Gallup v. Alden

57 Mass. App. Dec. 41
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 20, 1975
DocketNo. 320A
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 Mass. App. Dec. 41 (Gallup v. Alden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallup v. Alden, 57 Mass. App. Dec. 41 (Mass. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Gould, J.

This is an appeal under G.L. c. 123, §9 from rulings of law made pursuant to a petition for civil commitment which was brought under Massachusetts G.L. c. 123, §§7 and 8, seeking to recommit Beverly A. Alden to the Northampton State Hospital for a period of one year.

The petition was filed in the appropriate District Court in the area where the facility was located, and the District Court, after a hearing, conducted under G.L.C. 123, §8 committed Beverly A. Alden to the Northampton State Hospital for a period of one year.

At the close of the evidence, and prior to final arguments, both the petitioner and the appellant-defendant submitted various requests for rulings of law, which are hereby enumerated, because they will be germane to this opinion.

Defendant's Requests far Rulings

1. On all the evidence the defendant is not presently mentally ill.

2. On all evidence the defendant is not psychotic.

3. On all the evidence the defendant does not have a substantial disorder of thought, mood, perception, orientation, or memory, which grossly impairs judgment, behavior, capacity to recognize reality, or ability to meet the ordinary demands of life.

4. On all the evidence there is not a likelihood of serious harm if the defendant is discharged.

5. On all the evidence the Court cannot find beyond a reasonable doubt that there is a likelihood of serious harm if the defendant is discharged.

[43]*436. On all the evidence the Court cannot find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is mentally ill and that her discharge would create a likelihood of serious harm.

7. On all the evidence the Court cannot find that there is a clear and convincing proof that the defendant is mentally ill and that her discharge would create a likelihood of serious harm.

8. A qualified person other than a physician may render an opinion on whether the defendant’s discharge would create a likelihood of serious harm.

9. A qualified psychiatric social worker may render an opinion on whether the defendant’s discharge would create a likelihood of serious harm.

10. A qualified psychiatric social worker may render an opinion on whether further hospitalization would be beneficial to the defendant.

11. A qualified psychiatric social worker may render an opinion as to whether the defendant should be released.

12. A qualified physician may render an opinion as to whether the defendant would benefit from further treatment in a hospital.

13. The determination of whether a person other than a physician may render an opinion as to the defendant’s dangerousness is a matter exclusively in the discretion of the trial judge.

14. No person other than the trial judge is qualified to render an opinion as to what are appropriate credentials requisite to qualifying a person as an expert.

15. A person cannot be civilly committed unless the Court finds that such commitment is the least drastic alternative available to treat such person.

[44]*4416. A less drastic alternative than involuntary hospitalization is available to treat the defendant.

17. A less drastic alternative than involuntary hos-hospitalization is available to treat the defendant which would not create a likelihood of serious harm.

18. Petitioner’s treatment plan is not the least drastic alternative available for the defendant.

19. Defendant’s treatment plan is the least drastic alternative available for the defendant.

20. The defendant has a right to treatment if involuntarily committed to a state mental hospital.

21. The Northampton State Hospital does not have the necessary facilities to render the appropriate treatment for the defendant’s condition.

22. The petitioner’s treatment plan does not guarantee defendant’s right to adequate and appropriate treatment for her condition.

Petitioner's Requests for Rulings

1. Upon all the evidence, a finding releasing Beverly Alden from the Northampton State Hospital is not warranted.

2. A person, not a medical doctor licensed to practice in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, cannot give an opinion as to mental illness under the provisions of M.G.L., Chapter 123, secs. 7 or 8.

3. A person, not a physician duly licensed to practice in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, cannot give an opinion as to the likelihood of serious harm either to the confined party or to another within the provisions of Chapter 123, sec. 7 or 8.

4. A witness seeking to give a professional opinion as to either portion of the two-fold requirements under secs. 7 or 8, namely, existence of mental illness and likelihood of serious harm to the person or to [45]*45others as defined in M.G.L., Chapter 123, sec. 1, must be a "qualified person” as defined within the Department of Mental Health regulations.

5. The failure to grant cross-examination rights to the petitioner of a witness who has given an opinion under M.G.L., ch. 423. sec. 7 or 8, requires that such testimony be stricken in its entirety.

At the hearing, the evidence was recorded and transcribed, and a full transcript was attached to the report filed with the appeal, as exhibit "A” and was incorporated by reference therein. The evidence pertinent to the issues raised on this appeal is summarized as follows:

Dr. Shirley M. Gallup, Assistant Superintendent of the Northampton State Hospital, was a licensed physician in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and has been a staff physician at the Northampton State Hospital since 1958, which followed forty years of private practice in psychiatry. She first examined the defendant on February 9, 1972, after an emergency admission pursuant to $12 of Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 123.

Sometime after the examination the defendant was charged with homicide in the Superior Court of Hamden County, upon which charge the defendant was subsequently acquitted by reason of mental illness. The initial diagnosis of the defendant was acute schizophrenia. Dr. Gallup further testified that she had seen the defendant approximately every two or three months since that initial examination, and that in her most recent examination, which transpired in November of 1974, the diagnosis of the defendant was that of schizophrenia, undifferentiated kind. She further stated that the defendant, after having taken anti-psychotic medication during her term in the hospital, ceased taking this medication on October 26, 1974, and there was a "danger” in her not taking it, and she was so advised. Dr. Gallup further testified that the [46]*46effect of such medication might remain in a person’s body up to three months, and that it lessens in intensity towards the latter part of those three months.

She further testified that episodes of marked agitation associated with distortion of reality had occurred within the last few months before filing the petition, and that in her opinion the defendant was still under the effects of the medication as of the date of the hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Mass. App. Dec. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallup-v-alden-massdistctapp-1975.