Conservatorship of M.P. CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 2013
DocketA138544
StatusUnpublished

This text of Conservatorship of M.P. CA1/2 (Conservatorship of M.P. CA1/2) 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 M.P. CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 10/31/13 Conservatorship of M.P. CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

Conservatorship of the Person of M.P.

MATT DOMNICK, as County Conservator, etc., Petitioner and Respondent, A138544 v. M.P., (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. P12-01478) Objector and Appellant.

I. INTRODUCTION Objector and appellant M.P. challenges the trial court’s appointment of a temporary conservator pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code1 sections 500 et seq. (the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act or LPS Act). She argues that substantial evidence does not support the court’s finding that, as a result of her mental disability, she is unable to provide for her own basic personal needs of food, clothing or shelter. We find that the court’s determination of grave disability is supported by substantial evidence and affirm its order.

1 All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise noted.

1 II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On December 12, 2012, petitioner William B. Walker, M.D., Director of the Contra Costa County Health Services Department filed a petition for appointment of a temporary conservator of appellant M.P. In facts set forth in a declaration for temporary conservatorship, petitioner stated that M.P. was “[g]ravely disabled as a result of mental disorder and unwilling to accept, or incapable of accepting, treatment voluntarily.” He also described M.P. as “unable to manage . . . her financial resources.” The petitioner sought a one-year conservatorship “with the statutory powers recommended in the conservatorship investigation report, including the authority to detain the proposed conservatee in a facility described by . . . § 5358 (a)(2); with the right to require the conservatee to receive treatment related specifically to remedying or preventing the recurrence of the proposed conservatee’s being gravely disabled, including psychotropic medications; and with the right to require the proposed conservatee receive routine medical treatment . . . .” The declaration further stated that M.P. was “placed on 5150 from Nierika House due to agitated, disorganized behavior there. She was not sleeping, was standing out in the rain with no shoes on, stealing from others. Speech was loose and disorganized. Nierika House staff felt unable to manage her and will not accept her back there. She had no plan to provide for her own food, clothing and shelter.” The petition stated that M.P.’s “[d]iagnosis is Schizoaffective Disorder. [She] is labile, disorganized, delusional and severely lacking in insight and judgement [sic]. Repeatedly demands to be discharged despite having no plan to care for herself and nowhere to go. Due to her repeated admissions and consistently demonstrated inability to maintain stability in the community, her case manager is advocating strongly for her to be permanently conserved and admitted to a long-term locked facility.” According to petitioner, “due to her mental illness, [M.P.] is too disorganized, labile and lacking in judgement [sic] to understand and acknowledge her condition and situation.” For the same reason, petitioner considered M.P. “unable to understand the benefits and risks of, and alternatives to, psychotropic medication” and “unable to

2 understand and to knowingly and intelligently evaluate the information required to be given to patients whose informed consent is sought and to otherwise participate in treatment decisions by means of a rational thought process.” Attached to the petition was a declaration from Jonathan Kalkstein, MD and PhD., stating his determination that M.P. is “gravely disabled” within the meaning of section 5008, subdivision (h). M.P. objected to the conservatorship and a court trial was set for April 16, 2013 and then continued to April 17, 2013. At the trial, Dr. Michael Levin, an expert in psychiatry and the assessment of the “gravely ill” standard under the LPS Act testified that he met with M.P. on April 10, 2013 at Crestwood in Stockton. She had been living there for several weeks and had previously lived at a facility called Our House in Vallejo. She left Our House “because she got ill” and went to the county hospital. After a stay on the medical unit and then the psychiatric unit, she was transferred to Crestwood in Stockton. In addition to meeting with M.P.,2 Levin reviewed M.P.’s medical records from Crestwood Stockton. He also reviewed the conservator’s report and review that had been most recently conducted, and another one that had been conducted 21 months earlier. He did not review any other medical records. He spoke to the conservator, Matt Domnick and to M.P.’s caseworker, Jeff Boxer. He also spoke to one of the psychiatrists who had seen her in the past, Dr. Khan, and to a psychiatrist who cared for her recently at a county facility, Dr. John Echols, “whose specialty is psychiatry . . . and takes care of people who have psychiatric problems on the medical units, and he’s extremely experienced and knowledgeable.”3

2 Levin testified that his meeting with M.P. occurred on April 10, 2013, and “was probably somewhere in the neighborhood of 45 minutes to 50 minutes, maybe as much as an hour, but somewhere in that range.” 3 Levin spoke with Dr. Echols “[p]robably five minutes. It was in passing. I happened to be at a meeting together. I had seen that he had taken care of her. He knew her from prior hospitalizations there. He had some history, as well, so that was very helpful.” He also spoke with Dr. Khan, another of M.P.’s doctors. Khan “works at the

3 Levin diagnosed M.P. with “schizoaffective disorder,” the same diagnosis he had “seen in the record and seems most appropriate.” He testified that he had reviewed “records that go back into in the—maybe even to the 80s, but at least 97. I have a list of some of the psychiatric contacts that she’s had with the county that date quite a ways back in terms of, you know, where she was seen, by what clinicians and so forth. So, it goes back to, you know, some—see if I can find out exactly how far back it goes, but a long time. I think that when I asked her, I think she said that she got started having psychiatric problems somewhere in her mid-thirties . . . .” He discussed with her this diagnosis and “she acknowledged that was the diagnosis that people had made,” and she agreed that she suffered from a mental illness. “[S]he recognized that . . . when she’s not in a very controlled environment, she is very quick to relapse. And that’s why she’s had 200 plus contacts with the mental health system, not just because of her psychiatric illness, although that certainly could occur, but also because she has a compounding medical problem which effects her psychiatric status. [¶] That is, that she has fairly significant chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder and she has a hard time—well, she’s not been able so far to not smoke. And when she smokes, even a small amount, it sounds like she can get hypoxic, that is low blood oxygen, and that affects her psychiatric status and she can come unglued, and that seems to be what happened when she was at the facility in Vallejo.” Although M.P. told him that she had been reducing her smoking to “maybe two or three cigarettes even per week” “[i]t doesn’t take too much, evidently.” Levin’s information about M.P.’s smoking came not only from M.P. herself, but also from her conservator. His conclusion that smoking exacerbated her mental illness

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People v. Bassett
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Conservatorship of M.P. CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservatorship-of-mp-ca12-calctapp-2013.