DocketNumber: A165889
Judges: Aoyagi, Dehoog, Hadlock
Filed Date: 3/20/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
AOYAGI, J., *705Appellant seeks reversal of an order committing her involuntarily to the Oregon Health Authority for up to 180 days. Appellant contends that the trial court erred because the evidence in the record was insufficient to establish that she was dangerous to others due to a mental disorder. See ORS 426.130(1)(a)(C) ; ORS 426.005(1)(f)(A). We agree with appellant and, accordingly, reverse.
Unless we exercise our discretion to review de novo , which we do not in this case, we "view[ ] the evidence, as supplemented and buttressed by permissible derivative inferences, in the light most favorable to the trial court's disposition and assess whether, when so viewed, the record was legally sufficient to permit that outcome." State v. L. R. ,
*1199see also State v. S. R. J. ,
Appellant suffers from bipolar disorder with psychotic features. Her primary caregiver and sole support is D, to whom she was married for 22 years until their divorce in 2007. Appellant has continued to live with D since their divorce.
Appellant stopped taking her medications in April 2017. Several months later, around August 1, D told appellant that she should go to bed. It was around 2:00 or 3:00 a.m., and appellant had been sitting in a chair for almost 24 hours. To facilitate her going to bed, D removed a number of religious statues from the top of appellant's bed, wrapped them in a blanket, and threw them on the floor. When appellant went in the bedroom and saw what he had done, she "went bonkers." According to D, "[s]he told me I attacked St. Anthony and I was going to hell, and she was going to kill me, and she went up to the fireplace, grabbed a poker and raised it over her head like that and was actually coming after me." D was in a recliner, so he could not back up, and "[i]t was scary." Appellant was about four feet in *706front of him, and the poker was two-and-a-half to three feet long. D thought that appellant was actually going to hit him, but, "at the last minute," D grabbed a large brass lamp from the side table, and appellant backed off. Appellant calmed down after about five minutes and put the poker down. It was "pretty scary," and D thought about calling the police. He did not, because, within five minutes, appellant started laughing and was back to being "jovial, nice, [and] friendly."
Appellant was subsequently brought to the hospital for other reasons (not described in the admitted evidence), which led to a commitment hearing that took place on August 15. Appellant was verbally disruptive throughout the hearing, including constantly interrupting the witnesses, the attorneys, and the judge, and frequently insulting them.
The state called three witnesses: Gida, D, and McAlexander. Gida, a mental health therapist and the pre-commitment investigator, testified that appellant has a diagnosis of bipolar disorder with psychotic features. Gida met appellant once, on August 9, and tried to interview her with limited success. For her investigation, Gida reviewed past reports, met with appellant's case manager, spoke with D, and spoke with nurses and the mental health therapist at the hospital where appellant was initially transported. Based on her investigation, Gida understood appellant's presentation in court to be "how she's been presenting all along." Gida described appellant's symptoms as including elevated mood, agitation, lack of insight, lack of impulse control, response to internal stimuli, preoccupation, and *707a delusional belief that she has a little boy at home. After explaining in some detail why she believed that appellant was dangerous to herself, Gida was asked whether appellant was dangerous to others. Gida answered, "I believe so." When asked why, she cited, without elaboration, "the reports from [D]," appellant being "very unpredictable," and the "aggressiveness and the agitation" displayed at the hearing. Gida opined that any dangerousness to self or others was caused by appellant's mental disorder.
Asked whether appellant had "been violent towards [him] recently," D described the incident with the fireplace poker. According to D, that incident was "pretty scary" because "she just lost it there for a few minutes." D was not asked whether appellant had historically engaged in *708violence or threats towards him or anyone else, and he did not mention any other incidents of violence or threats.
The last witness was McAlexander, a psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner, who testified that she had been working with appellant for a little under two years and saw her once a month. She testified that appellant has bipolar disorder with psychotic features. Her symptoms include elevated mood, lack of impulse control, elevated speech, inability to sleep, and at-risk behaviors. After explaining why she believed that appellant was dangerous to herself, McAlexander was asked about the likelihood of appellant being dangerous to others. She answered, "I think that's also a high risk as well. I think past history, recent history..." McAlexander did not finish that sentence. McAlexander opined that any dangerousness was a direct result of appellant's mental disorder.
At the conclusion of the testimony, the state said that it would like to make note of appellant's behavior during the hearing, and the court stated for the record that it was apparent during the hearing that appellant was "responding to internal stimuli, as described by the witnesses," and that she had provided a running commentary throughout the hearing, as the transcript would reflect.
The trial court found that appellant had a mental disorder. It found that appellant was not dangerous to herself, nor was she unable to care for her basic needs.
Appellant appeals. In her sole assignment of error, she contends that the trial court erred in determining that she was a person with mental illness within the meaning of the civil commitment statutes, specifically that she was dangerous to others as a result of her mental disorder.
*1201ORS 426.130(1)(a)(C) allows the trial court to commit a person to the Oregon Health Authority, for a period up to 180 days, if the court determines that the person has "mental illness" and is in need of treatment. The determination of mental illness must be "based upon clear and convincing evidence." ORS 426.130(1)(a). "That standard of proof is a rigorous one, requiring evidence that is of extraordinary persuasiveness, and which makes the fact in issue highly probable." State v. J. T. C. ,
A "person with mental illness" includes someone who, "because of a mental disorder," is "dangerous to * * * others." ORS 426.005(1)(f)(A). Dangerousness to others is determined based on the person's "condition at the time of the hearing as understood in the context of [her] history." State v. D. L. W. ,
Dangerousness to others may be established by a pattern of overt acts of violence by a person with a mental disorder, including escalating violence. D. L. W. ,
In this case, there is no question that appellant has a mental disorder. Appellant does not contest that finding, and there is overwhelming evidence to support it, including her extremely disruptive behavior at the commitment hearing. However, " ORS 426.005 precludes a court from committing a person on the basis of a mental disorder alone." State v. S. D. M. ,
In determining that appellant was dangerous to others, the trial court relied on two things: the "fire poker" incident, and appellant's behavior at the hearing. See State v. D. L. ,
*711The incident with the fireplace poker was a threat of serious physical violence (telling D that she was going to kill him) coupled with an overt act of violence (coming at D with the poker raised). D, who knows appellant well, believed that appellant truly intended to strike him, until he raised a brass lamp at the last moment and she backed off.
*1202Although appellant did not actually swing the poker or strike D, D's description of the incident was sufficient to establish an express threat of serious physical harm accompanied by an overt act of violence.
Yet, on this record, the fireplace poker incident appears to be a classic example of an "isolated occurrence" of violence. A. M. R. ,
As for appellant's conduct at the commitment hearing, there is abundant evidence that appellant was "out of control," in the trial court's words, as far as being disruptive. It is readily apparent from the transcript that appellant was unable to stop herself from constantly interrupting the witnesses, the attorneys, and the judge, including to insult them. Gida testified that such behavior was a symptom or manifestation of appellant's mental disorder. The question is whether it also provided sufficient evidence to demonstrate that the fireplace poker incident was not an isolated occurrence.
We conclude that it did not. Being verbally disruptive and rude as the result of an untreated mental disorder was not sufficient, at least in these circumstances, to establish that "actual future violence" was "highly likely." M. A. ,
We have recognized the limited utility of fact-matching in civil commitment cases-especially because older cases apply a de novo standard of review that we rarely apply now-but our decision in A. M. R. ,
To summarize, with respect to appellant's dangerousness to others, the evidence in this case consists of one isolated incident of near-violence by appellant against her primary caregiver, while angry that he had disrupted some religious statues on her bed. Although that incident was serious, there was no evidence that it was part of a larger pattern of violence. There was no evidence of any other act of violence or any other threats against anyone at any time during the long history of appellant's mental disorder, including on any of the many prior occasions when she had stopped taking medications. Appellant's conduct during the commitment hearing was extremely disruptive, but there *713is no record of her having done anything violent or threatening. Nor is there anything else in the record to suggest that, in context, the fireplace poker incident was indicative of future dangerousness, rather *1203than being an isolated incident. A past violent act "must provide a foundation to predict future dangerousness," not merely have occurred, to support a determination that a person is dangerous to others due to a mental disorder. L. R. ,
Reversed.
Appellant's insults were quite offensive but not violent or threatening in nature.
We note that Gida's report was admitted into evidence, but hearsay statements in the report (some of which she repeated in her testimony) were admitted only to explain the basis of her opinion, not for the truth of the matter asserted.
The state argued for commitment on all three grounds-danger to self, danger to others, and inability to provide for basic needs-and all three witnesses answered questions about all three grounds. Because the court committed appellant based solely on her being dangerous to others, and that determination is the only issue before us on appeal, we have limited our description of the evidence to that issue.