Conservatorship of D.B. CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 2023
DocketA164706
StatusUnpublished

This text of Conservatorship of D.B. CA1/1 (Conservatorship of D.B. CA1/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conservatorship of D.B. CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 1/25/23 Conservatorship of D.B. CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

Conservatorship of the Person of D.B.

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY HEALTH SERVICES, A164706

Petitioner and Respondent, (Contra Costa v. County Super. Ct. No. D.B., MSP21-01855) Objector and Appellant.

The Contra Costa Public Conservator petitioned under the provisions of the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 5000 et seq.)1 for appointment as conservator of the person of appellant D.B. The petition alleged D.B. was gravely disabled due to a mental disorder, unable to provide for his basic needs for food, clothing, or shelter, and incapable of accepting treatment voluntarily. After a February 2022 hearing, the court granted the petition for an initial one-year term. D.B.’s sole contention on appeal is that the grave disability finding must be reversed because the trial court prejudicially erred in admitting into

All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions 1

Code unless otherwise indicated.

1 evidence certain entries in his medical records that he claims are inadmissible hearsay. We affirm. BACKGROUND The Public Guardian of Contra Costa County (Public Guardian) filed a petition to conserve D.B. in December 2021. The trial court appointed the Public Guardian as D.B.’s temporary conservator that day and empowered the Public Guardian to place D.B. in a locked facility and to make medication and treatment decisions on his behalf. At the trial, two months later, D.B. and clinical psychologist Jennifer Weinstein testified. Dr. Weinstein testified as an expert “in the area[] of psychology, as well as in the area[] of determining grave disability.” She stated, in evaluating patients for a grave disability, she will “do a review” of the records and also “go in to interview the patient.” In this case, she interviewed D.B. for 40 minutes, reviewed his medical records from the Contra Costa Regional Medical Center, and spoke to D.B.’s social worker. Dr. Weinstein diagnosed D.B. with schizophrenia. She explained, a “diagnosis of schizophrenia means that one exhibits symptoms from a list of symptoms, . . . one of which must include [either] delusions or hallucinations. [¶] So the first symptom is hallucinations, then delusions, . . . thought disorganization, negative symptoms. Hallucinations include auditory or visual—auditory/visual, most often auditory . . . come in the form of hearing voices.” Negative symptoms included, “poor upkeep of activities of daily living, such as poor hygiene, social problems or difficulties . . . , lack of motivation to proceed in activities, lack of appropriate emotional expression.” Schizophrenia is a “chronic disorder” which varies per individual and can

2 vary over time, but the disorder can be managed with psychiatric medications, structured treatment, therapy, day-to-day life assistance, and maintaining sobriety and a healthy lifestyle. After county counsel asked about D.B.’s current psychological or psychiatric medication, Dr. Weinstein confirmed she had reviewed D.B.’s medical records, which included medication information. D.B.’s counsel objected to any answer on “hearsay and foundation” grounds and also noted the records were not in evidence. The court overruled the objection, and county counsel moved to admit the records “under Evidence Code section 1271, along with a declaration compliant with Evidence Code section 1561.” D.B.’s counsel continued to object, asserting “there are several portions within the document that are inadmissible on hearsay and foundation bases.” The court allowed the records, stating “[o]ne, attached to the very front of the packet is the declaration of the custodian of medical records which comports to Evidence Code section 1562,” and two, it “comports with the requirements of [Evidence Code section] 1271 . . . because there may be hearsay or Sanchez-related[2] objectionable items inside, the Court will not, as a whole, review [the exhibit] but only the excerpts . . . that the Court allows in.” Dr. Weinstein then testified D.B. was taking two antipsychotics, which can “reduce symptoms of schizophrenia.” County counsel next asked Dr. Weinstein about her interview with D.B. Dr. Weinstein explained that during the interview, D.B. was oriented as to where he was but thought he “owned the building, the hospital building that he lives in, and that it was his house.” D.B. was “quite . . . confused and

2 People v. Sanchez (2016) 63 Cal.4th 665 (Sanchez).

3 paranoid about how he came to be involuntarily detained.” For instance, he told Dr. Weinstein that he had been “abducted by the police because his family made fake allegations about his behavior.” When Dr. Weinstein asked D.B. “how he came to be at the hospital,” D.B. maintained he “very recently came to this earth as a reincarnation after being eaten by a giant rat, that he—he came from a combustion and he is God.” He then “went on to describe interdimentional [sic] travel, time travel, that he—he came on out on the other side . . . that he disappeared suddenly and then came out on the other side in Concord, California, after being eaten by a giant rat” but stated he was actually from a place called “Zaloomba.” D.B. sounded “delusional, confused, disorganized,” and “grandiose[e]” during the interview. All of which are “symptoms of schizophrenia.” Additionally, during the interview, Dr. Weinstein observed that D.B. was “paranoid.” For example, he described that he was being “treated or abused at the facility he’s at or that doctors are creating a treatment plan for him based on their own desires and that their treatment is actually for another [D.B.]” D.B. also told Dr. Weinstein he had been “murdered at the hospital and then came back to life.” D.B. did not believe he had a “mental health diagnosis” and thought he was “God.” He also experienced “thought- broadcasting” during the interview, when he “believed that the TV [was] talking to him, the CBS network is speaking directly to him when he watches that TV network.” When Dr. Weinstein asked about his plans for food, clothing and shelter, D.B. informed her he “would walk to a hotel in Concord or Pittsburg and stay in a hotel . . . until . . . his name comes up on the Section 8 housing list,” because “he can’t go—he doesn’t think he can go near [his grandmother].” He explained that his grandmother, with whom he had

4 previously lived, “is a henchman and she’s in cahoots with . . . the police, trying to . . . get him detained.” Dr. Weinstein then returned to discussing D.B.’s current medications and generally how medications like the ones D.B. was currently taking may affect the person who takes them. D.B., for his part, could only tell Dr. Weinstein the name of one of his current medications but was of the opinion “he does not need the medication” and stated he would not take medication “if he were on his own.” When Dr. Weinstein asked D.B. about seeking assistance if he needed it in the future, D.B. stated he had previously “worked with the Hume Center” but that he “believed that they put AIDS in him,” and so he could no longer work with that organization. County counsel then asked Dr. Weinstein about specific entries in D.B.’s medical records. The court allowed Dr. Weinstein to testify, over counsel’s objection,3 about the entries in the records on which she based her opinion, but not about diagnoses set forth in the records. The first record entry, from April 6, 2021, indicated D.B.

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Conservatorship of D.B. CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservatorship-of-db-ca11-calctapp-2023.