20240215_C367990_33_367990.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 2024
Docket20240215
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20240215_C367990_33_367990.Opn.Pdf (20240215_C367990_33_367990.Opn.Pdf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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20240215_C367990_33_367990.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re JL.

AMY BUZZARD, UNPUBLISHED February 15, 2024 Petitioner-Appellee,

v No. 367990 Sanilac Probate Court JL, LC No. 23-034027-MI

Respondent-Appellant.

Before: GADOLA, C.J., and BORRELLO and BOONSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent appeals by right the probate court’s order finding him to be a “person requiring treatment” and ordering involuntary mental health treatment consisting of hospitalization for up to 60 days and assisted outpatient treatment for up to 180 days. We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In September 2023, respondent was taken to the emergency room (ER) at McLaren Port Huron hospital by Emergency Medical Services personnel. Petitioner was the nurse assigned to respondent in the ER. Petitioner testified that respondent was dirty, disheveled, and incapable of maintaining a coherent conversation or giving direct answers to basic questions about himself or his health. Respondent provided inconsistent explanations of why he was there; he stated that he had been assaulted, but showed no sign of having been recently injured. Respondent provided a variety of inconsistent statements regarding when the assault had occurred. Hospital records would later reveal that respondent had presented to the same ER a month earlier with blood in his urine, a fractured rib, and complaints that he had been struck on the head with a cobblestone. According to the records, respondent did not appear to have any mental disturbances at that time, but he did check out against medical advice for no known reason. Although petitioner denied that respondent made any threats, respondent was later examined by Daniel Goyes, M.D., who described respondent as “very aggressive, hostile, demanding, very grandiose.” Dr. Goyes opined

-1- that respondent had very poor insight, judgment, hygiene, and grooming, as well as very poor “reality testing.” Respondent refused medications and treatment.

Dr. Goyes testified that he diagnosed respondent with a mood disorder because respondent appeared to be unable “to regulate his mood and the flight of ideas, grandiosity” and seemed to be experiencing something “along the lines of a manic episode which falls under a mood disorder.” Dr. Goyes recognized the possibility that respondent might be suffering from the effects of a traumatic brain injury (TBI). Dr. Goyes opined that respondent was unable to attend to his basic physical needs based on respondent’s “[v]ery poor hygiene, grooming, disheveled appearance.” Dr. Goyes further opined that respondent did not understand his need for treatment because “[w]henever I try to talk to him about medications or treatment he usually responds with negative comments towards me and the medications, and states that he does not want to take anything.” Dr. Goyes believed respondent needed mental health treatment consisting of a combination of inpatient and outpatient treatment.

Respondent also participated in the hearing, although he was largely unable to answer direct questions, and he engaged in lengthy statements that frequently had little to do with the matter at hand. Respondent stated that he had been a trial attorney for approximately 50 years with a record of having only ever lost one or two cases; he attempted to advise his attorney and the probate court how to conduct the proceedings and referred to the proceedings as “a Mickey Mouse court.” Respondent’s appointed attorney testified that respondent had initially been assigned another attorney, who met with respondent and attempted to talk with him; the attempt was unsuccessful because respondent “was extremely aggressive, extremely combative, refused to engage in conversation, refused to allow [the attorney] to say any words.” Respondent acknowledged that he had “brain trouble” and was not thinking “up to [his] standard” and needed help. Respondent repeatedly stated that he had stumbled across a methamphetamine lab being operated near his ranch by a deputy, whereupon its operator hit him on the head with a cobblestone. Respondent did not answer his attorney’s question about whether he had reported the lab or the assault to law enforcement. Respondent told the probate court that his problems were not psychological, and that “you’re making a mistake to think that I have the normal kind of mental problems that’s cause[d] by being hit in the head when I discovered this meth lab.” The probate court refused respondent’s request to conduct his own closing argument.

The probate court found Dr. Goyes’s diagnosis of “mood disorder, not otherwise specified” was established by clear and convincing evidence based on witness testimony and the probate court’s observations of respondent at the hearing. The probate court observed that Dr. Goyes was “still attempting to determine some of this is a T.B.I., if it’s destabilized a mental health condition, if it’s something else” but that respondent’s refusal to cooperate was impeding the medical investigation. The probate court found respondent unable to attend to his basic physical needs and unable to avoid serious harm. The probate court also noted that respondent’s inability “to follow through and to explain things” was inconsistent with 50 years of experience as a trial attorney. The probate court found that respondent’s inability to attend to his hygiene could result in injuries like infections, that respondent did not understand his need for treatment, which resulted in an unwillingness to participate in treatment, and that, based on respondent’s extensive testimony regarding the methamphetamine lab, respondent was likely to suffer further harm by investigating the matter himself instead of making a proper police report.

-2- The probate court agreed with Dr. Goyes that “[c]ertainly hospitalization is necessary initially,” partly “to get a better handle on what’s happening for [respondent], and also to start a course of treatment to see if that’s going to be effective to reduce the symptoms and permit a return to the community.” The probate court expressed hope for the outcome, stating that the fact that respondent had no known mental health history “really kind of demonstrates to me that he’s able to be successful in the community once we get to the bottom of whatever’s happening right now.” The probate court ordered hospitalization not to exceed 60 days, and it ordered that psychotropic medications could be administered without respondent’s consent if necessary. This appeal followed.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

On review from a civil commitment proceeding, this Court reviews for an abuse of discretion a probate court’s dispositional rulings, and it reviews for clear error the probate court’s underlying factual findings. In re Moriconi, 337 Mich App 515, 521-522; 977 NW2d 583 (2021). A probate court abuses its discretion when “it chooses an outcome outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes,” which will necessarily occur if the probate court “makes an error of law.” Id. at 522 (quotation marks and citations omitted). A probate court’s finding is clearly erroneous when “a reviewing court is left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made, even if there is evidence to support the finding.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted). This Court generally defers to a probate court’s superior ability to evaluate the demeanor of a person who appeared before it. People v Kammeraad, 307 Mich App 98, 141; 858 NW2d 490 (2014).

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