Castillo v. United States

406 F. Supp. 585, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14783
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedDecember 17, 1975
DocketCiv. 75-088M
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 406 F. Supp. 585 (Castillo v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castillo v. United States, 406 F. Supp. 585, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14783 (D.N.M. 1975).

Opinion

*586 FINDINGS OF FACT and CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

MECHEM, District Judge.

The above entitled action having come on for trial, and the Court having heard the evidence and the arguments of the parties, the following findings of fact and conclusions of law are hereby made.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff Corrine Castillo is the personal representative of Richard Montoya for the purpose of bringing this action as Administratrix of the Estate of Richard Montoya, deceased.

2. Defendant is the United States of America.

3. The Veteran’s Administration is a federal agency.

4. On October 7, 1974, plaintiff made a claim for damages to the Veteran’s Administration, which claim was finally denied by the Veteran’s Administration not more than six months prior to the filing of this action.

5. The Veteran’s Administration operates and maintains the general hospital facility referred to in this action as the Veteran’s Administration Hospital located at Albuquerque, New Mexico (Hospital), which includes a psychiatric ward, designed and used for patients suffering from mental conditions or diseases.

6. The Hospital’s psychiatric ward is an “open ward”, which identifies both a particular theory concerning the treatment of mental illness, and a particular manner in which the ward is operated.

7. An open ward is a generally accepted medical and psychiatric theory of treatment of mental illness, in that psychiatric treatment cannot effectively be forced upon a patient; instead, the patient must be encouraged to want psychiatric treatment, and to accept the responsibility of seeking psychiatric help and learning from it, which places real emphasis on building rapport between patient and psychiatrist.

8. The open ward dictates various practices and procedures followed by the Hospital’s psychiatric ward. To encourage the patient to accept responsibility for his own treatment, patients who are not the subjects of civil commitment proceedings (voluntary patients) are not, except as found below, physically limited in their movements around the ward or of the Hospital and its grounds, or subjected to close observation by staff members. If a voluntary patient expresses a firm desire to leave, the open ward allows him to. The staff will verbally encourage him to stay and continue treatment.

9. Therefore, the Hospital’s psychiatric ward has no guards, no room checks, and no check-in check-out procedure, and patients are allowed to keep their own clothes, wallets and valuables.

10. Restraints upon a patient’s freedom of movement are imposed on a very individualized basis, and only when the staff feels it necessary to protect the patient from doing physical harm to himself or others. Where physical restraint or supervision is deemed necessary, open ward requires the use of the least restrictive measure which will protect the patient and others from direct physical harm.

11. The restraints usually used on patients are: 1) medication; 2) group pressure, primarily from fellow patients; 3) locking the patient in a single treatment room.

12. Plaintiff’s decedent, Richard Montoya (Montoya), served in the armed forces from March of 1968 until April of 1970. As a veteran, Montoya was entitled to medical treatment at Veteran’s Administration facilities.

13. Montoya was first admitted to the Hospital on June 16, 1970, to be treated for a cut on his palate. It is undisputed that Montoya made the cut on his' palate himself; it is not clear whether he made the cut because he wanted to lance an abcess on the roof of his mouth, or for darker psychological reasons.

*587 14. Because of this, Montoya was transferred from the surgical ward to the Hospital’s psychiatric ward within a few days of his initial admission.

15. Staff doctors on the psychiatric ward diagnosed Montoya on June 16, 1970, as experiencing a “schizophrenic reaction psychosis”, that being a mental condition characterized by ambivalence, confusion, and bewilderment. Patients with such a condition may become autistic, and are frequently disassociated from reality to an appreciable extent. The severity of the patient’s condition varies greatly over time; at some times he may be relatively normal, and at other times extremely disturbed. The condition, in many cases, responds to treatment with psychotropic drugs.

16. Between June of 1970 and October of 1972, inclusive, Montoya was admitted to the Hospital’s psychiatric ward as a voluntary patient nine times. These admissions were variously initiated by himself and/or members of his family. On each of his last four admissions before his admission on October 16, 1972, Montoya remained at the Hospital for a short time and then left without notifying the staff that he was leaving, and despite the staff opinion that he should continue treatment. The Hospital refers to such as “elopement”.

17. When Montoya eloped from the Hospital, he would walk or take a cab back to Belen to the home of one of his relatives.

18. Between June of 1970 and October of 1972, when Montoya was not an inpatient at the Hospital’s psychiatric ward, he lived with various members of his family in Belen, New Mexico, all of whom allowed him to come and go as he pleased, and stated that they believed that Montoya was not a danger to himself or others.

19. By October of 1972, the Hospital was well aware of Montoya’s tendency to elope.

20. Prior to October of 1972, Montoya had occasionally behaved in a physically aggressive manner towards others. On at least one occasion, Montoya’s physical aggression towards another member of the family prompted the members of the family to talk him into voluntarily returning to the Hospital for treatment. At least once, Montoya became physically aggressive towards another patient in the psychiatric ward.

21. The Hospital was aware that Montoya had had episodes of physical aggression towards others, but in light of all the facts and circumstances of his case as known to them since June of 1970, the staff doctors reasonably believed that these were relatively isolated incidents which occurred primarily when Montoya had refused to take medication prescribed for him, and that Montoya was not dangerous to others in October of 1972.

22. Based on all the facts and circumstances as known to the Hospital staff since June of 1970, the judgment of the staff doctors that Montoya was not dangerous to himself or to others was a medical diagnosis made in accordance with the recognized standards of medical practice and treatment in the community. Other than the time Montoya cut his palate, for whatever reason, he never engaged in any behavior which could be termed consciously or actively self-destructive or suicidal. The staff doctors reasonably believed that Montoya was not dangerous to himself in October of 1972, which was a medical diagnosis made in accordance with the recognized standards of medical practice and treatment in the community.

23. In June of 1971, and again in September of 1971, Montoya’s family began proceedings to have him civilly committed to the Hospital. These efforts were subsequently dropped by the family.

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Bluebook (online)
406 F. Supp. 585, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castillo-v-united-states-nmd-1975.