Garcia, M.D. v. Department of Health
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
Date FiledJuly 15, 2026
Docket1D2025-0764
StatusPublished
📰 News Coverage: Read the LAWS.com news report on this case
Full Opinion
FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
STATE OF FLORIDA
_____________________________
No. 1D2025-0764
_____________________________
CARLOS MANUEL GARCIA, M.D.,
Appellant,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,
Appellee.
_____________________________
On appeal from the Board of Medicine.
Amy Derick, M.D., Chair.
July 15, 2026
TREADWELL, J.
Appellant Carlos Manuel Garcia, M.D., appeals a Final Order
from the Board of Medicine revoking his medical license. Because
the Board did not err by concluding as a matter of law that
Appellant committed medical malpractice, we affirm. We also
conclude that he lacks standing to assert his constitutional
challenges.
I.
Appellant focused his medical practice on alternative and
complementary healthcare, including chelation therapy, hormone
replacement, intravenous vitamins and antioxidants,
detoxification, and similar modalities. Some of his patients were
suffering from various forms of cancer.
In 2021 and 2022, the Department of Health filed
administrative complaints against Appellant, alleging that he had
committed medical malpractice in various ways. Specifically, the
Department accused Appellant of treating his cancer patients with
intravenous cesium chloride, an unproven treatment that posed
certain dangers. 1 The Department also alleged that Appellant did
not monitor his cancer patients’ progress or their response to
treatments, nor did he refer them to appropriate specialists for
their conditions. In addition to the malpractice allegations, the
Department charged Appellant with failing to keep adequate
medical records. He timely petitioned for a formal hearing before
an administrative law judge (ALJ).
Following an evidentiary hearing, the ALJ issued a
Recommended Order and found that the dangers of cesium
chloride were not sufficiently known before July 2018, therefore
Appellant did not deviate from the standard of care during the
preceding years when he administered it. But the ALJ found that
the Department’s expert “credibly testified” that Appellant “failed”
to properly diagnose, track, or monitor his cancer patients or refer
them to specialists for additional testing or treatment. The ALJ
also found that he failed to maintain adequate medical records.
Instead of concluding, however, that Appellant committed
malpractice based on the above failures, the ALJ observed that
there was no evidence that any of Appellant’s patients were
actually harmed as a result of his treatments. Due to the absence
of any injury, the ALJ concluded that Appellant did not commit
medical malpractice in violation of section 458.331(1)(t), Florida
Statutes. The ALJ relied exclusively on State Board of Medical
Examiners of Florida v. Rogers, 387 So. 2d 937 (Fla. 1980), for this
injury requirement. Finally, the ALJ recommended six months of
probation and a $30,000 fine for the inadequate medical records.
Both the Department and Appellant filed exceptions to the
Recommended Order. The Board of Medicine then issued a Final
Order and granted the Department’s exception to the ALJ’s legal
conclusion that discipline for medical malpractice requires a
1 The FDA subsequently published a warning about the
dangers of using cesium chloride.
2
patient’s injury. Rejecting that requirement, the Board substituted
its own conclusion, which it described as more reasonable, that
Appellant violated section 458.331(1)(t) based on the ALJ’s
findings of fact that Appellant failed to properly diagnose, track,
or monitor his cancer patients or refer them to specialists. The
Board revoked Appellant’s license, and he timely appealed.
II.
Appellant argues that the ALJ was correct in deciding that
the Board cannot revoke his license for medical malpractice
because none of his patients were harmed by his deviations from
the standard of care. He relies primarily on the medical
malpractice tort statute, section 766.102, Florida Statutes, which
requires the element of an injury in any action for damages, and
on Rogers. We discuss each below.
A.
The Board of Medicine derives its authority from section
458.331(1)(t), Florida Statutes, to revoke Appellant’s license for
medical malpractice. 2 That section authorizes disciplinary action
against a licensee for “committing medical malpractice as defined
in s. 456.50.” § 458.331(1)(t)1., Fla. Stat. Section 456.50 defines
“medical malpractice” as “the failure to practice medicine in
accordance with the level of care, skill, and treatment recognized
in general law related to health care licensure,” which is equal to
“the standard of care specified in s. 766.102.” § 456.50(1)(e), (g),
Fla. Stat. Section 766.102, in turn, defines the standard of care as
follows:
The prevailing professional standard of care for a given
health care provider shall be that level of care, skill, and
treatment which, in light of all relevant surrounding
circumstances, is recognized as acceptable and
2 If a medical doctor commits three or more incidents of
medical malpractice, the Florida Constitution requires the State
to revoke that doctor’s license. Art. X, § 26, Fla. Const. Appellant’s
argument does not require us to consider this constitutional
authority.
3
appropriate by reasonably prudent similar health care
providers.
§ 766.102(1), Fla. Stat.
In neither of the above definitions from chapters 456 and 458,
which together govern the regulation of medical doctors, is found
a prerequisite of patient harm before the Board can exercise its
authority to discipline a doctor for medical malpractice. The
applicable definition of “medical malpractice” in section 456.50
only incorporates the “standard of care” from the tort statute,
section 766.102, but does not incorporate any other aspect of the
tort statute, such as the injury and causation elements.
Although the Board is instructed in section 458.331 to “give
great weight” to the medical malpractice tort statute when
enforcing discipline, see § 458.331(1)(t)1., Fla. Stat., we do not read
this language to incorporate the injury and causation elements
necessary for tort actions. The term “great weight” is not indicative
of any brightline requirement. In other words, an injury
requirement would not be a matter of “weight” in any analysis but
would create a distinct threshold for regulatory authority based on
a condition that either exists or does not. Hence, the instruction to
“give great weight” cannot support a blanket injury requirement
for professional discipline.
Furthermore, the Legislature’s stated purposes for the
regulatory provisions in chapters 456 and 458 reveal its goal of
preventing harm to patients in the first place. See § 458.301, Fla.
Stat. (recognizing that “the practice of medicine is potentially
dangerous to the public if conducted by unsafe and incompetent
practitioners” and aiming to prohibit practitioners who “present a
danger to the public”); § 456.003, Fla. Stat. (explaining that
regulation is “only for the preservation of the health, safety, and
welfare of the public” because “unregulated practice can harm or
endanger the health, safety, and welfare of the public”).
Appellant’s contention that actual patient harm must precede
regulatory action disregards the stated purposes of the
Legislature’s regulatory scheme to prevent harm and preserve the
public health. Accordingly, the Board has authority to discipline
Appellant for medical malpractice even if his deviations from the
standard of care did not harm his patients.
4
B.
Appellant next contends that his substantive due process
right “to practice medicine” cannot be infringed without proof of
patient harm. He relies, as did the ALJ, on State Board of Medical
Examiners of Florida v. Rogers, 387 So. 2d 937 (Fla. 1980). We
decline to read Rogers so broadly.
Although the supreme court in Rogers recognized a
physician’s “right to practice medicine,” 387 So. 2d at 939, it did
not establish a harm prerequisite for regulatory discipline in
general. Under the particular facts of that case, the supreme court
concluded that the record did not demonstrate that Dr. Rogers’s
unproven treatment for arteriosclerosis was harmful to patients.
Id. As a result, the Board’s discipline of Dr. Rogers was an
arbitrary and unreasonable exercise of police power because it did
not “have a reasonable relationship to the protection of the health
and welfare of the public.” Id. at 938–40.
Rogers does not stand for the broad proposition that a
physician may continue to practice medicine below the standard of
care and without fear of discipline, until a patient is actually
harmed. By its own terms, Rogers was a decision “under the
particular facts” of the case that considered disciplinary action in
the context of an unproven treatment. Id. at 937, 939. Here, the
Board did not discipline Appellant for his use of an unproven
treatment, such as his cesium chloride treatments, therefore the
Rogers case is simply inapplicable on its facts.
Moreover, the supreme court in Rogers only found that the
Board’s disciplinary action was arbitrary and unreasonable
because the record did not even show the “harmfulness” of the
unproven treatment. Id. at 939. In other words, the case turned on
a lack of danger, not on a lack of actual harm to a patient.
Here, even if Rogers were factually applicable, Appellant has
not argued that his failure to monitor, track, or refer his patients
posed no danger or harmfulness to them. For that reason, he
cannot argue pursuant to Rogers that the Board’s discipline was
an arbitrary or unreasonable infringement on his right to practice
medicine.
5
Accordingly, we agree with the Board’s rejection of an injury
requirement, which the ALJ erroneously imposed based on a
misapplication of Rogers, and affirm the Board’s disciplinary
action to revoke Appellant’s license.
III.
Finally, Appellant claims on appeal that section 456.073(5) is
facially unconstitutional. He argues that it (1) gives the Board
unbridled discretion in violation of the nondelegation doctrine and
(2) violates his procedural due process rights.
Section 456.073(5) states, in pertinent part,
The determination of whether or not a licensee has
violated the laws and rules regulating the profession,
including a determination of the reasonable standard of
care, is a conclusion of law to be determined by the board,
or department when there is no board, and is not a
finding of fact to be determined by an administrative law
judge.
§ 456.073(5), Fla. Stat. Appellant does not challenge the entirety
of the above provision, only the clause “including a determination
of the reasonable standard of care.”
This challenged language was added to section 456.073(5) in
2003. See Ch. 2003-416, § 20, Laws of Fla. Prior to its addition,
Florida courts had consistently held that whether an individual
had deviated from the standard of care was a finding of fact for the
ALJ to make, not a conclusion of law. See, e.g., Gross v. Dep’t of
Health, 819 So. 2d 997, 1003 n.8 (Fla. 5th DCA 2002) (collecting
cases). Appellant argues that the 2003 statutory revision, making
the determination of the standard of care a legal conclusion by the
Board instead of a factual finding by the ALJ, untethers the
Board’s decision-making away from any discernable guidelines in
the statutory text and away from the evidentiary record in a case.
Before we can address the merits of Appellant’s constitutional
challenge, we first determine whether Appellant has standing
under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) to assert his
challenge. See Escambia Cnty. Sch. Bd. v. Warren, 337 So. 3d 496,
6
498 (Fla. 1st DCA 2022) (applying the principle that “an appellate
court may raise standing sua sponte even where neither party
raises the issue” in an administrative case).
The APA entitles a party “who is adversely affected by final
agency action” to seek judicial review. § 120.68(1)(a), Fla. Stat.
Under longstanding Florida Supreme Court precedent, this
entitlement to judicial review allows an “affected party” to
challenge the facial constitutionality of a statute authorizing an
agency action by raising the challenge in the district court on direct
review. Key Haven Associated Enters., Inc. v. Bd. of Trs. of Internal
Improvement Tr. Fund, 427 So. 2d 153, 157 (Fla. 1982). However,
“the record should clearly indicate the appellant’s standing to raise
the issue of the facial unconstitutionality of a specific section of the
law.” Sasso v. Ram Prop. Mgmt., 431 So. 2d 204, 208 (Fla. 1st DCA
1983), approved, 452 So. 2d 932 (Fla. 1984). To have such standing,
the appellant must be “injuriously affected by the feature
complained of.” Id. (quoting 16 C.J.S. Constitutional Law § 76 at
243–44 (1956)).
The record here does not establish Appellant’s standing to
challenge the constitutionality of the feature of section 456.073(5)
he complains of. Appellant contends that section 456.073(5)
unconstitutionally shifts the determination of the standard of care
from the ALJ, as a finding of fact, to the Board of Medicine, as a
conclusion of law. But Appellant has failed to demonstrate on
appeal that the Board of Medicine, not the ALJ, made the
determination of the standard of care under this record.
The Board’s Final Order did not discuss, reference, or even
mention the standard of care. Rather, it adopted the findings of
fact set forth in the ALJ’s Recommended Order, including the
findings that Appellant “failed” to monitor and track his patients’
cancer and “failed” to refer them to specialists. By finding that
Appellant “failed” to monitor, track, and refer his patients, the ALJ
implicitly determined that Appellant did not meet the standard of
care with respect to those patients and those failures. The Board
did not attempt to find or rule otherwise. It did not alter or amend
the ALJ’s findings or legal conclusions with respect to the standard
of care at all. The Board merely reversed the ALJ’s erroneous legal
conclusion that section 458.331(1)(t) requires patient harm. See
7
supra Part II. This reversal, however, did not implicate the
challenged provision of section 456.073(5) with respect to the
standard of care.
Accordingly, Appellant has not been “adversely affected” by
the challenged portion of section 456.073(5) and therefore does not
have standing for the judicial review of its constitutionality.
§ 120.68(1), Fla. Stat.; see also Sandstrom v. Leader, 370 So. 2d 3,
4 (Fla. 1979) (“Fundamental constitutional principles dictate that
one may not challenge those portions of an enactment which do not
adversely affect his personal or property rights.”).
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Final Order of the
Board of Medicine.
AFFIRMED.
KELSEY and LONG, JJ., concur.
_____________________________
Not final until disposition of any timely and
authorized motion under Fla. R. App. P. 9.330 or
9.331.
_____________________________
Thomas W. Sculco and Shannon McLin of Florida Appeals,
Orlando, for Appellant.
Sarah Young Hodges, Chief Appellate Counsel, Florida
Department of Health, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
8