This is аn appeal from a decision of the Superior Court dismissing the plaintiff’s appeal from a decision of the state board of examiners in podiatry (board) suspending the plaintiff from the practice of podiatry for thirty days and fining him $3500. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Under General Statutes § 20-59 (4), the board may take disciplinary action against any practitioner who engages in illegal, incompetent or negligent conduct.
The board commenced hearings on the charges on January 13, 1988, and issued a memorandum of decision on September 9, 1988. The board dismissed sections (3) through (6) of the above statement of charges on the basis of insufficient evidence. The board found that the plaintiff was negligent in fаiling to take an axial view X ray of the patient’s foot. In his brief to this court, the plaintiff contends that the failure to take the X ray was not included in the statement of charges.
The plaintiff unsuccessfully appealed to the Superior Court. In his brief before this court, the plaintiff states that he wants to raise the same six claims that he made before the Superior Court and that he “will discuss the claims and the trial court’s view in series.” The plaintiff’s brief covers only the first four claims, however. “ ‘ “Assignments of error which are merely mentioned but not briefed beyond a statement of the claim will be deemed abandoned and will not be reviewed by this
What we will consider in this appeal are the plaintiffs clаims that the board (1) lacked jurisdiction because it was improperly constituted, (2) deprived the plaintiff of due process by applying standards of care that had not been promulgated in agency regulations or established on the record through expert testimony, (3) erroneously admitted the expert testimony of a member of the boаrd, and (4) erroneously found him negligent on a specification not contained in the statement of charges.
The board is an agency within the meaning of General Statutes § 4-166 (1) and is subject to the provisions of the Uniform Administrative Procedure Act (UAPA), General Statutes § 4-166 et seq. See Donis v. Board of Examiners in Podiatry,
The plaintiff’s first claim is that the board lacked subject matter jurisdiction tо adjudicate the statement of charges brought by the department because the board was not duly constituted as required by law. General Statutes § 20-51 provides that the board shall consist of five members: three resident practicing podiatrists of good standing and two public members. General Statutes § 4-9a (b) provides in part: “Public members shall constitute not less than one third of the members of each board and commission within the executive department . . . .” Also, General Statutes §§ 19a-8 and 19a-14 (b) (14) require that public members comprise not less than one third of the board. Public members are electors of the state who are not affiliated with the profession licensed by the board. General Statutes § 4-9a (b).
The board that heard the charges against the plaintiff consisted of two practicing podiatrists and one public member. According to a stipulation that the parties filed in the Superior Court on March 17,1989, the board consisted of five podiatrists and no public members from 1977 to 1979. In 1980, however, the membership was changed to consist оf three podiatrists and two lay persons. The board retained that composition through 1983. From 1984 through 1986 the two public members’ slots were vacant. In 1987 the board consisted of three podiatrists and one public member. In early 1988 the board consisted of two podiatrists and one public member. The Superior Court found that Martin M. Pressman, a podiatrist, wаs appointed to the board in February, 1988, but was disqualified from the plaintiff’s case.
The Superior Court, in its memorandum of decision, correctly explained why the plaintiff’s contention that
The plaintiff relies on Dubaldo v. Department of Consumer Protection,
In his brief, the plaintiff states that the Superior Court wrongfully held that, “the board could . . . function with a majority of its three podiatrists.” This is an inaccurate characterization. The trial сourt found that at the time of the hearing, the board consisted of two podiatrists and one lay person, and that the third podiatrist, Pressman, who was appointed to the board in February, 1988, after hearings in the plaintiff’s case had already started in January, was disqualified from sitting on the board for the remainder of the hearings. We are confident that the plaintiff’s mischaracterization was inadvertent for it does not benefit his cause. Even if the board in this case consisted of three podiatrists and one lay person, so that the ratio of one in three required by General Statutes § 19a-8 was
There is no merit to the plaintiffs first claim.
II
The plaintiffs second claim is contrary to the rule of law as enunciated in Jaffe v. State Department of Health,
Jajfe held that medical examining boards have expertise in the standards of care in their professions because they are comprised of practicing members of the prоfession. Id. “It is to be presumed that the members of the defendant board, as composed under the statute, are qualified to pass upon questions of professional conduct and competence.” Leib v. Board of Examiners for Nursing,
The passage of Public Acts 1977, No. 77-614, which changed the composition of medical examining boards to include public members, did not vitiаte the rule of Jaffe and Leib. Levinson v. Board of Chiropractic Examiners, supra, 522-33.1n Levinson, the court held that expert testimony on standards of care is not required in disciplinary hearings before medical examining boards. Id., 533.
If medical examining boards can rely on their own expertise on standards of care in disciplinary hearings, then they need not promulgate administrative regula
The plaintiff admits that there was expert testimony at the hearing on the standards of care in podiatry. Pressman оffered such testimony. The plaintiff argues that Pressman’s testimony was so general as to be “virtually irrelevant.” The probative value of the evidence was for the board to determine in the first instance, and that determination will not be disturbed on appeal unless it was arbitrary or an abuse of discretion. See Griffin Hospital v. Commission on Hospitals & Health Care, supra. Moreover, even supposing that Pressman’s testimony was completely irrelevant, the board was not required to hear expert testimony on standards of care in the first place. Levinson v. Board of Chiropractic Examiners, supra.
Ill
The plaintiff’s third claim is that he was deprived of due process in that Pressman’s testimony should not have been permitted because he was a member of the board when he testified, which сreated a risk of bias or undue influence on the board. The Superior Court made the following relevant findings of fact. The department selected Pressman to testify as an expert witness in the case. At the second hearing, the board announced that Pressman had been appointed to the board but would not participate in the bоard’s consideration of the plaintiff’s case. Each board member indicated on the record that he had no involvement with the selection of Pressman and that each would not be unduly influenced by Pressman’s appointment in weighing his testimony. Pressman did not participate in the decision of the board. On the basis of these facts, the
We agree with the Superior Court that the plaintiff has failed to show that he was denied due process because of Pressman’s testimony. Even if Pressman had sat as a member of the board in this case, the plaintiff would not have been deprived of due process. “ ‘The [UAPA] does not and probably should not forbid the combination with judging of instituting proceedings, negotiating settlements, or testifying.’ ” Withrow v. Larkin,
IV
Finally, the plaintiff claims that he had inаdequate notice of one of the charges against him. In section (9) of the statement of charges, the plaintiff was charged with “failure to document adequate pre-operative care.” The board found that the plaintiff’s negligent failure to take a preoperative axial view X ray of the
The plaintiff had a due process right to notice of the charges against him. Morgan v. United States,
If the notice of chаrges does not fairly apprise the person of the nature of the offense with which he is charged, the court may set aside the order of an agency for deficiency of notice. Murphy v. Berlin Board of Education,
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The Academy of Ambulatory Foot Surgery has filed an amicus brief for the plaintiff. Only two pages of the amicus brief address the issues raised in this appeal. The remainder consists of allegations that practitioners within the mainstream of podiatry are orgаnized in an attempt to suppress the practice of minimal incision surgery. The petitioner in this case has been a minimal incision surgeon. We simply note that the petitioner and the amicus curiae have failed to show any hint of abuse of prosecutorial discretion on the part of the department of health services in this case.
Section (1) of the statement of charges alleged that he did not keep accurate or adequate medical records.
