders for a child living in Oregon, on the other
hand, exposes Oregonians to advice specific to them from
practitioners who have not been licensed to practice in
Oregon. Therefore, we conclude that it is unlikely that the
legislature intended—in the same sentence that it exempts
teachers and researchers—to exempt a third category, viz.,
    2
      On review, petitioner disputes that the record shows that CCPI made no
changes to the report. At the contested hearing, however, petitioner testified
that “the report that’s currently in submission and the ones I testified to are my
reports and no changes have been made to them.” Further, there is no evidence in
the record demonstrating that the report was used internally at CCPI for train-
ing or other purposes.
54                          Childress v. Board of Psychology

out-of-state professionals providing consultation services to
individuals within this state so long as they use an organi-
zation to pass along their services.
          In our view, the phrase “consulting services to an
organization” is consistent with Ferder’s testimony: “the
provision of psychological consulting services to an organi-
zation or institution requires interaction with the organi-
zation or institution regarding some essential aspect of the
organization or institution itself, matters that are pertinent
to the internal functioning of the organization or institu-
tion.” Given its placement in the statute, and because it con-
flicts with the explicit purpose of the licensing requirement,
we are unpersuaded that the exemption for “consulting ser-
vices to an organization” was intended to open the door for
petitioner to review data specific to an individual in Oregon,
provide an assessment and interpretation of that data, and
then propose specific diagnoses for that individual—all with
no involvement from CCPI itself, aside from delivering the
information between the two parties.
         We are also not persuaded by petitioner’s argu-
ment that ORS 675.090(1)(b) provides context in support of
his interpretation. That subsection exempts from licensing
“[t]he provision of expert testimony by a person described in
paragraph (a) of this subsection.” Petitioner contends that
paragraph (1)(b) would apply where “the client hires a law-
yer, the lawyer in turn hires a non-Oregon licensed psychol-
ogist who performs an evaluation or consultation, and pro-
vides subsequent expert testimony.” Petitioner asserts that
that situation is no different than the one presented in this
case and that both are permissible. We first note that “eval-
uations” are never exempt under the statute, regardless of
who they are provided to. Second, paragraph (a) limits the
application of paragraph 1(b) to “a person who teaches psy-
chology, conducts psychological research or provides con-
sulting services to an organization or institution”—which
circles back to the question at the heart of this case, whether
petitioner was providing consulting services to an individ-
ual or to an organization. Psychologists who are not licensed
in this state may not provide consulting services to indi-
viduals in this state, as petitioner did, merely because an
organization—or lawyer—hires them to do so. Accordingly,
Cite as 327 Or App 48 (2023)                                      55

we conclude that nothing in the text or context of the statute
suggests that the legislature intended that the provision of
consulting services to individuals in Oregon be exempt from
the licensing requirement.
        Finally, a review of previous versions of the statute
provides additional support that the legislature intended to
exclude petitioner’s conduct from the exemption. See, e.g.,
Montgomery v. City of Dunes City, 236 Or App 194, 199,
236 P3d 750 (2010) (“Changes in the text of a statute over
time are context for interpreting the version at issue in a
given case.”). In a prior version, the statute exempted from
licensing:
       “A person who teaches psychology, conducts psychologi-
   cal research or provides consulting services to an organiza-
   tion or institution provided that the teaching, research or
   consulting services do not involve the delivery or supervi-
   sion of direct psychological services to individuals who are
   themselves, rather than a third party, the beneficiaries of
   the services, regardless of the source or extent of payment
   for the services rendered.”
ORS 675.090(1)(a) (2013).
         The 2013 statute clearly prohibits the conduct at
issue in this case: It dictates that the source of the payment
is irrelevant; if individuals are themselves the beneficiaries
of the direct psychological services, and said services are
delivered to them, the exemption does not apply. As noted
earlier, father and his family were the individual benefi-
ciaries of the report; the report was delivered to them and,
under the terms of the 2013 statute, the fact that the third
party—CCPI—was the source of payment and delivery is
irrelevant.
          At the committee hearing to amend the 2013 stat-
ute, the discussion was mostly unrelated to the change
made to paragraph (1)(a). However, the then-Chair of the
Oregon Board of Psychologist Examiners and a proponent of
the bill, testified to the purpose of that particular alteration.
The proposed change was “with the intent of hoping to make
the bill more readable. And that is in lines six through nine
which are intended to be deleted and replaced with lines
10 and 11. I believe that you will find that lines 10 and 11
56                          Childress v. Board of Psychology

say the same thing as six through nine but much more suc-
cinctly and clearly.” Audio Recording, House Committee on
Health Care, HB 2081, Feb 13, 2013, at 28:10 (statement
of Dr. Haydon), https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov (accessed
Apr 14, 2023). The lines referenced by Haydon refer to para-
graph (1)(a). Based on Haydon’s testimony, the wording of
paragraph (1)(a) in the current version of the statute was
intended to have the same meaning as paragraph (1)(a) in
the 2013 statute.
          We recognize that the testimony of a single, non-
legislator witness is not conclusive evidence of legislative
intent. See Linn-Benton-Lincoln Ed. v. Linn-Benton-Lincoln
ESD, 163 Or App 558, 569, 989 P2d 25 (1999) (“[W]e are
reluctant to draw decisive inferences concerning legisla-
tive intent [because] * * * the statements were made by wit-
nesses and are not direct expressions of legislative intent.”);
State v. Stamper, 197 Or App 413, 424-25, 106 P3d 172,
rev den, 339 Or 230 (2005) (“[W]e are hesitant to ascribe to
the Legislative Assembly as a whole the single remark of
a single nonlegislator at a committee hearing.”). However,
where the statement is from a proponent of the bill, and the
statement is not inconsistent with statements from the leg-
islators, the statement can be indicative of legislative intent.
See State v. Kelly, 229 Or App 461, 467, 211 P3d 932, rev den,
347 Or 446 (2009) (observing that, “[i]n the case of nonlegis-
lator statements, courts tend to be more wary, but do accord
them some weight when the nonlegislators sponsored the
legislation and who, as a result, are in a good position to
describe its purpose and intended effect”); State v. Worth,
274 Or App 1, 38-42, 360 P3d 536 (2015), rev den, 359 Or
667 (2016) (relying on statements of a representative of the
Oregon District Attorneys Association, which sponsored the
bill and whose comments were consistent with statements
of legislators). Haydon was a proponent of the amendment
and openly announced to the committee members that the
change was not intended to alter the meaning of the para-
graph; moreover, we have found no evidence of a contrary
intention. Accordingly, in our view, the statute’s text, con-
text, and legislative history comport with the board’s inter-
pretation of the statute, and we conclude that the licensing
exemption did not apply to petitioner’s conduct in this case.
Cite as 327 Or App 48 (2023)                               57

         Petitioner also argues that, in determining that
the exemption did not apply to him, the board improperly
relied on expert testimony and articles from the American
Psychological Association to retroactively redefine the
meaning of the exemption statute. Citing Megdal v. Board
of Dental Examiners, 288 Or 293, 605 P2d 273 (1980), he
argues that the board had to specify what it meant by “con-
sulting services to an organization or institution” through
rulemaking before taking an enforcement action. Instead of
doing so, petitioner argues that the board relied on Ferder’s
testimony and the articles to conclude that his conduct
did not fall within the statute’s exemption. Again, we are
unpersuaded.
         The board’s final order cites the applicable statutes
and administrative rules and, using the language from those
statutes and rules, concludes that petitioner engaged in the
practice of psychology by providing “consultation” and “eval-
uation” services to an individual in Oregon. As discussed
above, we agree with the board’s interpretation. The board’s
inclusion in its final order of exhibits and testimony that
were admitted at the case hearing is neither improper nor
unusual, and they were not adopted by the board in place of
the statutes or rules.
         Nor do we agree that the board was required to
adopt a rule defining the phrase “consulting services to
an organization or institution” prior to this action. Where
a statutory term expresses a legislative objective but does
not represent completed legislation, Megdal instructs that
an agency define such delegative terms through rulemaking
prior to enforcement actions. Springfield Education Assn. v.
School Dist., 290 Or 217, 230, 621 P2d 547 (1980). Examples
of delegative terms include “fair,” “undue,” and “unreason-
able.” Id. at 228. As petitioner appears to acknowledge, the
terms at issue here are not delegative terms but are instead
inexact terms. See Nulph v. Board of Parole, 279 Or App 652,
658, 381 P3d 948 (2016), rev dismissed, 361 Or 351 (2017)
(explaining the four considerations courts use to distinguish
inexact terms from delegative terms). When the terms at
issue are inexact terms, the role of the agency and the court
is to determine what the legislature intended by using those
58                              Childress v. Board of Psychology

terms. Id. at 657. We have done so here and conclude that
the board appropriately applied the terms of the statute,
was not required to adopt a rule defining the terms at issue,
and that petitioner was not exempt from licensing under the
terms of ORS 675.090(1)(a).
         The board also concluded that, in producing the
report, petitioner rendered “evaluation” services to father
and his family. “Evaluation,” which is also defined in the
board’s administrative rules, “means assessing or diag-
nosing mental disorders or mental functioning, including
administering, scoring, and interpreting tests of mental
abilities or personality.” OAR 858-010-0001(1)(a). As noted
earlier, evaluation services are not included in the exemp-
tion statute. The board’s final order concluded that peti-
tioner’s report provided his “assessment of the child and
the family pathology,” including “a specific diagnosis for the
child” (albeit one that is qualified with various disclaimers).
         Petitioner argues that he did not provide “evalua-
tion” services because he did not assess or diagnose any-
one. Petitioner’s report has various disclaimers throughout,
including: “Archival data cannot make a diagnosis, only
clinical interviews informed by data can make a diagno-
sis.” He contends that the disclaimers show that he did not
diagnose anyone because diagnoses require confirmation
through clinical assessments, which he did not conduct.
         The board argues that the record supports its con-
clusion that petitioner’s report provided an assessment and
diagnosis for father and his family. The board contends that
petitioner examined data specific to the family members
and, based on that data, “reached a preliminary DSM-V
diagnosis for the child and made an assessment of family
pathology.” The final order cites extensively from petition-
er’s report, including:
         “Of concern in this family is that the mother is manipula-
     tively incorporating the child, [C], into a cross-generational
     coalition against the father, thereby inflicting emotional
     hurt and suffering on the (ex-spouse) father for the failed
     marriage and divorce, using the child as a weapon.
        “* * * * *
Cite as 327 Or App 48 (2023)                                     59

       “The CRM data profile reported 9 [Associated Clinical
   Signs (ACS)] symptoms offering Extremely Strong Support
   for the identification of pathogenic parenting by the pri-
   mary three Diagnostic Indicators. The ACS symptoms also
   includes ACS-3 the Exclusion Demand. When ACS-3 the
   Exclusion Demand appears in the child’s symptom dis-
   play, it is almost 100% diagnostic of the multigenerational
   trauma pathology and would substantially confirm patho-
   genic parenting by an allied parent. * * *
      “* * * * *
      “Diagnosis: If these symptom[s] are confirmed by a
   professional mental health assessment, then the DSM-5
   diagnosis for the child would be:
      “Child: 309.4 Adjustment Disorder
      “V61.20 Parent-Child Relational Problem
      “V61.29 Child Affected by Parental Relationship
      Distress
      “V995.51 Child Psychological Abuse, Confirmed (patho-
      genic parenting).”
(Bracketed text, emphasis, and boldface in original).
          Having reviewed the record, we agree with the
board that petitioner’s report meets the definition of render-
ing “evaluation” services to individuals. We are unpersuaded
by petitioner’s argument that his disclaimers or qualifying
statements take it outside the definition of an evaluation. In
our view, a determination that the symptoms are “almost
100% diagnostic” of a certain pathology and proposing spe-
cific diagnostic codes for the child meets the standard of ren-
dering evaluation services to an individual.
         Turning to petitioner’s second and third assign-
ments of error, he argues (a) that there is no evidence that
the individuals referenced in his report were Oregon resi-
dents and (b) that the board abused its discretion by impos-
ing a $7,500 civil penalty. As the board contends, petitioner’s
second assignment is unpreserved, and we do not address it.
See Rushton v. Oregon Medical Board, 313 Or App 574, 576-
77, 497 P3d 814 (2021) (explaining that the rules of preser-
vation apply to judicial review of agency decisions and citing
cases). Regarding his third assignment, petitioner contends
60                        Childress v. Board of Psychology

that the penalty was excessive, exorbitant, disproportion-
ate considering the amount he was paid for the report, and
that the board failed to adequately explain why $7,500 was
the appropriate penalty. The board contends that the only
part of petitioner’s argument that was preserved below was
that the penalty was excessive and exorbitant. Even if all
of petitioner’s arguments were preserved, however, we con-
clude that the board did not stray outside its permissible
range of discretion by imposing the $7,500 penalty. ORS
675.070(3)(b)(E) authorizes the board to impose a penalty
not to exceed $10,000 where a person is found to have prac-
ticed psychology without a license. Having determined that
petitioner did so, the board assessed a penalty within the
range of its discretion.
        Affirmed.