Court Opinion

ID: 5137287
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-21 14:38:16.954128+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:01.446712
License: Public Domain

IN THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

                                      ‐‐‐‐ooOoo‐‐‐‐

Stacie Powell,                             )          MEMORANDUM DECISION
                                           )
      Petitioner,                          )            Case No. 20110195‐CA
                                           )
v.                                         )                  FILED
                                           )               (March 29, 2012)
Department of Commerce,                    )
                                           )              2012 UT App 83
      Respondent.                          )

                                          ‐‐‐‐‐

Original Proceeding in this Court

Attorneys:       Catherine M. Larson and Jennifer R. Carrizal, Salt Lake City, for
                 Petitioner
                 Mark L. Shurtleff, Nancy L. Kemp, and Laurie L. Noda, Salt Lake City,
                 for Respondent

                                          ‐‐‐‐‐

Before Judges Davis, Roth, and Christiansen.

ROTH, Judge:

¶1    Stacie Powell seeks review of the decision by the Department of Commerce (the
Department) to revoke her nursing license on the basis that the revocation was not
supported by substantial evidence and was arbitrary and capricious.1 We decline to
disturb the Department’s ruling.

¶2     When reviewing an agency decision,

              [t]he appellate court shall grant relief only if, on the basis of
              the agency’s record, it determines that a person seeking
              judicial review has been substantially prejudiced by . . . a
              determination of fact, made or implied by the agency, that is
              not supported by substantial evidence when viewed in light
              of the whole record before the court . . . [or] the agency
              action is . . . otherwise arbitrary or capricious.

Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐4‐403(4)(g), (h)(iv) (2011). An agency decision is supported by
substantial evidence if “a reasonable mind could reach the same conclusion as [did] the
[agency].” Patterson v. Utah Cnty. Bd. of Adjustment, 893 P.2d 602, 604 (Utah Ct. App.
1995); see also Smith v. Workforce Appeals Bd., 2011 UT App 68, ¶ 9, 252 P.3d 372
(“Substantial evidence is that quantum and quality of relevant evidence that is adequate
to convince a reasonable mind to support a conclusion.” (internal quotation marks
omitted)). We will review a “claim[] that an agency action was arbitrary and capricious
for reasonableness.” See Bourgeous v. State Dep’t of Commerce, 2002 UT App 5, ¶ 7, 41
P.3d 461 (internal quotation marks omitted).

¶3     Powell was originally licensed as a nurse in both Utah and Arizona. In April
2004, she self‐reported to the Arizona Board of Nursing that she had inappropriately
used controlled substances. As a result, Powell agreed to participate in a professionals‐
in‐recovery program for three years. Over the next two‐and‐a‐half years, however,
Powell tested positive for oxycodone four times and alcohol once and she failed to
undergo a required chemical dependency evaluation. As a result, in November 2006,
the Arizona Board of Nursing revoked her license. Based on the events in Arizona and

1. Powell’s license had previously been revoked, but the revocation had been stayed
pending completion of probation; the Department action complained of on judicial
review is therefore its decision to lift the stay of revocation. Although we recognize the
distinction between revocation and the lifting of a stay of revocation, the parties and the
relevant agencies have referenced the consequence of Powell’s actions as simply a
revocation. For simplicity, we too will generally refer to the agency decision as one to
revoke, except where the distinction has some independent significance.

20110195‐CA                                   2
her failure to report them to the Utah licensing board on her renewal application, the
Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing (the Division) entered into a
stipulation with Powell in March 2007 (the 2007 Stipulation) that revoked her Utah
nursing license but stayed enforcement of that revocation in return for her commitment
to abide by the terms of a five‐year probation. Eighteen months later, the Division filed
a verified motion for an order to show cause on the basis that Powell had failed to
comply with the terms of the 2007 Stipulation.

¶4      On December 1, 2008, Powell and the Division entered into another Stipulation
and Order (the 2008 Order), in which Powell admitted that she had violated a number
of the terms of the 2007 Stipulation. The most serious violation was Powell’s failure to
provide “samples for drug analysis” on over twenty occasions, a failure that Powell
attributed to her “concerns about the integrity of the samples she had provided on
previous occasions due to actions or omissions on the part of the employees of the drug
testing company[, Compass Vision].” The Division agreed to continue the stay of her
license revocation pending Powell’s completion of the conditions of a new four‐year
probation, which included, among other things, a requirement that she submit to
regular drug testing by Compass Vision, the facility contracted by the Division.2
Acknowledging Powell’s prior concerns with Compass Vision’s policies and
procedures, the 2008 Order instructed Powell to immediately report to the Division any
concerns that she might have about the integrity of any particular drug testing
procedure. The order warned Powell that “[a]ny report from [Compass Vision] that
indicates that [Powell] failed to provide a sample for drug analysis as directed may be
considered a positive drug test result.” It further notified Powell that the 2008 Order
was “the final compromise and settlement of this non‐criminal administrative matter”
and violation of any of its terms or conditions could result in the imposition of
sanctions, including “revocation or suspension of [Powell]’s license.” Powell, with the
advice of counsel, signed the 2008 Order, attesting that she “ha[d] read each and every

2. Some additional requirements of the 2008 Order included that Powell meet with the
Board of Nursing as directed; participate in substance abuse therapy and aftercare;
complete any additional chemical dependency evaluations and treatment programs
recommended by the Board of Nursing or the Division; abstain from alcohol and drug
use, unless prescribed; limit the number of facilities from which she obtained
prescription medications and submit copies of any prescriptions received; notify
employers of her probationary status; submit self‐assessments as well as employer
performance evaluations; report changes in employment status to the Board of Nursing;
and pay certain costs associated with drug testing and as required by the order.

20110195‐CA                                 3
paragraph contained in this . . . Order” and “ha[d] no questions about any paragraph or
provision contained in [it].”

¶5    Ten months later, on September 30, 2009, the Division filed a second verified
motion for an order to show cause, this time alleging that Powell had violated the 2008
Order. The motion alleged a number of specific violations, the most serious being that
she had failed to register for drug testing with Compass Vision.3

¶6     Following a hearing, the Board of Nursing (the Board)4 determined that Powell
had violated the 2008 Order by, among other things, failing to sign up for or complete
any drug testing.5 Furthermore, because the failure to register for or complete any drug
testing was the most “serious violation” and she had previously been noncompliant

3. In particular, the motion alleged that Powell had
              a) fail[ed] to meet with the Division on May 28, 200[9], in
              violation of Section 7(1)a of the Order;
              b) fail[ed] to provide a copy of a prescription for
              hydrocodone to the Division that she received on April 3,
              2009 in violation of Section 7(1)d of the Order;
              c) fail[ed] to sign up with Compass Vision for drug testing
              in violation of Section 7(1)f of the Order;
              d) fail[ed] to provide reports and documentation to the
              Division on the first day of the month for the months of
              May, June and July 2009 in violation of [Section] 7(1)i of the
              Order;
              e) fail[ed] to notify the Board [of Nursing] in writing within
              one week of any change in employer, employment or
              practice status in violation of Section 7(1)r of the Order.

4. An administrative law judge presided over the proceedings and executed the
findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommended order on behalf of the Board.
The Board, through ten of its eleven members, actually rendered the decision.

5. The Board also found Powell in violation of the 2008 Order for failing to appear for a
scheduled meeting with the Division, failing to provide the Division with a copy of a
prescription she had received for hydrocodone, and failing to notify it about an
employment change. It concluded, however, that there was insufficient evidence to
support a finding that Powell had violated the requirement that she submit monthly
reports and documentation.

20110195‐CA                                 4
with disciplinary orders to which she was subject (including persistent failure to drug
test), the Board concluded that “nothing would be served by entering more restrictive
terms of probation” and recommended, in the interest of “public health, safety and
welfare,” that Powell’s nursing license be revoked. On May 18, 2010, the Division
adopted the Board’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommended order and
revoked Powell’s license.

¶7      Powell requested the Department’s review of the revocation, claiming that the
Division had failed to produce substantial evidence that Powell had an ongoing
substance abuse problem. Powell asserted that in the absence of such evidence, the
Board’s decision to revoke her nursing license on the basis that she was a threat to
public health, safety, and welfare was arbitrary and capricious. Powell did not,
however, challenge the Board’s specific findings that she had committed numerous
violations of the 2008 Order. The Department upheld the revocation. It stated that the
unchallenged findings provided a sufficient basis to support a revocation. Then, it
concluded that the sanction of license revocation was not unreasonable based
principally on two related factors. First, in return for the Board’s agreement to stay the
revocation of her license in December 2008, Powell had knowingly and willingly agreed
to register for and complete regular drug testing through Compass Vision despite her
reservations about the integrity of the company’s procedures, and second, the 2008
Order expressly warned her that a “failure to provide a sample for drug analysis may
be considered a positive drug test result,” a violation of the order for which her license
could be revoked. Furthermore, the Department noted the Board’s concerns that
Powell’s last minute assurances that she would now comply with the drug testing
requirements if given another opportunity were unreliable in light of her history, and it
consequently declined to substitute its judgment for that of the Board, which heard her
live testimony that included the promises of future compliance.

¶8     Powell’s arguments in her briefing to this court are substantially identical to
those she made to the Department. First, she contends that the revocation is not
supported by substantial evidence because the Division presented no evidence that
proved that she actually has an ongoing substance abuse problem that made her a
threat to the public health, safety, and welfare. We agree with the Department,
however, that the revocation was not based on a conclusion that Powell was currently
abusing substances but rather on a finding that Powell had committed “specific
violations of the 2008 . . . Order,” the most “serious violation” of which was the failure
to submit to mandatory drug testing. In fact, the Department found that Powell had
“simply and unilaterally determined that . . . drug testing will not occur” as evidenced
by “her repeated failure to submit to drug testing” in connection with prior disciplinary

20110195‐CA                                 5
procedures. Powell has not challenged those findings.6 Because the language of the
Order itself permits license revocation as a consequence for the violation of its terms,
and violations undisputedly occurred, there is substantial evidence to support the
Department’s decision. See generally Smith v. Workforce Appeals Bd., 2011 UT App 68, ¶ 9,
252 P.3d 372 (“Substantial evidence is that quantum and quality of relevant evidence
that is adequate to convince a reasonable mind to support a conclusion.” (internal
quotation marks omitted)). The Department simply was not required to prove that
Powell was currently abusing drugs; rather, the conditions of the 2007 Stipulation and
2008 Order were designed to ensure she was drug‐free without requiring the
Department to bear the burden of affirmatively proving that she was not.

¶9     Powell next asserts that the decision to revoke her license was arbitrary and
capricious. Powell’s assertion has two components: first, the decision was based on an
assumption that she has an ongoing substance abuse problem that renders her a threat
to public health, safety, and welfare, and second, permanent revocation of her nursing
license is disproportionate to the offense and inconsistent with the Division’s usual
course of conduct in these situations. Because the second claim was not raised in the
administrative proceeding, it is unpreserved for judicial review, and we decline to
consider it further. See generally Columbia HCA v. Labor Comm’n, 2011 UT App 210, ¶ 6,
258 P.3d 640 (“Utah law requires parties to preserve arguments for appellate review by
raising them first in the forum below‐‐be it a trial court or an administrative tribunal.”).7

¶10 Powell’s claim that the decision was based on an inaccurate assumption that she
continues to abuse substances encounters the same problem as her claim that the

6. To the contrary, Powell admits that she “made a poor decision in not registering for
the drug testing program.”

7. In addition to being unpreserved, the issue is inadequately briefed. For example,
Powell asserts, in a footnote, that “[t]here are several examples on the Division . . .
website of nurses violating and/or failing to comply with disciplinary terms imposed by
the Division, . . . [in which] the licenses . . . have only been restricted and/or placed on
limited probation[,] . . . not permanently revoked.” Powell, however, neither provides a
citation to access these cases nor discusses any of the facts or the analyses of those cases
in relation to her case. See generally Hampton v. Professional Title Servs., 2010 UT App 294,
¶ 2, 242 P.3d 796 (mem.) (“Implicitly, rule 24(a)(9)[, which discusses appellate briefing,]
requires not just bald citation to authority but development of that authority and
reasoned analysis based on that authority.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).

20110195‐CA                                   6
decision was not supported by substantial evidence. The Board’s recommendation to
revoke was not based on evidence that Powell was then abusing drugs but on its
conclusion that revocation was the only “adequate protection of the public health,
safety and welfare” because Powell had committed a “serious violation” in failing to
register for drug testing and had a “history of unprofessional conduct,” including
“prior unauthorized use of controlled substances” and “repeated instances” of violating
“various prior disciplinary orders . . . governing her license.” When Powell argued to
the Department that this conclusion implicitly relied on an erroneous inference that she
was currently abusing controlled substances, the Department stated that Powell had
“failed to establish that the revocation of her license was clearly unreasonable under the
circumstances of this case” because “the sanction of revocation was a direct
consequence of [her] failure to comply with [the 2008 Order].” Indeed, it explained that
the Board had determined that revocation was the only “adequate protection” for the
public because it could not “independently assess whether any [drug abuse] behavior
had occurred” based on Powell’s “unilateral[] determin[ation] that . . . drug testing will
not occur.” The Department continued, “[T]he Division and the Board . . . ha[ve] grave
concerns about [Powell]’s credibility and her reliability in light of her prior history.
[The Department] will not substitute [its] own judgment for that of the the [finder of
fact]” regarding the decision to revoke her nursing license rather than to offer Powell
another chance at probation.

¶11 Powell makes similar arguments to this court. She claims that there was no
evidence that she was a threat to public health, welfare, and safety because there was no
direct evidence that she was then abusing controlled substances. In fact, she asserts, the
evidence demonstrated the opposite because even without the drug testing results, the
reports from her employers contain no indication that she has been using controlled
substances or that she has otherwise had problems on the job. In the absence of any
evidence that she is actually abusing drugs, Powell contends that the more appropriate
remedy for her noncompliance with the 2008 Order was another stint of probation
similar to the two she had failed to complete or some other less severe punishment. The
Department argues, however, that it is the absence of drug testing results that makes
her a potential threat because Powell has a history of unreliability‐‐as demonstrated by
her failure to submit to drug testing and to reschedule meetings with the Division‐‐and
has established a pattern of denial about her drug abuse history and rationalizations for
her failures to comply with the terms of the 2007 Stipulation and the 2008 Order.
Indeed, in light of her admitted drug abuse in the past and her resolute failure to
comply with the drug‐testing regimes that were central to both the 2007 Stipulation and
the 2008 Order, the lack of any affirmative evidence of more recent drug abuse does not
provide any basis to criticize the reasonableness of the Board’s ongoing concern about
her fitness to practice as a nurse. Rather, the parties agreed, more than once, that drug

20110195‐CA                                 7
testing would be the means for ensuring public safety by providing an “objective way
for the Division to determine whether [Powell] was engaging in unauthorized
substance abuse,” and the 2008 Order clearly warned her that failure to comply with the
drug‐testing requirement could result in revocation of her nursing license. In fact,
Powell stipulated in the 2008 Order that the Division had adequate grounds to revoke
her license based on her violations of similar conditions in the 2007 Stipulation and
agreed to the 2008 Order’s conditions as a means of staying that sanction. Under such
circumstances, Powell has failed to persuade us that revocation of her license was an
unreasonable consequence for her failure to comply with the 2008 Order. See generally
Bourgeous v. State Dep’t of Commerce, 2002 UT App 5, ¶ 7, 41 P.3d 461 (stating that we
review a claim that “an agency action was arbitrary and capricious for reasonableness”
(internal quotation marks omitted)).

¶12 For these reasons, we uphold the Department’s decision to revoke Powell’s
nursing license.

____________________________________
Stephen L. Roth, Judge

                                         ‐‐‐‐‐

¶13   WE CONCUR:

____________________________________
James Z. Davis, Judge

____________________________________
Michele M. Christiansen, Judge

20110195‐CA                                8