19-001812FL Agency For Persons With Disabilities vs. Meadowview Progressive Care Corporation Group Home, Owned And Operated By Meadowview Progressive Care Corporation
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, November 26, 2019.


View Dockets  
Summary: Petitioner failed to prove by clear and convicing evidence that verified report of maltreatment named licensee as perpetrator, that licensee lied on renewal application, or that licensee employed an unscreened person.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8AGENCY FOR PERSONS WITH

12DISABILITIES ,

13Petitioner,

14vs. Case No. 19 - 1812FL

20MEADOWVIEW PROGRESSIVE CARE

23CORPORATION GROUP HOME , owned

27and operated by MEADOWVIEW

31PROGRESSIVE CARE CORPORATION,

34Respondent .

36_______________________________

37RECOMMENDED ORDER

39On August 16 , 2019 , Robert E. Meale, Administrative Law

48Judge of the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH),

56conducted the final hearing by videoconference in Lauderdale

64Lakes and Tallahassee, Florida.

68APPEARANCES

69For Petitioner: Trevor Suter, Esquire

74Agency for Persons with Disabilities

794030 Esplanade Way, Suite 380

84Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 0950

89For Respondent : G. Barrington Lewis, Esquire

96Law Of fice of George B. Lewis

10310061 53rd Way South, Suite 1004

109Boynton Beach, Florida 33437

113STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE S

118The issue s are whether , pursuant to section 393.0673(1),

127Florida Statutes (2018), Respondent, which holds a license to

136operate a group home facility, was identified in a verified

146report by the Department of Children and Families (DCF) as the

157perpetrator of exploitation of a vulnerable adult , failed to

166disclose on a renewal application a perpetrator of " the . . .

178abuse, neglect, or exploitation of a vulnerable adult"

186(Maltreatment), 1 and allowed a new employee to begin working at

197the group home before complet ing all of the background screening

208requirements; and, if so, what penalty shoul d be imposed against

219Respondent's license .

222PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

224On March 1, 2019, Petitioner issued an Administrative

232Complaint against "Meadowview Progressive Care Corporation Group

239Home, owned and operated by Meadowview Progressive Care

247Corporation , " which are , respectively, a group home and the

256corporate licensee. Citing group home facility license number

26411 - 258 - GH (License) , t he Administrative Complaint alleges that

276Meadowview Progressive Care Corporation (Respondent) holds the

283L icense to operate a group home located at 19740 Northwest 32nd

295Avenue , Miami Gardens (Group Home) . The Administrative Complaint

304alleges that Respondent's corporate officers are Etha Griffith ,

312Kim Griffith , and Francis Griffith .

318Count I alleges that Respondent was responsi ble for the care

329of seven disabled adults . Count I alleges that DCF conducted a

341protective investigation of allegations of financial exploitation

348of these seven persons "cared for by Respondent and Etha

358Griffith , Respondent's corporate officer." Count I alleges

365that DCF issued a verified report of exploitation against

374Etha Griffith for improperly us ing the funds of these seven

385residents (Verified Report) . Count I concludes that Petitioner

394may revoke a license if DCF verifies "that the licensee is

405respons ible for the . . . abuse, neglect, or exploitation of a

418vulnerable adult. " § 393.0673, Fla. Stat .

425Count II alleges that , on November 12, 2018, Respondent's

434corporate officer, Etha Griffi th , submitted to Petitioner a

443license renewal application on behalf o f Respondent

451(Application) . Count II alleges that Etha Griffith attested to

461the truth of the answers supplied in response to questions asked

472in Section V of the A pplication , which is marked, "Affidavit."

483Count II alleges that Etha Griffith answered "no" to the question

494in Section V, Item 2 that asks whether "you or ownership

505controlling entity affiliated with this application" was "ever

513identified as responsible for . . . the abuse, neglect, or

524exploitation of a vulnerable adult?"

529Count II alleges that DCF closed the above - described

539protective investigation with a verified finding of exploitation

547against "Respondent Etha Griffith ." Count II alleges , f irst,

557that Etha Griffith's nondisclosure of a verified finding of

566exploitation c onstituted a "willful or intentional misstatement

574regarding the health, safety, welfare, abuse, neglect,

581exploitation, abandonment, or location of a resident" and thus

590constitutes a Class I violation, as provided in Florida

599Administrative Code Rule 65G - 2.0 07(20)(a). Count II alleges,

609second, that Etha Griffith's nondisclosure of a verified finding

618of exploitation constituted a "falsely represented material fact"

626in a license application, in violation of section 393.067. Count

636II concludes that Petitioner may deny a renewal application if

"646the licensee has "falsely represented or omitted a material

655fact" in its application, as provided by section 393.0673.

664Count III alleges that, on January 15, 2019, Huguette

673Bastien Meliard was employed by Respondent and working at the

683Group Home, despite the absence, in her personnel file, of

693documentation of background checks of her local criminal record

702and employment history. Count III alleges that these omissions

711violated the requirement of a preemployment level 2 s creening,

721pursuant to sections 393.0655(1) and 435.01, Florida Statutes, so

730as to constitute a Class I violation , as provided by

740Rule 65G - 2.008(2) . The Administrative Complaint concludes that

750Petitioner may revoke Respondent's license or impose a lesser

759p enalty.

761By Petition for Formal Administrative Hearing filed

768March 27, 2019, Respondent claimed that DCF never informed it or

779Etha Griffi th of a finding of exploitation, Etha Griffi th

790answered honestly the question asked in Section V, Item 2, and

801Ms. Meliar d had not yet been hired by Respondent on January 15,

8142019.

815On August 14, 2019, the parties filed a Pre h earing

826Stipulation. T he second sentence of the portion of the

836stipulation entitled, "Stipulated Facts and Nature of the

844Controversy," states that, on March 21, 2019, Petitioner filed

"853administrative complaints" to revoke "licenses" of Respondent.

860The first sentence identifies a group home facility license for a

871group home located at 2331 West Lake Miramar Circle, Miramar

881(Miramar Group Home). 2 However , there is only one administrative

891complaint in this proceeding, and it proposes discipline only

900against the L icense for the Group Home.

908T he first sentence also mis states that the two licenses are

920held by "Meadowview Progressive Care Corpor ation Group Home and

930Meadowview Progressive Care Corporation 2 Owned and operated by

939[Respondent]." Regarding the license for the Miramar Group Home,

948Petitioner offered into evidence applications that indicate that

956the license e is " Meadowview Progressive Care, Inc. , " not

965Respondent.

966The administrative law judge hereby strikes these sentences

974from the Prehearing Stipulation. 3

979At the hearing, Petitioner and Respondent each called two

988witness es . The only exhibits admitted were pages 28 through 39

1000of Petitioner Composite Exhibit 2, 4 which are the Application and

1011the Certificate of License that the Application sought to renew,

1021and Respondent Composite Exhibit H , which are emails between

1030Kim Griffith and the DCF protective investigator who prepared the

1040V erified Report .

1044The court reporter filed the transcript on October 17 , 2019.

1054The parties filed their proposed recommended orders by

1062October 25, 2019.

1065FINDING S OF FACT

10691. At all material times, as authorized by the License,

1079Respondent , a Florida not - for - profit corporation, has provided

1090services to intellectually disabled persons residing at the Group

1099Home . At all material times, Respondent's directors have been

1109Etha Griffith , her daughter Kim Griffith , and Francis Griffith .

1119The record does not disclose if Respondent has any members.

1129Etha Griffith , who is 79 years old, serves as an officer and the

1142onsite manager of the group home , for which K im Griffith and

1154Francis Griffith serve as the backup manager s or supervisor s of

1166the G roup H ome.

11712 . Petitioner presented no admissible evidence in support

1180of Count I . Pr ominent among the excluded evidence is the

1192Verified Report , as to which Petitioner failed to demonstrate its

1202relevance, as explained in the Conclusions of Law, or its

1212authenticity, given that it is unsigned and bears other indicia

1222of an investigation that, although closed, was never completed . 5

12333 . In support of Count II, Petitioner introduced the

1243Application , 6 which was filed on November 12, 2018 .

1253Etha Griffith 7 completed the Application by providing the

1262information requested on Petitioner's application form , which

1269serves a natural person or legal entity who or that is an

1281applicant or license e seeking the issuance or renewal of a group

1293home facility license (Appl ication Form). Etha Griffith signed

1302the Application as Respondent's designated representative , and

1309her signature was notarized on November 8, 201 8 .

13194 . T he Application states the answer, "no," to the question

1331posed in Section V, Item 2 : "Have you or ownership controlling

1343entity affiliated with this application ever been identif i ed as

1354responsible for the abuse, neglect, or abandonment of a child or

1365the abuse, neglect, or exploitation of a vulnerable adult?" For

1375several reasons, Petition er failed to prove by clear and

1385convincing evidence the material facts in support of Count II.

13955. First, "no" was correct because the question refers to a

1406determination, not a llegation, of Maltreatment. The Application

1414Form does not define "identified , " whose common meaning is not

"1424alleged," but " established , " 8 such as after a completed

1433investigation . As explained in endnote 5, the evidence fails to

1444establish that DCF determined that Etha Griffith is the

1453perpetrator of Maltreatment.

14566. Second , e ven if there had been a determination of

1467Maltreatment in the Verified Report by November 12, 2018, "no"

1477was not a willful or intentional misstatement or a false

1487statement because neither Etha Griffith nor any other agent of

1497Respondent knew about the Verified R eport or DCF's determination

1507of Maltreatment -- and not for a lack of inquiry. Aware that an

1520investigation had taken place during the summer of 2018, in

1530October 2018, Kim Griffith contacted the DCF protective

1538investigator who had conduct ed the investigation and asked for

1548any findings . T he investigator returned to her, not the Verified

1560Report, but a Notice of Conclusion, stating only that the

1570investigation was " complete " and " closed ," and DCF had

1578recommended no addit io nal services. Etha Griffith ha s never

1589received a copy of the Verified Report. No agent of Respondent

1600knew anything about the Verified Report until preparing for the

1610hearing in this case. On these facts, Etha Griffith and

1620Respondent's other agents had no reason to think, as of

1630November 12, 2018, that DCF had determined that Etha Griffith had

1641pe rpetrated Maltreatment.

16447. Third, e ven if , by November 12, 2018, Etha Griffith were

1656aware that DCF had determined that she had perpetrated

1665Maltreatment, the failure to disclose this fact or the Verified

1675Report was not materia l. An audit of the Group Home by

1687Petitioner led to DCF's protective investigation , and the

1695findings of the protective investigation , such as they were, 9

1705implied that any misappropriation involved substantial ly smaller

1713sums than those specified in the audit. 10 Knowledge of the audit

1725findings would thus include knowledge of the protective

1733investigation findings.

17358. F ourth , as discussed in the Conclusions of Law, "no" is

1747correct because, in the q uestion posed in Sect io n V, Item 2 ,

"1761you" refers to the applicant or licensee, and "ownership

1770controlling entity affiliated with this application" does not

1778effectively refer to Etha Griffith .

17849. The Application Form does not define these terms. Items

17941, 3, a nd 4 also contain questions posed to "you." The questions

1807in Items 1 and 3 alternatively address a "controlling entity

1817affiliated with this application," so, except for dropping

"1825ownership," the questions in Items 1 and 3 are directed to the

1837same addressee as is the question in Item 2. The question in

1849Item 4 is directed only to "you . " All four of these items frame

1863questions seeking potentially important information about past

1870license discipline and adverse action involving the Medicaid and

1879Medica re programs. 11

188310. Judging from her testimony at the hearing , Etha

1892Griffith possess es modest language skills. Given the level of

1902analysis required to determine the meaning of "you" and

"1911ownership controlled entity affiliated with this application,"

1918Etha Griffith could not possibly have understood that the

1927question in Section V, Item 2 addressed her.

193511. The two key issues in Count III are whether Ms. Meliard

1947was an employee or a covered volunteer, as defined in the

1958Conclusions of Law, and, if so, whether she had completed her

1969local screening.

197112. Ms. Meliard did not testify, nor did Petitioner direct

1981any questions to Kim Griffith as to Count III. Petitioner's

1991investigator testified that, upon his unannounced arrival at the

2000Group Home at 2:05 p.m . on January 1, 2019 , he found Ms. Meliard

"2014seated in a chair by the front window," presumably in a common

2026area of the house, such as a living room. , p. 6 3 .

2039Ms. Meliard was alone in the Group Home, as the residents

2050typically return ed from their day p rograms around 3:00 p.m.

2061Tr. , p . 6 3 . On the investigato r's arrival, Ms. Meliard called

2075Etha Griffith , who arrived at the Group Home very shortly after

2086the call., p. 6 4 . On her arrival, Etha Griffith told the

2099investigator th at she was "trying to giv e [Ms. Meliard] a job ."

2113Tr., p. 6 4 . The testimony recited in this paragraph is credited.

212613. Petitioner's witnesses were in conflict as to the

2135screening that Ms. Meliard had cleared. Petitioner's operations

2143management consultant testified that Ms. Meliard had not cleared

2152level 1 or 2 screening., p. 44. Petitioner's investigator

2161testified t o the same effect, but immediately corrected himself

2171by saying that she had cleared Level 2 screening, but not local

2183screening., pp. 65 - 66. Petitioner is unable to produce

2193documentary evidence of screenings because this material is

2201confidential, even in hearings of this type, according to

2210Petitioner's counsel., p. 46.

221414. When asked if Ms. Meliard had cleared her level 2

2225screening, Etha Griffith testified, "That is the one we got,

2235yeah." Tr., p. 95. No one asked Etha Griffith directly if

2246Ms. Me liard had not yet passed h er local screening. In a

2259clear - and - convincing case, no finding is possible based on the

2272negative implication inherent in Etha Griffith 's statement. Her

2281modest communication skills and laconic communication style

2288betray a lack of mental acuity, so no inference is possible by

2300Etha Griffin ' s use of the definite article, "the."

231015. A personnel file , which may be opened for a candidate

2321for employment, typically contains e vidence of a local scr eening,

2332which comprises an inquir y to the relevant local law enforcement

2343agency and a response from the agency . Tr., p. 83. Proof of a

2357failure to obtain a local screening thus depends on a negative --

2369the absence of documentation in the personnel file. Unable to

2379recall clearly whether he had seen evidence of a level 2

2390screening, Petitioner's investigator testified that he recalled

2397not seeing evidence in Ms. Meliard's personnel file of clearing

2407the local screening., p. 83.

241216. The testimony on the issues of employment and local

2422screening is too vague and uncertain to support findings by clear

2433and convincing evidence that, on January 10, 2019, Ms. Meliard

2443was employed by Respondent and had not passed her local

2453screening . The investigator presented himself as exceptionally

2461capable and articulate, but nothing in the record suggests that

2471he investigated with an y diligence the employment or local

2481screening issues involving Ms. Meliard.

2486CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

24891 7 . DOAH has jurisdiction. § § 120.569 and 120.57(1), Fla.

2501Stat.

250218 . Petitioner must prove the material allegations to

2511discipline Respondent's license by clear and convincing evidence.

2519§ 120.5 7(1)(j) . ÐClear and convincing evidenceÑ is evidence that

2530is " precise, explicit, lacking in confusion, and of such weight

2540that it produces a firm belief or conviction, without hesitation,

2550about the matter in issue. " Fla. Std. Jury Inst. (Civ.) 405.4.

256119. In stead of state programs for the treatment of persons

2572with developmental disabilities , the legislature has opted for

"2580community - based programs and services . . ., private businesses,

2591not - for - profit corporations, units of local government, and other

2603organizations capable of providing needed services to clients in

2612a cost - efficient manner. " § 393.062.

261920 . S ection 393.0673(1) and (2) sets forth identical

2629grounds for Petitioner , respectively, to discipline or deny a

2638group home facility license. 12 S ection 393.0673(1) predicates

2647discipline on the following :

2652(a) The licensee has:

26561. Falsely represented or omitted a

2662material fact in its license application

2668. . .;

26712. Had prior action taken against it by

2679the Medicaid or Medicare program; or

26853. Failed to comply with the applicable

2692requirements of this chapter or rules

2698appli cable to the licensee; or

2704(b) [DCF] has verified that the licensee is

2712responsible for the abuse, neglect, or

2718abandonment of a child or the abuse,

2725neglect, or exploitation of a vulnerable

2731adult . 13

273421 . Rule 65G - 2.002(20) provides:

2741Willful or intentional misstatements. A

2746licensee or applicant shall not make willful

2753or intentional misstatements, orally or in

2759writing, to intentionally mislead Agency

2764staff, the Department of Children and

2770Families, or law enforcement in the

2776performance of their duties.

2780(a) W illful or intentional misstatements

2786regarding the health, safety, welfare,

2791abuse, neglect, exploitation, abandonment or

2796location of a resident shall be considered a

2804Class I violation.

2807(b) All other willful misstatements shall

2813be considered Class II violat ions.

281922. Petitioner has not explain ed its reasoning in Counts I

2830and II in the Administrative Complaint, at hearing, or in its

2841p ro posed recommended order. A s to Count I, Petitioner has not

2854explained why the Verified Report naming Etha Griffith a s a

2865perpetrator of Maltreatment may operate as a verified report

2874naming Respondent a s a perpetrator of Maltreatment. As to Count

2885II, Petitioner has not explained how Etha Griffith is addressed

2895by a question in Section V, Item 2 of the Application Form

2907direct ed to "you" or "ownership controlling entity affiliated

2916with this application" and, if this question had addressed her ,

2926the materiality of the Application's failure to disclose that

2935Etha Griffith was named as a perpetrator of Maltreatment.

294423. Counts I and II illustrate different relationships that

2953may arise between a corporation and its agents, such as

2963directors, officers, and employees. 14 In Count I, the corporate

2973licensee resists the imposition of liability for the acts and

2983omissions of its agent . I n Count II , the corporate licensee,

2995which is unable to perform its corporate functions except through

3005a natural person, necessarily affirm s its agent 's preparing and

3016filing of the Application 15 a nd defend s the accuracy of the

3029agent's answer to th e question in Section V, Item 2 of the

3042Application.

304324. Count I rel ies on a false equivalence between

3053Respondent and Etha Griffith . Paragraph 8 alleges that DCF found

3064Etha Griffith to be a perpetrator of Maltreatment, and Paragraph

30749 alleges that Petitioner may discipline a license if a licensee

3085is found responsible for Maltreatment . Even if both allegations

3095were true, Count I fails for the lack of a bridge between them .

3109Compare Amer. States Ins. Co. v. Kelley , 446 So. 2d 1085, 1086

3121(Fla. 4th DCA 1984) (a corporation is an entity separate and

3132distinct fro m the people that constitute it ).

314125. Count I imputes to Respondent the putative

3149determination of wrongdoing by Etha Griffith , b ut t he power to

3161impute vicarious liabili ty lies with the courts, 16 not agenc ies . 17

3175Typically associated with the common law, such as tort law,

3185indirect liability will not be imposed by a court when the

3196liability is a matter of statute , if the statute does not impose

3208vicarious liability. Diaz de la Portilla v. Fla. Elections

3217Comm'n , 857 So. 2d 913, 917 - 18 (Fla. 3d DCA 2003) (candidate not

3231liable for violations of campaign treasurer when relevant

3239statutes do not impute liability to candidate ).

324726. C hapter 415 does not prohibit DCF from determin ing that

3259a corporation perpetrated Maltreatment , 18 but DCF did not do so . 19

3272Petitioner's attempt in Count I to treat Respondent as

3281vicariously liable for the Maltreatment is particularly

3288problematic because c hapter 415 no longer provides a hearing on a

3300verified report of Maltreatment 20 and imposes no evidentiary

3309standard whatsoever on DCF's determination that a person has

3318perpetrated Maltreatment . 21 Although , as this case demonstrates,

3327s ection 393.0673(1)(b) provide s a hearing when the discipline is

3338based on a verified report against the licensee, the language of

3349the statute provides no opportunity to relitigate the

3357Maltreatment determination by DCF, but limits the licensee to

3366collateral defenses, such as whether the licensee is the

3375perpetrator in a verified report of Maltreatment or whether the

3385verified report is authentic and meets the applicable statutory

3394requirements.

339527. Count I fails, not because Petitioner is unable to

3405discipline a group home facility licensee for the wrongful acts

3415and omissions of its agents, 22 but because , without any statutory

3426support, Petitioner has treated Respondent as the perpetrator of

3435Maltreatment in a verified report that name s Etha Griffith as the

3447perpetrator .

344928. By contr ast, s tating a claim for which relief may be

3462granted, Count II fails due to the absence of evidence that the

3474negative answer to the question in Section V, Item 2 constituted

3485a false statement or omission of a material fact or a willful or

3498intentional misstatement intentionally to mislead Petitioner.

350429. Petitioner has adopted the Application Form as a rule.

3514Rule 65G - 2.002(2). Count II requires the interpretation of

3524several provisions of the Application Form. The construction of

3533a rule is a question of law , 23 as is the construction of a

3547contract. 24

354930. As explained above, 25 the Verified Report is neither

3559relevant nor authentic, so Petitioner has failed to prove the

3569threshold element that DCF has "verified" or determined that Etha

3579Griffith perpetrated Maltreatment , as required by section

3586393.0673(1)(b). S ect io n 393.0673(1)(b) requires a determination,

3595not an allegation , so t his construction of the question ensures

3606that Item 2 works in tandem with the statute. Consistent with

3617this interpretation , Petitioner elsewhere has referred to an

3625allegation of Maltreatment by modifying "perpetrator ." R ule

363465G - 2.008(5) ( a person who "has been identified as an alleged

3647perpetrator " ).

364931. The requirement s of a false representation or false

3659omission of a material fact in section 393.0673(1)(a)1. and a

3669willful or intentional misstatement intentionally to mislead

3676Petitioner in rule 65G - 2.007(20)(a) demand proof that Etha

3686Griffith knew that the answer to Section V , Item 2 was false when

3699she filed the Application. 26 However, a s explained in the

3710Findings of Fact, the negative answer was not false due to the

3722deficiencies of the Verified Report and , even if the Verified

3732Report had determined that Etha Griffith were a perpetrator of

3742Maltreatment, none of Respondent's agents, including Etha

3749Griffith , had knowledge of the report's existence.

375632. Additionally, t he nondisclosure of the Verified Report

3765was not be material. The "findings" of the Verified Report were

3776circumscribed by Petitioner's audit findings. Petitioner is

3783housed within DCF , § 20.197 , and its employees administering

3792chapter 393 have access to all otherwise - confidential DCF records

3803involving protective investigations , except for the name of the

3812repo rter. § 415.107(3)(a). If DCF has "reason to believe" that

3823Maltreatment has been perpetrated on a resident of a group home

3834facility, it is required to provide a copy of its investigative

3845report to Petitioner. Compare Steinberg v. Bay Terrace Apt.

3854Hotel , 375 So. 2d 1089, 1092 (Fla. 3d DCA 1979) (person to whom

3867false representation is made not entitled to relief if it might

3878have learned the truth by ordinary care and attention).

388733. Lastl y, Petitioner failed to prove a false statement or

3898omission or willf ul or intentional misstatement because

3906Petitioner failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence tha t

"3917you" or "ownership controlling entity affiliated with this

3925application" addresses Etha Griffith .

393034. " Y ou" means the applicant , who or which is the obvious

3942focus of the Application Form . If "you" means the natural person

3954completing the Application Form -- e.g., the applicant if a sole

3965proprietor or a designated representative if a corporation -- the

3975question in Item 4 would sometimes address the applican t and

3986sometimes address the designated represent -- itself, an illogical

3995situation. Worse, Item 4 would elicit from a corporate applicant

4005useless 27 information about the designated representative at the

4014expense of eliciting important information about the a pplicant.

4023If "you" means only the designated representative, then Item 4 is

4034directed to no one when the applicant is a natural person. If

"4046you" serves double duty, addressing the applicant when it is a

4057natural person and the designated representative whe n the

4066app licant is a legal entity, then the Application Form would need

4078explicitly to inform users of this complicated, contingent

4086arrangement.

408735. "O wnership controlling entity affiliated with this

4095application" yields its meaning more grudgingly . The core of

4105this phrase seems to be "ownership controlling entity ," 28 which

4115likely describe s an entity that controls the applicant .

"4125Ownership" suggests that the means of control is by way of

4136equity, not , say, management or debt. Thus, as used in Section

4147V, Item 2, thi s phrase seems to apply only to an applicant that

4161is a legal entity , as a natural person cannot be owned . For a

4175legal entity with owners, the obvious question is when does a

4186natural person or legal entity own enough to control the

4196applicant? F or a legal entity without owners, such as

4206Respon dent, this phrase thus would be inoperative.

421436. But "ownership controlling entity" may mean more.

4222Although unmentioned in the Application Form, "controll ing

4230entity" is defined in rule 65G - 2.001(8)(a) and (b) as "the

4242applicant or licensee" or a " person or entity that serves as an

4254officer of, is on the board of directors of, or has a 5 - percent

4269or greater ownership interest in the applicant or licensee " ("5%

4280owner").

428237. Ignoring the troublesome modifier, "ownership," 29 which

4290would restrict the scope of the rule in Section V, Item 2 to a

43045% owner, there are one factual and two legal impediments to

4315applying the rule in this case so as to capture Etha Griffith as

4328an officer or director.

433238. First , Etha Griffith lacks the language and cognitive

4341skills to understand that th is phrase refers to her , even if it

4354did . 30 Pupo - Diaz v. State , 966 So. 2d 1010, (Fla. 2d DCA 2007)

4370(failure to prove by preponderance of evidence that applicant

4379falsely failed to reveal a driver license suspension due to

4389applicant's "lack of understanding of the wording of the

4398questions"). And Petitioner bears the responsibility for this

4407failure to communicate. At the risk of stating the obvious, the

4418legislature has directed that agenc ies draft rules, which would

4428includ e the Application Form, in "readable language" that avoids

4438the use of "obscure words and unnecessarily long or complicated

4448constructions" or "unnecessary . . . specialized language that is

4458understood only by members of pa rticular . . . professions."

4469§ 120.54(2)(b).

447139. Second, the information sought in Section V, Item 2 as

4482to an officer, director, or 5% owner would not be relevant.

4493Petitioner is not authorized to deny or discipline a group home

4504facility license on the ground that an officer , director , or 5%

4515owner has been determined to be a perpetrator of Maltreatment. 31

452640. Third, as suggested in the preceding paragraph ,

4534Petitioner lacks the authority to direct the question contained

4543in Section V, Item 2 to a n office r, director, or 5% owner. In

4558doing so, Petitioner is not "implement [ing] or interpret [ing] the

4569specific powers and duties granted by [any] enabling statute," 32

4579as required by the flush left language of sect io n 120.52(8). 33

459241. The language of rule 65G - 2.001(8)(a) and (b) 34 is found

4605in section 408.803(7)(a) and (b) , which defines a "controlling

4614interest" for licensing programs administered by the Agency for

4623Health Care Administration (AHCA) . 35 In contrast to section

4633393.0673 (l) and (2) , which applies only to a "licensee" or an

"4645applicant," s ection 408.815(1) authorizes discipline or denial

4653for acts or omissions by a "controlling interest . " 36 The contrast

4665between the scope of these two regulatory regimes is underscored

4675by the overlapping grounds for discipline or denial that are

4685available to AHCA, including a false representation or omission

4694of a material fact from an application, a violation of applicable

4705law, and current exclusion from the Medicaid or Medicare program,

4715although not a det ermination that the applicant is a perpetrator

4726of Maltreatment.

472842. Plainly, the legislature has restricted the regulatory

4736reach of Petitioner in chapter 393, relative to AHCA in chapter

4747408, part II -- a choice that Section V, Item 2 unlawfully

4759overrides with its alternative addressee. T he refore, the

4768reference to " ownership controlling entity affiliated with this

4776application " in Section V, Item 2 of the Application Form is an

4788invalid rule on which neither the administrative law judge nor

4798Petitioner may b ase agency action under section 120.57(1)(e)1.

480743. Count III fails for a lack of clear and convincing

4818evidence. Section 393.0655(1) requires a level 2 employment

4826screening for "direct service providers," who are persons over 18

4836years of age with " direct face - to - face contact with a client

4850while providing services to the client or . . . access to a

4863clientÓs living areas or to a clientÓs funds or personal

4873property. " § 393.063(13). Section 393.0655(1) adds:

" 4879Background screening shall include emplo yment history checks as

4888provided in s. 435.03(1) and local criminal records checks

4897through local law enforcement agencies. " S ection 393.0655(1)(a)

4905states: " A volunteer who assists on an intermittent basis for

4915less than 10 hours per month does not have t o be screened if a

4930person who meets the screening requirement of this section is

4940always present and has the volunteer within his or her line of

4952sight. "

495344. Petitioner has failed to prove that Ms. Meliard was a

4964direct service provider as an employee of R espondent. The only

4975affirmative evidence is that she was in the process of applying

4986to become an employee. Petitioner never asked Kim Griffith about

4996Ms. Meliard's employment status and never produced evidence of

5005payments from Respondent to her. On these facts, an inference of

5016employment might be possible in a preponderance case, but not in

5027a clear - and - convincing case.

503445. Petitioner has failed to prove Ms. Meliard was a direct

5045service provider as an unpaid volunteer . The evidence fails to

5056establish that Ms. Meliard was ever in contact with residents or

5067had access to their rooms without being in direct view of a

5079screened person. The evidence places Ms. Meliard alone in the

5089front room of the Group Home for a few minutes , but not alo ne

5103with residents or alone with access to a resident's living area. 37

511546. Petitioner has failed to prove by clear and convincing

5125evidence that Ms. Meliard did not undergo local screening. The

5135testimony as to screening wa s im precise, im plicit, confused , and

5147not of such weight that it has produced a firm belief or

5159conviction, without hesitation, that Ms. Meliard in fact had not

5169passed her local screening.

517347. The administrative law judge reserves jurisdiction to

5181award a reasonable attorney 's fee against Petitioner , pursuant to

5191section 57.105(5). After the issuance of the final order, the

5201administrative law judge will issue a notice of hearing to

5211address Petitioner's liability under section 57.105 and, if

5219established, the amount of fees.

5224RECO MMENDATION

5226It is

5228RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Persons with Disabilities

5236enter a final order finding Respondent not guilty of all counts

5247set forth in the Administrative Complaint .

5254DONE AND ENTERED this 2 6 th day of November , 2019 , in

5266Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.

5270S

5271ROBERT E. MEALE

5274Administrative Law Judge

5277Division of Administrative Hearings

5281The DeSoto Building

52841230 Apalachee Parkway

5287Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 3060

5292(850) 488 - 9675

5296Fax Filing (850) 921 - 6847

5302www.doah.state.fl.us

5303Filed with the Clerk of the

5309Division of Administrative Hearings

5313this 2 6 th day of November , 2019 .

5322ENDNOTES

53231 / When the context requires, "Maltreatment" will also refer to

5334the abuse, neglect, or abandonment of a child.

53422/ The Miramar Group Home was formerly located in Pembroke Pines.

53533/ A stipulation contrary to the law is not binding on the trial

5366judge. See, e.g. , Troup v. Bird , 53 So. 2d 717, 721 (Fla. 1951).

5379Any attempt to broaden the scope of this proceeding to include a

5391second license invites confusion, especially when it is attempted

5400by a prehearing stipulation, rather than a motion to amend an

5411administrative complaint.

5413Any attempt to add a second respondent to the case is unlawful.

5425Nothing in this record indicates that Petitioner has ever advised

5435the licensee of the Miramar Group Home of proposed agency action

5446against its license, so as to confer jurisdiction under s ection

5457120.569(1). Parties may not confer jurisdiction by stipulation,

5465Int'l Studio Apt. Ass'n v. Sun Holiday Resorts , 375 So. 2d 335

5477(Fla. 4th DCA 1979); waiver, Lee v. Div. of Fla. Land Sales &

5490Condo , 474 So. 2d 282, 284 (Fla. 5th DCA 1985); pleading, H adley

5503v. Hadley , 140 So. 2d 326, 327 (Fla. 3d DCA 1962), action of

5516counsel lacking suitable authority, U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Rios , 166

5526So. 3d 202, 209 (Fla. 2d DCA 2015); or, one may assume,

5538inadvertence by Respondent's counsel, especially when nothing in

5546the record suggests that he also represents the licensee of the

5557Miramar Group Home.

5560Suggesting that Petitioner may have realized its error in the

5570Prehearing Stipulation, at hearing, Petitioner did not offer into

5579evidence Petitioner Exhibit 1, which is a c omposite exhibit

5589consisting of two applications for licenses for the Miramar Group

5599Home, and did not pursue any line of evidence of which this

5611exhibit might have been a part. See Tr., p. 38.

56214/ In its proposed recommended order, Petitioner noted that it

5631was "allowed only one exhibit in evidence." Petitioner's

5639proposed recommended order, p. 2. Actually, only part of one of

5650Petitioner's exhibits was admitted; the excluded part of this

5659exhibit was an earlier renewal application filed by Respondent.

5668T he grounds for the exclusion of the Verified Report are

5679detailed in the next endnote.

5684The administrative law judge also excluded eight additional

5692exhibits offered by Petitioner containing over 150 pages of

5701financial information in support of a charge of financial

5710exploitation. The Administrative Complaint includes no such

5717charge. The charge stated in Count I is based on the Verified

5729Report, not the underlying financial exploitation that is the

5738subject of the Verified Report. Petitioner never requested leave

5747to amend the Administrative Complaint, nor could Respondent have

5756been prepared to try this more - detailed claim, if the new

5768allegations had been added to the case at the hearing.

5778The remaining exhibits of Petitioner not admitted into evidence

5787pert ain to the Miramar Group Home, which is discussed in the

5799preceding endnote.

58015/ The Verified Report is inadmissible on two grounds: relevance

5811and authenticity. The Verified Report is irrelevant because it

5820names Etha Griffith as the perpetrator of the Ma ltreatment to

5831support Count I, which seeks to impose discipline against

5840Respondent as the named perpetrator of Maltreatment.

5847The Verified Report is not authentic because it fails to meet

5858three statutory criteria for a verified report. Alternatively,

5866th e Verified Report is not relevant because this failure and

5877other circumstances described below preclude assigning any weight

5885to the Verified Report in determining whether DCF has verified

5895that Etha Griffith is the perpetrator of Maltreatment. § 90.401

5905("[ r]elevant evidence is evidence tending to prove or disprove a

5917material fact"). To differentiate between the grounds for

5926irrelevance set forth in this and the preceding paragraphs, the

5936recommended order refers to the ground s referenced in this

5946paragraph as a lack of authenticity.

5952As for the statutory criteria, for each report of Maltreatment,

5962section 415.104(3) (g) and (h) requires DCF to "[d]etermine the

5972immediate and long - term risk to each vulnerable adult through

5983utilization of standardized risk assess ment instruments" and

" 5991[ d ] etermine the [necessary] protective, treatment, and

6000ameliorative services . . . and cause the delivery of those

6011services." Section 415.104(4) requires DCF, within 60 days of

6020receipt of the report of Maltreatment, to complete the

6029investigation and notify, among others, the caregiver "of any

6038recommendations of services to be provided to ameliorate the

6047causes or effects of [Maltreatment]."

6052There is no indication that DCF's protective investigation

6060complied with any of these requir ements, which are obviously

6070crucial to protect the well - being of vulnerable adults who have

6082been subjected to Maltreatment. The Verified Report recounts

6090allegations from an audit conducted by Petitioner that Etha

6099Griffith stole thousands of dollars from r esidents, including

6108about $5000 per month in reimbursements to which she was not

6119entitled. Yet, the Verified Report lacks detailed findings about

6128any theft, concluding only that "there is evidence to support the

6139allegations" and that the residents "are be ing charged for

6149services that the provider is supposed to provide such as soap,

6160toiletries, shampoo, food, and transportation to doctor's

6167appointments . " Although the protective investigation does not

6175seem to have found ongoing theft of $5000 per month , it finds

6187some evidence of theft, but inexplicably fails to recommend

6196intervention services or judicial action. This omission

6203constitutes a failure to satisfy the crucial statutory

6211requiremen ts set forth above , but also constitutes a factual

6221circumstance sug gestive of an incomplete investigation.

6228Another circumstance suggestive of an incomplete investigation

6235is that the Verified Report is unsigned by the protective

6245investigator and protective investigator supervisor , even though

6252the Application Form prov ides lines for their signatures. The

6262affidavit of the DCF records custodian attests that DCF's files

6272contain an unsigned report. Nor does the custodian's affidavit

6281assert that Etha Griffith is listed in a verified report as a

6293perpetrator of Maltreatment.

6296On the other hand, the vague assurance that "there is evidence

6307to support the allegations" is not necessarily an indicator of an

6318incomplete investigation. A verified report is not required to

6327meet any standard of proof. See endnote 21.

6335Pursu ant to section 415.104(4), a protective investigation must

6344be completed within 60 days. Less than one week before the

6355deadline in effect for the investigation of Etha Griffith, DCF

6365closed its investigation, but , for the reasons set forth in this

6376endnote, the protective investigator had not completed her work.

6385References in this recommended order to the Verified Report

6394therefore do not imply that it constitutes a verified report

6404under section 415.104 .

64086/ Because Respondent already held the License, the Application

6417was a renewal application, but the same form is used as an

6429initial and renewal application. For this reason, the

6437recommended order uses "application" and "renewal application"

6444interchangeably.

64457/ Kim Griffith initialed two representations that are irrelevant

6454to the present case.

64588/ The first definition of "indicate" in the Merriam - Webster

6469online dictionary is "to establish the identity of." No

6478definition approximates "allege." https://www .merriam -

6484webster.com/dictionary/identify

64859/ See endnote 5.

648910/ See endnote 5, fourth paragraph.

649511/ As an affirmative response to Item 2 would justify license

6506discipline under section 393.0673(1)(b) or a denial of a license

6516application under 393.0673(2)(b), discipline or denial could be

6524based on an affirmative response to Item 3, which asks about

6535adverse action in the Medicare o r/and Medicaid program.

6544§ 393.0673(1)(a)2. and (2)(a)2.

654812/ For this reason, the recommended order uses "applica nt" and

"6559licensee" interchangeably.

656113/ Similar provisions apply to an applicant. § 393.0673(2).

657014/ Not - for - profit corporations may have members, but not

6582shareholders or owners. §§ 617.0601 and 617.01401(16). Because

6590it is unclear whether Responden t has any members or, if so,

6602whether Etha Griffith is a member of Respondent, this recommended

6612order does not address the relationship between Respondent and a

6622member, although it would not be materially different from the

6632relationship between Respondent a nd an agent.

663915/ See, e.g. , Jacksonville Am. Pub. Co. v. Jacksonville Paper

6649Co. , 197 So. 672, 679 (Fla. 1940).

665616/ See, e.g. , Weiss v. Jacobsen , 62 So. 2d 904 (Fla. 1953).

666817/ The inverse process is holding a shareholder or director

6678liable for the acts and omissions of the corporation -- i.e.,

6689piercing the corporate veil. This, too, is judge - made law. See,

6701e.g. , American States Ins. Co. v. Kelley ¸ 446 So. 2d 1085 (Fla.

67144th DCA 1 984). Absent statutory authorization, agencies lack the

6724authority to pierce the corporate veil. Roberts' Fish Farm v.

6734Spencer , 153 So. 2d 718, 720 (Fla. 1963).

674218/ Section 415.104 authorizes DCF to investigate a report of

6752Maltreatment by a "caregiver." Section 415.102(5) defines a

"6760caregiver" as a "person" responsible for the care of a

6770vulnerable adult. Although "person" is not defined in chapter

6779415, section 1.01(3) defines "persons" to include "individuals,

6787children, [and] corporations."

679019/ If DCF lacks this authority, then the imputation of vicarious

6801liability would be equally unwarranted.

680620/ The Florida Senate, Committee on Children, Families, and

6815Elder Affairs, "Review of State Child Abuse Registries," Issue

6824Brief 2011 - 205 (October 2010),

6830https://www.flsenate.gov/UserContent/Session/2011/Publications/In

6831terimReports/pdf/2011 - 205cf.pdf (Issue Brief).

6836The Issue Brief notes that, when repealing the provision in

6846chapter 415 for an administrative hearing on the proposed

6855verified report, the le gislature also repealed other statutes

6864that imposed adverse employment consequences upon a person who

6873was listed as a perpetrator of Maltreatment in a verified report.

6884The Issue Brief lists cases in other jurisdictions rejecting as

6894unconstitutional simila r programs that: 1) do not provide for a

6905hearing and 2) generate adverse employment consequences.

6912Obviously, section 393.0673(1)(b) and (2)(b) imposes adverse

6919effects on a group home facility license or an application to

6930obtain such a license. It is an open question whether a person

6942is entitled to an administrative hearing under chapter 120 or a

6953judicial hearing under the case law when the determination that

6963he is a perpetrator of Maltreatment supports the loss of a group

6975home facility license or the denial of an application for such a

6987license. Compare Herold v. Univ. of S. Fla. , 806 So. 2d 638

6999(Fla. 2d DCA 2002); Sickon v. Sch. Bd. , 719 So. 2d 350 (Fla. 1st

7013DCA 1998) (dictum).

701621/ The evidentiary standard for reports of Maltreatment was

7025formerly pr ovided in the statute that provided a hearing for an

7037alleged perpetrator to seek to expunge a confirmed report or

7047amend a confirmed report to indicated. See § 415.1075(1)(d)

7056(1999). There is no longer any provision in chapter 415 imposing

7067on DCF a specif ic evidentiary standard in determining whether a

7078person has perpetrated Maltreatment. It is an open question

7087whether a statute may impose discipline against a license based

7097on an agency's determination of Maltreatment without meeting a

7106minimal evidentiary standard.

710922/ Section 393.0673(5) authorizes Petitioner to issue an

7117immediate suspension or revocation order when "any condition in

7126the facility presents a threat to the health, safety, or welfare

7137of the residents." Here, the focus is on the condition,

7147regardless of wh o or what caused the condition to arise,

7158although, if the problem were documented by a verified report of

7169Maltreatment, Petitioner would have to prove the facts underlying

7178the verified report.

7181Section 393.0673(1)(a)3. authorizes discipline for failing to

7188comply with the provisions of chapter 393 or rules applicable to

7199a group home facility license. Rule 65G - 2.012(1)(b) requires the

"7210designated facility operator" -- here, Etha Griffith -- to "be a

7221person of responsible character and integrity."

7227Rule 65G - 2 .012(2)(d)3. and (3) designates as a Class III

7239violation noncompliance by a provider -- Respondent -- or a

7249provider's employee -- e.g., Etha Griffith -- with the prohibition

7259against "[b]orrowing or otherwise using a residentÓs personal

7267funds for any purpose other than the residentÓs benefit."

7276But Petitioner's options are limited in terms of reliance on a

7287verified report of Maltreatment. The background screening

7294discussed elsewhere in this recommended order does not screen for

7304DCF's determination that a person i s a perpetrator of

7314Maltreatment, §§ 393.0655(1) and 435.04, so a verified report of

7324Maltreatment would not preclude a perpetrator's passing such a

7333screening. The reason for this omission likely is the

7342unavailability of a hearing on a proposed verified rep ort, as

7353mentioned in the Issue Brief discussed in endnote 20.

736223/ See, e.g. , Collier Cnty. Bd. Of Cnty. Comm'rs v. Fish &

7374Wildlife Conservation Comm'n , 993 So. 2d 69 (Fla. 2d DCA 2008).

738524/ See, e.g. , Chhabra v. Morales , 906 So. 2d 1261, 1262 (Fla.

73974th DCA 2005) (however, provisions "rationally susceptible to

7405more than one construction" present a question of fact); Comm.

7415Capital Res. v. Giovannetti , 955 So. 2d 1151, 1153 (Fla. 3d DCA

74272007) (however, an ambiguity in wording presents a question of

7437fact). In general, intrinsic evidence, which is drawn from a

7447contract itself, is always available to aid in the construction

7457of the contract, B.F. Goodrich Co. v. Brooks , 113 So. 2d 593, 596

7470(Fla. 2d DCA 1959) (citation omitted), but extrinsic or parole

7480evidence is available only if the ambiguity is latent, as a

7491patent ambiguity would require the court to rewrite the contract

7501for the parties. See, e.g. , Nationstar Mortg. Co. v. Levine , 216

7512So. 3d 711, 715 (Fla. 4th DCA 2017) (extrinsic evidence may not

7524explain a contractual provision whose ambiguity is patent, which

7533means that "'the use of defective, obscure, or insensible

7542language'" is evident on the face of the document) (citation

7552omitted).

755325/ See endnote 5 for a discussion of authenticity, as used with

7565regard to the Verified Report.

757026/ Compare Martin Co. v. Carpenter , 132 So. 2d 400, 406 (Fla.

75821961) (false statement by employee regarding workers'

7589compensation); Johnson v. Davis , 480 So. 2d 625, 627 (Fla. 1985)

7600(fraudulent representation or concealment by seller).

760627/ It is unclear whether there is any limitation upon whom a

7618corporate applicant may designate as a representative, so the

7627force of a question as to Maltreatment directed to a desi gnated

7639representative easily could be evaded. The introductory

7646instructions in the Application Form require only that the

7655designated representative indicate her "role in the operation of

7664the facility (licensee, supervisor, manager, board member,

7671etc.)." Even if the parenthetical impliedly restricts the choice

7680of a designated representative to a person with managerial

7689responsibilities, the most problem - plagued licensee should be

7698able to hire as a manager a natural person who is not a verified

7712perpetrator o f Maltreatment to complete the Application Form and,

7722if the licensee chooses, terminate the employment of the person

7732on the next day.

773628/ "Affiliated with this application" raises its own issues, but

7746not in this case, as Etha Griffith is clearly affili ated with the

7759Application.

776029/ Petitioner has implicitly joined in this rhetorical device

7769regarding the modifier, "ownership" in Section V, Item 2.

7778Petitioner's proposed recommended order recites the question, but

7786omits "ownership," without ellipses, so that, as amended, the

7795question asks, "Have you or controlling entity . . .."

7805Petitioner's proposed recommended order, p. 4. If an inadvertent

7814lapse in recitation, it happened twice. See Prehearing

7822Stipulation, Petitioner's Stateme nt. Prehearing Stipul ation,

7829p. 5.

783130/ It is unclear whether even Petitioner's counsel and witnesses

7841thought that this phrase to Etha Griffith. If they did, they

7852never said so.

785531/ See last paragraph of endnote 22 .

786332/ Section 120.52(8) flush left language continues: "No agency

7872shall have authority to adopt a rule only because it is

7883reasonably related to the purpose of the enabling legislation

7892. . .."

789533/ The rule claims that it implements sections 393.067 and

7905393.13. Section 393.13 is The Bill of Rights for Persons with

7916Developmental Disabilities, which includes no substantive

7922criteria for denying or disciplining a group home facility

7931license. Section 393.067(1) authorizes Petitioner to adopt an

7939application addressing, among other things, provider

7945qualifications, b ut provides Petitioner with no authority to

7954extend this grant of authority to a controlling entity.

796334/ Rule 65G - 2.001(8)(c) and (d) is identical to section

7974408.803(7)(c) and (d), but these provisions are irrelevant to the

7984present case.

798635/ These provisions of chapter 408, part II apply to 26 programs

7998administered by the Agency for Health Care Administration, but

8007obviously not to the group home facility program administered by

8017Petitioner under chapter 393.

802136/ The use of "controlling intere st" relieves the agency,

8031statutes, and rules from specifying among the applicant, officer,

8040director, and 5% owner. Petitioner's importation of this omnibus

8049reference into the Application Form creates additional confusion

8057due to the overlapping references to the applicant or licensee as

"8068you" and a "controlling entity."

807337/ In a clear - and - convincing case, the evidence would need to

8087show that Ms. Meliard had access to the residents' bedrooms, such

8098as if they were unlocked.

8103COPIES FURNISHED:

8105Trevor S. S uter, Esquire

8110Agency for Persons with Disabilities

81154030 Esplanade Way, Suite 380

8120Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 0950

8125(eServed)

8126G. Barrington Lewis, Esquire

8130Law Office of George B. Lewis

813610061 53rd Way South, Suite 1004

8142Boynton Beach, Florida 33437

8146(eServed)

8147Danielle Thompson

8149Senior Attorney/Agency Clerk

8152Agency for Persons with Disabilities

81574030 Esplanade Way, Suite 309

8162Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 0950

8167(eServed)

8168Francis Carbone, General Counsel

8172Agency for Persons with Disabilities

81774030 Esplanade Wa y, Suite 380

8183Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 0950

8188(eServed)

8189Barbara Palmer, Director

8192Agency for Persons with Disabilities

81974030 Esplanade Way, Suite 380

8202Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 0950

8207(eServed)

8208NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

8214All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within

822415 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions

8235to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that

8246will issue the Final Order in this case.

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Proceedings: Agency Final Order
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Case Information

Judge:
ROBERT E. MEALE
Date Filed:
04/05/2019
Date Assignment:
04/05/2019
Last Docket Entry:
01/29/2020
Location:
Lauderdale Lakes, Florida
District:
Southern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN PART OR MODIFIED
Suffix:
FL
 

Counsels

Related Florida Statute(s) (25):

Related Florida Rule(s) (2):