Conservatorship of Morrison

206 Cal. App. 3d 304, 253 Cal. Rptr. 530, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 1132
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 1988
DocketA037920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 206 Cal. App. 3d 304 (Conservatorship of Morrison) 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 Morrison, 206 Cal. App. 3d 304, 253 Cal. Rptr. 530, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 1132 (Cal. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Opinion

KING, J.

In this case we hold that a conservator can authorize the removal of a nasogastric feeding tube from a conservatee who is in a *307 persistent vegetative state, but cannot require physicians to remove the tube against their personal moral objections if the patient can be transferred to the care of another physician who will follow the conservator’s direction. Louise Childs, as conservator of the person of Thelma Morrison, appeals from a judgment denying an injunction. We affirm.

Morrison, now 90 years old, has been a patient at Laguna Honda Hospital since 1979. She is in a persistent vegetative state (PVS), and the prognosis is that her condition will not improve.

A PVS patient has no mental functions. The eyes may be open at times, but the patient is “completely unconscious, i.e., unaware of him[self] or herself or the surrounding environment. Voluntary reactions or behavioral responses reflecting consciousness, volition, or emotion at the cerebral cortical level are absent.” (Cranford, The Persistent Vegetative State: The Medical Reality (Getting the Facts Straight) (1988) 18 Hastings Center Rep. 27, 28 (hereafter The Persistent Vegetative State).) The patient is incapable of experiencing pain and suffering. (Id. at p. 31.) PVS has been described as “amentia, an absence of everything for which people value existence.” (Wikler, Not Dead, Not Dying? Ethical Categories and Persistent Vegetative State (1988) 18 Hastings Center Rep. 41, 47.) 1

Morrison also suffers from heart disease and two broken legs caused by osteoporosis. Her skin is so fragile that when she is turned in bed a towel must be held under her arms so that her skin does not tear. However, she presently has no terminal illness or disease.

Since 1983 Morrison has been able to receive adequate nutrients only through a nasogastric tube. This is a plastic tube inserted through her nose to her stomach through which she is given a protein-enriched liquid.

Childs is Morrison’s daughter and conservator. In a 1984 letter to Ben Abramovice, the hospital administrator, she expressed a desire that Morrison’s life not be prolonged artificially and requested removal of the nasogastric tube.

Removal of a nasogastric tube from a PVS patient results in death within one to thirty days. (The Persistent Vegetative State, supra, at p. 31.) A *308 physician testified at trial that Morrison would develop bedsores within 48 hours after withdrawal of the tube. Despite the presence of bedsores, however, it has been said that “[i]f given adequate nursing care during this withdrawal, including good oral hygiene, PVS patients will not manifest the horrible signs ascribed to this process by some . . . nor will they experience consciously any symptoms (burning of urine, hunger, thirst), [fl] . . . . [P]atients in a persistent vegetative state cannot experience pain and suffering.” (The Persistent Vegetative State, supra, at p. 31; see also Armstrong & Colen, From Quinlan to Jobes: The Courts and the PVS Patient (1988) 18 Hastings Center Rep. 37, 40.)

The hospital refused Childs’s request. It subsequently offered to transfer Morrison, at no expense to her or Childs, to any suitable facility that would follow Childs’s wishes. 2 The hospital believed that within two weeks it could find a suitable facility.

In 1985 Childs filed this action against Abramovice, the hospital’s medical director, and Morrison’s attending physician at the time, seeking an injunction requiring removal of the tube. The court denied the request in December 1986. In a written order the court said that although it felt Morrison would probably concur in the request if she were able to, it could find no authority allowing a conservator to withhold consent to life-sustaining medical treatment. The court rendered judgment denying an injunction, and Childs filed a timely notice of appeal.

This case raises two issues. One is resolved by a recent appellate decision; the other is novel in California.

The first issue is whether a conservator can authorize the removal of a nasogastric tube from a conservatee who is in a persistent vegetative state. This question is resolved in Conservatorship of Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, which found such authority under Probate Code section 2355.

Section 2355 provides, “If the conservatee has been adjudicated to lack the capacity to give informed consent for medical treatment, the conservator has the exclusive authority to give consent for such medical treatment to be performed on the conservatee as the conservator in good faith based on medical advice determines to be necessary . . . .” (Prob. Code, § 2355, subd. (a).) The court in Drabick held “this statute, by necessary implication, *309 gives the conservator power to withhold or withdraw consent to medical treatment under appropriate circumstances.” (200 Cal.App.3d at p. 200.) Any contrary construction would render meaningless the statute’s reference to a good faith decision. (Id. at p. 202.) The court further held a patient’s fundamental right to refuse medical treatment (Bouvia v. Superior Court (1986) 179 Cal.App.3d 1127 [225 Cal.Rptr. 297]; Bartling v. Superior Court (1984) 163 Cal.App.3d 186 [209 Cal.Rptr. 220]) is not lost if the patient becomes incompetent, and the only way to maintain any meaning to this right is to allow a conservator to exercise it vicariously. (Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d at pp. 206-209.) “To summarize, California law gives persons a right to determine the scope of their own medical treatment, this right survives incompetence in the sense that incompetent patients retain the right to have appropriate decisions made on their behalf, and Probate Code section 2355 delegates to conservators the right and duty to make such decisions.” (Id. at p. 205.)

Drabick concluded that under Probate Code section 2355 a conservator can authorize removal of a nasogastric tube if the decision is made in “good faith” and is based on “medical advice” which includes “the prognosis that there is no reasonable possibility of return to cognitive and sapient life.” (200 Cal.App.3d at pp. 216-217.)

A physician’s compliance with the conservator’s decision is within the range of medical ethics. Although some believe feeding should never be withheld, the authors of a text on medical ethics state it is ethically correct to remove a nasogastric tube from a patient in a persistent vegetative state. (Jonsen et al., Clinical Ethics (2d ed. 1986) p. 110; cf. Am. Med. Assn., Current Opns. of the Council on Ethical and Jud. Affairs (1986) § 2.18, pp. 12-13 [discontinuation of nutrition and hydration not unethical in case of irreversible coma].)

Respondents do not dispute the holding in Drabick. The present case, however, differs from Drabick in a fundamental respect. The treating physician in

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Bluebook (online)
206 Cal. App. 3d 304, 253 Cal. Rptr. 530, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 1132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservatorship-of-morrison-calctapp-1988.