State v. C. M. C. ( 2019 )


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  •                                       206
    Submitted September 12, reversed December 11, 2019
    In the Matter of C. M. C.,
    a Person Alleged to have Mental Illness.
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Respondent,
    v.
    C. M. C.,
    Appellant.
    Multnomah County Circuit Court
    18CC04295; A168620
    454 P3d 30
    Appellant challenges a judgment committing him to the Mental Health
    Division for a period not to exceed 180 days, arguing that the record is insuffi-
    cient to support the trial court’s determination that his mental disorder rendered
    him unable to provide for his basic needs, ORS 426.005(1)(f)(B). Held: The record
    was insufficient to support appellant’s basic-needs commitment.
    Reversed.
    L. Randall Weisberg, Judge pro tempore.
    Joseph R. DeBin and Multnomah Defenders, Inc., filed the
    brief for appellant.
    Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General, and Inge D. Wells, Assistant Attorney
    General, filed the brief for respondent.
    Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Shorr, Judge, and
    James, Judge.
    ORTEGA, P. J.
    Reversed.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 206
     (2019)                             207
    ORTEGA, P. J.
    Appellant challenges a judgment committing him
    to the Mental Health Division for a period not to exceed 180
    days on the ground that he has a mental illness. ORS 426.130.
    Appellant argues that (1) the trial court issued a warrant of
    detention that lacked proof that he had been advised of the
    warning required by ORS 426.123(1)—in appellant’s view,
    that constitutes reversible plain error; and (2) the evidence
    is insufficient to support the trial court’s determination that
    appellant’s mental disorder rendered him unable to provide
    for his basic needs, ORS 426.005(1)(f)(B). We reject appel-
    lant’s first assignment of error without further discussion.
    See State v. C. F. P., 
    299 Or App 196
    , 447 P3d 85 (2019);
    State v. T. H., 
    298 Or App 290
    , 442 P3d 607 (2019); State v.
    R. C., 
    298 Or App 280
    , 443 P3d 742 (2019). As to the second
    assignment of error, we agree with appellant that the evi-
    dence in the record is insufficient to support his basic-needs
    commitment. Accordingly, we reverse.
    We review whether the state presented sufficient
    evidence to support appellant’s civil commitment for legal
    error and are bound by the trial court’s factual findings that
    are supported by evidence in the record. State v. E. D., 
    264 Or App 71
    , 72, 331 P3d 1032 (2014) (citations omitted). We
    therefore recite the following facts in the light most favor-
    able to the trial court’s disposition. 
    Id.
    Appellant—who was 22 years old at the time of
    the commitment hearing—suffers from schizophrenia, and
    that mental disorder was complicated by his co-occurring
    developmental disorder of autism. Appellant’s conditions
    caused him extreme anxiety, which led to constant residen-
    tial instability. In the events leading up to this commitment
    hearing, for example, appellant was hospitalized at Unity
    Center for Behavioral Health for a period of three weeks
    before being discharged and sent to Transition Projects TPI
    (TPI). Appellant quickly became anxious and left TPI, with-
    out taking his medications with him. At 4:00 a.m. the next
    day, appellant returned to Unity, stating that he did not
    know how to get food or money and that he had no money,
    no phone, and only one change of clothing. According to
    Jennifer Haynes, a case manager with Multnomah County’s
    208                                                      State v. C. M. C.
    Forensic Division Program, this was illustrative of “a cycli-
    cal pattern” with appellant: He would be stable when hos-
    pitalized; initially would be “completely willing” to try out
    a housing placement; would quickly change his mind about
    the placement and leave, often without taking his medi-
    cations with him; would rapidly decompensate; and would
    return to the hospital or be picked up by law enforcement.
    Appellant’s schizophrenia and autism also caused
    him to exhibit executive-functioning issues with planning,
    decision-making, and staying focused. Appellant recognized
    that he had symptoms, but his overall insight into his need
    for treatment was very poor. Although appellant complied
    with taking medications, his mother and Tara O’Connor—a
    psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner at Unity—did
    not believe that he was organized enough to do so unsuper-
    vised: For example, he did not know that he needed to go
    to a doctor to obtain a prescription as opposed to showing
    up at a Walgreen’s to write his own prescription. O’Connor
    agreed that medications might not improve some of appel-
    lant’s cognitive impairments, which had both mental and
    developmental components, and she explained that multiple
    antipsychotic medications had yielded negligible improve-
    ment. O’Connor described appellant as “thus far be[ing]
    really treatment resistant”1 and opined that he might need
    more aggressive or proactive treatment, which he so far was
    not willing to consider. In O’Connor’s view, appellant was
    not stable and needed further supervised care and treat-
    ment to ensure that he eats, takes medications, and engages
    in the community appropriately:
    “I think when [appellant] doesn’t take his psychiatric med-
    icines, he becomes increasingly emotionally unstable, he
    has manic symptoms, he does the disrobing, * * * he puts
    himself in harm’s way. * * * Additionally, [appellant] has a
    genetic disorder of fat absorption, and also has Hepatitis C,
    and these two things are causing him to have some scar-
    ring of his liver, and elevated liver function tests did
    indicate that, and he had the thyroid nodule. And so he
    1
    In context, we understand this portion of O’Connor’s statement to mean
    that appellant’s conditions were resistant to treatment—that is, that the treat-
    ment had not been as effective in alleviating appellant’s conditions as desired—
    and not that appellant himself was resistant to receiving treatment.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 206
     (2019)                                  209
    has some medical problems that actually need some addi-
    tional follow-up. I don’t think he could organize himself to
    follow-up on these problems, and they could become life-
    threatening if not treated. So I don’t think he can * * * plan
    to make meals for himself, I don’t think he can figure out
    * * * how to obtain and manage finances to buy food. So he
    could become malnourished and dehydrated.”
    Due to appellant’s co-occurring mental and devel-
    opmental conditions, it was also difficult to find housing
    services that would accommodate him, and living with
    his mother was not an option. Appellant’s five or six past
    housing placements were unsuccessful because he would
    “abscond” from the facility, never staying overnight at any
    of them. On one such occasion, appellant was later located
    near Emanuel Hospital dressed in only his underwear; he
    told Haynes that he had been robbed at gunpoint and that he
    was going to the hospital to get clothes and food. According
    to Haynes, appropriate housing options for appellant have
    been exhausted. Haynes perceived no pattern to appellant’s
    reasons for leaving a placement. Haynes also stated that
    “[n]othing stands out” to suggest that appellant’s schizo-
    phrenic hallucinations were connected to his reasons for
    leaving a placement or were interfering with his thinking
    about caring for himself or accessing food, although she
    allowed that that “could certainly be part of it.” In her year-
    plus of working with appellant, Haynes explained, she had
    observed him demonstrate the ability to care for himself
    only in the sense that he would voluntarily return to the
    hospital setting to seek out food, shelter, or clothing—but in
    her view, that was an inappropriate use of hospitalization.
    Appellant’s mother testified that appellant “abso-
    lutely would have difficulty” finding shelter and that he
    lacked the ability to support himself financially, to find
    food, and to cover basic survival needs. Appellant “loses
    things constantly because people take them from him,”
    and he had been assaulted in the past. Appellant’s mother
    was concerned that appellant would befriend somebody on
    the streets too easily and give away money from his Social
    Security Disability Insurance benefits (SSDI)—money that
    had been put on hold because of appellant’s hospitalizations
    and that still needed to be reactivated.
    210                                            State v. C. M. C.
    Appellant also testified at the hearing, expressing
    his wish to be released. Appellant explained that he had left
    TPI because he did not like that the facility required him to
    check in multiple times a day and that it provided only shel-
    ter and no food. The reason that he had returned to Unity,
    appellant stated, was because hospital staff had told him
    that he could do so if he encountered any issues. Appellant
    had wanted Unity’s help contacting his parents and figur-
    ing out whether he could go to the Mission, a facility that
    provided both shelter and food. Appellant explained that he
    had left his medications at TPI because he had no backpack
    to carry them around; he had intended to return for them
    after arranging to go to the Mission. According to appellant,
    before his continuous encounters with law enforcement and
    hospitalizations in the last year, he had been living in down-
    town Portland and getting food at the Mission on his own for
    a year.
    Regarding the incident in which he had been found
    near Emanuel Hospital, appellant explained that he had left
    that housing placement because it was a “little, tiny house”
    “in the middle of absolutely nowhere”; that made him feel
    uncomfortable and secluded. In response to why he had left
    a different placement, appellant testified that the facility
    had requested $600 out of his SSDI, which appellant viewed
    as too much: “I need to spend it on clothes * * * [and] things
    that are more important than—than the place that I’m
    living that I don’t even want to live at.” When asked about
    his plan if he were released after the hearing, appellant
    detailed that he would go to the Mission for food and cloth-
    ing; go reactivate his SSDI; arrange to receive mail at the
    post office near TPI; and have his parents send him money
    within two days. With that money, appellant added, he could
    “stay in a hotel for a little while” or split rent with a friend.
    At the end of the hearing, the trial court found
    clear and convincing evidence that appellant suffers from
    a mental disorder and that, because of his mental disorder,
    appellant is unable to provide for his basic personal needs.
    Describing this as a “difficult and close case[,]” the trial court
    found that appellant has an awareness of his codiagnoses of
    autism and schizophrenia, but that he lacks full awareness
    of his limitations. The trial court also expressed skepticism
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 206
     (2019)                                 211
    regarding appellant’s ability to “get his finances together,”
    to “access his meds,” and to “survive,” stating that appellant
    “would decompensate rapidly” and “get taken advantage of”
    due to his impaired decision-making capacity. Sleeping on
    the sidewalk in August is “fine right now,” the trial court
    opined, but “[i]t’s going to be a drag” come September and
    October. Additionally, the trial court noted that appellant
    has Hepatitis C and “some other physical problems” that
    will “be difficult for you to handle the way you are right
    now[.]” Ultimately, the trial court determined that a basic-
    needs commitment was “the best course” for appellant, so
    that his medical providers could “get [appellant] stabilized
    as best as the medical science is able to do” before he goes
    back to living “on the streets.”
    On appeal, appellant does not dispute that he has a
    mental disorder; he asserts only that the evidence is insuf-
    ficient to support the trial court’s determination that his
    mental disorder rendered him unable to provide for his basic
    needs. Specifically, appellant argues that, considering his
    past ability and future plan to obtain food, medication, and
    housing, and the absence of evidence establishing a causal
    connection between his mental disorder and an inability
    to provide basic needs, the commitment judgment must be
    reversed.
    As relevant here, a person is subject to involuntary
    civil commitment if the state proves by clear and convinc-
    ing evidence that the person is a “[p]erson with mental ill-
    ness” under the current basic-needs provision, ORS 426.005
    (1)(f)(B), and neither release nor conditional release is in the
    person’s best interest. ORS 426.130(1)(a)(C). ORS 426.005
    (1)(f)(B) provides:
    “(f) ‘Person with mental illness’ means a person who,
    because of mental disorder, is one or more of the following:
    “* * * * *
    “(B) Unable to provide for basic personal needs that
    are necessary to avoid serious physical harm in the near
    future, and is not receiving such care as is necessary to
    avoid such harm.”
    (Emphasis added.) Recently in State v. M. A. E., 
    299 Or App 231
    , 236-37, 448 P3d 656 (2019), we construed ORS
    212                                            State v. C. M. C.
    426.005(1)(f)(B) as a matter of first impression and deter-
    mined that that provision provides for a different legal stan-
    dard than did the previous basic-needs provision requiring
    “an imminent threat to safe survival.” We specified that the
    current basic-needs standard differs from its predecessor in
    two ways: “one that relates to the type of risk the allegedly
    mentally ill person must face if not involuntarily committed
    (‘serious physical harm’) and one that relates to the time-
    frame in which that risk must exist (‘in the near future’).”
    
    Id. at 237
    . “In sum,” we concluded,
    “a person meets the ‘basic needs’ definition of a ‘[p]erson
    with mental illness’ under ORS 426.005(1)(f)(B) if the per-
    son is unable to provide for his or her basic personal needs
    in a way that leaves the person at nonspeculative risk of
    ‘serious physical harm’—meaning that the person’s safe
    survival will be compromised—in the near future, even
    though that risk is not imminent.”
    
    Id. at 240
     (brackets in M. A. E.). Additionally, the state must
    establish “a causal connection” between the person’s mental
    disorder and inability to meet basic needs. State v. S. S., 
    189 Or App 9
    , 18, 73 P3d 301 (2003) (citations omitted).
    In committing appellant, the trial court primarily
    cited his inability to obtain medications and to function “on
    the streets” with his impaired decision-making capacity.
    Considering that articulation of the trial court’s rationale,
    below and in turn, we discuss the evidence specific to appel-
    lant’s ability to obtain medical treatment and to his house-
    lessness and then consider other evidence of appellant’s
    general vulnerability to determine whether the trial court
    permissibly determined that appellant’s mental disorder
    placed him at nonspeculative risk of serious physical harm
    in the near future. We conclude that, viewing this record as
    a whole, the evidence is insufficient to support appellant’s
    basic-needs commitment.
    Regarding appellant’s ability to obtain medications,
    the record shows that, although he complied with treat-
    ment, it provided only slight improvement, and appellant
    would sometimes leave a housing facility without taking
    his medications with him. When appellant does not take his
    medications, he becomes emotionally unstable, has manic
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 206
     (2019)                             213
    symptoms, and disrobes. The difficulty, however, lies in the
    absence of any evidence to support the inference that those
    manifestations of appellant’s mental disorder would give rise
    to a nonspeculative risk of serious physical harm. To con-
    trast, in M. A. E., there was testimony that “providers like
    soup kitchens would not be willing to serve [the] appellant
    if she appeared in the psychotic, agitated, and violent state
    that likely would result if she were released.” 
    299 Or App at 241
     (quotation marks omitted). Here, the record might
    well justify generalized concerns associated with appellant’s
    unmedicated state, but the basic-needs standard requires
    more particularized evidence of the resulting risk to appel-
    lant’s “safe survival.” 
    Id. at 240
    .
    Similarly, the trial court expressed concern about
    appellant’s ability to treat his Hepatitis C and other phys-
    ical medical problems, but the evidence as to those issues
    is impermissibly vague and speculative. O’Connor opined
    that those problems “could become life-threatening if not
    treated.” But, from that testimony alone, the trial court
    could not reasonably deduce a timeframe in order to deter-
    mine whether the risk will transpire “in the near future.”
    In M. A. E., there was evidence that the appellant “would
    decompensate within a matter of days to a week[.]” 
    Id. at 241
    (quotation marks omitted). Notably, a nonvague estimation
    of appellant’s expected rate of decline or decompensation is
    lacking from this record.
    Turning to appellant’s houselessness, the record
    permits the nonspeculative inference that appellant will
    experience difficulty locating housing appropriate for
    his co-occurring disorders of schizophrenia and autism.
    Moreover, the evidence strongly suggests that appellant
    would not remain at an unsecured facility for very long;
    he tends to move about as a result of his anxiety. But even
    accepting that appellant, by his choice, will likely be without
    shelter upon release, we have repeatedly stated that house-
    lessness is not a per se basis for a basic-needs commitment.
    State v. M. A., 
    276 Or App 624
    , 632, 371 P3d 495 (2016); see
    also State v. L. B., 
    138 Or App 94
    , 99, 
    906 P2d 849
     (1995)
    (“Although the lack of certain shelter is not a good plan, we
    cannot say that homelessness by itself is sufficient grounds
    214                                          State v. C. M. C.
    for commitment.”). Living on the streets “is not necessarily
    the choice that everyone would make. But it is appellant’s
    choice. And it is not the state’s prerogative under the civil
    commitment statutes to interfere with that choice.” State v.
    M. G., 
    147 Or App 187
    , 196, 
    935 P2d 1224
     (1997); see also
    State v. T. R. O., 
    208 Or App 686
    , 692, 145 P3d 350 (2006)
    (“[C]ivil commitment is not intended to be used as a pater-
    nalistic vehicle to save people from themselves.” (Citation
    and quotation marks omitted.)). Certain general risks are
    inherent to houselessness, but in the absence of more spe-
    cific evidence, this record is insufficient for the trial court
    to conclude that the lack of housing would place appellant
    at nonspeculative risk of serious physical harm in the near
    future.
    The other evidence of limitations and vulnerabil-
    ities attendant to appellant’s impaired decision-making
    capacity is similarly insufficient to support a basic-needs
    commitment. Although appellant’s mother testified to her
    belief that appellant lacks the ability to find food and cover
    other basic survival needs, that is but “a conclusory asser-
    tion that reflects the legal question at issue, rather than
    evidence of what actually will happen to appellant if he
    is released.” State v. S. T., 
    294 Or App 683
    , 687, 432 P3d
    378 (2018). For example, the record contains no evidence
    that appellant is malnourished or would lose weight at a
    rate that would constitute “serious physical harm in the
    near future.” Nor is there any evidence of appellant’s reluc-
    tance or refusal to eat. To the contrary, the record shows
    that appellant will voluntarily seek out a hospital when he
    needs food. Granted, that may not be an appropriate use
    of hospitalization, but “appropriate use of hospitalization” is
    not the applicable legal standard. If anything, appellant’s
    repeated returns to a hospital setting to obtain food, cloth-
    ing, and shelter demonstrate a level of self-awareness that
    suggests that civil commitment is inappropriate. See S. S.,
    
    189 Or App at 19-20
     (reversing based in part on evidence
    that appellant had some recognition of the need to engage
    in certain life-sustaining activities).
    In committing appellant, the trial court also
    expressed concern that appellant would be “taken advan-
    tage of” on the streets because he befriends people too easily.
    Cite as 
    301 Or App 206
     (2019)                              215
    But that rationale for commitment would seem to contra-
    vene the principle against using commitment procedures as
    a paternalistic vehicle for saving people from themselves.
    Here, the record does not reflect that appellant’s undiscern-
    ing disposition is because of his mental disorder as opposed
    to, for example, his autism or his natural temperament.
    Furthermore, although appellant had been assaulted and
    robbed in the past, any conclusion that similar harms would
    befall him in the near future because of his mental disorder
    would be an inferential leap that is inconsistent with the
    clear-and-convincing evidentiary requirement. See State v.
    H. S., 
    194 Or App 587
    , 595, 95 P3d 1146 (2004) (“ ‘Clear and
    convincing evidence’ is evidence of ‘extraordinary persua-
    siveness,’ such that the ‘truth of the facts asserted is highly
    probable[.]’ ” (Citations omitted.)).
    Viewed as a whole, the record establishes that
    appellant will have certain difficulties navigating through
    life with his co-occurring mental and developmental chal-
    lenges, and the trial court’s concern for appellant’s well-
    being outside of hospital confines is understandable. But
    involuntary civil commitment implicates serious liberty
    interests and social stigmatization and must be supported
    by clear and convincing evidence. See, e.g., State v. D. R., 
    239 Or App 576
    , 582-83, 244 P3d 916 (2010) (“Given the serious
    deprivation of liberty and social stigma that are attendant
    to a civil commitment, and the fact that such a preventive
    confinement is predicated on a prediction of future behavior,
    our cases have articulated certain minimum evidentiary
    standards for commitment.”). On this record, the trial court
    erred in determining that, because of his mental disorder,
    appellant is unable to provide for his basic needs.
    Reversed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A168620

Judges: Ortega

Filed Date: 12/11/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024