Conservatorship of Drabick

200 Cal. App. 3d 185, 245 Cal. Rptr. 840, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 333
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 1988
DocketH002349
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 200 Cal. App. 3d 185 (Conservatorship of Drabick) 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 Drabick, 200 Cal. App. 3d 185, 245 Cal. Rptr. 840, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 333 (Cal. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Opinion

I. Introduction

AGLIANO, P. J.

Petitioner David Drabick is conservator of the person of his brother William J. Drabick III, who has been comatose in a persistent vegetative state since 1983 and maintained with a nasogastric feeding tube. Citing his brother’s best interests, David Drabick sought the approval of the superior court of Santa Clara County for removal of the tube. The superior court denied the petition, and the conservator appeals.

David Drabick contends that California law authorizes the conservator of an incompetent person in a vegetative state with no hope of recovery to decide, considering medical advice and the conservatee’s best interests, that medical treatment in the form of artificial life support should be withdrawn and the conservatee permitted a natural death. We agree and thus reverse the superior court’s decision with directions to reconsider the petition in light of the principles set forth below. Our view is in essential accord with tiiat of all other states which have confronted the question. 1

*190 II. Background

A. William Drabick

On February 5, 1983, William Drabick received a severe head injury in an automobile accident. In emergency care, physicians diagnosed and evacuated a subdural hematoma and introduced nasogastric feeding but were not able to return William to consciousness.

William is now 44 years old. He has four adult brothers: David, Thomas, Kirke, and Fredrick Drabick. His parents are deceased. He was married in November 1968, divorced in August 1969, and has no children. At the time of the automobile accident, William had lived for approximately 12 years with Jeannine Crincic Gonzalez.

William is now in a nursing home. In the five years since the accident he has remained unconscious in a persistent vegetative state, or coma. Because his electroencephalogram is not flat he is not “brain dead.” Moreover, he breathes without the assistance of a respirator. For these two reasons, California law considers him to be alive.* 2 However, he is unconscious, his eyes remain closed, and he is not capable of voluntary movement. He does not communicate or respond to sound or physical stimulation. He does not usually respond to painful stimuli. When he does respond it is only with a nonspecific tremor. William is totally unable to care for himself or to sustain his own life. He cannot eat but is given nourishment and water through a nasogastric tube.

Three physicians have examined William. His primary physician, Dr. Klee, stated in a declaration that, “[bjased on history to date and reasonable expectations of the future, I believe that Mr. Drabick is permanently comatose. . . . He has no rehabilitation potential.” Two neurologists, Drs. Taster and Tikosky, have also examined William and come to essentially the same conclusion. Based on all of the information available about William’s medical condition, Dr. Klee does not believe that he “may again communicate and have any kind of a sentient, thinking existence” and does not feel that there is “any realistic hope for recovery in any way.” Dr. Klee has *191 stated that she would be willing to remove or direct the removal of William’s nasogastric tube if the court approves the conservator’s decision.

B. The Conservatorship Proceedings

On September 26, 1985, the superior court appointed David Drabick successor conservator of the person of William, his brother. Pursuant to Probate Code section 2355, subdivision (a), the court found that William lacked capacity to give informed consent to medical treatment. Granting a specific request of the conservator, the court ordered “that cardiopulmonary resuscitation and electrical cardioversion may be withheld in the event the conservatee suffers a cardiac arrest or any similar medical emergency requiring such treatment.” The court also authorized the conservator “to consent to a medical order directing that such treatment be withheld.” This earlier order is not before us on appeal.

On December 30, 1985, after William had been comatose for two years and ten months, the conservator petitioned the superior court for a further order “authorizing the withholding of medical treatment, to wit, the permanent removal of nasogastric tubes and the withholding of any other medical procedure or treatments utilized to deliver nutrition and hydration to a patient in the conservatee’s condition.” No one opposed the conservator’s petition. Each of William’s four adult brothers submitted a declaration expressing his belief that William “would not view his present state as a meaningful or as an acceptable existence” and “would not want to continue living in his present condition.” The county public defender appointed to represent William also came to the conclusion that the petition was in his best interests. 3

Ms. Gonzalez, who lived with William for the 12 years before his accident, 4 also filed a declaration in support of the conservator’s petition. She appears to be the only person with whom William discussed his medical care preferences.

In her declaration, Ms. Gonzalez stated: “I am, without question or any possible doubt, convinced that William J. Drabick, III would not want to be kept alive in his present condition. I believe that he would want his physi *192 cian to permanently remove the nasogastric tubes through which he receives nutrition and hydration. He would do this with full knowledge that such removal would result in his death. []f] I say this because of numerous and explicit conversations I had with the conservatee about this subject.”

William’s conversations on this subject with Ms. Gonzalez “were occasioned by two events, or circumstances.” As Ms. Gonzalez explained, “[o]ne event was the death of his father, which occurred while the conservatee and I were living together. While I do not believe that he was close to his father, the conservatee was very upset about the life prolonging treatment that was given to his father, a victim of cancer of the liver. It was the conservatee’s understanding that his father was supported by a variety of medication, by a nasogastric tube, and he was incapacitated. It is my recollection that he said clearly and emphatically that he would never want to be kept alive by artificial means like his father was.”

The other circumstance was William’s reaction to being diagnosed as having polycystic renal disease, an inherited and possibly fatal disorder which, while not curable, can be controlled somewhat by medication, diet, and avoidance of alcohol. According to Ms. Gonzalez, William “consistently chose to reject conservative, prophylactic medical advice about his diet and nonuse of alcohol. He and I argued about this often, and most recently in the spring of 1982 when the disease caused him to be hospitalized. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
200 Cal. App. 3d 185, 245 Cal. Rptr. 840, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservatorship-of-drabick-calctapp-1988.