In the Matter of the Guardianship of Tavonjia Denise Hill, Tavonjia Denise Hill, Ward-Appellant. ( 2015 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 14-0497
    Filed February 11, 2015
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    GUARDIANSHIP OF TAVONJIA
    DENISE HILL,
    TAVONJIA DENISE HILL,
    Ward-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, Joel A.
    Dalrymple, Judge.
    A ward challenges the reinstatement of a full guardianship. REVERSED
    AND REMANDED.
    Nina Forcier of Forcier Law Office, P.L.L.C., Waterloo, for appellant.
    Andrew C. Abbott of Abbott Law Office, P.C., Waterloo, for appellee Black
    Hawk County.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Gretchen Witte Kraemer,
    Assistant Attorney General, for appellee State of Iowa.
    Joseph D. Thornton, Waterloo, for intervenor Ravenwood Nursing and
    Rehabilitation.
    Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ.
    2
    TABOR, J.
    Ward Tavonjia Hill wishes to end her guardianship.              On appeal, she
    challenges rulings issued by the district court amid a series of hearings and the
    ultimate reinstatement of a full guardianship. Because the district court denied
    her statutory right to be personally present at the final hearing, we reverse the
    decision and remand for new proceedings.
    I.         Background Facts and Proceedings
    Hill is now forty years old. In 1997, she was involved in a car accident that
    left her with a traumatic brain injury, paraplegia, and a neurogenic bowel and
    bladder. She has been under a guardianship since the accident.
    In a pro se letter dated September 9, 2013, Hill requested her
    guardianship be dissolved.           She told the court she believed she could take
    control of her life and find “independent living in the community.” The court set
    the matter for hearing on October 28, 2013, but the guardian failed to appear.
    The district court accepted evidence offered by Hill, including a recommendation
    from Dr. Robert Grittmann that, with certain accommodations, Hill could live
    independently. But noting the “lopsided” nature of the proof, the court left the
    record open for further hearing. The court removed the previous guardian, a
    family member who no longer wished to serve, and appointed the Black Hawk
    County Conservator’s Office as guardian,1 with full guardianship powers.
    At this time, Hill was residing at Ravenwood Nursing and Rehabilitation
    Center. On December 3, 2013, that facility filed a motion to intervene in the
    1
    That office had previously served as Hill’s guardian from 2005 until 2013.
    3
    guardianship proceedings.      The motion alleged Hill engaged in disruptive
    conduct which placed herself and other residents at risk. Along with that motion,
    Ravenwood filed an application requesting Hill be placed in another facility
    because of her violent behavior. The court granted the motion to intervene.
    On December 27, 2013, following a contested hearing, the district court
    found Hill had sufficient mental capacity to make decisions regarding her
    behavior. The court stated: “Upon further hearing, the Court was not presented
    with clear and convincing evidence that the ward’s decision-making capacity
    continues to be so impaired that the guardianship should not be terminated upon
    considering Iowa Code Section 633.552(2)(a) (2013).” The district court modified
    Hill’s status “to a limited guardianship and determined that upon obtaining
    suitable living arrangements and other implementations of the accommodations
    as set forth by Dr. [Robert] Grittmann, the guardianship should terminate.”
    On January 18, 2014, Hill allegedly assaulted a member of the
    Ravenwood staff. Court exhibits show the police brought Hill to the emergency
    department of Allen Memorial Hospital in Waterloo and then she was transferred
    to Iowa Lutheran Hospital in Des Moines, where she received psychiatric care.
    On January 31, 2014, Black Hawk County filed an “Application for Review
    of Guardianship Powers and Placement Hearing.”          The application asserted
    there had been a “substantial change in circumstances regarding the ward’s
    medical situation” since the court entered the order for a limited guardianship.
    The county asserted “it now appears that a more restrictive setting may be
    4
    necessary and that full guardianship powers should be granted to the guardian in
    order to enable said placement.”
    The district court set the county’s application for hearing on February 14,
    2014.2 Hill’s counsel filed a motion asking for Hill to be transported to Waterloo
    for the hearing or alternatively to participate by telephone.        On February 12,
    2014, the county conservator wrote to the judge concerning “unanticipated
    complications arising regarding the ability to have Tavonjia transported to the
    hearing on February 14th.” The court denied Hill’s request to be transported and
    ordered Iowa Lutheran to make the ward available by telephone.
    At the start of the February 14 hearing, Hill objected to participating by
    telephone and invoked her right to be personally present at the proceeding. The
    court overruled her objection.
    Following the hearing, the district court modified its appointment of the
    Black Hawk County Conservator’s Office from limited to full guardian. The court
    also granted the guardian power to place Hill in a more restrictive living
    arrangement. Hill now appeals.
    On appeal, Hill claims the district court erred in reinstating the full
    guardianship and granting the power to place her in a more restrictive living
    condition. She argues the guardianship should have been terminated after the
    October 28, 2013 hearing.         Hill also claims the district court erred in not
    considering a limited guardianship after the February 14, 2014 hearing. Finally,
    Hill claims the district court violated her statutory and constitutional rights in going
    2
    A hearing had already been set for that day to consider Ravenwood’s request for an
    injunction barring Hill from its premises.
    5
    forward with the February 14 hearing without her personal presence.                We
    address only the last issue, finding it dispositive of the appeal.
    II.    Standards of Review
    Actions to modify or terminate a guardianship are equitable in nature, and
    thus our review is de novo. 
    Iowa Code § 633.33
    ; see In re Guardianship of
    Kennedy, 
    845 N.W.2d 707
    , 709 (Iowa 2014). We give weight to the factual
    findings of the probate court, but are not bound by those findings. Kennedy, 845
    N.W.2d at 709.       We also review constitutional issues de novo.               In re
    Guardianship of Hedin, 
    528 N.W.2d 567
    , 575 (Iowa 1995). To the extent we are
    interpreting a statutory right, our review is for legal error. See In re Estate of
    Waterman, 
    847 N.W.2d 560
    , 565 (Iowa 2014).
    III.   Personal Presence at Hearing
    Hill alleges the district court violated her statutory and constitutional rights
    by refusing her request to be personally present at the February 14, 2014
    hearing on the county’s motion to reinstate a full guardianship.
    The guardianship statute sets out a ward’s rights as follows:
    The court shall ensure that all proposed wards entitled to
    representation have been provided with notice of the right to
    representation and right to be personally present at all proceedings
    and shall make findings of fact in any order of disposition setting
    out the manner in which notification was provided.
    
    Iowa Code § 633.561
    (2). 3
    3
    The statutory right for wards to be personally present does not describe any
    exceptions. In contrast, the rules governing involuntary civil commitment proceedings
    contemplate exceptions to the respondent’s presence. See Iowa Ct. R. 12.19.
    6
    Hill also contends her due process rights were violated under the
    Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article 1 sections 1
    and 9 of the Iowa constitution.       She cites Hedin for the proposition that a
    guardianship action is akin to a criminal action given the possibility an individual
    could be deprived of a liberty interest.      See 
    528 N.W.2d at
    573–75 (opining
    “[g]uardianship involves such a significant loss of liberty that we now hold that the
    ward is entitled to the full panoply of procedural due process rights comparable to
    those present in involuntary civil commitment proceedings”).
    Hill, who had been personally present at all prior proceedings, was being
    treated at Iowa Lutheran Hospital in Des Moines in early February 2014. Her
    counsel filed a motion on February 12, 2014, requesting the guardian provide
    transportation for Hill to be personally present at the hearing or in lieu of
    transportation, the ability to appear by telephone.       The district court initially
    granted the transport order. But then the judge received correspondence from
    the guardian citing “unanticipated complications” associated with transporting Hill
    from Des Moines to Waterloo.
    The email suggested, in part, that transportation would not be possible
    because Hill was confined to a wheelchair and would need assistance in
    transferring herself into and out of a vehicle. The email further stated: “Concern
    was also expressed about her ability to ride for 4 hours total in a car in the sitting
    position, due to the nature of her pressure wounds and the fragility of the tissue
    even though it is now healed.” The letter went on to explain that neither the
    hospital nor sheriff’s office was able to provide the necessary assistance to
    7
    transport Hill. The guardian rejected the possibility of an ambulance transport
    because “this is not something her insurance would pay for as it would only cover
    if going to and from medical facilities.”4 The guardian also rejected the possibility
    of a private transportation company because of security concerns.
    After receiving this information and without a hearing on the motion, the
    district court denied the transportation order and provided for Hill to participate by
    telephone.      The correspondence from the guardian was not entered into the
    record as an exhibit, nor was Hill’s attorney able to cross-examine the guardian
    on the contents of the letter. Instead, the correspondence was attached to the
    court’s ruling.
    At the start of the February 14 hearing, Hill objected to participating only
    by telephone and requested to be personally present at the proceeding. The
    court overruled her objection and allowed the hearing to go forward.              Hill
    participated in the hearing by telephone, and the court accommodated her
    requests to speak confidentially with her attorney.
    On appeal, the guardian does not dispute Hill had a right to be present at
    the hearing.      Instead, the guardian argues the motion filed by Hill’s attorney
    stipulated to the alternative option of appearing by telephone. The guardian also
    contends Hill should have formally sought a continuance of the hearing. We are
    not convinced by either contention.          The district court directly denied Hill’s
    request to be personally present at the hearing, preserving the issue for our
    review.
    4
    Hill was transported from Waterloo to Iowa Lutheran Hospital by ambulance.
    8
    The guardian requested reinstatement of a full guardianship and the
    possibility of a more restrictive placement for Hill. With her liberty interests thus
    at stake, we believe the district court violated the procedure outlined in the
    guardianship statute by summarily denying the ward’s request to be personally
    present. Here, the court did not engage in any colloquy with the ward and did not
    take any evidence concerning the guardian’s email listing the drawbacks to
    transporting Hill.
    Under these specific facts, we find Hill’s statutory right was violated when
    she was denied the opportunity to appear in person. The inconveniences of
    transporting Hill back to Waterloo outlined in the guardian’s email do not—
    without more inquiry—justify depriving her of the statutory right to be present at
    the guardianship hearing. Cf. State v. Rogerson, 
    855 N.W.2d 495
    , 506 (Iowa
    2014) (stating, in criminal context, “mere convenience, efficiency and cost-saving
    are not sufficiently important public necessities” to justify denial of face-to-face
    confrontation).
    On appeal, the guardian also suggests Hill’s telephonic appearance
    satisfied the statutory requirement for her to be personally present. We disagree.
    One court has offered the following insightful comparison of telephonic hearings
    and personal appearances:
    We do not wish to overstate the benefits of communicating in
    person, nor the drawbacks of telephone communication. We live in
    an era when efficiency often dictates that many communications be
    machine-facilitated. When the technology employed is operating
    well, such communications are at least good enough to transmit
    basic information. But the potential for empathy and nuanced
    understanding is much greater in person-to-person communications
    than in any of the various forms of telecommunicating. Likewise,
    9
    when a party is denied an in-person hearing before a trier of fact,
    there is a risk that the party will be less able to convey the message
    that his story is the truth.
    Whitesides v. State, Dep’t of Public Safety, Div. of Motor Vehicles, 
    20 P.3d 1130
    ,
    1137 (Alaska 2001); see also Shegan v. Commw. Unemp’t Comp. Bd. of Review,
    
    564 A.2d 1022
    , 1025 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1989) (“[W]e cannot find that an offer to
    conduct a telephonic hearing served as an adequate substitute for an in-person
    hearing so as to comport with Claimant’s due process right to fully present her
    case.”).
    Because Hill was denied her right to be personally present at the hearing
    under section 633.561(2), we reverse the district court’s order reinstating the full
    guardianship and remand for a new hearing.5 On remand, the parties will be
    allowed to present information as to Hill’s current situation.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    5
    Because we reach this result on a statutory ground, we do not rule on Hill’s
    constitutional claims.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-0497

Filed Date: 2/11/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/11/2015