Lead Opinion
Dr. Oparaugo Udebiuwa appeals from the decision of the D.C. Board of Medicine to discipline him for engaging in an inappropriate social and sexual relationship with a former psychiatric patient. See D.C.Code § 3-1205.14(a)(26) & (28) (2001). The Board found that this misconduct was established conclusively by the $2.3 million judgment that had been rendered against Dr. Udebiuwa and Howard University Hospital (HUH) in the patient’s malpractice action in D.C. Superior Court. Dr.
The post-trial settlement of the malpractice action mooted the litigation. For that reason the settlement required the dismissal of the pending appeal. See Milar Elevator Co. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
Nor, it should be clear, did their settlement entitle the parties to have the trial court vacate the judgment upon their request.
As is illustrated by the present case, one important reason that the judgment of a court is “valuable to the legal community as a whole,” id. at 26,
While “exceptional circumstances may conceivably counsel” granting a motion for vacatur at the behest of settling parties, Bonner Mall,
Apart from his contention that the judgment in the malpractice action should have been treated as vacated, which we have rejected, Dr. Udebiuwa advances no argument that the Board of Medicine abused its discretion by using that judgment in accordance with the doctrine of offensive nonmutual collateral estoppel to establish the fact that he had an inappropriate relationship with a patient. It is undisputed that the issue in question was “actually litigated” in the malpractice action, was “determined by a valid and final judgment” in that action, and was “essential to th[at] judgment.” Ali Baba Co. v. WILCO, Inc.,
Dr. Udebiuwa also complains about the delays he encountered in the administrative proceeding. Under D.C.Code § 3 — 1205.19(h) (2001), the Board of Medicine was supposed to issue a final decision in writing within ninety days of conducting a hearing. Applicable regulations prescribed tighter deadlines. See 17 DCMR §§ 4114.3 (administrative law judge to submit a recommended decision to the Board within thirty days of the hearing) and 4117.1 (Board to issue decision within sixty days of the hearing). These deadlines were not met in Dr. Udebiuwa’s case; for example, the Board did not issue its decision until eleven months after the hearing concluded. Nonetheless, the delays do not entitle Dr. Udebiuwa to relief because they did not prejudice him. See Wisconsin Ave. Nursing Home v. District of Columbia Comm’n on Human Rights,
Dr. Udebiuwa’s remaining two contentions on appeal require no extended discussion. First, the Executive Director of the Office of Professional Licensing was not disqualified from testifying about the malpractice lawsuit and related matters merely because he performed various administrative duties for the Board (such as receiving HUH’s report of the malpractice settlement, directing the Board’s Office of Compliance to investigate, and notifying Dr. Udebiuwa of the Board’s actions). The Executive Director had no adjudicatory role and there was no incompatibility between his testifying and his administrative duties that would overcome the presumption that the Board acted fairly. See Park v. District of Columbia Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd.,
The decision of the Board of Medicine is affirmed.
Notes
. Nor did the parties seek equivalent relief in this court while the appeal was still pending.
. In view of Dr. Udebiuwa’s argument in his brief that the parties to the malpractice action had a legal right to vacate the judgment, and that they effectively exercised that right by filing a praecipe which the trial court did not disturb and which therefore "remains the law of the case," we do not agree with our concurring colleague’s view that the balance of our discussion of the vacatur issue in this opinion is "purely advisory and not necessary to the court’s holding.” Post at 165.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the judgment:
I agree with my colleagues that the decision of the District of Columbia Board
In the Superior Court malpractice case, the jury returned a verdict in the plaintiffs favor, and against Dr. Udebiuwa and Howard University, in the amount of $2,300,000. Judgment was entered on the verdict. The defendants appealed. The case was then settled for $1,500,000, and the parties filed a praecipe agreeing that “[a]s a part of the settlement agreement and release, the parties agree that the judgment entered against [the defendants] is to be vacated.” No motion to vacate the judgment was filed, however, and — most significantly — the trial judge did not vacate the judgment. As my colleagues point out, ante, page 162, the parties could not, without the court’s consent, vacate a judgment that the court had entered. Only the court could do that. Therefore, the judgment remained in effect and collaterally estopped Dr. Udebiuwa from contesting the facts found against him by the jury, namely, that he had committed malpractice against the patient who had sued him in the Superior Court.
That, to me, should be the end of this appeal, or at least of the “collateral estop-pel” issue. On these facts, a judgment that has not been vacated has a “collateral estoppel” effect. It does not make any difference, on this appeal from the decision of the District of Columbia Board of Medicine, whether the judgment in the Superior Court case should or should not have been vacated. The fact is that it was not vacated, that it remains in effect, and that the appeal from the judgment has been dismissed, rendering the judgment final.
In spite of the foregoing, my colleagues in the majority address in some detail the question whether a judgment ought to be vacated when the parties have settled the case during the pendency of an appeal. They tell us, inter alia, that a judgment of the court is “valuable to the legal community as a whole,” that it may have “preclu-sive benefits for third parties,” and that only “exceptional circumstances may conceivably counsel granting a motion for vacation at the behest of settling parties.” Ante at pages 162-63 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). These are certainly interesting propositions, but they have absolutely no bearing on the outcome of this case. Even if the law encouraged vacatur following settlement, and even if the judge ought to have granted a hypothetical motion to vacate the judgment if one had been filed, the fact is that the judgment in the Superior Court was not vacated, that no appeal from the judgment remains pending, that the judgment is therefore final, and that it therefore properly serves as a basis for claim preclusion. That is all that matters. In my opinion, the remainder of the discussion is purely advisory and not necessary to the court’s holding.
“[A]n issue is ripe for adjudication only when the parties’ rights may be immediately affected by it.” Allen v. United States,
[t]he suggestion that this court may “wish to give the trial court guidance” on an issue not yet presented amounts to a request that we write an advisory opinion. This court has no authority to issue advisory opinions regarding questions which may or may not arise. Smith, [supra ],310 A.2d at 231 ; see also Allen, [supra ],603 A.2d at 1228-29 n. 20. “Courts should not decide morethan the occasion demands.” Younger v. Smith, 30 Cal.App.3d 138 , 153,106 Cal.Rptr. 225 , 235 (1973). Like the Supreme Court of Washington,
[a]s a general rule, this court will decide only such questions as are necessary for a determination of the case presented for consideration, and will not render decisions in advance of such necessity ....
Johnson v. Morris,87 Wash.2d 922 ,557 P.2d 1299 , 1305 (1976) (en banc) (citation omitted); see also Local No. 8-6, Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Int’l Union v. Missouri,361 U.S. 363 , 367-68,80 S.Ct. 391 ,4 L.Ed.2d 373 (1960).
In light of the foregoing, I would end the analysis with the determination that Dr. Udebiuwa is collaterally estopped from contesting the determination of malpractice because the judgment in the malpractice case has not been vacated, and I would defer to another day discussion of the circumstances, if any, under which a trial judge should vacate a judgment because the parties have settled the underlying case.
