Filed: Aug. 24, 2016
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida Opinion filed August 24, 2016. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing. _ No. 3D15-2360 Agency Case No. 15F-5178 _ M.T., Appellant, vs. Agency for Persons with Disabilities, Appellee. An Appeal from the Agency for Persons with Disabilities. Stephanie Langer, for appellant. Llamilys Bello (Fort Lauderdale), for appellee. Before SALTER, EMAS and FERNANDEZ, JJ. SALTER, J. M.T., a young man diagnosed with Lennox-Gastaut syndrom
Summary: Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida Opinion filed August 24, 2016. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing. _ No. 3D15-2360 Agency Case No. 15F-5178 _ M.T., Appellant, vs. Agency for Persons with Disabilities, Appellee. An Appeal from the Agency for Persons with Disabilities. Stephanie Langer, for appellant. Llamilys Bello (Fort Lauderdale), for appellee. Before SALTER, EMAS and FERNANDEZ, JJ. SALTER, J. M.T., a young man diagnosed with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome..
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Third District Court of Appeal
State of Florida
Opinion filed August 24, 2016.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
________________
No. 3D15-2360
Agency Case No. 15F-5178
________________
M.T.,
Appellant,
vs.
Agency for Persons with Disabilities,
Appellee.
An Appeal from the Agency for Persons with Disabilities.
Stephanie Langer, for appellant.
Llamilys Bello (Fort Lauderdale), for appellee.
Before SALTER, EMAS and FERNANDEZ, JJ.
SALTER, J.
M.T., a young man diagnosed with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome1 and afflicted
with seizures that are continuous and non-responsive to any known medical
treatment, appeals a final order by Florida’s Agency for Persons with Disabilities
(APD) and a hearing officer denying M.T.’s mother’s application (on M.T.’s
behalf) for enrollment in APD’s Home and Community-Based Services Waiver
Program (the “HCBS Waiver Program”).2 We reverse.
Facts and Procedural History
1 The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (a part of the
National Institutes of Health, in Bethesda, Maryland), describes the syndrome:
Lennox-Gastaut syndrome is a severe form of epilepsy. Seizures
usually begin before 4 years of age. Seizure types, which vary among
patients, include tonic (stiffening of the body, upward deviation of the
eyes, dilation of the pupils, and altered respiratory patterns), atonic
(brief loss of muscle tone and consciousness, causing abrupt falls),
atypical absence (staring spells), and myoclonic (sudden muscle
jerks). There may be periods of frequent seizures mixed with brief,
relatively seizure-free periods. Most children with Lennox-Gastaut
syndrome experience some degree of impaired intellectual functioning
or information processing, along with developmental delays, and
behavioral disturbances. Lennox-Gastaut syndrome can be caused by
brain malformations, perinatal asphyxia, severe head injury, central
nervous system infection and inherited degenerative or metabolic
conditions. In 30-35 percent of cases, no cause can be found.
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/lennoxgastautsyndrome/lennoxgastautsyndrom
e.htm (last visited Aug. 3, 2016).
The NINDS description also states that “There is no cure for the disorder.”
Id.
2 Although M.T. is represented here by counsel, it is noteworthy that M.T.’s
mother, pro se, presented M.T.’s evidence and arguments during the administrative
hearing, and did so in a polite and effective way.
2
M.T.’s mother applied for participation in the HCBS Waiver Program under
the “intellectual disability” statutory definition, section 393.063(21), Florida
Statutes (2015):3
“Intellectual disability” means significantly subaverage general
intellectual functioning existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive
behavior which manifests before the age of 18 and can reasonably be
expected to continue indefinitely. For the purposes of this definition,
the term:
(a) “Adaptive behavior” means the effectiveness or degree with
which an individual meets the standards of personal independence
and social responsibility expected of his or her age, cultural group,
and community.
(b) “Significantly subaverage general intellectual functioning” means
performance that is two or more standard deviations from the mean
score on a standardized intelligence test specified in the rules of the
agency.
The application was denied by APD in a written notice stating summarily
that M.T. had been determined not to have an intellectual disability as defined in
the statute. As provided by APD’s rules and procedures, M.T.’s mother then
sought and was granted an administrative hearing. M.T.’s mother and APD
introduced testimony and written exhibits over the course of two days. In
September 2015, the hearing officer issued a final order containing findings of fact,
analysis, and a decision denying M.T.’s appeal. This further and timely appeal
3 The definition was renumbered as section 393.063(24), effective June 30, 2016.
3
followed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to section 120.68, Florida Statutes
(2015), and Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.030(b)(1)(C).
Standard of Review
Although we review an administrative hearing officer’s findings of fact to
determine whether they are supported by competent, substantial evidence in the
record before us, the hearing officer’s conclusions of law are subject to de novo
review. Diaz & Russell Corp. v. Dep’t of Bus. & Prof’l Regulation,
140 So. 3d
662, 664 (Fla. 3d DCA 2014). While a state agency’s interpretation of the laws it
is charged with enforcing is entitled to great deference, that deference does not
apply when the agency’s interpretation is clearly erroneous. Verizon Fla., Inc. v.
Jacobs,
810 So. 2d 906, 908 (Fla. 2002); S.C. v. Agency for Pers. with Disabilities,
159 So. 3d 1033, 1036 (Fla. 3d DCA 2015).
Analysis
An applicant who seeks benefits under the programs administered by APD
bears the burden of establishing eligibility “by a preponderance of the evidence, to
the satisfaction of the hearing officer.” Fla. Admin. Code R. 65-2.060(1). The
evidence admitted on behalf of M.T. established that: (a) at age 10, M.T. scored in
the borderline range on a visual motor integration test, in the average range for
visual-perception skills, and in the extremely low range for adaptive functioning;
(b) when M.T. was 14, his Philadelphia physician reported (in writing) a diagnosis
4
of “Chronic Static Encephalopathy resulting in mental retardation;”4 (c) at age 21,
M.T. was assessed by the Miami-Dade County Public Schools and had an IQ score
of 61; (d) four months later, M.T.’s Miami doctor tested him and M.T. scored an
estimated IQ of 75;5 M.T.’s cognitive decline, brain damage, and deficits in
adaptive functioning had manifested themselves before he turned 18 years of age.
APD relied on its own notice of ineligibility, its “diagnostic and evaluation
team screening committee form,” and its argument that M.T. was ineligible
because his mother had not provided an IQ test result as administered before M.T.
turned 18 years of age. APD’s only witness was an “operations management
consultant” who served as chair of the APD eligibility committee on M.T.’s case.
The consultant did not evaluate M.T. in person, nor did he contradict any of the
assessment reports and testimony by medical professionals admitted into evidence
on behalf of M.T. APD’s witness testified that the IQ test offered by M.T.’s
4 “Intellectual disability” has since replaced “mental retardation” in federal and
Florida statutory provisions as well as the American Psychiatric Association’s
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
5 The doctor, a Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Neurology at the
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, reported that the earlier Miami-
Dade Schools IQ test was “a more accurate indicator of [M.T.’s] level of
functioning” because the later assessment was conducted using only four of the
eleven tests administered by the Schools. The doctor concluded that M.T. “is
performing within the Mentally Deficient range of overall intelligence and
additionally presents multiple neuropsychological impairments in measures of
language, learning and memory, and processing speed among others that are
disabling and warrant comprehensive services and interventions to maximize his
functioning and independence in his activities of daily living.”
5
current neurologist “was conducted after the developmental years, that is, after age
18, as defined by statutes.” He further testified that the test “can be accepted,” and
that “the main thing is that prior to the age of 18 we don’t have any document that
substantiates the presence of an intellectual disability.”
The hearing officer, apparently accepting APD’s legal argument that the
statutory definition of “intellectual disability,” together with the pertinent
administrative rules promulgated by APD, require an applicant to provide a
qualifying IQ test score administered prior to the applicant’s eighteenth birthday,
continued the hearing to permit M.T.’s mother to obtain and provide that evidence.
At that hearing, M.T.’s mother offered additional evidence, including the report
from M.T.’s physician in the Division of Neurology at the Children’s Hospital in
Philadelphia that “M.T. is now a 14-year-old with chronic static encephalopathy of
unknown etiology resulting in mental retardation and intractable generalized
epilepsy.” (Emphasis provided).
In response, APD reiterated its legal position that the statutory eligibility
criteria includes a qualifying “full scale IQ score before the age of 18.” The
hearing officer affirmed APD’s determination of ineligibility in the final order
based on the following interpretation of section 393.063(21) and Florida
Administrative Rule 65G-4.014: “Specifically, there is no record of a full-scale IQ
score below 70 prior to age eighteen (18) as required by the regulations.”
6
APD and the hearing officer reached this conclusion based on the provisions
of Rule 65G-4.014:
(3) Mental Retardation or Intellectual Disability -- is evidenced by
the concurrent existence of:
(a) Significantly subaverage general intellectual functioning
evidenced by an Intelligence Quotient (IQ) two or more standard
deviations below the mean on an individually administered
standardized intelligence test, and
(b) Significant deficits in adaptive functioning in one or more of
the following areas:
1. Communication skills,
2. Self-care, home living,
3. Social and interpersonal skills,
4. Use of community resources and self-direction,
5. Functional academic skills,
6. Work, leisure, health and safety awareness and skills,
(c) Which are manifested prior to age 18; and
(d) Constitute a substantial handicap which is reasonably
expected to continue indefinitely.
M.T. provided an individually administered standardized test reflecting a
full-scale IQ of 61, which APD concedes is two or more standard deviations below
the mean. APD does not dispute that M.T. also established the requisite “deficits
in adaptive functioning” specified in the statute and rule, and the existence of those
deficits both before and after M.T. turned 18.
Instead, APD relies exclusively on the fact that the IQ test was administered
when M.T. was 21 years of age, rather than when he was age 18 or younger. In
7
taking that position, however, APD has ignored (and the hearing officer did not
address) M.T.’s written diagnosis of “mental retardation” by Dr. Berqvist, an M.D.
neurologist at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, when M.T. was fourteen
years old. Reports by Dr. Berqvist dated June 3 and July 10, 2007, were
introduced and admitted to the record in this case without objection. M.T. was
born in June, 1993. Each report states that in addition to “intractable mixed
epilepsy,” M.T. was determined to be mentally retarded.6 That diagnosis was
established, and thus “manifested,” before M.T. was 18. In its definition of
intellectual disability, the Legislature did not impose a requirement that an
applicant for the HCBS Waiver Program provide an IQ test administered before
the applicant turned 18.
Based on that dispositive legal issue, we reverse the decision below and
remand with directions to APD to grant M.T.’s application for benefits under the
HCBS Waiver Program.7
6 In 2007, “intellectual disability” had not yet been substituted for “retardation”
and “mentally retarded” by many practitioners and in the diagnostic literature. For
example, the federal government did not make the change until 2010, when
“Rosa’s Law” was enacted, and Florida did not make the substitution in Chapter
393.063 until the enactment of Chapter 2013-162, Laws of Florida, effective July
1, 2013. The American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
specifies that “every individual who is or was eligible for a diagnosis of mental
retardation is eligible for a diagnosis of intellectual disability.”
https://aaidd.org/intellectual-disability/definition/faqs-on-intellectual-
disability#.V6INWGT6vuh (site last visited Aug. 3, 2016).
7 We need not, and therefore do not, address M.T.’s additional argument that
8
Reversed and remanded with instructions.
APD’s interpretation of the pertinent statute is unconstitutional. “When a case may
be resolved on grounds other than constitutional grounds, the Court will ordinarily
refrain from proceeding to decide the constitutional question.” The Fla. Bar v.
Gold,
937 So. 2d 652, 655 (Fla. 2006).
9