Court Opinion

ID: 9904799
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-27 21:09:39.741755+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:27.363586
License: Public Domain

11/27/2023
               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                          AT KNOXVILLE
                               August 16, 2023 Session

 CHRISTINA K. COLLINS v. TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
                           ET AL.

                Appeal from the Chancery Court for Knox County
             No. 204630-2     Richard B. Armstrong, Jr., Chancellor
                     ___________________________________

                          No. E2022-01501-COA-R3-CV
                      ___________________________________

In the Chancery Court for Knox County (“the Trial Court”), Christina K. Collins sought
judicial review of a disciplinary order entered against her by the Tennessee Board of
Nursing (“the Board”). Finding that Ms. Collins’s petition for judicial review was
untimely, the Trial Court determined that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the
matter and dismissed her petition. Ms. Collins has appealed the Trial Court’s order of
dismissal. Discerning no reversible error, we affirm.

      Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
                            Affirmed; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN W.
MCCLARTY and KRISTI M. DAVIS, JJ., joined.

Eric C. Vinsant, Birmingham, Alabama, for the appellant, Christina K. Collins.

Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General and Reporter; Andrée Sophia Blumstein, Solicitor
General; Sara Sedgwick, Senior Assistant Attorney General; and Reed Smith, Assistant
Attorney General, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Health, Division of Health
Related Boards and Tennessee Board of Nursing.
                                       OPINION

                                      Background

       In 2016, the Tennessee Department of Health (“the Department”) initiated a
disciplinary action against Ms. Collins, a registered nurse (“RN”) and an advanced
practice registered nurse (“APRN”), for over-prescribing controlled substances in her
treatment of eleven patients from 2011 through 2012. A panel of the Board, being
“authorized to discipline licensed nurses for violations of its nursing rules,” adjudicated
the matter with the assistance of an administrative law judge (“ALJ”). Tenn. Dep’t of
Health v. Collins, No. M2019-01306-COA-R3-CV, 2020 WL 6940702, at *1 (Tenn. Ct.
App. Nov. 25, 2020).

       As described in this Court’s previous opinion addressing Ms. Collins’s first appeal
(“Collins I”), the Department alleged that:

      Ms. Collins “use[d] an APRN license and DEA registration to essentially
      act as a wholesaler to drug dealers, abusers, and addicts.” The State
      claimed that Ms. Collins violated provisions of the Board’s rules and
      regulations by overprescribing controlled substances, narcotics, and other
      medications in amounts and/or for durations not medically necessary,
      advisable, or justified for a diagnosed condition and without appropriate
      record-keeping or documentation of the medical rationale for her
      prescribing habits.

Id. Although the Board found that Ms. Collins was guilty of violating Tennessee’s
nursing rules, one member conducted her own research, observed that her findings had
“changed her mind,” and shared her findings with the other panel members during the
panel’s deliberations. Id. As a result, in an order entered in 2018 (“2018 Order”), the
Board imposed a more lenient sanction than that sought by the Department. Id.

      As detailed in Collins I,

             After the panel members completed their review, the Board ruled
      that it could not “[f]ind by a preponderance of the evidence that [Ms.
      Collins’s] prescribing to the Patients fell below the standard of care of an
      ordinary and prudent [APRN] practicing in the area of pain management in
      2011 and 2012.” It did find that Ms. Collins’s “documentation fell below
      what this Board believes is called for by the Rules of the Board of Nursing,
      particularly in light of the complexity of the treatments provided to the
      Patients.” The final order required two years of probation plus civil
      penalties, costs, and additional education.

                                           -2-
Id. at *4. Both Ms. Collins and the Department filed petitions for judicial review of the
Board’s decision to the Davidson County Chancery Court (“Davidson County Court”).
The Department challenged the Board’s use of extrinsic materials during its deliberations.

       At that stage of the proceedings, Ms. Collins claimed that the Department lacked
standing to challenge the Board’s decision and did not constitute an aggrieved party
under Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-322(a)(2). Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-322(a) (West May 18,
2021 to current) provides:

      (1) A person who is aggrieved by a final decision in a contested case is
      entitled to judicial review under this chapter, which shall be the only
      available method of judicial review. A preliminary, procedural or
      intermediate agency action or ruling is immediately reviewable if review of
      the final agency decision would not provide an adequate remedy.

      (2) A state agency is considered to be an aggrieved person for the purpose
      of judicial review when the order is from a board, commission or other
      entity independent of the aggrieved agency. In such instances, judicial
      review under this chapter is permitted upon the request of the agency head
      and the approval of the attorney general and reporter.

(Emphasis added.)     The Davidson County Court rejected Ms. Collins’s argument,
concluding:

              It is settled law that the State Petitioners have standing to bring this
      action under Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-322(a)(2). The Division [of Health
      Related Boards] and the Department are sufficiently independent of the
      Board and sufficiently aggrieved within the meaning of the statute to have
      standing in Chancery Court. See Tennessee Dep’t of Health v. Odle, No.
      01A01-9207-CH-00267, 1993 WL 21976, at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 3,
      1993). Moreover, the Division and the Department are independent of the
      Board because they are superior agencies. See id. Therefore, although the
      statute precludes the Board from challenging its own decision, the Division
      and the Department have standing, and the State Petitioners are aggrieved
      parties under Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-322(a)(2). See id.

The Davidson County Court further determined that certain procedural errors, including
the introduction of extrinsic prejudicial information, had constituted an abuse of
discretion and accordingly reversed the Board’s decision and remanded for a new
contested hearing to be heard by a different panel of the Board. Ms. Collins appealed to
this Court, and this Court affirmed the Davidson County Court in Collins I, although the
issue of standing was not explicitly raised by Ms. Collins or addressed by this Court.

                                           -3-
       On remand, the new panel of the Board conducted a contested hearing on several
dates in January and February 2022. The Board entered a “Final Order” on March 2,
2022 (“March 2022 Order”). The Board found that Ms. Collins’s treatment of certain
patients was below the standard of care due to her over-prescription of controlled
substances which it deemed had been “dangerous to the health of her patients and
promoted a culture of addiction and possible diversion of controlled substances.” The
Board consequently found that Ms. Collins was “unfit or incompetent by reason of
negligence, habits or other cause” in violation of Tenn. Code Ann. § 63-7-115(a)(1)(C);
“guilty of unprofessional conduct” in violation of Tenn. Code Ann. § 63-7-115(a)(1)(F);
guilty of over-prescribing, or prescribing in a manner inconsistent with Rules 1000-04-
.08 and 1000-04-.09 in violation of Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 1000-01.13(1)(t); guilty of
violating the guidelines for the treatment of pain in violation of Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs.
1000-04-.08; and guilty of violating the prerequisites for APRNs who prescribe
medication in violation of Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 1000-04-.09.

       The Board further stated:

              The Tennessee Board of Nursing has a duty to protect the health,
       safety, and welfare of the citizens of Tennessee. In supporting Tennessee
       Department of Health’s ongoing battle against prescription drug abuse and
       overprescribing, the Board believes this action is necessary due to
       Respondent’s haphazard and unprofessional prescribing practices.
       Respondent’s actions constitute a serious danger to the public’s health,
       safety and welfare.

The Board accordingly revoked her APRN license and voided her “multistate privilege,”
although it permitted her to continue to practice as an RN in Tennessee. The March 2022
Order provided that Ms. Collins could not apply for a new APRN certificate before the
expiration of a one-year time period from the date of the order. It further provided that in
the event Ms. Collins is granted a new APRN certificate in the future, Ms. Collins’s
APRN certificate would be restricted to prohibit her from prescribing controlled
substances. Ms. Collins was ordered to pay eleven “type B civil penalties” of $500.00
each, one for each of the eleven patients involved in the action, for a total of $5,500.00.
She also was ordered to pay the actual and reasonable costs of prosecuting the case, not
to exceed $100,000.00. The March 2022 Order further stated that Ms. Collins had sixty
days after the effective date of the order to file a petition for judicial review.

       On March 17, 2022, Ms. Collins filed a timely petition for reconsideration, which
the Board subsequently denied. On May 3, 2022, Ms. Collins filed a petition for judicial
review in the Trial Court. Therein, Ms. Collins stated that she sought judicial review of
the “Final Order of the Board, filed March 2, 2022, with the Administrative Procedures
Division.” Ms. Collins noted that the March 2022 Order “did not contain a statement that
it is deemed entered upon the date that it is filed with the Administrative Procedures
                                         -4-
Division and contained no effective date.” She indicated that she was seeking review of
“certain errors by the Administrative Law Judge,” and she raised several issues in her
petition. Ms. Collins also filed a separate request for a stay of the March 2022 Order
pending resolution of her petition.

       The Department filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction
pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 12.02(1). The Department argued that the
Trial Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because Ms. Collins had filed her petition
“outside the mandatory and jurisdictional 60-day statute of limitations.” The Department
cited Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-322(b)(1)(A)(iv) (West May 18, 2021 to current), which
provides: “Petitions seeking judicial review shall be filed within sixty (60) days after the
entry of the agency’s final order thereon.” Ms. Collins filed her petition sixty-two days
after March 2, 2022.

        The Department also contended that the Board’s final order fulfilled all statutory
requirements for entry of a final order. The Department cited Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-
318(b) for the proposition that an “initial or final order shall not be deemed entered until
the initial or final order has been filed with the administrative procedures division.” The
Department noted that the Board’s final order provided in its Certificate of Filing, “Filed
in the Administrative Procedures Division, Office of the Secretary of State, this the 2 day
of March 2022. [signed] Stephanie Shackelford, Director, Administrative Procedures
Division.” The Department continued to explain:

               In an apparent attempt to explain her failure to timely file her
       petition for judicial review, Ms. Collins claims in her petition that the
       March 2, 2022, Final Order “did not contain a statement that it is deemed
       entered upon the date that it is filed with the Administrative Procedures
       Division and contained no effective date,” citing Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs.
       1340-04-04-01-.19. Petition, p. 1. But in fact, the Order plainly contained
       a filing date, signed by the Administrative Procedures Division Director, of
       March 2, 2022, and a filing/entry date is all the statutes require. As is
       explained above, Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-322(b)([1])(A)(iv) requires that
       petitions seeking judicial review shall be filed within sixty (60) days after
       the entry of the agency’s final order, while Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-318(b)
       provides that the initial or final order shall not be deemed entered until the
       initial or final order has been filed with the administrative procedures
       division.” Id. (emphasis added). The March 2, 2022, Final Order was
       filed/entered on the date stated on the Certificate of Filing on March 2,
       2022. And, pursuant to § 4-5-318, the Certificate of Filing memorializes
       the fact of such filing on that date. That is the extent of the filing
       requirements contained in the applicable statutes.

                                           -5-
             Thus, the effective date of the Order and the filing/entry date of the
      Order are contained in the Order itself, and the Order meets both the
      statutory and regulatory requirements.

In support, the Department attached Collins I and the March 2022 Order to its motion.

       Ms. Collins filed a response to the Department’s motion to dismiss. Ms. Collins
contended that the March 2022 Order did not become final until April 22, 2022,
providing her until June 21, 2022 to file her petition for judicial review. In so arguing,
Ms. Collins first noted that the Department was a “superior adjudicative agency to the
Board,” as determined by the Davidson County Court, and therefore the Department
maintained the authority to review the orders of the Board pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. §
4-5-315. She further contended:

              The Board filed its initial order from February 28, 2022 with the
      Administrative Procedures Division of the Office of the Secretary of State,
      on March 2, 2022. Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-318(f)(3) provides that an initial
      order “become[s] a final order in accordance with § 4-5-314 . . . [f]ifteen
      (15) days after entry of the initial order, if no party has filed a petition for
      appeal and the agency has not given written notice of its intention to
      exercise review.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-315, entitled “Review of initial
      order”, however, states in part pertinent: “The fifteen-day period for a
      party to file a petition for appeal or for the agency to give notice of its
      intention to review an initial order on the agency’s own motion shall be
      tolled by the submission of a timely petition for reconsideration of the
      initial order pursuant to § 4-5-317, and a new fifteen-day period shall start
      to run upon disposition of the petition for reconsideration.” Tenn. Code
      Ann. § 4-5-315(b). Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-317(a), in turn, provides that
      “[a]ny party, within fifteen (15) days after entry of an initial order or final
      order, may file a petition for reconsideration, stating the specific grounds
      upon which relief is requested.”

              Based on the date of filing, the Order would not become a final order
      until March 17, 2022, fifteen days after it was entered, pursuant to Tenn.
      Code Ann. § 4-5-318(f). However, on March 17, 2022, Ms. Collins filed a
      timely petition for reconsideration with the Board, seeking to have the
      Board address several issues, including orders by the administrative law
      judge prohibiting the Board from considering relevant judicial
      determinations of the chancery court on judicial review regarding the
      Board’s and Department’s rights under the law. According to statute, the
      fifteen (15) day period to review an initial order is tolled by the timely
      filing of a petition for reconsideration until disposition of the petition has
      taken place. Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-315(b). The Board filed an order
                                             -6-
        denying Ms. Collins[’s] petition for reconsideration, on or about, April 7,
        2022. The fifteen (15) day period began anew, and the Order of the Board
        became effective as a final order on April 22, 2022.

               Upon the Order becoming effective as a final order, the time for
        seeking judicial review began to run.            Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-
        322(b)(1)(A)(iv) provides, “Petitions seeking judicial review shall be filed
        within sixty (60) days after entry of the agency’s final order thereon.” The
        time for filing a petition seeking judicial review in this case will expire on
        June 21, 2022. Ms. Collins’ petition seeking judicial review was timely
        filed on May 3, 2022.

       The Department filed a reply to Ms. Collins’s response. First, the Department
noted that Ms. Collins had already conceded that the March 2022 Order was a final order,
quoting her petition for judicial review in which she requested “judicial review of the
Final Order of the Board filed March 2, 2022” and petition for reconsideration in which
she requested “reconsideration of this panel’s March 2, 2022 final order.” The
Department further contended that Ms. Collins’s argument failed given that she had
misconstrued the difference between an “initial order” and a “final order.” According to
the Department, the March 2022 Order was a final order because it was entered by the
Board rather than an ALJ. Therefore, the Department argued that Ms. Collins’s reliance
on Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 4-5-315(b) and -318(f) was misplaced in that these statutory
provisions pertained to initial orders rather than final orders.1

        After conducting a hearing on August 4, 2022, the Trial Court entered a
“Memorandum Opinion and Order” granting the Department’s motion to dismiss on
September 23, 2022. First, the Trial Court agreed with the Department that the sixty-day
period in which to file a petition for judicial review was mandatory and that it had no
discretion to extend the deadline. Second, the Trial Court considered Ms. Collins’s
argument that her filing of the petition on May 3, 2022, was timely and that the sixty-day
time limit did not begin to run until April 22, 2022, due to the fifteen-day period
purportedly provided for the Department to exercise its right to review the Board’s
decision as well as the tolling of the deadline by virtue of her motion for reconsideration.
In looking at Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 4-5-315(b) and -318(f), the Trial Court emphasized
that these provisions applied only to initial orders rather than final ones.

1
  The Department also argued, in the alternative, that the Trial Court should transfer the case to the
Davidson County Court to the extent that Ms. Collins sought to “further litigate and construe the meaning
and effect of the Davidson County Chancery Court’s September 10, 2019 Amended Memorandum and
Final Order that was affirmed by the Tennessee Court of Appeals at Nashville.” In so arguing, the
Department noted that the Tennessee Supreme court had rejected Ms. Collins’ Rule 11 application for
permission to appeal Collins I.

                                                  -7-
        The Trial Court also agreed with the Department that there was a significant
distinction between initial orders and final orders. The Trial Court explained that if an
ALJ conducts a hearing alone, then the ALJ renders an “initial order,” which would
become final after fifteen days unless reviewed by the agency pursuant to § 4-5-315(b).
Conversely, the Trial Court explained that a final order is rendered if the case is decided
by an agency, board, or commission. In Ms. Collins’s case, the Board decided her case.
Therefore, the Trial Court determined that the Board’s March 2022 Order was a final
order, not subject to the statutes that provided a fifteen-day period for review or the
tolling provision triggered by the filing of a motion for reconsideration.

       Next, the Trial Court noted that the March 2022 Order contained a Certificate of
Filing from the Administrative Procedures Division of the Secretary of State showing a
date of March 2, 2022. Determining that sixty days from March 2 was May 1, the Trial
Court concluded that Ms. Collins’s May 3 petition was untimely filed and accordingly
dismissed her petition for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Ms. Collins thereafter filed
a notice of appeal.

        A day after filing her notice of appeal, Ms. Collins filed a motion to reconsider,
alter, or amend the Trial Court’s order granting the Department’s motion to dismiss. Ms.
Collins first noted that page three of the Trial Court’s order appeared to be a page from a
different order addressing a different case. Ms. Collins further argued that either the
Davidson County Court had incorrectly decided that the Department was superior and
independent to the Board and accordingly had standing to seek judicial review of the
Board’s 2018 Order, or the Trial Court incorrectly determined that the March 2022 Order
was a final order in that “the Board would lack the authority to bind the Department.” In
sum, Ms. Collins argued that either the Davidson County Court incorrectly determined
that the Department was an independent and superior agency, or the Trial Court
incorrectly determined that the March 2022 Order had become a final order prior to the
expiration of the Department’s purported fifteen-day period in which to review the order.
She stated in pertinent part:

       If this Court maintains its current opinion that the Board is granted statutory
       authority to issue a final order with no review by a superior agency, Ms.
       Collins[] request[s] this Court [to] vacate the prior [Davidson County
       Court] order entered in this case from the judicial review as well as the
       orders that followed it as such orders were without legal authority and in
       direct contradiction [ ] to the statutory framework created by our state
       legislat[ors]. Alternatively, if this Court adopts the prior Chancery Court’s
       opinion that the Department and Division are superior to the Board, we ask
       the court to remand the case to the appropriate administrative agency to
       obtain confirmation that the Department agrees to be bound by the findings
       of its subordinate agency (i.e. the Board).
                                             -8-
On October 25, 2022, the Trial Court entered an order correcting page three of its
dismissal order, but the Court did not address Ms. Collins’s motion to reconsider, alter, or
amend.

        In February 2023, this Court entered an order staying Ms. Collins’s appeal and
remanding the case to the Trial Court for it to rule on Ms. Collins’s motion to reconsider,
alter, or amend. The Trial Court held a hearing and entered an order addressing Ms.
Collins’s motion to reconsider, alter, or amend its final order. In considering her motion,
the Trial Court noted:

        [R]ather than addressing the Petition’s untimely filing, the Motion argues
        that the Court should vacate a prior decision of the Davidson County
        Chancery Court filed in September 2019. See, e.g., Motion at 4 (“Ms.
        Collins’ [sic] requests this Court vacate the prior [Davidson County
        Chancery Court] order entered in this case.”); Memorandum at 2 (“We,
        therefore request this Court . . . to vacate the decision of the [Davidson
        County] Chancery Court.”); id. at 14 (“[T]his Court must vacate the
        Chancery Court’s ruling.”). Such relief falls well outside the scope of the
        Motion to Dismiss or any arguments Ms. Collins raised in opposition to the
        Motion to Dismiss. Furthermore, this Court notes that the Davidson
        County Chancery Court’s order was affirmed by, and any questions of
        jurisdiction necessarily resolved by, the Tennessee Court of Appeals. See
        Tenn. R. App. P. 13(b)[.][2]

The Trial Court denied Ms. Collins’s motion to reconsider, alter, or amend.

                                               Discussion

      Although not stated exactly as such, Ms. Collins has presented four issues, which
we have consolidated into one dispositive issue: whether the Trial Court erred by finding
that Ms. Collins’s petition for review was untimely, consequently rendering the Court
without subject matter jurisdiction to consider the merits of her petition. Ms. Collins

2
  Although Ms. Collins did not raise the Department’s standing to seek judicial review of the Board’s
2018 Order as an issue in Collins I, the Trial Court concluded that the Collins I Court must have
necessarily and implicitly determined that the Davidson County Court had jurisdiction to hear the
Department’s petition by the fact that it adjudicated the merits of Ms. Collins’s appeal and affirmed the
Davidson County Court. The Trial Court cited Tenn. R. App. P 13(b), which provides: “Review
generally will extend only to those issues presented for review. The appellate court shall also consider
whether the trial and appellate court have jurisdiction over the subject matter, whether or not presented
for review . . . .” Likewise, on appeal, Ms. Collins states that she presumes the Collins I Court’s “silence”
on this issue was an “implicit adoption of the Davidson County Chancery Court’s ruling on the subject,”
also citing Tenn. R. App. P. 13(b).
                                                   -9-
presents two primary arguments: (1) that this Court should reconsider the Davidson
County Court’s order finding that the Department had standing to seek judicial review,
and by extension this Court’s affirmation of the Davidson County Court in Collins I, and
alternatively, (2) that the law of the case that the Department constituted an aggrieved
party with standing to seek judicial review, as established in the Davidson County Court
order, should have resulted in an extended deadline for her to file a petition for judicial
review.

      The Tennessee Supreme Court has previously explained the relevant standard of
review for dismissals based upon Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 12.02(1) as follows:

       Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 12.02(1) governs a motion to dismiss
       for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Subject matter jurisdiction involves
       a court’s lawful authority to adjudicate a controversy brought before it. See
       Meighan v. U.S. Sprint Commc’ns Co., 924 S.W.2d 632, 639 (Tenn. 1996);
       Standard Sur. & Cas. Co. v. Sloan, 180 Tenn. 220, 173 S.W.2d 436, 440
       (1943). Subject matter jurisdiction depends on the nature of the cause of
       action and the relief sought, see Landers v. Jones, 872 S.W.2d 674, 675
       (Tenn. 1994), and can only be conferred on a court by the constitution or a
       legislative act. See Kane v. Kane, 547 S.W.2d 559, 560 (Tenn. 1977);
       Computer Shoppe, Inc. v. State, 780 S.W.2d 729, 734 (Tenn. Ct. App.
       1989). Where subject matter jurisdiction is challenged under Rule
       12.02(1), the party asserting that subject matter jurisdiction exists . . . has
       the burden of proof. See Redwing v. Catholic Bishop for the Diocese of
       Memphis, 363 S.W.3d 436, 445 (Tenn. 2012) (citing Staats v. McKinnon,
       206 S.W.3d 532, 543 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006)). “Since a determination of
       whether subject matter jurisdiction exists is a question of law, our standard
       of review is de novo, without a presumption of correctness.” Northland
       Ins. Co. v. State, 33 S.W.3d 727, 729 (Tenn. 2000).

Chapman v. DaVita, Inc., 380 S.W.3d 710, 712-13 (Tenn. 2012).

       To the extent our consideration of Ms. Collins’s arguments involve statutory
interpretation, we note that our Supreme Court has provided the following standard of
review:

       Issues of statutory construction present questions of law that we review de
       novo with no presumption of correctness. Martin v. Powers, 505 S.W.3d
       512, 518 (Tenn. 2016). The primary goal of statutory interpretation is to
       carry out legislative intent without expanding or restricting the intended
       scope of the statute. State v. Smith, 484 S.W.3d 393, 403 (Tenn. 2016)
       (citations omitted). In determining legislative intent, we first must look to
       the text of the statute and give the words of the statute “their natural and
                                           - 10 -
       ordinary meaning in the context in which they appear and in light of the
       statute’s general purpose.” Mills v. Fulmarque, Inc., 360 S.W.3d 362, 368
       (Tenn. 2012) (citations omitted). When a statute’s language is clear and
       unambiguous, we enforce the statute as written; we need not consider other
       sources of information. Frazier v. State, 495 S.W.3d 246, 249 (Tenn.
       2016). We apply the plain meaning of a statute’s words in normal and
       accepted usage without a forced interpretation. Baker v. State, 417 S.W.3d
       428, 433 (Tenn. 2013). We do not alter or amend statutes or substitute our
       policy judgment for that of the Legislature. Armbrister v. Armbrister, 414
       S.W.3d 685, 704 (Tenn. 2013).

Coleman v. Olson, 551 S.W.3d 686, 694 (Tenn. 2018).

        In this case, the proceedings below were governed by the Uniform Administrative
Procedures Act (“UAPA”). See Collins, 2020 WL 6940702, at *5 (“Judicial review of
decisions by administrative agencies following contested case hearings is governed by
the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act (“UAPA”), Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-
322(a)(1).”). Under the UAPA, a person “aggrieved by a final decision in a contested
case is entitled to judicial review” and has sixty days to file a petition seeking judicial
review after the entry of the agency’s final order. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-322(a)(1)
& (b)(1)(A)(iv). If the aggrieved person fails to file his or her petition for judicial review
within the sixty-day period, the reviewing court will not have subject matter jurisdiction
to review or adjudicate the merits of the case. See Schering-Plough Healthcare Prods.,
Inc. v. State Bd. of Equalization, 999 S.W.2d 773, 776 (Tenn. 1999) (“The sixty-day time
limitation upon filing of the petition is jurisdictional.”); Davis v. Tenn. Dep’t of Emp.
Sec., 23 S.W.3d 304, 307-08 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999) (“A party’s failure to file a petition
for review on or before the statutory deadline prevents the courts from exercising their
jurisdiction to review the agency’s decision.”). Furthermore, the filing of a petition for
reconsideration does not toll the sixty-day time limitation. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-
322(b)(2) (West May 18, 2021 to current) (“The time for filing a petition for review in a
court as provided in this chapter shall not be extended because of the period of time
allotted for filing with the agency a petition for reconsideration.”); Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-
5-317(e) (West July 1, 2022 to current) (“The sixty-day period for a party to file a
petition for review of a final order shall be tolled by granting the petition and setting the
matter for further proceedings . . . .”) (emphasis added).

       The Board filed its “Final Order” with the Administrative Procedures Division,
Office of the Secretary of State, on March 2, 2022. Sixty days from March 2, 2022, was
Sunday, May 1, 2022. Given that the sixty-day deadline concluded on a Sunday, Ms.
Collins had until Monday, May 2, 2022, to file her petition for judicial review. See Tenn.
R. Civ. P. 6.01 (“In computing any period of time prescribed or allowed by these rules,
by order of court, or by any applicable statute . . . The last day of the period so computed
shall be included unless it is a Saturday, a Sunday, or a legal holiday . . .”). However, it
                                            - 11 -
is undisputed that Ms. Collins did not file her petition until May 3, 2022. As the
Department points out in its appellate brief, this Court has previously affirmed a trial
court’s dismissal of a petition for judicial review that was filed on the sixty-first day. See
Kolasinski v. Tenn. Dep’t of Safety & Homeland Sec., No. M2014-02487-COA-R3-CV,
2015 WL 9594544, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 30, 2015).

        Ms. Collins does not deny that she filed her petition more than sixty days after the
Board entered its “Final Order,” but rather, she primarily argues that this Court should
revisit the Davidson County Court’s order, and by extension, this Court’s affirmation of
that order in Collins I. The Davidson County Court found that the Department had
standing to seek judicial review of the Board’s decision, and although this issue was not
specifically before this Court in Collins I, given that the Court decided the appeal based
on the merits in favor of the Department, it must have necessarily affirmed the Davidson
County Court’s conclusion that the Department had standing to seek review under Tenn.
Code Ann. § 4-5-322(a). Our High Court has previously explained:

       [U]nder the law of the case doctrine, an appellate court’s decision on an
       issue of law is binding in later trials and appeals of the same case if the
       facts on the second trial or appeal are substantially the same as the facts in
       the first trial or appeal. The doctrine applies to issues that were actually
       before the appellate court in the first appeal and to issues that were
       necessarily decided by implication.

Memphis Publ’g. Co. v. Tenn. Petroleum Underground Storage Tank Bd., 975 S.W.2d
303, 306 (Tenn. 1998) (internal citations omitted). We accordingly decline to review or
revisit our decision in Collins I and instead focus our attention to the only issue properly
before us: whether the Trial Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction.

       Ms. Collins’s alternative argument also focuses on the Davidson County Court’s
order. Ms. Collins contends that if the Davidson County Court’s finding that the
Department had standing to seek judicial review of the Board’s decision is the law of the
case, then the Trial Court failed to apply this principle in addressing the Department’s
motion to dismiss. According to Ms. Collins, if the Trial Court had correctly extended
the reasoning of the Davidson County Court’s decision, then the Department, as a
“superior adjudicative agency,” would have had the authority to review the Board’s
March 2022 Order, thereby extending the sixty-day time limitation. Ms. Collins posits:

              The law of the case establishing the Department as a superior agency
       must be given effect and cannot be disregarded by the trial court and parties
       by asserting that the law of the case conflicts with existing statutes.

              Under Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-314(a) “An agency with statutory
       authority to decide a contested case shall render a final order.” The
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      Davidson County Chancery Court determined, “the Division and the
      Department are independent of the Board because they are superior
      agencies.” TR 228, 8 (citing Tennessee Dep’t of Health v. Odle, No.
      01A01-9207-CH-00267, 1993 WL 21976, at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 3,
      1993) (citing East Tennessee Health Improvement Council, Inc. v.
      Tennessee Health Facilities Commission, 626 S.W.2d 272, 274 (Tenn. App.
      1981))). In Tennessee, a superior adjudicative agency has the authority to
      review the orders of its subordinate agency. Based on the Department’s
      status in this case as superior to the Board, the Department has the right to
      review the order of the Board prior to it becoming final. The Board does
      not have the authority to modify or revise the findings made by the court on
      appeal. Freemon Indus. LLC v. Eastmon Chem. Co., 277 S.W.3d 561, 567
      (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006). Therefore, the effect of the law of the case is the
      Department, not the Board, is the agency with the ultimate authority to
      decide a contested case and render a final order.

(Paragraph numbering omitted.)

      Ms. Collins argues that the Board’s March 2022 Order was an “initial” order
pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 4-5-315(b) and -318(f). Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-318(f)
(West July 1, 2022 to current) provides:

      Unless a later date is stated in an initial order or a stay is granted, the time
      when an initial order becomes a final order in accordance with § 4-5-314
      shall be as follows:

      (1) When the initial order is entered, if administrative review is unavailable;

      (2) When the agency enters an order stating, after a petition for appeal has
      been filed, that review will not be exercised, if discretion is available to
      make a determination to this effect; or

      (3) Fifteen (15) days after entry of the initial order, if no party has filed a
      petition for appeal and the agency has not given written notice of its
      intention to exercise review.

Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-315(b) provides, in part:

      A petition for appeal from an initial order shall be filed with the agency, or
      with any person designated for such purpose by rule of the agency, within
      fifteen (15) days after entry of the initial order. If the agency on its own
      motion decides to review an initial order, the agency shall give written
      notice of its intention to review the initial order within fifteen (15) days
                                          - 13 -
      after its entry. The fifteen-day period for a party to file a petition for appeal
      or for the agency to give notice of its intention to review an initial order on
      the agency’s own motion shall be tolled by the submission of a timely
      petition for reconsideration of the initial order pursuant to § 4-5-317, and a
      new fifteen-day period shall start to run upon disposition of the petition for
      reconsideration.

She accordingly argues that the Board’s March 2022 Order was an initial order that
would not become a final order until a fifteen-day period after entry, purportedly
provided to allow the Department, as a “superior adjudicative agency,” to determine
whether to exercise review of the Board’s decision. She further argues that because she
filed a petition to reconsider pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-315(b) within the fifteen-
day period, the fifteen-day period was tolled until April 7, 2022, when the Board denied
her petition to reconsider. After April 7, 2022, the fifteen-day period started anew,
rendering the Board’s 2022 Order “final” on April 22, 2022, rather than March 2, 2022.
Insofar as the sixty-day timeframe should have been based upon April 22, Ms. Collins
contends that the May 3 filing of her petition was timely. Upon our review of the
relevant statutes, we conclude that her argument is unavailing.

       The Board’s March 2022 Order was a final order, rather than an initial order.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-314(b) (West July 1, 2022 to current) provides: “If an
administrative judge or hearing officer hears a case alone under § 4-5-301(a)(2), the
administrative judge or hearing officer shall render an initial order, which shall become a
final order unless reviewed in accordance with § 4-5-315.” An “initial” order, therefore,
is an order entered by an ALJ that may, in accordance with Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-315,
be reviewed by the agency within fifteen days after its entry. Here, the March 2022
Order was not entered by an ALJ but rather the Board, an agency “with statutory
authority to decide” contested cases. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-314(a) (West July 1,
2022 to current) (“An agency with statutory authority to decide a contested case shall
render a final order.”); Johnson v. Tenn. Bd. of Nursing, No. M2005-02129-COA-R3-CV,
2007 WL 624353, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 28, 2007) (“The Board is authorized by
Tenn. Code Ann. § 63-7-115 to discipline individuals licensed to practice nursing in
accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act, Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-301 et seq.”).

       This Court has previously elaborated upon two different procedures to address
contested administrative cases, explaining:

             The Uniform Administrative Procedures Act affords state agencies
      two procedures for deciding contested cases. First, the agency, board, or
      commission may hear and decide the case itself. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-
      5-314(a) (1998). Second, the agency, board, or commission may decide to
      request an administrative law judge or hearing officer to conduct the
      hearing and then render an “initial order” that may, in turn, be affirmed or
                                         - 14 -
       modified by the agency, board, or commission on its own motion or at the
       request of one of the parties. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-314(b). These
       initial orders cannot become final until ten days after they are entered. See
       Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-318(f)(3) (1998).

Davis, 23 S.W.3d at 308; see also Lee, ex rel. Lee v. Tenn. Dep’t of Fin. & Admin., No.
M2008-02029-COA-R3-CV, 2009 WL 2214023, at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App. July 24, 2009)
(“If the case is heard by members of an agency, then that panel renders a final order.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-314(a). ‘If an [ALJ] . . . hears a case alone . . ., the [ALJ] . . .
shall render an initial order,’ Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-314(b)[.]”) (internal citations
omitted).

       This Court previously explained this process when the Board of Electrolysis
authorized an ALJ to hear the contested case alone:

               After the ten-day period[3] for filing a petition for review or
       reconsideration expired, the ALJ’s final order became the final order of the
       Board. T.C.A. § 4-5-301(2) authorizes an ALJ to hear a contested case
       sitting alone. The determination of whether an ALJ will hear a case rests
       solely with the agency. T.C.A. § 4-5-302(c). The ALJ therefore acts on
       behalf of the agency, and, the ALJ’s initial order, if not reviewed and
       revised, becomes the final order of the agency. See T.C.A. § 4-5-318(f)(3).

Tenn. Dep’t of Health, Div. of Health Related Boards v. Odle, No. 01A01-9207-CH-
00267, 1993 WL 21976, at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 3, 1993). Although it appears that
the Board utilized an ALJ to preside over the hearing, it is clear that the Board ultimately
adjudicated Ms. Collins’s case and rendered a final decision against her. The Board’s
March 2022 Order is signed by the “Chairperson/Acting Chairperson” of the Board. We
accordingly find that the Board’s March 2022 Order is in fact the final order at issue.

       Ms. Collins also presents arguments related to the sufficiency of the March 2022
Order. She argues that the Board failed to set forth in its order the procedures for the
Department to fulfill its right to review the Board’s decision and failed to include the
entry and effective date of the order in contravention of Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 4-5-314(c), -
318(a). Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-314(c) (West July 1, 2022 to current) provides, in
pertinent part: “The final order, initial order or decision must also include a statement of
the available procedures and time limits for seeking reconsideration or other
administrative relief and the time limits for seeking judicial review of the final order.”
The March 2022 Order provides these instructions in compliance with the statute.

3
 The time limitation for an agency to review an initial order is now fifteen days rather than ten days.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-315(a).

                                                - 15 -
Although the order does not contain instructions for the Department to review the
Board’s decision, as Ms. Collins contends it should have, we have already concluded that
Ms. Collins has misconstrued §§ 4-5-315(b) and -318(f) and that the order before us was
a final order, not subject to review by the Department. We therefore discern no error in
the Board’s instructions for seeking reconsideration and judicial review.

        Regarding Ms. Collins’s argument regarding the entry date of the March 2022
Order, Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-318(a) provides, in pertinent part: “All initial and final
orders shall state when the order is entered and effective.” The March 2022 Order
provides that it was “Filed in the Administrative Procedures Division, Office of the
Secretary of State, this the 2 day of March 2022.” Furthermore, Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-
                            -
318(b) (West July 1, 2022 to current) provides: “If the agency has utilized an
administrative judge from the administrative procedures division of the office of the
secretary of state, the initial or final order shall not be deemed entered until the initial or
final order has been filed with the administrative procedures division.” (Emphasis added.)
We conclude that the Certificate of Filing statement provided Ms. Collins sufficient
notice of the date of entry, see Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-322(b)(1)(A)(iv) (“Petitions
seeking judicial review shall be filed within sixty (60) days after the entry of the agency’s
final order thereon.”) (emphasis added), by which she could calculate the sixty-day
deadline to file her petition. In fact, the record demonstrates that Ms. Collins had actual
knowledge that March 2, 2022, was the entry date of the Board’s final order. In her
timely filed petition for reconsideration, Ms. Collins stated that she “petitions [the Board]
for reconsideration of this panel’s March 2, 2022 final order.” We therefore conclude
that Ms. Collins’s argument is meritless.

      Given that Ms. Collins filed her petition for judicial review one day after the
conclusion of the sixty-day time limitation, we conclude that the Trial Court correctly
determined that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction and properly granted the
Department’s motion to dismiss.

                                         Conclusion

       The Trial Court’s final judgment granting the Department’s motion to dismiss
pursuant to Rule 12.02(1) is affirmed, and this cause is remanded to the Trial Court for
the collection of costs below. Costs on appeal are taxed to the appellant, Christina K.
Collins, and her surety, if any.

                                                     _________________________________
                                                     D. MICHAEL SWINEY, CHIEF JUDGE

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