Ariz. Admin. Code § R13-9-603 - Rehearing or Review of Decision
A.
The Department shall provided provide for a rehearing and review of its
decisions under A.R.S. Title 41, Chapter 6, Article 10 and the rules issued by
the Office of Administrative Hearings.
B. Within 30 days after the Department enters
a final administrative decision, the affected individual may, but is not
required to, file a motion for rehearing or review of the decision.
C. A party may amend a motion for rehearing
or review at any time before the Department rules on the motion.
D. The Department may grant a rehearing or
review for any of the following reasons materially affecting a party's rights:
1. Irregularity in the proceedings of the
Department or any order or abuse of discretion that deprived the moving party
of a fair hearing;
2. Misconduct by
the Department, its staff, or an administrative law judge;
3. Accident or surprise that could not have
been prevented by ordinary prudence;
4. Newly discovered evidence that could not,
with reasonable diligence, have been discovered and produced at the
hearing;
5. Excessive
penalty;
6. Error in the admission
or rejection of evidence or other errors of law occurring at the hearing or
during the progress of the proceedings; or
7. The findings of fact or decision is not
justified by the evidence or is contrary to law.
E. The Department may affirm or modify a
decision or grant a rehearing or review to all or some of the parties on all or
some of the issues for any of the reasons in subsection (D). An order modifying
a decision or granting a rehearing or review shall specify with particularity
the grounds for the order. If a rehearing or review is granted, the rehearing
or review shall cover only the matters specified in the order.
F. Not later than 15 days after the date of a
decision, and after giving the parties notice and an opportunity to be heard,
the Department may, on its own initiative, order a rehearing or review of its
decision for any reason it might have granted a rehearing or review on motion
of a party. The Department may grant a motion for rehearing or review, timely
served, for a reason not stated in the motion. An order granting a rehearing or
review shall specify the grounds on which the rehearing or review is
granted.
G. When a motion for
rehearing or review is based upon affidavits, they shall be served with the
motion. An opposing party may serve opposing affidavits within 15 days after
service of the motion. This period may be extended by the Department for a
maximum of 20 days for good cause as described in subsection (H) or upon
written stipulation of the parties. Reply affidavits may be
permitted.
H. The Department may
extend all time limits listed in this Section upon a showing of good cause. A
party demonstrates good cause by showing that the grounds for the party's
motion or other action could not have been known in time, using reasonable
diligence, and a ruling on the motion will:
1.
Further administrative convenience, expedition, or economy; or
2. Avoid undue prejudice to any
party.
I. If, in a
particular decision, the Department makes a specific finding that the immediate
effectiveness of the decision is necessary for preservation of the public
health, safety, or welfare, the decision may be issued as a final decision
without an opportunity for rehearing or review. If an application for judicial
review of the decision is made, it shall be made under A.R.S. §
12-901 et
seq.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.