Osakatukei O. Omulepu, M.D. v. Department of Health, Board of Medicine ( 2018 )


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  •          FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    STATE OF FLORIDA
    _____________________________
    No. 1D17-1571
    _____________________________
    OSAKATUKEI O. OMULEPU, M.D.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, BOARD
    OF MEDICINE,
    Appellee.
    _____________________________
    On appeal from the Department of Health, Board of Medicine.
    Magdalena Averhoff, Chair.
    June 22, 2018
    OSTERHAUS, J.
    Dr. Osakatukei Omulepu appeals a final order of the Board of
    Medicine revoking his license to practice medicine. Dr. Omulepu
    argues that the decision violated his Fifth Amendment rights by
    incorporating an adverse inference against him based on his
    decision to remain silent at his formal hearing in response to
    evidence of medical malpractice. He argues additionally that the
    administrative complaint failed to properly charge him and that
    the evidence did not support the charges filed by the Department
    of Health. We disagree with these arguments and affirm.
    I.
    In 2016, the Department filed an administrative complaint
    against Dr. Omulepu seeking disciplinary action against his
    medical license. The Department alleged in a nine-count complaint
    that Dr. Omulepu violated § 458.331(1), Florida Statutes (2014).
    According to the allegations, during a three-day period in May
    2015, four of Dr. Omulepu’s liposuction patients experienced
    severe post-surgery complications requiring hospitalization. The
    Department asserted that in all four cases, Dr. Omulepu deviated
    from the standard of care by using an improper concentration of
    epinephrine in a surgical solution that is used to reduce bleeding
    and failing to maintain accurate medical records of the
    concentration of epinephrine. See § 458.331(1)(m) & (t), Fla. Stat.
    It also alleged medical malpractice against Dr. Omulepu for
    puncturing the internal organs of two of the patients. See
    § 458.331(1)(t), Fla. Stat.
    The complaint led to a formal hearing before an
    administrative law judge in October 2016. After the hearing, the
    ALJ issued recommended findings of fact and conclusions of law
    that Dr. Omulepu committed medical malpractice and violated the
    medical records law. Specifically, the ALJ found that Dr. Omulepu
    committed medical malpractice by puncturing the internal organs
    of two patients by an “improper angling of the cannula during the
    procedures.” In reaching this conclusion, the ALJ relied partly
    upon an adverse evidentiary inference against Dr. Omulepu
    because he declined to testify or explain how the organ punctures
    occurred. In addition, the ALJ found in Dr. Omulepu’s favor as to
    the charges of using an improper concentration of epinephrine to
    control bleeding in four patients, but found that he failed to create
    and keep medical records accurately reflecting the concentration
    of epinephrine given to them. The ALJ recommended that Dr.
    Omulepu be disciplined with a fine, probation, and costs.
    The Board of Medicine then took up the recommended order,
    approving and incorporating almost all of it into its Final Order.
    The Board rejected, however, the discipline recommended by the
    ALJ. Due to the severity of the injuries to Dr. Omulepu’s patients
    within the span of a single day, it decided to revoke his license to
    practice medicine. Dr. Omulepu timely appealed.
    2
    II.
    A.
    Dr. Omulepu contends first on appeal that the Board erred by
    accepting the ALJ’s adverse inference because he remained silent
    about the medical malpractice charges at his formal hearing. He
    asserts that this adverse inference violated his right not to
    incriminate himself under the Fifth Amendment to the United
    States Constitution. We disagree.
    The Fifth Amendment states that “[n]o person . . . shall be
    compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.”
    U.S. Const. amend. V. This privilege may be asserted in
    proceedings to protect “against any disclosures which the witness
    reasonably believes could be used in a criminal prosecution or
    could lead to other evidence that might be so used.” Kastigar v.
    United States, 
    406 U.S. 441
    , 445 (1972). In the criminal context,
    the defendant’s silence may not be considered as evidence of guilt.
    Marston v. State, 
    136 So. 3d 563
    , 569 (Fla. 2014) (quoting Griffin
    v. California, 
    380 U.S. 609
    , 615 (1965)).
    The Florida Supreme Court has recognized the Fifth
    Amendment right against self-incrimination to apply in the
    context of professional license revocation cases because they are
    “penal” in nature. State ex rel. Vining v. Fla. Real Estate Comm’n.,
    
    281 So. 2d 487
    , 491 (Fla. 1973). Agreeing that Vining applies here,
    the Department asserts that the scope of the Fifth Amendment’s
    protection is nevertheless circumscribed in civil cases like this one.
    It argues that, unlike the criminal context, the Fifth Amendment
    protection in civil cases allows fact-finders to consider a
    defendant’s silence as evidence of guilt. The Department’s
    argument is backed by the opinion of the United States Supreme
    Court in Baxter v. Palmigiano that “the Fifth Amendment does not
    forbid adverse inferences against parties to civil actions when they
    refuse to testify in response to probative evidence offered against
    them.” 
    425 U.S. 308
    , 318 (1976). Various federal courts have noted
    that Baxter applies “forcefully in medical discipline cases.” Arthurs
    v. Stern, 
    560 F.2d 477
    , 478 (1st Cir. 1977) (agreeing with Baxter in
    a medical disciplinary proceeding that “the trier of fact [may] treat
    3
    silence as evidence of guilt”); see also MacKay v. Drug Enf’t
    Admin., 
    664 F.3d 808
    , 820 (10th Cir. 2011) (citing Baxter and
    affirming the revocation of a medical doctor’s registration to
    dispense controlled substances). Florida cases also echo the rule
    from Baxter. See, e.g., Vasquez v. State, 
    777 So. 2d 1200
    , 1203 (Fla.
    3d DCA 2001); Atlas v. Atlas, 
    708 So. 2d 296
    , 299 (Fla. 4th DCA
    1998). The Florida Supreme Court in Boedy v. Department of
    Professional Regulation, 
    463 So. 2d 215
    , 218 (Fla. 1985) for
    example, found it constitutionally permissible to deny authority to
    practice medicine “to a physician who asserts the privilege against
    self-incrimination if his claim has prevented full assessment of his
    fitness and competency to practice.” The Boedy opinion noted that
    [w]hen a conflict arises between the right of a physician
    to pursue the medical profession and the right of the
    sovereignty to protect its citizenry, it follows that the
    rights of the physician must yield to the power of the state
    to prescribe reasonable rules and regulations which will
    protect the people from incompetent and unfit
    practitioners.
    
    Id. at 217
    ; cf., Borrego v. Agency for Health Care Admin., 
    675 So. 2d 666
    , 668 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996) (affirming the revocation of a
    medical license against a Fifth Amendment double jeopardy claim
    because the sanction was “remedial rather than punitive,” and
    noting that a medical license “is . . . a privilege granted by the
    sovereign, which may be withdrawn to ‘preserve the public health,
    morals, comfort, safety and the good order of society’”) (quoting
    State ex rel. Munch v. Davis, 
    196 So. 491
    , 493-94 (Fla. 1940)).
    In this case, the Department presented competent,
    substantial evidence that Dr. Omulepu committed malpractice by
    puncturing the organs of two patients during their cosmetic
    surgery procedures. In the face of this evidence, Dr. Omulepu
    exercised his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. He wasn’t
    forced to waive this right. In view of his silence, the ALJ applied
    an adverse inference, citing Baxter. The ALJ and Final Order did
    not, however, as a “consequence of [Dr. Omulepu’s] silence
    automatically [find him] guilty of the infraction with which he has
    been charged.” Baxter, 
    425 U.S. at 317
    . Rather, the adverse
    inference combined with other probative evidence that advanced
    4
    the Department’s case—expert testimony identifying the improper
    angling of the cannula, multiple punctures of patient organs, and
    Dr. Omulepu’s admission to a patient’s mother that he’d “messed
    up” with a new cannula—supported the Board’s ultimate decision.
    Under these circumstances, the adverse inference drawn by the
    ALJ, and accepted by the Board’s Final Order, did not violate Dr.
    Omulepu’s Fifth Amendment rights.
    B.
    We likewise affirm with respect to Dr. Omulepu’s other claims
    involving the sufficiency of the evidence and alleged disparities
    between the administrative complaint and evidence deduced at the
    hearing. We recognize that a physician may not be “disciplined for
    an offense not charged in the complaint.” Trevisani v. Dep’t of
    Health, 
    908 So. 2d 1108
    , 1109 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005); Ghani v. Dep’t
    of Health, 
    714 So. 2d 1113
     (Fla. 1st DCA 1998). An administrative
    complaint must “afford ‘reasonable notice to the licensee of facts or
    conduct which warrant’ disciplinary action.” Cottrill v. Dep’t of
    Ins., 
    685 So. 2d 1371
    , 1372 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996) (quoting
    § 120.60(5), Fla. Stat.). Here, contrary to Dr. Omulepu’s
    assertions, the administrative complaint did not fail to notice the
    charges against him. The violations found by the Board—medical
    malpractice in puncturing the internal organs of patients (see
    counts I and II of the Second Amended Complaint), and failing to
    create or maintain accurate records regarding the concentration of
    epinephrine used (see counts VI through IX)—were consistent with
    the allegations, which also were proven with competent,
    substantial evidence.
    III.
    For these reasons, we affirm the Board of Medicine’s final
    order.
    LEWIS, J., concurs; MAKAR, J., concurs with opinion.
    5
    _____________________________
    Not final until disposition of any timely and
    authorized motion under Fla. R. App. P. 9.330 or
    9.331.
    _____________________________
    MAKAR, J., concurring.
    Today’s decision holds for the first time that a physician’s
    exercise of his constitutional right against self-incrimination
    permits an adverse inference to be drawn against him in an
    administrative disciplinary action based on his failure to use
    reasonable care in treating patients. Guidance is long overdue on
    this topic. The practice has been to permit administrative law
    judges to draw adverse inferences from a physician’s silence, but
    when and how that is done is filled with nuance, qualifications,
    and unanswered questions. See generally Matthew C.
    Lucas, Balance of Silence: Weighing the Right to Remain Silent
    Against the Right of Access to Florida Civil Courts, 22 U. FLA. J.L.
    & PUB. POL’Y 1 (2011) (overview of three important issues that
    arise when the Fifth Amendment privilege is invoked in civil
    proceedings: “(i) whether to stay the civil lawsuit prior to the
    completion of parallel criminal proceedings; (ii) how to weigh
    discovery disputes and access to information against a party’s
    Fifth Amendment privilege; and (iii) what substantive effect, if
    any, a litigant’s refusal to testify has on the outcome of the civil
    proceedings”).
    The “constitutional struggle” between a litigant’s right to
    remain silent and society’s interest in adjudicating a civil dispute,
    as Judge Lucas framed it in his article, id. at 23-24, arises “in even
    more pronounced ways” as a civil case progresses. Two of the
    leading supreme court cases underlying today’s decision reflect
    that struggle: Boedy v. Department of Professional Regulation, 
    463 So. 2d 215
     (Fla. 1985) and State ex rel. Vining v. Florida Real
    Estate Commission, 
    281 So. 2d 487
     (Fla. 1973). Neither arose in
    the context of medical negligence, but both provide helpful
    parameters for future physician disciplinary cases.
    6
    Boedy involved a physician, but his Fifth Amendment claim
    was a right to refuse to submit to any mental and physical
    examinations. At issue was his fitness to practice generally, rather
    than his exercise of care as to patients. In this context, our
    supreme court held that “it is constitutionally permissible to deny
    authority to practice medicine to a physician who asserts the
    privilege against self-incrimination if his claim has prevented full
    assessment of his fitness and competency to practice.” Boedy, 
    463 So. 2d at 218
    . The court reasoned that although the “Fifth
    Amendment privilege against self-incrimination protects the
    accused from being compelled to testify against himself[,] [it] does
    not extend to the exclusion of evidence of his physical or mental
    condition when such evidence is otherwise admissible, even when
    the evidence is obtained by compulsion.” 
    Id. at 217
    . The reasons
    why the privilege didn’t apply were two-fold: the physician’s
    competence was at issue, not his guilt or innocence, and a statute
    explicitly protected the physician’s interest against compelled
    testimony providing that “neither the testimony received from a
    physician, nor the orders subsequently entered on the basis of that
    testimony may be used against the physician in any other
    administrative, civil or criminal proceeding.” 
    Id. at 218
    .
    Unlike Dr. Boedy, Dr. Omulepu was not required to give up
    his testimonial privilege in this disciplinary proceeding. Instead,
    he exercised that right, the question presented being the
    evidentiary value of his silence as to his provision of medical care.
    On this point, Boedy signaled that a tradeoff exists in physician
    discipline cases between the exercise of the privilege and the
    retention of the “benefits of the status of being a licensed
    physician.” 
    Id.
     In Boedy, the balance was struck to compel the
    mental and physical examinations of the physician but protect
    against their use in any legal proceedings thereafter. The balance
    here, in contrast, is not to compel testimony but to allow an
    adverse inference from the decision to remain silent, which raises
    potential constitutional implications such as those discussed in
    Vining, next discussed.
    In Vining, the supreme court held that a statute, which
    compelled a realtor to file a sworn answer to allegations against
    him or lose his license by default, amounted to a coercive
    deprivation of the Fifth Amendment right to withhold testimony
    7
    in an administrative proceeding. 
    281 So. 2d at 491-92
     (“The basic
    constitutional infirmity of the statute lies in requirement of a
    response under threat of license revocation or suspension, which
    amounts to compelling the defendant to be a witness against
    himself” under the state and federal constitutions.). In doing so,
    the court made clear that the Fifth Amendment “right to remain
    silent applies not only to the traditional criminal case, but also to
    proceedings ‘penal’ in nature in that they tend to degrade the
    individual’s professional standing, professional reputation or
    livelihood.” 
    Id. at 491
    . Further, it surmised that “a legislative
    enactment allowing but not requiring a defendant to answer would
    not be constitutionally objectionable, but we are not confronted
    with such a provision here.” 
    Id. at 492
    .
    An obvious takeaway from Vining is that license-deprivation
    is penal in nature, thereby confirming that other professionals,
    such as attorneys and physicians, retain their Fifth Amendment
    privilege in the face of administrative disciplinary proceedings.
    Less obvious is the court’s holding that the statute at issue
    effectively shifted the burden of proof from the Real Estate
    Commission to the realtor, an unconstitutional result under the
    court’s analysis. 
    Id.
     By parallel reasoning, other forms of proof or
    procedure that shift the evidentiary burden—such as a
    presumption of negligence—could be subject to invalidation.
    Applied here, the question is whether allowing an adverse
    inference from Dr. Omulepu’s silence can be drawn without
    crossing the line into invalid burden-shifting. On this point, an
    adverse inference is unlike a presumption because it merely allows
    the fact-finder to infer a fact that is rationally related to facts
    established in the record; it does not require that an inference be
    adverse, nor does it shift the burden of proof. But the concept has
    the potential to be misconstrued as allowing an adverse inference
    to become an independent fact that by itself can meet the burden
    of proof to establish substandard patient care, which it cannot. For
    example, in Scott v. Department of Professional Regulation, 
    603 So. 2d 519
     (Fla. 1st DCA 1992), opinion clarified (Aug. 12, 1992), a
    license-suspension order was reversed because it was based
    entirely on an inadmissible hearsay report. The nurse failed to
    appear at the hearing or respond to the complaint against her, but
    doing so “did not relieve the [Department] of its obligation to
    8
    substantiate the charges by presenting sufficient evidence.” Id. at
    520. Had Nurse Scott chosen to appear, but invoked her privilege
    and refused to testify, a similar result would have been likely:
    sufficient record evidence—apart from any adverse inference—
    would have been necessary to support license-suspension. See, e.g.,
    Golden Yachts, Inc. v. Hall, 
    920 So. 2d 777
    , 780 (Fla. 4th DCA
    2006) (“The adverse inference instruction does not relieve a party
    from its burden of proof at trial.”).
    As to Dr. Omulepu’s silence, the administrative law judge not
    only drew from it an adverse inference that malpractice occurred,
    but also concluded that it was the “only inference” to be drawn in
    the case based on other evidence independently establishing that
    Dr. Omulepu had acted negligently; indeed, Dr. Omulepu had
    tacitly admitted to doing so by telling a patient’s mom that he’d
    “messed up” the surgery. Sufficient record evidence—apart from
    the adverse inference from the physician’s silence—supported the
    factual findings of substandard medical care, making the adverse
    inference supplemental (and probably unnecessary) to affirm in
    this case (or making it harmless error if the adverse inference had
    been impermissibly drawn).
    The point is that an inference must be rooted in and flow
    directly from record evidence establishing professional
    misconduct; an inference alone cannot establish liability. See, e.g.,
    Eagle Hosp. Physicians, LLC v. SRG Consulting, Inc., 
    561 F.3d 1298
    , 1304 (11th Cir. 2009) (“[A] dismissal following the assertion
    of the Fifth Amendment violates the Constitution where the
    inferences drawn from Fifth–Amendment–protected silence are
    treated as a substitute for the need for evidence on an ultimate
    issue of fact.”). As Judge Lucas said on this point:
    The effect of the adverse inference is not without limits.
    For example, under federal law, a court may not enter
    summary judgment or dismiss a complaint based solely
    on a party’s assertion of the Fifth Amendment and the
    adverse inference against the litigant’s silence. This
    follows from the basic proposition that whatever
    inference or persuasiveness it may give rise to, silence, by
    itself, is not a substitute for evidence. Nor has any
    reported Florida decision upheld adjudication in favor of
    9
    a plaintiff’s claim absent some evidence in addition to the
    defendant’s Fifth Amendment objection.
    Balance of Silence, at 36 (footnotes omitted). Simply put, an
    administrative complaint of medical negligence against a
    physician who chooses to exercise a Fifth Amendment privilege
    cannot support discipline without adequate supporting evidence of
    the claimed misconduct; the physician’s silence is insufficient to
    shift or meet the regulator’s evidentiary burden.
    A final note is that Fifth Amendment jurisprudence as it
    applies to criminal trials versus civil proceedings is starkly
    different. Silence is protected vigilantly in the former (to prevent
    government overreach in criminal cases) but loathed in the latter
    (because society expects people to defend themselves against false
    charges). This gulf signifies an ongoing need to discern where to
    draw the “line between unlawful compulsion against one party’s
    right to remain silent and infringement of another party’s right of
    access to the court” as Judge Lucas has written. Id. at 43. “Drawing
    it inescapably involves a question of judgment.” Id.
    _____________________________
    Monica L. Felder Rodriguez, Rodriguez & Perry, P.A., Coral
    Springs, for Appellant.
    Sarah Young Hodges, Chief Appellate Counsel; Carrie B.
    McNamara, Katelyn R. Boswell, and Mari H. McCully, Assistant
    General Counsels, Florida Department of Health, Tallahassee, for
    Appellee.
    10