DANIEL FINK, DDS, v. DELAWARE BOARD OF DENTISTRY AND DENTAL HYGIENE
C.A. No. N21A-12-002 VLM
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
February 16, 2022
MEDINILLA, J.
Submitted: February 15, 2022
ORDER
Upon Consideration of Appellee‘s Motion to Dismiss,
GRANTED.
Daniel Fink, D.D.S., Pro Se.
Zoe Plerhoples, Deputy Attorney General, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorney for Appellee.
MEDINILLA, J.
- This is an appeal from a decision of the Appellee Delaware Board of Dentistry and Dental Hygiene (the “Board“) wherein it suspended Appellant Daniel Fink, D.D.S. (“Dr. Fink“)‘s license to practice dentistry in Delaware.
- Dr. Fink has held an active dental license in Delaware since 1993.1 He has been disciplined by the Board on one prior occasion.2 On April 1, 2021, a Delaware State Police officer found two loaded firearms, prescription drugs, illegal substances, and drug paraphernalia in Dr. Fink‘s vehicle following a traffic stop.3 The stop resulted in both misdemeanor and felony charges.4
- Following the vehicle stop, the State filed a Motion for Emergency Suspension and an Amended Complaint with the Board.5 Dr. Fink initially requested an expedited hearing which he later withdrew.6 As a result, a hearing was required
to be held within sixty (60) days of the emergency suspension and during the pendency of his criminal charges. A Hearing Officer held a hearing on June 10, 20217 and subsequently recommended the Board find Dr. Fink violated 24 Del. C. § 1128(6) ,8 Board Regulation 12.2.15,9 and Board Regulation 12.2.1710 and that his license should be suspended.11 - After considering various materials, including the Hearing Officer‘s recommendation, a letter and statements from Dr. Fink, and two Board meetings, the Board issued a written order on November 1, 2021, (“Final Order“).12 Although the Board was bound by the recommendation of the Hearing Officer‘s findings of fact, the Board rejected the recommended discipline.
- Instead of the recommended suspension, the Board crafted more lenient disciplinary action. The Board suspended Dr. Fink‘s dental license for five years but also called for an immediate stay of the suspension for five years of probation “upon his enrollment in the Delaware Professionals’ Health Monitoring Program
(DPHMP) within 30 days of the Board‘s Final Order.”13 Failure to enroll in the DPHMP program within the 30 days would result in his immediate suspension.14 The Board also required Dr. Fink to complete additional continuing education hours15 and pay a fine.16 - The following day, on November 2, 2021, the Final Order was mailed to Dr. Fink.17
- On December 3, 2021, Dr. Fink filed his notice of appeal with this Court. On December 23, 2021, the State filed this pending Motion to Dismiss. Dr. Fink filed his response on February 4, 2022. In its Letter filed with the Court on February 10, 2022, the State conceded that the Final Order was mailed on November 2, 2021, and Dr. Fink filed his notice of appeal with this Court on December 3, 2021.18 Oral arguments were held on February 15, 2022. The matter is now ripe for review.
Party Contentions
8. The State contends that Dr. Fink‘s appeal must be dismissed under
9. Dr. Fink argues the matter should not be dismissed because he filed within the 30-day deadline and was told by the Prothonotary that his filing was timely.21 Specifically, he contends that the Board‘s Final Order was mailed on November 2, 2021, and his filing on December 3, 2021, was within the 30-day period because the Courts were closed for two days for the Thanksgiving holiday.22 Dr. Fink is incorrect.
Standard of Review
10. Under
Discussion
11. Under
12.
13. In the Board‘s original filing seeking dismissal, it provided the Court with two incorrect dates, mainly the Board‘s date of mailing (incorrectly as November 1) and Dr. Fink‘s date of filing (incorrectly as December 7). Dr. Fink Responded by aptly pointing out the correct dates, both critical to this Court‘s ruling.
14. The first date is that the mailing date was November 2nd. Delaware law provides that “[t]he appeal shall be filed within 30 days of the day the notice of the decision was mailed.”31 Dr. Fink suggests that the Court‘s closure for the Thanksgiving holiday impacts the computation of time.32 He is incorrect. Intermediate weekends or legal holidays are only excluded from the calculation when the prescribed period of time is less than eleven (11) days or when it falls on the last day of the period of time.33
15. During oral arguments, after Dr. Fink was told he could not rely on the Thanksgiving holiday to explain the delay, the Court next explained that it needed to determine whether the one-day delay was “attributable to court personnel and [] not attributable to the appellant . . . .”36 The Court asked Dr. Fink for a more detailed explanation37 of what he was told by the Prothonotary at filing.38
16. Though not in his Response, Dr. Fink explained that he had hired an attorney for his appeal who later told him during the Thanksgiving holiday that he would no longer represent him. With the filing deadline looming, he stated he called and presented in-person to the courthouse on December 239 to understand how to file an appeal, and that it was at that time, he was told he had until December 3.
17. He further claims that he did not file when he first presented to the courthouse on December 2 because his documents “weren‘t ready in terms of
18. Although it sympathizes with Dr. Fink, the Court finds that his explanation for traveling to the courthouse on the day of the deadline and then waiting until the next day to file does not demonstrate “unusual circumstances that are attributable to court personnel”40 nor does this Court find the existence of “extraordinary circumstances”41 to permit this Court to relax the procedural requirements for him. His contention that he received incorrect information either on the filing deadline date or the day after is unavailing. Court personnel are prohibited from providing legal advice to litigants.42
19. Because this Court finds no error attributable to court-related personnel and Dr. Fink did not file his appeal within the 30-day deadline established in
Conclusion
Dismissal, as requested by the State, must be granted as a matter of law. Neither the Thanksgiving holiday nor any claimed representations by Court personnel cures the jurisdictional defect. For these reasons, therefore, Appellee‘s Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED.
/s/Vivian L. Medinilla
Vivian L. Medinilla
Judge
