By the Court,
The district court affirmed a decision of the Nevada Real Estate Advisory Commission suspending the real estate licenses of the appellants for a period of six months for several violations of the real estate code, ch. 645 NRS.
1. NRS 645.680(4) provides that at least 20 days prior to the hearing the licensee shall receive “copies of any and all communications, reports, affidavits or depositions in possession of the real estate division touching or relating to the matter in question.” The chief investigator for the Commission had prepared a “complaint analysis” during the course of his investigation of Rudin. The licensees, Rudin and Rudin Realty and Construction Co., did not receive a copy of that document prior to the hearing. The Commission’s explanation for failing to deliver it to the licensees is that it is an internal document and not within the contemplation of the statute. We do not decide
2. After the hearing, counsel for the Commission, who prosecuted the matter, prepared proposed findings and decision and submitted them to the Commission without notice to the appellants-licensees. The proposals were adopted verbatim except as to the penalty to be imposed.
It is not uncommon in administrative law to find the combination of investigating, prosecuting and judging functions. As a general proposition, such a combination, standing alone, does not constitute a denial of due process. 2 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 13.02. Such combination of functions possesses the potential for unfairness, but unfairness is not its inevitable consequence. In the matter at hand that combination did not exist. The investigation was conducted by investigators, the prosecution, by counsel for the Commission, and the decision was made by the Commission itself. There is nothing to suggest that the prosecutor decided the case. The Commission heard the evidence and examined the exhibits. This alone sets this proceeding apart from Morgan v. United States,
Counsel for the Commission did not submit a copy of the proposed findings and decision to counsel for the licensees. When this hearing occurred, neither the real estate code nor
3. In finding against the licensees the Commission noted that Ron Rudin had refused to answer a question concerning one of the several charges, upon the ground that his answer might tend to incriminate him. It was his privilege to claim that constitutional protection, and no effort was made to compel an answer. The licensees contend, however, that it was impermissible for the Commission to draw an adverse inference from such refusal to answer.
The self-incrimination clause of the Fifth Amendment is applicable to the states [Malloy v. Hogan,
4. Other assertions of error have been examined and are
Affirmed.
Notes
The most significant violations concerned the handling of money in a manner condemned by NRS 645.310(3) (4) (5). Although the sufficiency of the evidence is questioned, our review of the record shows substantial evidence to support the decision. We shall not recite it for to do so would serve no useful purpose.
