Judges: WINSTON BRYANT, Attorney General
Filed Date: 9/7/1993
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The Honorable John E. Miller State Representative P.O. Box 420 Melbourne, Arkansas 72556-0420
Dear Representative Miller:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on the following questions:
1. Did passage of 1989 Ark. Act 861, which includes a general repealing clause, effectively repeal A.C.A. §
27-16-604 (a)(5) (1987)?2. Does a voluntary or an involuntary admission under A.C.A. §
20-47-201 et seq. (Repl. 1991) constitute an adjudication that an individual is afflicted with or suffering from a mental disability or disease within the meaning of A.C.A. §27-16-604 (a)(5) (1987)?3. If such an admission does constitute such an adjudication, does release constitute restoration to competency under A.C.A. §
27-16-604 (a)(5) (1987)?4. In light of A.C.A. §
20-47-223 (Repl. 1991), may the Office of Driver Services automatically suspend the license of a person admitted to the State Hospital under A.C.A. §20-47-201 et. seq. (Repl. 1991) without some further adjudication of incompetency to drive a motor vehicle?
In my opinion, the answer to your first question is "no." The general repealing clause in 1989 Ark. Act 861, § 28 repeals Act 243 of 1987 and all other laws in conflict with Act 861. The issue posed by your first question is whether A.C.A. §
The office shall not issue any license under this chapter to any person: as an operator or chauffeur who has previously been adjudged to be afflicted with or suffering from any mental disability or disease and who has not at the time of application been restored to competency by the methods provided by law.
The issue presented in your first question is whether the above provision is inconsistent with 1989 Ark. Act 861, § 16(b), which is now codified at A.C.A. §
No person shall be deemed incompetent to manage his affairs, to contract, to hold professional, occupational, or motor vehicle driver's licenses, to marry or to obtain a divorce, to vote, to make a will or to exercise any other civil right solely by reason of that person's admission to the mental health services system. [Emphasis added].
It is my opinion that A.C.A. §
The provision at A.C.A. §
In my opinion, the answer to your second question is "no." While the term "adjudged," within the context of the phrase "adjudged to be afflicted with or suffering from any mental disability or disease" located at A.C.A. §
To pass on judicially, to decide, settle, or decree . . . Implies the judicial determination of a fact, and the entry of a judgment.
In addition, under A.C.A. §
For the reasons stated above in response to your first and second questions, your third question becomes moot. As I have stated, it is my opinion that admission to the mental health services system does not constitute per se an adjudication of incapacity.
In response to your fourth question, it is my opinion that the answer is "no." Under A.C.A. §
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General Nancy A. Hall.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:cyh