Jefferson County v. M. P. ( 2020 )


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  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                       NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                    This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    March 5, 2020
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Sheila T. Reiff             petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals        Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.        2019AP2229-FT                                           Cir. Ct. No. 2018ME139
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                       IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT IV
    IN THE MATTER OF THE MENTAL COMMITMENT OF M. P.:
    JEFFERSON COUNTY,
    PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    M. P.,
    RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.
    APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Jefferson County:
    WILLIAM V. GRUBER, Judge. Affirmed.
    No. 2019AP2229-FT
    ¶1      BLANCHARD, J.1              M.P. appeals an order of the circuit court
    extending her mental health commitment by 12 months under WIS. STAT. ch. 51 and
    authorizing continued outpatient care with conditions that include involuntary
    medication as necessary. M.P. does not dispute that Jefferson County proved by
    clear and convincing evidence that she is mentally ill and a proper subject for
    treatment. See Portage Cty. v. J.W.K., 
    2019 WI 54
    , ¶18, 
    386 Wis. 2d 672
    , 
    927 N.W.2d 509
     (citing WIS. STAT. § 51.20(1)(a), (am)) (petitioner seeking
    recommitment must prove by clear and convincing evidence, first, that the
    individual is mentally ill and a proper subject for treatment and, second, that the
    individual is dangerous). M.P.’s argument is that Jefferson County failed to prove
    by clear and convincing evidence that she is dangerous. I conclude that the County
    met its burden of proof and accordingly affirm.
    ¶2      Whether the facts in the record satisfy the statutory standard for
    recommitment is a question of law that I review de novo. Waukesha Cty. v. J.W.J.,
    
    2017 WI 57
    , ¶15, 
    375 Wis. 2d 542
    , 
    895 N.W.2d 783
    .
    ¶3      As background, I begin by summarizing the events leading to the
    initial commitment of M.P. that underlies the commitment extension at issue. In
    November 2018, a social worker with the Jefferson County Department of Human
    Services filed a statement of emergency detention in the circuit court that alleged
    1
    This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(d) (2017-18).
    Pursuant to a January 9, 2020 order, the appeal was placed on the expedited calendar and the parties
    have submitted memo briefs. See WIS. STATE. RULE 809.17. Briefing was complete on
    February 20, 2020. All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2017-18 version unless
    otherwise noted.
    Separately, M.P. addresses potential mootness, given uncertainty about the timing of the
    resolution of this appeal challenging a 12-month order issued on May 6, 2019. I need not address
    mootness, because the order remains in effect.
    2
    No. 2019AP2229-FT
    the following.   M.P. was then receiving services from the Jefferson County
    Community Support Program (CSP). Two CSP employees, a therapist and the
    medical director, had reported that M.P. had made statements about shooting a
    cousin and her husband and burning down a house, after M.P. stopped taking
    medications as prescribed. Also in November 2018, the circuit court issued an order
    of commitment for M.P. for a period of six months and an order for involuntary
    medication and treatment. Before the six-month period expired, in March 2019, the
    County petitioned for an extension, alleging in part that M.P. “has not taken her
    psychiatric medications as prescribed” on nine specified dates, “causing an increase
    of symptoms such as paranoia and avoidant behaviors.”
    ¶4     The court appointed Dr. Jeffrey Marcus, a psychiatrist, to examine
    M.P. and submit a report on her condition. In April 2019, Dr. Marcus filed a report
    after performing the following tasks: reviewing treatment records of the CSP and
    the history of Chapter 51 documentation regarding M.P.; discussing M.P. with CSP
    staff; and interviewing M.P. He concluded that “there is a substantial likelihood,
    based on [M.P.’s] treatment record, that [she] would be a proper subject for
    commitment if treatment were withdrawn.”
    ¶5     Dr. Marcus’s report includes the following “Brief History”:
    [M.P.] carries the diagnosis of schizophrenia and receives
    multiple psychotropic agents. She has a chronic history of
    paranoid ideation, auditory and visual hallucinations,
    thought disorganization, and impairment of executive
    functioning. She has a history of numerous past psychiatric
    hospitalizations. She has an extensive history of treatment
    non-adherence and has become acutely symptomatic when
    not taking her medications. Her current commitment stems
    from an incident in 2018 when she developed homicidal
    ideation toward her cousin and her cousin’s husband.
    According to CSP staff, this homicidal ideation was
    associated with acute paranoid ideation.
    3
    No. 2019AP2229-FT
    [M.P.] currently resides alone in [city named]. Staff
    expressed concern about inconsistent oral medication
    adherence, but she has been consistent with her Abilify
    Maintena injection.[2] No recent suicidal or homicidal
    thoughts or behavior have been described. No recent
    substance abuse was noted in the records.
    ¶6      Dr. Marcus’s report regarding his interview with M.P. included the
    following observations. While M.P. exhibited a “[t]hought process” that was
    “mostly organized,” she described interactions with and knowledge of her son that
    appeared to be “hallucinatory and delusional in nature,” and her “reality testing
    appeared poor.”3       M.P. told Dr. Marcus that she “would not suffer negative
    consequences if she were to stop [taking] her medications.” “Chronic impairment
    of insight and judgment appeared present.               Chronic impairment of executive
    functioning was evident.”
    ¶7      On the topic of dangerousness, Dr. Marcus specifically concluded in
    his report:
    There is a high likelihood of psychotic decompensation if
    current treatment were withdrawn. This would result in an
    increased risk of dangerousness to self and others. Of
    specific concern would be the emergence of homicidal
    thoughts and erratic behavior associated with acute
    psychosis.    Her psychotic symptoms are reportedly
    improved when [she is] adherent to her psychotropic
    treatment.
    ¶8      At a circuit court hearing in May 2019, the only witness was Dr.
    Marcus.       Called by the County, he testified consistently with his report, as
    2
    During testimony in this case, Dr. Marcus explained that Abilify is M.P.’s primary
    medication to control her mental illness symptoms, which she is to take by injection and orally.
    3
    Dr. Marcus testified that, as one would expect, “reality testing” in psychiatry involves
    assessing the ability of a person to distinguish between reality and delusion.
    4
    No. 2019AP2229-FT
    summarized above.4 This included the following, all to a reasonable degree of
    medical certainty. M.P. suffered from schizophrenia, which is treatable primarily
    through antipsychotic medications. “[D]angerousness would reoccur” if M.P. were
    to stop taking her medications, causing her to become “increasingly paranoid and
    disorganized” in her thinking. Grounds for this conclusion included the following:
    M.P. was subject to emergency detention in 2018 when she “developed homicidal
    ideas toward her cousin and her cousin’s husband” and M.P. has “a fairly extensive
    history of not adhering to her treatment,” resulting in acute symptoms. As a result
    of her mental illness, M.P. was substantially incapable of making an informed
    choice as to whether to accept or refuse medication.
    ¶9       On cross examination, Dr. Marcus acknowledged the following: M.P.
    had been consistent in receiving injectable medication and perhaps in taking oral
    medication; she had no hospitalizations or emergency detentions over the prior six
    months; and there had been no recent homicidal or suicidal thoughts or acts.
    ¶10      Counsel for M.P. did not attempt to challenge any of Dr. Marcus’s
    testimony during cross examination and acknowledged to the circuit court that Dr.
    Marcus’s “testimony … obviously [is] credible with his credentials.” However,
    counsel challenged Dr. Marcus’s conclusion that “[t]here is a high likelihood of
    psychotic decompensation.” Counsel argued that this was “just conjecture” because
    Dr. Marcus “rel[ied] on prior history to make a statement [about] what the future
    will hold.”
    ¶11      The circuit court credited Dr. Marcus’s testimony and concluded that
    the State had carried its burden. The court’s conclusion rested in part on Dr.
    4
    The report was moved into evidence at the hearing without objection by M.P.
    5
    No. 2019AP2229-FT
    Marcus’s assessments that M.P. was unable to apply an understanding of the
    advantages and disadvantages of maintaining treatment and that this presented a risk
    of dangerousness to herself or others. I agree with the circuit court that, based on
    Dr. Marcus’s testimony and his report, the County carried its burden of proof under
    the applicable legal standards.
    ¶12    A county seeking to initiate a Chapter 51 commitment must prove by
    clear and convincing evidence that the subject is mentally ill, a proper subject for
    treatment, and presently dangerous. WIS. STAT. § 51.20(1)(a), (1)(am), (13)(e).
    When, as here, a county seeks to extend a commitment, it can meet its burden of
    proving dangerousness, pursuant to paragraph (1)(am), by “showing that there is a
    substantial likelihood, based on the subject individual’s treatment record, that the
    individual would be a proper subject for commitment if treatment were withdrawn.”
    Sec. 51.20(1)(am).
    ¶13    As M.P. acknowledges, this path to proving dangerousness was
    created out of recognition that dangerousness “can persist even when the overt
    behavior or statements that led to … commitment subside.” As explained in J.W.K.,
    this path is designed to avoid revolving-door commitments consisting of repeating
    cycles of dangerousness, followed by treatment, followed by lack of treatment,
    followed by dangerousness, etc. See J.W.K., 
    386 Wis. 2d 672
    , ¶19.
    ¶14    M.P. makes three arguments, which I address in turn. The first
    argument is somewhat involved. It is not framed as a constitutional challenge to the
    substantial likelihood dangerousness test for recommitment in WIS. STAT.
    § 51.20(1)(am), but it is based on due process. The argument appears to be the
    following. The legislature could not have intended courts to interpret the substantial
    likelihood dangerousness test to allow counties to prove dangerousness absent
    6
    No. 2019AP2229-FT
    evidence of dangerous statements or conduct that post-date the original
    commitment, because this would violate due process. Under this interpretation, the
    County failed to carry its burden here because, to establish the potential for actual
    dangerous conduct, Dr. Marcus exclusively relied on evidence relating to M.P.’s
    November 2018 statements about shooting a cousin and her husband and burning
    down a house in preparing his report in April 2019 and testifying in May 2019.
    ¶15     This argument may involve a concept that we have explained in an
    unpublished but authored opinion that I consider persuasive. The concept is that
    WIS. STAT. § 51.20(1)(am) requires proof of current dangerousness, even though
    the statute relieves the State of a burden to show “recent acts” evincing
    dangerousness. Waupaca Cty. v. K.E.K, 2018AP1887, unpublished slip op., ¶¶37-
    39 (WI App Sept. 26, 2019). Under this requirement, the petitioner must prove a
    substantial likelihood that the subject will harm himself or herself or others in the
    absence of treatment. M.P. may mean to argue that current dangerousness cannot
    be proven through conduct that occurred before commitment. However, she fails
    to explain why that is so as a matter of logic or of statutory interpretation, or
    pursuant to any due process jurisprudence or other authority. M.P. provides no
    reason to think that the nature and timing of dangerous statements or conduct alleged
    to have pre-dated the original commitment are not simply part of the mix in
    evaluating whether the petitioner has shown the required “substantial likelihood,
    based on the subject individual’s treatment record, that the individual would be a
    proper subject for commitment if treatment were withdrawn.” See § 51.20(1)(am).5
    5
    I do not understand a reference that M.P. includes in this argument to the general rule
    that courts should attempt to give meaning to each word in a statute. I reject as undeveloped
    whatever argument is intended.
    7
    No. 2019AP2229-FT
    ¶16    The second argument is apparently the following. The legislature
    could not have intended courts to interpret the substantial likelihood dangerousness
    test to allow counties to prove dangerousness absent evidence of dangerous
    statements or conduct that post-date the original commitment, because this would
    create “perpetual extensions of Chapter 51 commitment[s].”         Such “perpetual
    extensions” would “fly in the face of Chapter 55,” which provides for long-term
    care as opposed to short-term care.          This argument appears to rest on an
    unreasonable assumption, namely, that courts will fail to properly assess the nature
    and timing of dangerous statements or conduct alleged to have pre-dated the original
    commitment and as a result will “perpetually” grant recommitment petitions based
    on all such statements or conduct. Put differently, it could be a winning argument
    against recommitment that dangerous statements or conduct are old enough, weak
    enough, or otherwise insufficient to support clear and convincing evidence under
    the substantial likelihood of dangerousness test. However, as I now explain in
    addressing the third argument, M.P. fails to persuade me that she can prevail under
    any such argument in this case.
    ¶17    The third argument generally challenges the sufficiency of the
    evidence. M.P. contends that the circuit court should have interpreted the substance
    of Dr. Marcus’s testimony to be that “M.P.’s mental health has stabilized and that
    she’s turned over a new leaf,” and therefore the County did not provide the required
    clear and convincing evidence of dangerousness. It is true that various pieces of Dr.
    Marcus’s testimony are favorable to M.P. This includes his acknowledgement of
    her consistent use of Abilify injections during the current commitment period, the
    apparent absence of recent suicidal or homicidal thoughts or behavior, and the
    apparent absence of recent substance abuse. However, it remains that Dr. Marcus
    understood M.P. to say that she believed that she could stop taking medications
    8
    No. 2019AP2229-FT
    without negative consequences, and that she exhibited “[c]hronic impairment of
    insight and judgment” and “[c]hronic impairment of executive functioning.” These
    conclusions are striking in light of the November 2018 events, which were serious
    and were relatively recent as of the time of the recommitment hearing. Further, Dr.
    Marcus was not impeached in any manner during cross examination and M.P. did
    not offer any contrary opinions or evidence. In sum, the only evidence presented at
    the recommitment hearing established, to a level that is clear and convincing, that
    all of the criteria for extending the commitment were satisfied and that an order for
    involuntary medication was warranted.
    By the Court.—Order affirmed.
    This    opinion   will   not       be   published.   See     WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)4.
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019AP002229-FT

Filed Date: 3/5/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024