[Cite as Demas v. State Med. Bd. of Ohio, 2019-Ohio-2932.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
Christopher L. Demas, M.D., :
Appellant-Appellant, :
No. 18AP-978
v. : (C.P.C. No. 18CV-6433)
State Medical Board of Ohio, : (REGULAR CALENDAR)
Appellee-Appellee. :
D E C I S I O N
Rendered on July 18, 2019
On brief: Dinsmore & Shohl LLP, Eric J. Plinke, Daniel S.
Zinsmaster, and Justin M. Burns, for appellant. Argued:
Justin M. Burns.
On brief: Dave Yost, Attorney General, and Kyle C. Wilcox,
for appellee. Argued: Kyle C. Wilcox.
APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas
NELSON, J.
{¶ 1} Initially after Christopher Lou Demas, a medical doctor, was convicted of
seven felony counts of forgery, the State Medical Board of Ohio did not permanently strip
him of his license. Rather, the board suspended him from the practice of medicine for a
period that ran from June 8, 2013 to September 10, 2014.
{¶ 2} It was only after the board found him to have circumvented that suspension
by practicing in the name of others that it permanently revoked his practice certificate. On
administrative appeal to the common pleas court, and as he had before the board, Dr.
Demas did not contest the board's power to sanction him for this latest transgression, but
argued that the permanent revocation was improper because it had been based on
considerations of which he had not been given notice and that were contrary to stipulations
No. 18AP-978 2
he had made with the board. Agreeing with that view, the common pleas court remanded
the matter for further proceedings consistent with that rationale. In the next go-round, the
board again determined that revocation was the appropriate sanction, and the common
pleas court found that the board had followed its directives and upheld the administrative
determination.
{¶ 3} Dr. Demas now appeals from the common pleas court's judgment. The
somewhat more detailed procedural history that follows provides further context for our
decision affirming the common pleas court's judgment that upheld the medical board's
determination.
{¶ 4} After his various felony convictions for forgery, Dr. Demas wanted to "retain
[his] solo family practice * * * during [the] suspension," so he engaged "several physicians
* * * from various employment agencies" to keep his several-thousand-patient practice
going until he sold it in October of 2013. Demas Affidavit at ¶ 9; Joint Stipulations at ¶ 7,
9. But during the summer of 2013, he "did not have 100% coverage" from those licensed,
fill-in ("locum tenens") doctors. Demas Aff. at ¶ 15. He admits that during the June -
August 2013 time period, he "prescribed medications to Patients 1 through 8 under the
[pretense] that said prescriptions were authorized" by those other doctors, "when, in fact,
no such authorization had been provided * * *." Joint Stipulations at ¶ 4 (admitting factual
recitation from paragraphs 1-3 of December 9, 2015 Notice of Opportunity for Hearing);
Dec. 9, 2015 Notice of Opportunity for Hearing at ¶ 3 (describing ruse); see also, e.g.,
Demas Affidavit at ¶ 19 ("my staff called in or had prescriptions issued under my direction
when the patient had not been seen by the [contract] physicians and when [those]
physicians had not authorized the prescription").
{¶ 5} The state medical board did not view this conduct kindly. After reciting the
key facts as then alleged (and later admitted), the board's Notice of December 9, 2015
advised Dr. Demas that by undertaking these actions while his license was suspended, he
had violated the conditions of his suspension and practiced medicine without a certificate.
Notice of Opportunity for Hearing at 1. The board apprised him of its intent to "determine
whether or not to limit, revoke, permanently revoke, suspend, refuse to register or reinstate
your certificate to practice medicine and surgery, or to reprimand you or place you on
probation * * *." Id. The board also advised him of his right to appear in person, through
No. 18AP-978 3
counsel, or by written submission at the hearing on the matter, and ended its Notice with
further reference to potential permanent licensure revocation. Id. at 2.
{¶ 6} The board conducted its administrative hearing through a hearing examiner
on August 25, 2016. Dr. Demas did not appear in person, but was represented by counsel.
Aug. 25, 2016 Hearing Proceedings at 5. By agreement of the parties, subpoenas that had
issued "to various witnesses," including Dr. Demas himself, were called off, the joint
stipulation was submitted, and no live testimony was taken. Id. at 6. The state's lawyer
began by expressing his understanding that, freed from factual dispute, the matter had
become "a case of mitigation to make a determination" about what sanction was
appropriate. Id. at 7. Dr. Demas, through counsel, agreed. His lawyer concurred that,
"[a]s noted by [the state's counsel] at the beginning of this case, the factual and legal
allegations in this case are not in dispute." Id. at 14. She went on to say: "We will ask for
an appropriate sanction at the end of this case once all of the evidence has been introduced."
Id. at 15.
{¶ 7} After the introduction of records reflecting the suspended doctor's
prescription of significant quantities of various psychiatric drugs and pain medications—
including Xanax, diazepam, Valium, lorazepam, Ultram, and Vicodin, see id. at 23—the
lawyers moved to closing arguments. The state's lawyer characterized the position of Dr.
Demas's counsel as being that "the facts are being stipulated to, the legal conclusions that
he practiced medicine by doing this is not being contested, and the fact that he was under
consent order * * * was also violated." Id. at 31-32. He argued that, especially in light of the
board already having given the doctor "a second chance," Dr. Demas's license should be
revoked. Id. at 33.
{¶ 8} Dr. Demas's lawyer argued in mitigation that "there [had] not been any
patient harm," and that most of the specified misattributed prescriptions "were refills of
prescriptions" previously prescribed by authorized doctors. Id. at 34-35. "[T]he Board has
alleged a violation of [Dr. Demas's] suspension order," she noted. "I think it was not done
for malicious intent, it was not done to harm the patients, it was not done for financial gain":
she asked for a sanction that would require "some sort of continuing education coursework
on prescribing," but that would "give Dr. Demas an opportunity to return to the practice of
medicine." Id. at 35.
No. 18AP-978 4
{¶ 9} The hearing examiner did not agree that mandating additional course work
was a sufficient response. Noting that, "[t]here is no dispute that, by issuing or authorizing
the eight prescriptions identified in this case, Dr. Demas engaged in the practice of
medicine without a certificate and violated the Board's May 2013 Order," he recommended
that Dr. Demas's medical license be "PERMANENTLY REVOKED." Oct. 3, 2016 Report
and Recommendation at 8.
{¶ 10} Dr. Demas objected to the proposed sanction. He filed his objections with
the board, saying that he: "opposes the recommendation of the Hearing Examiner and
respectfully requests that the State Medical Board of Ohio * * * issue an alternative
sanction that will allow Dr. Demas to retain his Ohio medical license." October 14, 2016
Objections to Report and Recommendation at 1 (emphasis added; further arguing that
"[t]he harsh sanction * * * is not supported by the evidence and is not warranted as this case
does not involve harm to patients or substandard patient care"). The doctor already "has
paid dearly for his errors," his counsel submitted: "I am writing to respectfully request that
the Board impose a sanction that will allow Dr. Demas to retain his medical license." Id. at
4.
{¶ 11} Despite Dr. Demas's plea for leniency, the board permanently revoked his
medical license through an order issued November 9, 2016. Dr. Demas appealed to the
common pleas court, advancing one assignment of error: the board's order was contrary to
law, he argued, "because Dr. Demas was disciplined based upon charges or reasons not
included in the notice of opportunity for hearing." Jan. 30, 2017 Brief of Appellant
Christopher L. Demas, M.D. at v (administrative appeal to common pleas court). His
administrative appeal conceded that the board's notice had alleged that he had practiced
medicine without a certificate, and it also noted the factual stipulations, but it urged
reversal or modification of the permanent licensure revocation because the board in its
sanction deliberations had looked to standard of care issues involving patient harm even
though "legal counsel for the Board had stipulated at hearing that '[n]o harm came to any
patient as a result of the prescriptions in question.' " Id. at 1, 8.
{¶ 12} Consistent with his lawyer's mitigation presentation to the board, Dr. Demas
emphasized to the common pleas court in his administrative appeal that he was not
contesting the board's authority to discipline him for practicing without a license; rather,
No. 18AP-978 5
he argued, the particular sanction imposed was inappropriate as influenced by extraneous
standard of care/patient harm issues that had not been flagged in the hearing notice. "To
be clear," he told the court, "it has not been argued that the Board was without ability to
seek discipline against Dr. Demas. Rather, Dr. Demas has brought to the Court's attention
the impropriety of the Board's discipline for reasons involving standard of care or patient
harm when, in fact, the 119.07 Notice did not charge or notify him of such." Feb. 17, 2017
Reply Brief of Appellant, Christopher L. Demas, M.D., at 6 (emphasis added).
{¶ 13} The common pleas court accepted that argument. Reviewing the matter's
history, the court correctly characterized the doctor's objections to the hearing examiner's
report and recommendation: "While [he] admitted the violations [of practicing without a
certificate and breaching the terms of the 2013 suspension], Dr. Demas asserted that his
license should not be permanently revoked because 'this case does not involve harm to
patients or substandard patient care.' " June 25, 2018 Decision and Judgment Entry
Reversing the Nov. 9, 2016 Order of the State Medical Board of Ohio at 3. The court then
quoted extensively from the board's sanctions discussion and turned to the lone assignment
of error. Id. at 4-7. Because "the Board cannot stipulate at the hearing that no harm
occurred to patients, and thereafter make contrary findings when imposing discipline," the
court reversed the permanent revocation order and remanded the matter to the board for
further proceedings "consistent with [the] court's decision." Id. at 12, 13. The court
underscored, however, that "[i]t is not the holding of this court * * * that the Medical Board
abused its discretion in imposing [some] sanction upon Appellant given Appellant's
agreement to the charges contained in the Notice." Id. at 13.
{¶ 14} Pursuant to the common pleas court's instructions, the board reconsidered
the appropriate sanction and again (on a 7-0 vote, with four abstentions) permanently
revoked Dr. Demas's license to practice medicine. July 11, 2018 board Order and Entry;
excerpt from minutes of July 11, 2018 board meeting on Remand in the Matter of
Christopher Lou Demas, M.D. Board minutes reflect that deliberations were prefaced by a
reminder that the board could not consider standard of care considerations and had to
"honor the stipulations entered at the hearing." July 11, 2018 excerpt from minutes at
24372. Board member Dr. Schottenstein observed that attempts to circumvent board-
ordered suspensions can prompt "the break-down of [the] public's trust in the profession"
No. 18AP-978 6
and absent significant sanction could erode the board's "ability to maintain the competence
and ethical standards of its practitioners"; he also detailed the "multiple aggravating
factors" that weighed against Dr. Demas, including the history of earlier disciplinary action
and the "multiple violations." Id. Board member Dr. Factora commented on the "fraud"
of writing prescriptions without a license, arguing that the type of medications admittedly
prescribed made the case especially concerning. Reminded that the case was "not about
minimal standards of care or fraud issues," he stated that "the type of practice that Dr.
Demas conducted while his license was suspended * * * helps show the severity of his
actions." Id. at 24373.
{¶ 15} Dr. Demas again appealed the board's license revocation determination to
the common pleas court. This time, and for the first time in any proceeding involving the
matter, he argued among other things that his conduct had not constituted the
unauthorized practice of medicine as statutorily defined because he was not shown to have
received compensation for the specific activities at issue. See Nov. 20, 2018 Decision and
Judgment Entry Affirming the July 11, 2018 Order of the State Medical Board of Ohio at 12
("Dr. Demas * * * now argues for the very first time that the Hearing Examiner's and Board's
findings are not based upon reliable, probative or substantial evidence and are not in
accordance with law because the record contains no evidence that Dr. Demas received any
compensation"). Noting that the doctor "did not preserve this issue for appeal by raising it
at the adjudicatory hearing [at which his counsel had termed the "legal allegations * * * not
in dispute," see id. at 11] or in his objections to the Board" from the hearing examiner's
findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommendation, and also remarking that he had
not raised the issue in his first, single-assignment-of-error appeal to the common pleas
court, the common pleas court held that the doctor had waived the issue. Id. at 12-13. The
court further said that its first decision had already "held that the Medical Board did not
abuse its discretion in imposing [some] sanction upon Appellant given Appellant's
agreement to the charges contained in the Notice and stipulation to the facts." Id. at 4.
{¶ 16} The common pleas court also dispensed with other arguments put forth by
Dr. Demas, finding that: the board was not required to reconstitute itself with new members
in order to conduct the further proceedings that had been ordered on remand, id. at 7; the
board had "complied with the Court's instructions" on remand by reconsidering the
No. 18AP-978 7
sanction in keeping with the stipulations, and that there had been no need for it to
reconsider the (then unchallenged) findings of fact and conclusions of law as set forth by
the hearing examiner, id. at 8; the board's sanction reconsideration had not relied on
standard of care issues, and that consistent with law and the presumption of regularity, the
board had authority to rely on its own knowledge and judgments in making the sanction
determination, id. at 9-10; Dr. Demas had stipulated to prescribing medications to specified
patients during the time his license was suspended, and that he therefore was precluded
from arguing that he merely had fallen victim to renegade staff, id. at 13; and the court was
not empowered to modify the board-imposed sanction because it was authorized by law for
the violation at issue, id. at 13-14 (citing Demint v. State Med. Bd., 10th Dist. No. 15AP-456,
2016-Ohio-3531, ¶ 63, citing Henry's Cafe, Inc. v. Bd. of Liquor Control, 170 Ohio St. 233
(1959), paragraphs two and three of the syllabus).
{¶ 17} The common pleas court therefore affirmed the board's permanent license
revocation order as supported by reliable, probative and substantial evidence and in
accordance with law. Id. at 14. Dr. Demas now has appealed to this court, arguing that the
common pleas court erred in affirming the revocation of his license because (first) the
board's proceedings violated his due process rights, and (second) he had not waived the
argument that he had not been engaged in the practice of medicine during the time of his
suspension and the board lacked substantial, reliable, and probative evidence to show that
he had practiced without a license.
{¶ 18} Under his first assignment of error, Dr. Demas makes a trio of due process
arguments. None of them succeeds.
{¶ 19} He first takes issue with language in the board's order and entry saying that
it issues "pursuant to the instructions of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas [as
more fully described to have directed against considering 'charges or reasons that were not
included in the Board's Notice'] and upon consideration of the findings and conclusions
made by this Board on November 9, 2016 * * *." See Aug. 2, 2018 board Order and Entry.
Because the earlier board action had been reversed and remanded on due process grounds,
he argues, reference to previously ascertained "findings and conclusions" automatically
infected the subsequent determination and "ignored Judge Schneider's order * * *."
Appellant's Brief at 14.
No. 18AP-978 8
{¶ 20} But that argument both ignores the context of the challenged phrase (which
follows immediately upon language reflecting the board's understanding of the common
pleas court's directive to reconsider the sanction without regard to standard of care/patient
harm concerns) and misses the point that Dr. Demas even at that stage had not objected to
or contested the hearing examiner's findings of fact and conclusions of law as originally
considered in 2016; the referenced 2016 board order had explicitly approved and confirmed
the unchallenged "Report and Recommendation of R. Gregory Porter, Esq., State Medical
Board Hearing Examiner," see Nov. 9, 2016 Entry of Order. As the common pleas court
noted in upholding the 2018 board order, and contrary to Dr. Demas's premise, in its first
ruling, the common pleas court "did not find that the specific written findings of facts and
conclusions of law of the Hearing Examiner and the Board were improper or were not based
upon substantial, reliable and probative evidence," or that no sanction was warranted.
Nov. 20, 2018 Decision and Judgment at 8. So rather than conclude that its earlier ruling
had been "ignored," the common pleas court quite properly held that a "review of the 2018
Order and minutes from the Board's July 11, 2018 meeting reveal that the Board complied
with the Court's instructions. There was no denial of Appellant's due process rights"
through the 'findings and conclusions' reference. Id.
{¶ 21} Dr. Demas's next argument is no more persuasive. He submits that Ohio's
statute establishing the composition of the state medical board is "unconstitutional" in this
application because many of the same board members who had participated in 2016 had
voted again in 2018, after the matter had been remanded from the common pleas court
with instructions to engage in further proceedings as to the appropriate sanction. See
Appellant's Brief at 16-22. Although Revised Code 4731.01 fixes the number and
composition of the board membership (providing for 12 members who hold office until the
end of the defined terms for which they have been appointed), he suggests that the state
could "decide to increase the Board's size," and "[t]here is certainly no financial
impediment" that Dr. Demas can discern "to recruiting, training, and selecting new Board
Members." Id. at 21.
{¶ 22} The doctor is of course free to make his suggestions and offer his fiscal
observations to the legislature, but he cites not one whit of authority anywhere close to the
proposition that a matter along these lines may not be remanded to an administrative body
No. 18AP-978 9
that was found to have erred in the first instance. The Supreme Court of Ohio itself has
remanded disciplinary matters to the board for reconsideration of sanctions after finding
that initial determinations were not in accordance with law. See, e.g., Brost v. State Med.
Bd. of Ohio, 62 Ohio St.3d 218, 221 (1991). Moreover, Dr. Demas claims no parallel to his
construct in the court systems that are charged with protecting due process rights. And his
argument that "[t]here is no telling how many of these Members were tainted by their prior
unconstitutional discussions," Appellant's Brief at 19, does not trump the well-established
" 'presumption of honesty and integrity on the part of an administrative body [that] exists,
absent a showing to the contrary.' " McRae v. State Med. Bd. of Ohio, 10th Dist. No. 13AP-
526, 2014-Ohio-667, ¶ 42, quoting Bharmota v. State Med. Bd. of Ohio, 10th Dist. No.
93AP-630, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 5858 (Dec. 7, 1993), citing Ohio State Bd. of Pharmacy
v. Poppe, 48 Ohio App.3d 222, 229 (12th Dist.1988).
{¶ 23} As a third prong of his due process argument, Dr. Demas seizes upon one
deliberating board member's use of the word "fraud" to describe the doctor's admitted
conduct in using the names of physicians who actually held licenses but who had not in fact
authorized the prescriptions that he caused to be ordered in their names. Appellant's Brief
at 23-25. Because "fraud was not contained in the Notice," he urges, the board's second
order suffered from the same defect as its first. Id. at 24.
{¶ 24} We are not in a position to gainsay the assessment of the common pleas court
that the comment related not to some new, previously undisclosed charge but to the
conduct in which Dr. Demas engaged "[b]y his own admission," and that the medical board
could appropriately find constituted severe misconduct under the circumstances. See
Nov. 20, 2018 Decision and Judgment Entry at 10. Dr. Demas concedes that the board
member later stated that he was "not discussing minimum standards of care" issues. See
Appellant's Brief at 24. And while the word "fraud" was not found in the hearing notice,
see id., the notice did recite that "you prescribed medications to Patients 1 through 8 * * *
under the auspices that said prescriptions were authorized by locum tenens doctors
working at your medical practice when, in fact, no such authorization had been provided
by the locum tenens doctors." Dec. 9, 2015 Notice of Opportunity for Hearing, item (3).
{¶ 25} The colloquial characterization used by one member during the board's
discussion would not have given the court warrant to overturn its licensure determination.
No. 18AP-978 10
See, e.g., Pons v. Ohio State Med. Bd., 66 Ohio St.3d 619, 621 (1993) ("In an appeal from a
medical board's order, a reviewing trial court is bound to uphold the order if it is supported
by reliable, probative, and substantial evidence, and is in accordance with law"); compare
Gladieux v. Ohio State Med. Bd., 133 Ohio App.3d 465, 470 (10th Dist.1999) ("An appellate
court's review is even more limited than the common pleas court['s]. The standard is
whether the common pleas court abused its discretion in finding that the administrative
order was or was not supported by reliable, probative and substantial evidence * * *. When
reviewing a medical board's order, courts must accord due deference to the board's
interpretation of the technical and ethical requirements of its profession").
{¶ 26} We overrule Dr. Demas's first assignment of error, finding no merit to his
tripartite "due process" argument.
{¶ 27} As for Dr. Demas's second assignment of error, it is far too late in the day for
the doctor to contest the merits of the board's finding that he engaged in the sanctionable
conduct of unauthorized practice of medicine. To recap:
Dr. Demas's lawyer told the board that "the factual and
legal allegations in this case are not in dispute." Aug. 25,
2016 Hearing Proceedings at 14. And Dr. Demas's
position as his counsel expressed it was that Dr. Demas
was "ask[ing] for an appropriate sanction." Id. at 15.
Indeed, Dr. Demas's lawyer then did request a sanction
to include "some sort of continuing education
coursework on prescribing," but that would "give Dr.
Demas an opportunity to return to the practice of
medicine." Id. at 35. The explicit and repeated requests
for non-permanent sanctions, made not in the
alternative but as the first line of defense, naturally
presupposed and again conceded that the doctor had
engaged in the unauthorized practice of medicine
(consistent with that legal allegation being "not in
dispute").
Then, after the hearing examiner recommended
permanent revocation, Dr. Demas filed objections with
the board in which he "respectfully request[ed] that the
[board] * * * issue an alternative sanction * * *." Oct. 14,
2016 Objections to Report and Recommendation at 1.
That filing by his counsel closed by again beseeching the
board to "impose a sanction that will allow Dr. Demas to
retain his medical license." Id. at 4. Again, that is, the
No. 18AP-978 11
inevitability of some sanction was conceded (because no
administrative challenge was made to the finding that
the doctor had practiced medicine while his certificate
was suspended).
When Dr. Demas appealed in the first instance to the
common pleas court, his quarrel remained with the
particular sanction imposed, and not with the
(previously conceded) conclusion that he had practiced
medicine without a license. "To be clear," his brief
underscored to the court, "it has not been argued [in
either venue] that the Board was without ability to seek
discipline against Dr. Demas." Feb. 17, 2017 Reply Brief
of Appellant, Christopher L. Demas, M.D. at 6.
The common pleas court accepted this position and
observed that Dr. Demas "admitted the violations."
June 25, 2018 Decision and Judgment Entry Reversing
the Nov. 9, 2016 Order of the State Medical Board of
Ohio at 3 (remanding on sanctions determination while
also emphasizing, id. at 13, that "[i]t is not the holding
of this court * * * that the Medical Board abused its
discretion in imposing [some] sanction upon Appellant
given Appellant's agreement to the charges contained in
the Notice").
{¶ 28} Instructed to proceed "consistent with [the common pleas court's] decision,"
id. at 13, the board likely was not in a position to reassess the merits of the already
determined unauthorized practice finding even had it wanted to. See, e.g., Nov. 20, 2018
Decision and Judgment Entry Affirming the July 11, 2018 Order of the State Medical Board
of Ohio at 4 (common pleas court recites that its earlier decision had "held that the Medical
Board did not abuse its discretion in imposing [some] sanction upon Appellant given
Appellant's agreement to the charges * * *"); compare Nolan v. Nolan, 11 Ohio St.3d 1, 3
(1984) (outlining general principles of law of the case doctrine, which "provides that the
decision of a reviewing court in a case remains the law of that case on the legal questions
involved for all subsequent proceedings in the case at both the trial and reviewing levels
* * *. [C]onsidered to be a rule of practice rather than a binding rule of substantive law
* * * * the rule is necessary to ensure consistency of results in a case, to avoid endless
litigation by settling the issues, and to preserve the structure" of court review).
No. 18AP-978 12
{¶ 29} In any event, Dr. Demas had the opportunity to dispute the unauthorized
practice allegations before the board, and (as shown, for example, by his limited objections
to the hearing examiner's recommendations) he admitted them rather than contesting
them. Nor did he dispute the unauthorized practice finding in his first appeal to the
common pleas court. Whether evaluated under the rubric of res judicata, failure to exhaust
administrative remedies, or waiver (to use the common pleas court's term)—and different
of these formulations would apply as to different stages of the process—the result is the
same: the unauthorized practice determination stands. See, e.g., State ex rel. Schlegal v.
Stykemain Pontiac Buick GMC, Ltd., 120 Ohio St.3d 43, 45, 2008-Ohio-5303 ("a party's
failure to raise an issue at the administrative level precludes the party from raising it before
[the] reviewing court," citing State ex rel. Quarto Mining Co. v. Foreman, 79 Ohio St.3d 78
(1997) ); Edmands v. State Med. Bd. of Ohio, 10th Dist. No. 14AP-778, 2015-Ohio-2658, ¶
18 ("An administrative hearing provides a forum for a party to raise legal and factual
arguments propounding why an agency should not take the proposed action against the
party * * *. '[T]he failure to present an argument usually constitutes waiver of that
argument' on appeal * * *. As a general matter, '[a]llowing a claimant to raise an issue for
the first time in an appeal to the court of common pleas would frustrate the statutory system
for having issues raised and decided through the administrative process,' " quoting Jain v.
Ohio State Med. Bd., 10th Dist. No. 09AP-1180, 2010-Ohio-2855, ¶ 10; other internal
citations omitted); compare In re Lima Mem. Hosp., 111 Ohio App.3d 225, 229 (10th
Dist.1996) ("doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel preclude relitigation of claims
or issues which * * * could have been litigated in a prior action. Both doctrines are applicable
to administrative hearings of a quasi-judicial nature. Administrative proceedings are
deemed quasi-judicial if notice, a hearing and an opportunity to introduce evidence are
afforded") (citations omitted).
{¶ 30} If there once was a point at which Dr. Demas could have attempted his
argument that the perhaps inartful wording of joint stipulation 3 ("Dr. Demas has not
practiced medicine since 2013, when his Ohio medical license was suspended"), unmoored
from the context of the case and the rest of the stipulations, concluded the matter in his
favor on the merits, see Appellant's Reply Brief at 10, that point was past after he took the
position at the administrative hearing that the legal allegations against him were not in
No. 18AP-978 13
dispute and agreed that sanction of some sort was in order. It was well past after he did not
challenge to the board the hearing examiner's finding that he had engaged in "Practicing
Medicine Without a Certificate" and had violated the terms of his suspension. See Oct. 3,
2016 Report and Recommendation at 7-8, Conclusions of Law (1) and (2). And it retained
not a glimmer of possibility once he failed to make the argument on his initial appeal to the
common pleas court.
{¶ 31} Because Dr. Demas's strategy rendered the legal allegations against him "not
in dispute" and because he repeatedly conceded that some sanction was in order, we need
not reach any question, for example, of whether actions undertaken to maintain the value
of a medical practice could appropriately be viewed as generating the sort of
"compensation" that Dr. Demas now observes is an essential component of practicing
medicine without a license. See Appellant's Brief at 27-31.
{¶ 32} Dr. Demas's last argument—that his stipulations did not rule out the
possibility that renegade staff acted without his "express authority" in ordering
prescriptions, see Appellant's Brief at 39—again is unavailing because early on he conceded
the conduct alleged against him, opting to argue only for leniency. It also fails as flatly
contradicted by the text of his stipulations themselves. Joint Stipulation 5 recited that "Dr.
Demas admits that for the eight prescriptions referenced in the Notice that under his
direction his staff called in or had prescriptions issued * * * under the name of a Locum
Tenens physician, despite the fact that the patients were not examined by the Locum
Tenens physicians and despite the fact that the Locum Tenens physicians did not authorize
the prescriptions or refills." And Joint Stipulation 7 was, if anything, a bit crisper: "Dr.
Demas admits that under his direction, that his staff called in or had prescriptions issued
to the eight patients in question without the explicit approval and authority of the Locum
Tenens physicians, during the time period that his license was suspended." Dr. Demas adds
length but no weight to his brief by now condemning his staff as somehow "not acting on
Dr. Demas's behalf." Appellant's Brief at 40.
{¶ 33} The common pleas court did not err in finding that Dr. Demas "waived" and
did not preserve for appeal any argument that he did not in fact engage in the unauthorized
practice of medicine. See Nov. 20, 2018 Decision and Judgment Entry at 12-13. It did not
err in finding that "the July 11, 2018 Entry of Order of the State Medical Board of Ohio is
No. 18AP-978 14
supported by reliable, probative and substantial evidence and is in accordance with law."
Id. at 14. And it did not err in finding that because "the Board's sanction of permanent
suspension of appellant's license is authorized by law, * * * [the] Court cannot modify the
penalty imposed." We overrule Dr. Demas's second assignment of error.
{¶ 34} Having overruled both of Dr. Demas's assignments of error, we affirm the
judgment of the common pleas court that upheld the state medical board's permanent
revocation of the doctor's certificate to practice medicine in Ohio.
Judgment affirmed.
BRUNNER and BEATTY BLUNT, JJ., concur.
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