Bigley v. Alaska Psychiatric Institute

208 P.3d 168, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2009 WL 1424454
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 2009
DocketS-13116
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 208 P.3d 168 (Bigley v. Alaska Psychiatric Institute) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigley v. Alaska Psychiatric Institute, 208 P.3d 168, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2009 WL 1424454 (Ala. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A psychiatric patient committed to the Alaska Psychiatric Institute (APT) challenges the superior court's order approving API's petition for involuntary administration of psychotropic drugs under AS 47.80.8389. He alleges that the trial court violated due process guarantees and that it erred in its findings that API's proposed treatment was in his best interests and that no less intrusive alternative was available. Because the patient was subsequently released without treatment, the case is technically moot, but we decide it because it falls within the public interest exception to the mootness doctrine. We conclude that, because the patient did not receive adequate notice of the nature of the proceedings and access to his medical chart, he was denied due process. We accordingly issue declaratory relief clarifying these due process requirements.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

This case concerns a petition by API to administer psychotropic medication to an un-consenting adult, William Bigley. Bigley's first hospitalization at API was in 1980. He exhibited threatening and bizarre behavior, delusions, and auditory hallucinations; API diagnosed him with schizophreniform disorder and treated him with anti-psychotic medications. During another hospitalization at API in 1981, he was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia.

Bigley was hospitalized dozens of times in the next two decades in a "revolving door" pattern of arrest, hospitalization, release, and relapse. In 1996 a court appointed the Office of Public Advocacy (OPA) as Bigley's conservator to manage his finances, and OPA became Bigley's guardian later in 2004. Throughout the years of his mental illness, it appears that Bigley generally denied that he had any psychiatric problems. He has often quit taking the psychotropic medications prescribed to him after his hospitalizations have ended. Bigley resented being placed under guardianship and has sought to terminate the guardianship. Doctors attribute Bigley's resistance to medication to his delusional belief that people are attempting to poison him. However, it is also true that the medications have sometimes produced harmful physical side effects, ranging from relatively minor (weight gain, sedation) to serious and irreversible (a movement disorder known as tar-dive dyskinesia). 1

According to a 2004 report by a court-appointed visitor, Bigley's mental condition and living conditions had recently taken an alarming turn for the worse. He had been living in an apartment for four years, but his angry and belligerent behavior escalated and he was evicted. He appeared underweight. The visitor thought he was "spinning out of control" and "quite angry," and concluded that he was unable to manage his own affairs.

By early 2007 Bigley had been in API at least sixty-eight times. 2 He had periods *173 where his symptoms were moderate enough that he was able to live in assisted living or other forms of housing for short periods. There were other times when he lived on the streets. According to doctors at API, his periods of stability coincided with his acceptance of the medication prescribed to him, while when he stopped taking the medications, his delusions and disturbing behavior became more intense and he became homeless. For a period in 2007, Bigley received assistance with living in the community from a nonprofit mental health services provider called CHOICES, Inc.

In 2008 Bigley's situation was highly unstable. He had lost his most recent housing at a motel and refused another room his guardian found for him. Bigley's guardian reported that Bigley was not eating or drinking, could not express himself coherently, did not seem to recognize him, and refused an offer of money or a bus pass. The guardian said he had never seen Bigley in such a bad state and called the police.

Meanwhile, Bigley was involved in a series of disturbances at the First National Bank in Anchorage. Bigley often came into the bank to withdraw funds. In recent visits he had become disruptive, making hostile and threatening statements to bank employees and customers. Employees became frightened, so the bank banned him from the premises and hired a security guard to deal with his visits. On April 25 a police officer who responded to one of these disturbances took Bigley into custody and requested an emergency mental health evaluation.

At API Bigley was agitated, angry, and delusional. He refused to eat or drink, and had to be housed in locked seclusion because his behavior intimidated other residents, some of whom tried to retaliate physically. API records say he believed his food and drink were poisoned, that he had God-ike powers, spoke repeatedly of natural and man-made catastrophes, and talked about blowing things up. While the professionals who dealt with him did not think he was dangerous, they worried his aggressive behavior could sooner or later provoke someone he encountered outside the hospital to assault him.

B. Proceedings

1. Commitment and related proceedings

On April 26, 2008, a magistrate issued an ex parte order committing Bigley to psychiatric evaluation after finding probable cause that he was mentally ill and that he was gravely disabled or presented a likelihood of causing serious harm to himself or others. The order also appointed the public defender to represent Bigley.

On April 28 API petitioned for a thirty-day commitment, and also petitioned for court approval of non-erisis administration of psychotropic medication. On that same day, an attorney, James Gottstein of the Law Project for Psychiatric Rights, e-mailed API and the public defender to inform them that he was representing Bigley with respect to what he called the "forced drugging" petition. In the e-mail he stated the view that Bigley had likely acted out as a way to get shelter at API during cold weather. He proposed a plan under which Bigley would be housed and fed at APL.

The public defender's office represented Bigley at the commitment hearing on April 30, 2008. Attorney Gottstein filed a limited entry of appearance to represent Bigley regarding the petition for court-ordered administration of medication. The public defender objected to Gottstein's appearing on Bigley's behalf. The master agreed that should Big-ley be committed, Gottstein could appear for Bigley during the subsequent involuntary medication proceedings. However, until that time, the master said she would not allow Gottstein to appear as counsel, cautioning him that "you're not co-counsel and you're not to be sitting at the table with them or interfering with their conduct of the case."

At the April 30 hearing, the master heard evidence and found that Bigley was gravely disabled under AS 47.30.915(7). On May 5 the superior court adopted the findings of fact and ordered Bigley committed to API *174 for mental health treatment for a period not to exceed thirty days.

2. Proceedings on administration of psychotropic medication

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 P.3d 168, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2009 WL 1424454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigley-v-alaska-psychiatric-institute-alaska-2009.