Conservatorship of P.S. CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 2015
DocketB251865
StatusUnpublished

This text of Conservatorship of P.S. CA2/1 (Conservatorship of P.S. CA2/1) 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 P.S. CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 12/31/15 Conservatorship of P.S. CA2/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

Conservatorship of the Person of P.S. B251865 ___________________________________ (Los Angeles County M.S., as Conservator, etc., Super. Ct. No. BP144498)

Petitioner and Appellant, v.

P.S.,

Objector and Respondent.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Lesley C. Green, Judge. Affirmed. M.S., in pro. per., for Petitioner and Appellant. Barry P. Goldberg, A Professional Law Corporation, Barry P. Goldberg, and Matthew S. Erickson for Objector and Respondent. M.S. filed a petition requesting the court to appoint his wife, F.S., and him conservators of their son, P.S. While that petition was pending, M.S. filed a petition to appoint F.S. and him as P.S.’s temporary conservators. At the hearing on the petition for temporary conservatorship, the trial court denied both petitions with prejudice. M.S. appealed. He contends that the court denied him due process, failed to consider evidence, and should not have denied the petitions with prejudice. Because the court reasonably concluded that the petitions were meritless attempts to prevent P.S.’s impending wedding, its orders were valid exercises of the court’s inherent authority to dismiss sham, frivolous, or vexatious petitions. We therefore affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY In 2013, P.S. was a 28-year-old employed engineer. He was to be married on October 5, 2013. About six weeks before the wedding date, M.S. filed a petition for appointment of a conservator of the person of P.S. M.S. alleged that P.S. is “unable to properly provide for his . . . personal needs for physical health, food, clothing, or shelter.” More particularly, P.S. allegedly “is not able to maintain a clean living environment. He cannot make medical decisions. He does not know the date and time of day. He gets confused easily. He fails to recognize familiar people. He does not perceive or appreciate danger. He cannot use public transportation.” M.S. further alleged that P.S. does not have the capacity to give informed consent to any form of medical treatment. M.S. sought an order that P.S. “be adjudged to lack the capacity to give informed consent for medical treatment,” and that F.S. and he be appointed P.S.’s conservators. In support of the petition, M.S. submitted a declaration by Dr. Farshid Rahbar, a gastroenterologist who has examined P.S. concerning P.S.’s inflammatory bowel disease (IBD or Crohn’s Disease). Dr. Rahbar last saw P.S. in November 2011—21 months prior to M.S’s petition. Dr. Rahbar made his declaration on Judicial Council Form, GC-335 (Rev. Jan. 1, 2009), titled, “Capacity Declaration—Conservatorship.” The form calls for the declaring physician to evaluate various mental abilities of the proposed conservatee and assign a

2 level of impairment to each ability.1 Dr. Rahbar indicated that P.S. has no impairment with respect to 17 out of 19 mental abilities. Dr. Rahbar perceived moderate impairment of two abilities due to “stress”: (1) the ability to attend and concentrate; and (2) the ability to plan, organize, and carry out action in one’s own rational self-interest. The form also calls for the physician to state any opinion regarding the proposed conservatee’s mood state. Dr. Rahbar indicated that P.S. has a “mildly inappropriate” level of anxiety and a “severely inappropriate” level of hopelessness. He expressed no opinion regarding the listed mood states of anger, fear, panic, euphoria, depression, despair, helplessness, apathy, or indifference. Finally, Dr. Rahbar opined that P.S. “has the capacity to give informed consent to any form of medical treatment.” Dr. Rahbar attached a letter to his declaration in which he stated that P.S. has not kept appointments or agreements with his office, and has not returned telephone calls to follow up with treatment for his IBD. Dr. Rahbar expressed concern about P.S.’s “possible lack of understanding that unsupervised cessation of his medications may cause a ‘flare’ of his IBD, which may put him in a situation that he would require urgent attention and possible hospitalization.” He was also concerned about P.S.’s ability to handle stress and the effect of stress on P.S.’s IBD. Finally, he noted that F.S. has expressed to him her “extreme concern about [P.S.’s] physical and mental well being, and [his] current living situation with a significant other.” Dr. Rahbar concluded, however, that he “does not have a[ny] proof” to support F.S.’s statements. The court set the hearing on M.S.’s petition for October 9, 2013. That would have been four days after P.S.’s wedding date. On September 10, 2013, two weeks after he filed the original petition, M.S. filed a petition for appointment of temporary conservators of the person of P.S., again seeking to have F.S. and himself appointed as conservators. The temporary petition was based on

1 The form calls for the physician to rate the patient’s level of impairment on an “a” through “d” scale where “a” indicates “no apparent impairment,” “b” indicates “moderate impairment,” “c” indicates “major impairment,” and “d” indicates “so impaired as to be incapable of being assessed.” The physician may also select “e” to indicate: “no opinion.”

3 the allegation that M.S. and F.S. “are afraid that [P.S.] is going to marry a dangerous woman and also would like access to his doctor and medical records because they fear that he is not taking his medications properly.” The petition was supported by the same documents filed in support of the original conservatorship. The court set a hearing on the temporary petition for September 19, 2013, about two weeks before P.S.’s wedding date. At the September 19 hearing on the temporary petition, M.S. appeared without counsel; P.S. was present and represented by counsel. F.S. was present as was P.S.’s fiancée.2 The court noted it had reviewed a report regarding the case by a probate volunteer panel (PVP) and commented that P.S. is 28 years old, an engineer, employed full time, and that he “looks perfectly fine.”3 P.S.’s attorney told the court that P.S. is “a highly competent individual” and “a supervising engineer for a very top company.” He argued that the petition is an attempt to stop P.S.’s wedding and an abuse of process. After the court indicated that there was no basis for a conservatorship, F.S. told the court that she needed to get a “court order for his mental [sic],” and indicated that she had other evidence.4 When the court asked what evidence she had, she responded: “Okay. Bottom line is, for his Crohn[’s] Disease, you already call an attorney. He has—his evaluation about his Crohn[’s], but for recent, recent Crohn[’s] condition, which he has

2 The court denied F.S.’s request to have P.S.’s fiancée excluded from the courtroom. 3 Although the PVP report was filed with the trial court, M.S. did not designate the report for the record on appeal and it is not included in our record. A minute order in our record indicates that the author of the PVP report concluded that the evidence is insufficient to establish that P.S. is incapacitated and requires a conservatorship, and that there is insufficient evidence or information to establish the necessity for a temporary conservatorship. 4 M.S. was the petitioner and represented himself in pro. per. Although F.S. was neither a petitioner nor an attorney, she was permitted to argue the petitioner’s case. M.S. spoke only to announce his presence. After M.S.

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