in the Matter of A.D. ( 2020 )


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  •                   In the
    Court of Appeals
    Second Appellate District of Texas
    at Fort Worth
    ___________________________
    No. 02-19-00380-CV
    No. 02-19-00381-CV
    ___________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF A.D.
    On Appeal from County Court at Law No. 1
    Wichita County, Texas
    Trial Court Nos. CCL1-MH2019-0359; CCL1-MH2019-0423
    Before Gabriel, Womack, and Wallach, JJ.
    Memorandum Opinion by Justice Gabriel
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    In these preferential and accelerated appeals, appellant A.D. seeks relief from
    the trial court’s (1) order to authorize psychoactive medication and (2) order granting
    temporary inpatient mental-health services and committing her to the North Texas
    State Hospital (NTSH). See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. §§ 574.070, 574.108;
    Tex. R. App. P. 28.1(a). In two issues, she argues that the evidence is legally and
    factually insufficient to support the commitment order, which also mandates reversal
    of the psychoactive-medication order. We conclude that the evidence, although
    conflicting, was sufficient to support the order for temporary mental-health services
    and that the psychoactive-medication order, therefore, may also stand.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.D. was committed to NTSH in March 2019 after she stopped eating for five
    days, drinking only water and coffee, and would not come inside her house because
    she believed she had been infected with lice. By April 8, A.D.’s symptoms “remitted,”
    and she was discharged. But her symptoms “recurred several times.”
    On September 16, 2019, A.D.’s husband Mike filed an application for A.D.’s
    emergency detention. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 573.011. In his affidavit,
    Mike stated A.D. showed a substantial risk of harming herself or others: “Stays up for
    days at a time, drinks out of the [non-potable] water. Thinks she has super lice, will
    not see the doctor or take her medication. H[ears] her old boyfriends talking to her
    through the radio. God has told her to kill the neighborhood cats, which gave her
    2
    lice.” Mike also affirmed that the risk of harm was imminent unless A.D. was
    immediately restrained: “Threatened her parents and sister. Killed frogs and gave
    them to our neighbor at night. Bath[e]s, but doesn’t use soap because it is poison.
    Sometimes will not eat for days (fasting). Our 10 year old daughter is scared of her
    mother!!”   The district attorney filed a motion for protective custody and an
    application for court-ordered mental-health services, attaching a certificate of medical
    examination for mental illness by Dr. C.E. Llauger Mier. See 
    id. §§ 574.001,
    574.009,
    574.011.
    Mier certified that his “brief diagnosis” of A.D. after assessing her condition on
    September 16 was that she suffered from nonspecific psychosis; was likely to cause
    serious harm to herself or others; and was suffering severe and abnormal mental,
    emotional, or physical distress. Mier detailed the bases of his opinion:
    Client is not eating, drinking brown water, sleeping outside. Killing
    animals and throwing them in neighbor[’]s yard. She thinks she is
    covered in lice. Has a paranoia with husband. ‘He is petting cats with
    lice and then touches me.’ Also God gave her the mission to kill cats in
    neighborhood.
    In his supporting affidavit, Mier delineated A.D.’s statements and actions that led to
    his recommendation to admit A.D. to NTSH, including her belief that the sheriff and
    firefighters were conspiring to hurt her and that she was aggressive toward her 25-
    year-old daughter. Mier concluded that A.D. was delusional, aggressive, paranoid,
    moody, labile, and hallucinatory.
    3
    A magistrate ordered A.D. into protective custody, finding that A.D. presented
    a substantial risk of serious harm to herself or others if not immediately restrained.
    See 
    id. § 574.022.
    The magistrate also ordered the preparation of an alternative
    treatment recommendation (ATR). See 
    id. § 574.012.
    On September 24, Dr. Peter Fadow filed a certificate of medical examination
    for mental illness based on his September 20 examination of A.D. See 
    id. §§ 574.009,
    574.011. Fadow diagnosed A.D. with bipolar I disorder with psychotic features and a
    severe manic phase. Fadow opined that A.D. was likely to cause serious harm to
    herself; was suffering severe and abnormal mental, emotional, or physical distress; and
    was unable to function independently based on the following facts:
    Patient has symptoms of mania and psychosis. She has acted on
    delusional thought and has severely restricted her food intake
    endangering her health. She [weighed] 116lbs in April 2019 [during] her
    last admission. She now weigh[s] 96lbs and has a body ma[ss] index of
    14.69. Normal BMI is 18 to 25. Patient noted by husband to drink
    from a fish pond on the property where she lives. Patient admits
    shooting a BB gun towards feral cats on her property because she
    believes they have given her an infection with “super lice[.]”
    In his supporting affidavit, Fadow included A.D.’s statements about the cats and her
    reticence to eat: “I shoot the BB gun at the cats and any dogs. I will try to hit metal
    around them. I try to make a popping sound[]. I’ve been killing frogs. They are
    slimy and they damage my herbal garden with slime. I can’t eat soy. It’s in all bread I
    won’t eat it.” Fadow noted that A.D. was alert but that she was irritable and that her
    4
    speech was “pressured, contains paranoid delusions and derails.”                 Fadow
    recommended a temporary commitment to NTSH.
    That same day, Fadow filed an application for an order to authorize
    psychoactive medications based on her mania, delusions, and psychosis, leading to
    “significant malnutrition.” See 
    id. § 574.104.
    Fadow believed that A.D. did not have
    the capacity to make a decision about medication and that medication would lead to a
    remission of her symptoms and remove the danger to her health.
    On September 26, a “Continuity Care Coordinator” filed an ATR that A.D. be
    hospitalized in NTSH for 90 days.          The recommendation was based on the
    coordinator’s September 23 interview of A.D. The coordinator noted that A.D. was
    alert, oriented, stable, and had appropriate affect; however, he recognized that A.D.
    “continue[d] to refuse medications to treat her psychosis” and that her insight and
    judgment were “limited.” It had been reported to the coordinator, presumably by
    Mike, that A.D. smoked home-grown marijuana six times a day.
    The trial court set a hearing on both applications for September 30. At the
    start of the hearing, the trial court took judicial notice of the parties’ prior filings,
    including the certificates of medical examination and the ATR. See generally In re C.S.,
    
    208 S.W.3d 77
    , 81 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006, pet. denied) (recognizing judicial
    notice may be taken of the court’s filings but not of the truth of any facts alleged in
    those filings). Fadow testified to many of the facts contained in his certificate of
    medical examination and in the ATR.
    5
    Fadow explained that A.D. was malnourished and had been fasting while at
    NTSH. A.D. should weigh between 135 and 140 pounds. When the application for
    court-ordered mental-health services was filed, A.D. weighed 96 pounds;1 on the day
    of the hearing, she weighed 102.5 pounds with a BMI of 15.2 She told Fadow that she
    would not eat processed food, legumes, or soy products because of food allergies
    caused by a blood transfusion she had during a gastrointestinal surgery in 2005 and
    because God had commanded her to do so. When twice threatened with a feeding
    tube, however, A.D. would begin to eat again. No food-allergy symptoms were noted
    when A.D. resumed eating. Fadow testified that A.D.’s aversion to certain types of
    foods and belief of food allergies caused by a blood transfusion were paranoid
    delusions. According to Fadow, any stomach cramps or physical reactions A.D. could
    have experienced were probably the result of eating after a prolonged period of
    fasting. Fadow also testified that Mike had reported A.D. would lock their ten-year-
    old daughter in the bathroom for extended periods of time because A.D. believed her
    daughter had “somehow wronged her.”
    Fadow opined that A.D. was unable to make a rational and informed decision
    about medications based on her mental illness and that court-ordered medications
    would be in her best interest. The risks and benefits of the proposed medications had
    1
    This was a 20 pound loss from her admission to NTSH six months earlier.
    2
    A.D. testified she weighed 104.7 pounds at the hearing with a BMI of “just
    less than 21 percent.”
    6
    been explained to A.D., but she was unable to appreciate them. Fadow testified that
    her current symptoms would not resolve without pharmacological intervention, unlike
    her prior hospitalization:
    She told me that she smokes marijuana three times a day and she has a
    strong smell of something had burned near her, and I believe that - - and
    this is based on some of the information the husband provided. She’s
    always had cyclic mood disturbance, but in March this is the first time
    that the combination of heavy use of marijuana with her bipolar disorder
    has led to a hospitalization, and a significant event where she is sitting in
    the sun and risked injury to herself. Fortunately it resolved when she
    stopped using the marijuana. At this time it’s not resolving as well, and
    that’s why I think she’ll continue to be psychotic and her mood will
    continue to be significantly impaired and she needs the help of
    medications to help resolve it this time.
    Fadow stated that there was no alternative to the medications to treat A.D.’s
    symptoms. Without the requested medications, A.D. will be psychotic, will likely
    continue to fast and to put her health at risk, and could focus on others at NTSH in
    order to harm them.
    A.D. testified and disputed much of Fadow’s testimony. She denied locking
    her daughter in the bathroom for extended periods, but A.D. admitted that she would
    put her 10-year-old daughter in the bathroom for ten minutes to allow her to read
    because it was a “good reading technique.”3 She explained that she and Mike had
    marital problems because Mike was “disloyal,” which caused her to cry “for two
    years.”
    3
    A.D. homeschooled her 10-year-old daughter.
    7
    A.D. stated that she resumed eating at NTSH because the staff started feeding
    her better food that she was not allergic to. A.D. stressed that her food allergies were
    caused by the 2005 transfusion and resulted in severe physical reactions such as
    stomach cramps. She also explained why she fasted and stayed outside before her
    most recent hospitalization: “[T]o harvest and prepare tomatoes for hot sauce” and
    because Mike had locked her outside.
    She admitted to smoking marijuana daily but only “1 or 2 puffs three times a
    day maximum,” not the six times per day reported in the ATR. She asserted that she
    declined the psychoactive medications because of their risk for liver and kidney
    damage, which was a concern based on her family history. She stated that she would
    take medications if she were convinced she had a mental illness and if the medications
    were not “chemically composed.” When asked what would make her believe she had
    a mental illness, A.D. seemed to focus on whether she had harmed someone else but
    quickly veered off topic:
    If I had harmed someone, if I had flown off the handle without
    justifiably being angry or being sad or being sorrowful. If I had the
    respect from my parents that - - please back away, give us respect. We
    are almost 50. We can handle a marital issue on our own. Our - - my
    parents, they have the 25-year-old living at their home.[4] I asked her to
    leave our home. She has a job, she has a healthy bank account of almost
    $20,000, she was taking advantage in every way. I asked her to please
    buy her own home. The interest rates had dropped to two and a half
    percent. She would have been able to have a nice home for what - -
    prior to the year before, she would have had to have a bank note. We
    allowed her to stay home and pay her medical - - her college debt. She
    4
    It appears that A.D. was referring to her and Mike’s older daughter.
    8
    received a scholarship, healthy, healthy scholarship. And this - - two
    years had passed and she still was having us pay her insurance and her
    phone and she was watching things inappropriate for the ten-year-old.
    We - - we keep a pretty stern household when it comes to what you’re
    allowed to watch or what you’re allowed to - - I asked the 25-year-old to
    please leave so the ten-year-old would have a normal healthy raising, and
    not - - not be trying to behave like she was an adult. She’s ten. She likes
    climbing trees and mud pies, play, trampoline and swimming pool. I - -
    I believe that there’s - - there are reasons when you’re sorrowful. There
    are reasons when a husband and a wife need to speak on their own
    about things. My husband refused to speak to me.
    A.D. contended that only she and her attorney were telling the truth and that
    everyone else involved—Fadow, Mier, Mike, the staff at NTSH, and the continuity
    care coordinator who prepared the ATR—lied about her actions and mental state.
    The trial court found by clear and convincing evidence that A.D., a person with
    a mental illness, (1) was likely to cause serious harm to herself and (2) was suffering
    severe and abnormal mental, emotional, or physical distress; experiencing substantial
    mental or physical deterioration of her ability to function independently, which was
    exhibited by her inability to provide for her basic needs; and unable to make a rational
    and informed decision as to whether or not to submit to treatment. See Tex. Health &
    Safety Code Ann. § 574.034(a), (c). The trial court also found by clear and convincing
    evidence that A.D. lacked the capacity to make a decision regarding the administration
    of the proposed medications, which were in A.D.’s best interest. See 
    id. § 574.106(a–
    1)(1). Thus, the trial court ordered A.D. committed to NTSH for 90 days and
    authorized the administration of psychoactive medications. See 
    id. §§ 574.036(e),
    574.106(g)–(h).   A.D. argues that the evidence did not support the order for
    9
    temporary mental-health services, which eviscerates the basis for the medication
    order.
    II. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
    A. STANDARDS OF REVIEW, SCOPE OF REVIEW, AND BURDEN OF PROOF
    The State bore the burden of establishing by clear and convincing evidence the
    statutory requisites for the temporary commitment order and for the court-ordered
    administration of psychoactive medication.        See 
    id. §§ 574.034(a),
    574.106(a–1).
    Because of the State’s higher burden of proof, we apply a heightened review standard
    for sufficiency. See In re M.T., Nos. 02-17-00011-CV, 02-17-00012-CV, 
    2017 WL 1018596
    , at *5 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Mar. 16, 2017, no pet.) (per curiam) (mem.
    op.) (citing In re C.H., 
    89 S.W.3d 17
    , 25 (Tex. 2002)). Even though the trial court took
    judicial notice of the certificates of medical examination and the ATR, we may not
    consider those in our sufficiency review because they were not admitted into evidence
    at the hearing. See In re A.J.W., Nos. 02-15-00028-CV, 02-15-00029-CV, 
    2015 WL 1407890
    , at *4 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Mar. 26, 2015, pet. denied) (mem. op.). We
    may consider, however, any facts Fadow testified to that were also included in his
    certificate or in the ATR.
    Regarding legal sufficiency, we determine whether the evidence would allow a
    fact-finder to reasonably form a firm belief or conviction regarding the truth of the
    allegations sought to be established. See M.T., 
    2017 WL 1018596
    , at *5. We look at
    all the admitted evidence in the light most favorable to the finding, indulging every
    10
    reasonable inference in favor of the finding, and assume that the fact-finder resolved
    any disputed facts in favor of its finding if a reasonable fact-finder could have done
    so. See 
    id. In a
    heightened factual-sufficiency review, we must give due consideration
    to evidence that the fact-finder could reasonably have found to be clear and
    convincing. See In re J.F.C., 
    96 S.W.3d 256
    , 266 (Tex. 2002). Evidence is factually
    sufficient if the fact-finder could reasonably form a firm belief or conviction about the
    truth of the allegations in the applications. K.E.W. v. State, 
    333 S.W.3d 850
    , 855 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2010, no pet.); In re M.M., 
    184 S.W.3d 416
    , 418 (Tex.
    App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.).
    In both a legal- and factual-sufficiency review, the fact-finder is the sole judge
    of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony. In re
    S.P., 
    444 S.W.3d 299
    , 302–03 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2014, no pet.). Clear and
    convincing is not unequivocal or undisputed evidence; it is that measure or degree of
    proof that will lead to a firm belief or conviction as to the truth of the allegations. 
    Id. at 302.
    B. ORDER FOR TEMPORARY MENTAL-HEALTH SERVICES
    Clear and convincing evidence to support an order for temporary mental-health
    services must include (1) expert testimony and (2) evidence of a recent overt act or a
    continuing pattern of behavior that tends to confirm the likelihood of serious harm to
    the proposed patient or others, or the proposed patient’s distress and the
    deterioration of the proposed patient’s ability to function. See Tex. Health & Safety
    11
    Code Ann. § 574.034(d). A.D. asserts that the evidence was legally and factually
    insufficient to show a recent overt act or a continuing pattern of harmful behavior.
    A.D. contends that her testimony directly contradicted Fadow’s testimony about her
    delusions and that there is no evidence of an overt act showing a likelihood of serious
    harm.
    Even though A.D. contradicted Fadow’s opinion regarding A.D.’s need for
    temporary mental-health services, Fadow described A.D.’s specific behavior forming
    the basis of his opinion and discussed a recent overt act or a continuing pattern of
    behavior confirming the likelihood of serious self-harm. See J.M. v. State, 
    178 S.W.3d 185
    , 193 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, no pet.) (“[A]n expert opinion
    recommending involuntary commitment must be supported by the factual bases on
    which it is grounded and not simply recite the statutory criteria.”). The trial court as
    the fact-finder was entitled to credit Fadow’s testimony over A.D.’s and to weigh the
    evidence in light of those credibility choices. Viewed in this light, the evidence
    authorized the trial court to reasonably form a firm belief or conviction about the
    truth of the allegations in the State’s application for temporary mental-health services.
    See, e.g., 
    M.M., 184 S.W.3d at 418
    –19; State ex rel. M.D., No. 12-05-00425-CV,
    
    2006 WL 1791661
    , at *4–5 (Tex. App.—Tyler June 30, 2006, no pet.) (mem. op.);
    State ex rel. K.H., No. 2-02-301-CV, 
    2003 WL 21404821
    , at *3–4 (Tex. App.—Fort
    Worth June 19, 2003, no pet.) (mem. op.). We overrule issue one.
    12
    C. ADMINISTRATION OF PSYCHOACTIVE MEDICATIONS
    In her second issue, A.D. argues that the order authorizing psychoactive
    medications was erroneous because it was not based on a valid order for temporary
    mental-health services. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 574.106(a)(1). This
    issue, as argued by A.D., is predicated on a conclusion that the order for temporary
    mental-health services was supported by insufficient evidence. Cf. In re State ex rel.
    K.D.C., 
    78 S.W.3d 543
    , 551–52 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2002, no pet.) (“[H]aving
    sustained K.D.C.’s [sufficiency challenges to the order for temporary mental-health
    services], we also . . . reverse the trial court’s order authorizing administration of
    psychoactive medication.”). It was not, as we have discussed. Accordingly, we
    overrule issue two.
    III. CONCLUSION
    Although A.D. disagreed with Fadow that she required temporary mental-
    health services and explained why she refused to eat or take medications, the trial
    court could have reasonably relied on Fadow’s contrary testimony that A.D. would
    continue to deteriorate and harm herself based on her continuing delusions and
    paranoia about food and about her health.         We will not second-guess those
    determinations. The evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support the trial
    court’s order for temporary mental-health services. Because this order was supported
    by sufficient evidence, the psychoactive-medication order is not ipso facto invalid as
    argued by A.D. We overrule A.D.’s issues and affirm the trial court’s October 2, 2019
    13
    “Judgment Granting Temporary Inpatient Mental Health Commitment” and “Order
    to Authorize Psychoactive Medication.” See Tex. R. App. P. 43.2(a).
    /s/ Lee Gabriel
    Lee Gabriel
    Justice
    Delivered: January 7, 2019
    14