486 N.E.2d 1272 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1985
The Ohio State Board of Chiropractic Examiners (the "board"), appeals from an order of the court of common pleas in favor of Shirley Jenneman entered when the court struck from the record the transcript of proceedings before the board. The board asserts two assignments of error: (1) that the court erred in granting relief other than that authorized by the governing statute, R.C.
The underlying facts of the instant case, while not relevant to the board's appeal, are useful in explaining the procedural posture of this case. On April 4, 1983, Steven Stevens, a self-employed distributor of vitamins, herbal cleaners and cosmetics, took his eleven-year-old daughter Stephanie to the office where Jenneman carried on her profession as a licensed chiropractor. Stevens told Jenneman that his daughter had had the flu for several days, was constipated, and that her bowels had not moved even though he had given her a herbal laxative. Jenneman examined the child, made a tentative diagnosis of acute appendicitis and recommended at least twice that Stevens take his daughter to a doctor and get a white blood cell count to determine with certainty whether or not her appendix was involved. Stevens, a believer in faith healing, did not want to go to a doctor, and demanded that Jenneman call in an unlicensed masseuse, Mrs. Brown, who gave colonic therapy and rented office space from Jenneman. Brown responded to Jenneman's call and performed colonic irrigation (an enema) on the child apparently relieving her constipation. The father and child left. The next day, Stephanie Stevens died from complications secondary to the rupture of her appendix. She had been suffering from a chronic condition of appendicitis for almost a week.
On May 9, 1983, the board sent Jenneman a letter citing alleged violations of various sections of the Ohio Revised Code and Ohio Administrative Code.1 At *227
her request, a hearing was held on August 25, 1983, pursuant to R.C. Chapter 119 and R.C. Chapter 4754, and the board eventually issued its adjudication order, suspending Jenneman's chiropractic license for two years, with twenty months suspended contingent on her completion of four educational seminars and her being on probation for two years. On November 23, 1983, she timely appealed to the court of common pleas under R.C.
The board's first assignment of error alleges that the court of common pleas erred in granting relief other than that which "appears" in R.C.
The Supreme Court has not ruled directly on either point. As we read Matash v. Dept. of Ins. (1964),
The court's "finding," however, must comply with the statute. The "finding" is granted to the "party adversely affected" because the agency failed to meet the statutory provision that the administrative record shall be filed within the thirty-day period. The reasons for this "finding" are procedural; it is not
a *228
finding of facts on the merits. When the Supreme Court said inState, ex rel. Crockett, v. Robinson (1981),
"Where the word, `merits,' is used in speaking of the determination of an action upon the merits, it embraces the consideration of substance, not of form; of legal rights, not of mere defects of procedure or practice or the technicalities thereof."
We hold that the "motion" contemplated by R.C.
We reverse the judgment below and remand this case with instructions to the court of common pleas to enter a finding in favor of Jenneman for failure of the board to comply with the filing mandate of R.C.
Judgment reversed and case remanded.
DOAN and KLUSMEIER, JJ., concur.
"Within thirty days after receipt of notice of appeal from an order in any case wherein a hearing is required by sections