Dietrich v. Brooks

558 P.2d 357, 27 Or. App. 821, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1528
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 20, 1976
Docket93794, CA 6692; 93795, CA 6693
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 558 P.2d 357 (Dietrich v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dietrich v. Brooks, 558 P.2d 357, 27 Or. App. 821, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1528 (Or. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*823 TANZER, J.

This is a consolidated appeal from an order denying a writ of habeas corpus and from a judgment declaring ORS 426.290 to be constitutional.

On August 28, 1975, the appellant was involuntarily committed to the Mental Health Division pursuant to ORS 426.130. That proceeding is not challenged. Appellant was then confined in the Oregon State Hospital until November 2, 1975, when he was released on trial visit pursuant to ORS 426.280.

On December 26, 1975, appellant was returned from trial visit after two persons signed an affidavit requesting the Superintendent of the Oregon State Hospital to return him to the hospital. The return was accomplished without a hearing.

On January 19, 1976, these actions were commenced. Appellant was discharged from the Oregon State Hospital on February 23, 1976. These actions were heard by the circuit court on March 1,1976. The trial court dismissed the habeas corpus action as moot and entered a declaratory judgment holding that ORS 426.290 is constitutional and that on-site preliminary hearings and full trial visit revocation hearings are not constitutionally required.

I. DECLARATORY JUDGMENT

ORS 426.290 provides the procedure by which a trial visit of a person committed to the Mental Health Division may be terminated. If two persons swear to a complaint, the division or its local delegee shall take custody of the person and assign him to a suitable facility. If the acts complained of indicate to the examining physician of the receiving facility that the person should no longer be permitted to remain on trial visit, the person shall be admitted to that facility. The person may insist upon returning to the same facility from which he was released. There need be no judicial hearing, but if the trial visit has lasted at least 90 days, an administrative hearing with the right to *824 counsel shall be afforded within seven days of the return. 1

Appellant challenges the statute and his return under it on due process and equal protection grounds, invoking Article I, §§ 10, 11, of the Oregon Constitution, and the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.

A. Due Process

The syllogism of appellant’s argument is that a trial visit from a mental hospital is analogous to parole from a penitentiary, that Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 US 471, 92 S Ct 2593, 33 L Ed 2d 484 (1972), holds that the Due Process Clause requires hearings with notice, counsel, and confrontation before parole can be revoked, and therefore that the same constitutional protections as are required for revocation of parole are required for revocation of its analogous mental health counterpart, a trial visit.

There is superficial appeal to the analogy between parole and trial visits. ORS 426.280 and 426.290, as first enacted in 1915, provided for "parole” from institutions and that word remained until the legislature substituted the phrase "trial visit” for "parole” throughout the two statutes. Oregon Laws 1961, ch 228, § 2. The more familiar term "parole” is sometimes used imprecisely to convey rough understanding of the *825 less familiar term "trial visits.” 2 The description of the purpose of a parole in Morrissey v. Brewer sounds much like the description of the purpose of a trial visit: "* * * to help individuals reintegrate into society as constructive individuals as soon as they are able * * *.” 408 US at 477. In each case, there is a release from confinement to conditional liberty with the objective of reintegration of the individual into normal life, subject to reconfinement upon failure.

Reasoning by analogy, however, has its limits. The appellant would have us extend it ad absurdum beyond the points of similarity between parole and trial visits. In reality, there are profound differences of nature, degree and function between the two concepts which make different due process considerations appropriate.

The societal purposes of parole and trial visits are different. Although penology is now called "corrections,” see, e.g., ORS chs 421 and 423, and although Article I, § 15, of the Oregon Constitution exhorts us to apply punishment upon principles of reformation wherever possible for the benefit of those amenable to correctional treatment, see Kent v. Cupp, 26 Or App 799, 802, 554 P2d 196, rev den (1976), still the underlying nature of imprisonment and parole is penal and deterrent, however enlightened its philosophical overlay may be. A trial visit, on the other hand, is one therapeutic device in a program of medical treatment of a mentally ill person. There is nothing penal or deterrent about it. Although the *826 corrections and mental health programs function similarly in several respects, and even overlap in their client populations, the basic purposes and societal expectations of each are fundamentally different.

The length of the deprivation of liberty is different. By statute, a trial visit of less than 90 days may be terminated without hearing. Parole, however, lasts for "such time as satisfies the State Board of Parole” limited only by the expiration of the parolee’s sentence, ORS 144.310, which could be from six months, ORS 144.050, to life. Any interference with liberty is constitutionally significant, but the relative gravity of the interference influences the amount or nature of the process which is due.

The two types of conditional liberty are also functionally different in many ways, but particularly in their relationship with the institutional program. Trial visits are essentially a part of the institutional program to prepare the patient for his return. The very term "trial visit” implies an expectation that the patient may go back and forth between hospital and home until a satisfactory adjustment to community living is achieved. If the trial visit is analogous to any correctional program, then it is to the institution-related work release program, cf. ORS 144.500, rather than parole. Parole works differently.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
558 P.2d 357, 27 Or. App. 821, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 1528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dietrich-v-brooks-orctapp-1976.