Deoide Lea Cunningham v. State Of Wa., Dshs ( 2017 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DEOIDE LEA CUNNINGHAM,                   )
    )       No. 73713-9-1
    Appellant,          )                                                --t
    )       DIVISION ONE                      C.—
    c.
    rn
    v.                         )                                           -
    )
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                     )                                                  cP
    DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND                 )       UNPUBLISHED OPINION                             t—
    rio
    HEALTH SERVICES,                         )
    FILED: July 31, 2017                c.A)
    )                                           cr.
    Respondent.         )
    )
    BECKER, J. —When Deoide Cunningham failed to appear for an
    administrative hearing, an administrative law judge entered an order of dismissal
    in favor of the Department of Social and Health Services. The administrative law
    judge subsequently denied Cunningham's motion to vacate the dismissal for
    good cause. Cunningham does not challenge the administrative law judge's
    finding that she lacked good cause but rather contends that the administrative
    law judge erred in failing to consider certain evidence. We find no error in the
    administrative law judge's findings regarding good cause but remand for further
    fact-finding on the issue of whether Cunningham was entitled to continued
    benefits during the pendency of her appeal.
    Cunningham has previously received services and financial benefits from
    the department as a client of the Development Disabilities Administration. On
    No. 73713-9-1/2
    March 4, 2013, the department notified Cunningham in writing that it was
    terminating her eligibility for these services effective April 1, 2013, because
    Cunningham was no longer living in Washington. The notice informed
    Cunningham that she had until June 4, 2013, to appeal the termination but that
    she was required to file her appeal by March 31, 2013, in order to continue
    receiving services pending the appeal.
    Cunningham, through her representative, Karl Olson, filed a notice of
    appeal and requested an administrative hearing with the Office of Administrative
    Hearings.1 The record shows that Cunningham faxed the notice of appeal to the
    Office of Administrative Hearings on March 7, 2013. However, it was misfiled in
    one of Cunningham's other open cases. Cunningham faxed the notice of appeal
    a second time on June 3, 2013. An administrative hearing was scheduled for
    May 20, 2014, at 9:00 a.m. The Office of Administrative Hearings issued an
    order requiring Cunningham and any of her witnesses to appear in person "due
    to significant issues of credibility."
    At a continuance hearing on December 17, 2013, Cunningham requested
    to continue receiving services pending the appeal. On January 9, 2014, an
    administrative law judge issued an order denying continued benefits because
    Cunningham had not appealed the eligibility termination in time. Cunningham did
    not specifically appeal this order.
    1 Olson is Cunningham's caregiver and significant other.
    2
    No. 73713-9-1/3
    Neither Cunningham nor Olson appeared at the May 20 hearing. Nor did
    they contact the court or otherwise explain their absence. The administrative law
    judge dismissed Cunningham's appeal.
    Cunningham moved to vacate the dismissal, claiming that she had good
    cause to miss the hearing. Cunningham stated that she had a medical
    appointment on May 20 and her primary care physician "has asked for all
    hearings to be continued until issues are identified and therapy initiated." In
    support of her motion, Cunningham submitted four letters from Dr. Seth Cowan,
    a naturopathic physician. The first, dated June 10, 2014, stated:
    Ms. Cunningham has multiple serious medical problems. Stress
    related to DSHS hearings may exacerbate her conditions.
    Therefore, please allow her power of attorney, Karl Olson, to
    represent her for related hearings, including via telephone calls and
    in-person interviews.
    The second, also dated June 10, 2014, stated:
    Please excuse Mr. Olson from his appointment on 05/20/14. He
    was being seen in my office that day.
    The third, dated July 10, 2014, stated:
    Please provide special accommodations for Deoide Cunningham
    by contacting her primary care giver and representative, Karl Olson
    prior to scheduling further meetings or hearings due to her complex
    medical situation. If possible, please conduct meeting and hearings
    via phone. The best time for Ms. Cunningham and Mr. Olson are
    mid-day between 11 am and 1 pm due to care giving routines and
    typical scheduled therapy appointments.
    The fourth, dated August 12, 2014, stated:
    Ms. Cunningham has a complex medical history including seizure
    disorder, severe constipation and chronic pain. It is my
    understanding that she required an urgent medical intervention on
    3
    No. 73713-9-1/4
    5/20/14, which required her to miss a scheduled DSHS hearing.
    Please consider reinstating her hearing.
    In response, the department submitted an affidavit in which Dr. Cowan
    stated that Olson's May 20 appointment had been at 1:40 p.m., several hours
    after the 9:00 a.m. hearing, and was for the purpose of discussing Cunningham's
    condition, not for an emergent medical matter. Dr. Cowan also stated that
    Cunningham had not been a patient of his on May 20 and he had not even met
    her until June 6. Dr. Cowan stated that he was "still unaware of the scope and
    severity of Ms. Cunningham's purported medical conditions, and that the
    statement he provided to OAH regarding Ms. Cunningham's condition was at Mr.
    Olson's request and was based solely on information provided by Mr. Olson."
    An administrative law judge denied the motion to vacate the dismissal.
    The administrative law judge found that Dr. Cowan did not have any personal
    knowledge of the contents of his statements and that the letters were insufficient
    to establish "a link between Ms. Cunningham and Mr. Olson's medical conditions
    and their inability to attend a hearing." The administrative law judge concluded
    that Cunningham had not shown good cause for failing to attend the May 20
    hearing.
    As to Cunningham's continued benefits, the administrative law judge
    found that Cunningham had not filed her notice of appeal until June 3,2013, and
    was thus not entitled to continued benefits. The administrative law judge further
    found:
    4.10   The motion for a continuance was therefore heard on
    December 17, 2013. . . . At the same time, Mr. Olson
    4
    No. 73713-9-1/5
    raised, for the first time, the issue of continued benefits
    under docket number 06-2013-A-0805 claiming Ms.
    Cunningham had timely requested a hearing by fax on
    March 7, 2013. The available evidence was reviewed,
    argument taken, and Mr. Olson was given additional time to
    provide more evidence of his alleged timely fax.
    4.11    On December 23, 2013, Mr. Olson submitted additional
    documentation by certified mail, return receipt requested.
    (A letter from the purported March 7, 2013 fax sender and
    another copy of the purported fax transmission.) On
    January 6, 2014, DSHS filed a response. On January 9,
    2014, an order denying continued benefits was issued.
    In a footnote, the administrative law judge noted:
    More importantly, even if continued benefits had been
    granted based on the purported timely request, they would have
    terminated, pursuant to WAC 388-825-150(11)(c), when Ms.
    Cunningham failed to appear for hearing on May 20, 2014. There
    is no right to resume continued benefits pending hearing when a
    petition to vacate is filed. Even if the letters or other evidence was
    persuasive that the ruling denying continued benefits was in error,
    there is no legal basis to grant continued benefits at this point. He
    may appeal that issue (as he had earlier been instructed) if and
    when he appeals this initial decision.
    Cunningham filed a petition for review with the department's Board of
    Appeals. A review judge adopted the administrative law judge's findings that
    Cunningham had not established good cause for her failure to appear at the
    administrative hearing. The review judge declined to consider Cunningham's
    challenge to the denial of continued benefits, finding that Cunningham had not
    sought review of the January 9 order denying continued benefits.
    Cunningham sought review in Skagit County Superior Court, which also
    affirmed the administrative law judge's decision. Cunningham appeals.
    5
    No. 73713-9-1/6
    In reviewing an administrative action, we sit in the same position as the
    superior court, applying the standards of the Administrative Procedure Act,
    chapter 34.05 RCW, directly to the record before the agency. Brighton v. Dep't
    of Transp, 
    109 Wn. App. 855
    , 861-62, 
    38 P.3d 344
     (2001). To the extent they
    modify or replace the administrative law judge's findings of fact and conclusions
    of law, a review judge's findings and conclusions are relevant on appeal. Tapper
    v. Emp't Sec. Dep't, 
    122 Wn.2d 397
    , 406, 
    858 P.2d 494
     (1993). The party
    challenging an agency's action bears the burden of demonstrating the invalidity
    of the decision. Brighton, 109 Wn. App. at 862 (citing RCW 34.05.570(1)(a)).
    We review an agency's factual findings to determine whether they are
    supported by substantial evidence. Port of Seattle v. Pollution Control Hr'gs Bd.,
    
    151 Wn.2d 568
    , 588, 
    90 P.3d 659
     (2004). Substantial evidence is a sufficient
    quantity of evidence to persuade a fair-minded person of the truth or correctness
    of the agency action. Port of Seattle, 
    151 Wn.2d at 588
    . We will overturn an
    agency's findings only if they are "clearly erroneous" and we are "definitely and
    firmly convinced that a mistake has been made." Port of Seattle, 
    151 Wn.2d at 588
    , quoting Buechel v. Dep't of Ecology, 
    125 Wn.2d 196
    , 202, 
    884 P.2d 910
    (1994). We view the "evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom in the light
    most favorable to the party who prevailed at the administrative proceeding
    below." Kirby v. Dep't of Emp't Sec., 
    185 Wn. App. 706
    , 713, 
    342 P.3d 1151
    (2014), review denied, 
    183 Wn.2d 1010
     (2015).
    Cunningham primarily challenges the administrative law judge's decision
    denying continued benefits pending the appeal. Cunningham contends that the
    6
    No. 73713-9-1/7
    administrative law judge violated her right to due process and her right to present
    a complete defense when it "concealed" or "destroyed" the notice of appeal she
    faxed on March 7.
    The department acknowledges that Cunningham timely filed her notice of
    appeal to be entitled to continued benefits. See WAC 388-825-130(3)(individual
    must request administrative hearing within 10 days in order to maintain current
    services during the appeal process). Because the notice of appeal had been
    misfiled, the administrative law judge was not aware of it. Therefore, the
    administrative law judge's finding that Cunningham was not entitled to continued
    benefits because of her untimely filing was clearly erroneous. We remand to the
    superior court with instructions to remand to the board for further fact-finding on
    this issue. See RCW 34.05.562(2)(b),(c)(a superior court has authority to
    remand a matter back to the agency if it finds that "new evidence has become
    available that relates to the validity of the agency action at the time it was taken"
    or "the agency improperly excluded or omitted evidence from the record.")2
    Cunningham also contends that the administrative law judge "concealed"
    or "destroyed" evidence that the department had withdrawn the March 4
    2 The   department argues that the issue of continued benefits is not
    properly before us on appeal because Cunningham did not timely appeal the
    January 9 order. But it is not clear that the January 9 order was an appealable
    order. The order does not provide Cunningham with notice of her right to appeal.
    See WAC XXX-XX-XXXX(9) and (10)(requiring an administrative law judge to
    include in his/her decision "how to request changes in the decision and the
    deadlines for requesting them" and "the date the decision becomes final
    according to WAC XXX-XX-XXXX"). Furthermore, the administrative law judge's
    initial order clearly stated that Cunningham could appeal the denial of continued
    benefits as part of her appeal of the initial order.
    7
    No. 73713-9-1/8
    notification in a different proceeding. But, even based on the documents
    Cunningham has provided from this unrelated proceeding, Cunningham's claim
    has no basis in fact.
    Finally, Cunningham contends that the review judge failed to consider two
    additional letters that she provided in support of her motion to vacate. The first,
    dated May 5, 2014, is from Kenneth Dunning, a licensed mental health
    counselor. According to Dunning, who has reportedly provided counseling for
    Olson since 2001, Olson has "complained that he is having difficulty maintaining
    a level of mental acuity over prolonged periods" and "believes this difficulty
    impairs his ability to deal with matters involving intense concentration." The
    second, dated May 16, 2014, is from Mary Stone, a licensed mental health
    counselor. According to Stone, who has seen both Cunningham and Olson for
    counseling since February 2007, Cunningham "is unable to represent herself due
    to a seizure disorder and other medical conditions" and Olson "has difficulty with
    concentration and reasoning, and would not be able to adequately. . . represent
    himself or Ms. Cunningham at this time."3 But Cunningham fails to establish that
    these letters, attached as an appendix to her opening brief, were actually
    provided to the administrative law judge. Nor does Cunningham articulate how
    either of these letters would be relevant to the question of whether she was
    unable to appear in person on May 20.
    3 Cunningham also included copies of identical letters written by Stone,
    dated February 16, 2014, and December 26, 2013.
    8
    No. 73713-9-1/9
    We remand for further fact-finding on the issue of whether Cunningham
    was entitled to continued benefits during the pendency of her appeal. In all other
    respects, we affirm.
    13ec ke R)
    -                             ,
    WE CONCUR:
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