Conservatorship of McKeown
This text of 25 Cal. App. 4th 502 (Conservatorship of McKeown) 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.
Opinion
Conservatorship of the Person of JAMES S. McKEOWN III.
SAN DIEGO COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, Petitioner and Respondent,
v.
JAMES S. McKEOWN III, Objector and Appellant.
Court of Appeals of California, Fourth District, Division One.
*504 COUNSEL
Peter W. Singer, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Objector and Appellant.
Lloyd M. Harmon, Jr., County Counsel, Diane Bardsley, Chief Deputy County Counsel, Bruce D. MacLeish and Janice L. Ingold, Deputy County Counsel, for Petitioner and Respondent.
OPINION
NARES, J.
James S. McKeown III appeals an order reestablishing a conservatorship of his person after the trial court denied his motion to dismiss the reestablishment petition for lack of jurisdiction. McKeown also contends the trial court erred in instructing the jury regarding expert testimony. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A one-year conservatorship for McKeown was established on April 16, 1992. On March 22, 1993, the public conservator filed a petition to reestablish conservatorship. A hearing on the petition was noticed for April 15, 1993. McKeown, through his attorney, appeared specially reserving the right to contest jurisdiction, waived the hearing, and demanded a jury trial.
McKeown filed a motion to dismiss the reestablishment petition for lack of jurisdiction. McKeown alleged the citation for conservatorship of the person was issued by a department of social services clerk and not by the *505 court clerk or under court seal. When trial commenced on April 20, 1993, the court denied McKeown's motion, stating jurisdiction continued from the original conservatorship to the current reestablishment proceedings. The jury found McKeown gravely disabled and accordingly, the court reestablished McKeown's conservatorship. This appeal ensued.
DISCUSSION
I.
(1) McKeown contends the trial court was without jurisdiction because the citation for conservatorship of the person was improperly issued. McKeown argues this citation must bear the signature of the court clerk for the court to have jurisdiction. This contention is without merit. This hearing was a reestablishment proceeding as opposed to an establishment proceeding. As such, the court had continuing jurisdiction from the date the previous conservatorship was established until the end of that one-year period. (Conservatorship of Wyatt (1987) 195 Cal. App.3d 391, 397 [240 Cal. Rptr. 632]; see also In re Gandolfo (1984) 36 Cal.3d 889, 894 [206 Cal. Rptr. 149, 686 P.2d 669].)
McKeown's conservatorship was established on April 16, 1992. The court, therefore, had jurisdiction over McKeown's person until April 16, 1993. (Conservatorship of Wyatt, supra, 195 Cal. App.3d at p. 397.) The public conservator filed a petition to reestablish conservatorship on March 22, 1993. A hearing on the petition was noticed for April 15, 1993. On that date, the court clearly had jurisdiction over McKeown. (Ibid.) McKeown appeared specially, reserving the right to contest jurisdiction. At that time, McKeown waived the hearing and demanded a jury trial. The jury trial began on April 20, 1993.
Although the jury trial commenced four days after the one-year conservatorship period, the initial hearing to reestablish the conservatorship was noticed before the end of the one-year period. Even a temporary interruption in the chain of conservatorship does not extinguish the court's continuing jurisdiction. (In re Gandolfo, supra, 36 Cal.3d at p. 896, fn. 2; Conservatorship of Wyatt, supra, 195 Cal. App.3d at p. 397.) Gandolfo found the trial court properly retained jurisdiction over a conservatee even though there was a six-week interruption in the chain of conservatorship. Here, there was at most a four-day interruption. In light of the factual similarities between the cases, we reject McKeown's contention that Gandolfo is inapplicable.
Accordingly, the court retained its jurisdiction over McKeown in the reestablishment proceeding from the previous conservatorship.
*506 II.
(2) McKeown argues the trial court should have given CALJIC No. 2.80[1] instead of BAJI No. 2.40[2] regarding the expert testimony of Dr. Robert Simmonds, a psychologist. We find McKeown's argument unpersuasive.
Initially, we note there is no duty to give CALJIC No. 2.80 in civil trials. (Conservatorship of Law (1988) 202 Cal. App.3d 1336, 1342 [249 Cal. Rptr. 415].) While McKeown likens conservatorship hearings with criminal trials, a conservatorship proceeding is civil, not criminal. (Ibid.) Nor is a conservatorship proceeding analogous to a criminal proceeding. (Conservatorship of Baber (1984) 153 Cal. App.3d 542, 549 [200 Cal. Rptr. 262]; see also Cramer v. Tyars (1979) 23 Cal.3d 131, 137 [151 Cal. Rptr. 653, 588 P.2d 793].) We recognize some safeguards provided to criminal defendants have been applied to conservatorship hearings; however, the protections are those required by the due process clause of the California Constitution.[3] (Conservatorship of Gordon (1989) 209 Cal. App.3d 364, 368 [257 Cal. Rptr. 365].) Subsequent appellate decisions have declined to extend the application of other criminal principles to conservatorship hearings, and there is no basis to do so here. (See Conservatorship of Law, supra, 202 Cal. App.3d at p. 1342; Conservatorship of Baber, supra, 153 Cal. App.3d at p. 549 [refusing to extend the double jeopardy doctrine and the privilege not to *507 testify to conservatorship hearings]; Conservatorship of Mitchell (1981) 114 Cal. App.3d 606, 612 [170 Cal. Rptr. 759] [in a conservatorship hearing there is no absolute right to warning of the privilege against self-incrimination prior to a psychiatric examination]; Conservatorship of Maldonado (1985) 173 Cal. App.3d 144, 148 [218 Cal. Rptr. 796] [civil procedural law determines whether a conservatee has waived the right to a jury trial].)
In Conservatorship of Law, the conservatee argued the court was required to give the circumstantial evidence jury instruction applicable to criminal cases. The court in Law initially noted a conservatorship proceeding is not a criminal proceeding. The court held because the trial court gave the circumstantial evidence instruction applicable to civil cases, BAJI No. 2.00, the jury was sufficiently advised as to the quality, nature, and use of circumstantial evidence. (Conservatorship of Law, supra, 202 Cal. App.3d at p. 1342.)
Similarly, the court here gave the expert testimony instruction applicable to civil cases, BAJI No. 2.40, and not the corresponding criminal instruction, CALJIC No. 2.80. BAJI No. 2.40 correctly states a jury is not bound by an expert opinion and may reject it if it is not believable. Additionally, the jury was instructed generally on the manner in which to evaluate the credibility of witnesses, BAJI No. 2.20.[4]
McKeown challenges the last sentence of BAJI No. 2.40, that uncontradicted expert testimony is "conclusive and binding on you." But given the fact instructions must be considered as a whole and not by the individual paragraphs or sentences, the jury was properly advised as to Simmonds's expert testimony. (Wells v. Lloyd
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25 Cal. App. 4th 502, 30 Cal. Rptr. 542, 1994 WL 230789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservatorship-of-mckeown-calctapp-1994.