In re C.V.

2016 MT 307, 384 P.3d 1048, 385 Mont. 429
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 2016
DocketNo. DA 15-0316
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2016 MT 307 (In re C.V.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re C.V., 2016 MT 307, 384 P.3d 1048, 385 Mont. 429 (Mo. 2016).

Opinion

JUSTICE SHEA

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 C.V. appeals from a May 8, 2015 Order of the Seventh Judicial District Court, Dawson County, granting the State’s petition for involuntary commitment.

¶2 We address the following issues on appeal:

Issue One: Whether the District Court erred in finding there was sufficient evidence to commit C.V. to the Montana State Hospital.
Issue Two: Whether C.V.’s right to remain silent was violated.
Issue Three: Whether C.V.’s right to due process was violated.

¶3 We affirm in part and reverse in part.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶4 On April 29, 2015, the Dawson County Attorney petitioned the District Court for the involuntary commitment of C.V., alleging that as the result of a mental disorder, she was unable to provide for her own basic needs of safety, there was an imminent threat of injury to herself or others, and her recent acts or omissions would, if untreated, predictably result in deterioration of her mental condition to the point at which she would become a danger to herself or others or would be unable to provide for her own basic need of safety. The petition included mental health professional Albinus Heidt’s report detailing his diagnosis of C.V. with a delusional disorder, and his conversations with two complaining witnesses, Tara Oakland and Kristin Thompson, regarding their interactions with C.V.

¶5 Mr. Heidt met with C.V. at the Glendive Medical Center to conduct a mental health evaluation, in which C.V. chose not to participate. In rambling speech and tangential responses to Mr. Heidt’s questions, C.V. denied any serious mental illness, and communicated that she believed an acquaintance, Cy Wyse, was cheating her out of money and the Oakland family was blacklisting her from employment. C.V. was unable or unwilling to tell Mr. Heidt where she lived. When Mr. Heidt asked C.V. whether she was employed, she replied that this information “was either secret or confidential and she could not divulge that” to him. Mr. Heidt received information about C.V. from Oakland, Thompson, Wyse, Katie Mills of the Dawson County Sheriffs Office, and Dr. Joe Leal, C.V.’s treating physician. Because C.V. refused to [431]*431participate in the mental health evaluation, Mr. Heidt relied heavily on information from these other sources — which included interviews with complaining witnesses and documents filed with Sheriffs Office by the complaining witnesses and C.V., herself — to reach his diagnosis that C.V. suffers from a delusional disorder.

¶6 The District Court found the petition established probable cause that C.V. suffers from a mental disorder that requires her commitment. Between April 30 and May 8,2015, an initial hearing, an adjudicatory hearing, and a dispositional hearing were held.

¶7 At the initial hearing on April 30,2015, C.V. argued the State did not have probable cause to file the commitment petition, and the District Court proceeded with the hearing to establish probable cause at which Mr. Heidt, Thompson, and Oakland testified.

¶8 Mr. Heidt testified as an expert witness and mental health professional regarding his diagnosis of C.V.’s delusional disorder, and that her own safety and the safety of others were at risk because of her delusional disorder. Mr. Heidt stated that C.V. does not recognize that she has a delusional disorder, and explained that a person with a delusional disorder distorts reality. When asked how a person with a delusional disorder is affected, Mr. Heidt testified: “What happens is that the individual ends up — in this case ends up saying and doing things which has [sic] been escalating other people in the community to become scared for their own safety and the safety of their children.” The District Court scheduled the commitment hearing for May 4,2015, and appointed Cindy Heidt as the professional person ordered to conduct a mental health evaluation and submit a written report. The District Court appointed Linda O’Connor as C.V.’s Appointed Friend.

¶9 At the initial hearing, Thompson, the office manager for Oaks Disposal Trucking, testified that C.V. has repeatedly called Oaks Disposal Trucking regarding employment despite being told there were no openings. Thompson stated C.V. would berate and harass her and other employees during phone calls and messages to the point Thompson considered quitting her job. During one voice message, C.V. stated she knew Thompson’s home address, which caused Thompson concern for her family’s safety. Thompson stated she was seeking an order of protection against C.V., and although she had never seen C.V. in person before the hearing on April 30, 2015, their interactions over the phone caused Thompson to change her behavior when out in the community.

¶10 Oakland, the owner of several businesses in the community including Oaks Disposal Trucking, also testified at the initial hearing. Oakland stated C.V. frequently called seeking employment or trying [432]*432to contact Wyse, who does not work for any of Oakland’s businesses, and that C.V.’s calls always reverted to complaining about a car and asserting that Wyse owed her money. When C.V. called demanding a job application for driving trucks, Oakland informed C.V. that Oakland does not own or work for the trucking business and instructed her to not call back. Oakland testified C.V. called up to five times a day every couple of months since July 2013, and the intensity of the calls increased over the last two months. C.V. also called Oakland’s father-in-law’s insurance company and Oakland’s accountant. C.V. demanded a W-2 form from Oakland’s accountant even though C.V. was never employed by Oakland’s businesses. Oakland testified C.V. filed three complaints with federal agencies regarding employment with Oakland’s businesses, and made false allegations to those federal agencies and local law enforcement. Oakland stated that the phone calls and complaints caused her to alter her activities because she was concerned C.V.’s behavior was escalating.

¶11 Finding unrebutted testimony that C.V. suffers from a delusional disorder, the District Court found C.V. posed an imminent threat of injury to herself and others, noting: “[Wjhile she may not be a direct risk to others or herself, the danger in part is the response of the people that she’s stalking and harassing and how they’re going to react to protect themselves.”

¶12 On May 4, 2015, Ms. Heidt filed her report with the District Court, and at the May 4,2015 adjudicatory hearing, Ms. Heidt testified to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that C.V. suffers from a delusional disorder mixed type with grandiose and persecutory features. Ms. Heidt explained the delusional disorder is a thought disorder and available treatment includes antipsychotic medications, teaching reality thinking and cognitive types of therapy. Ms. Heidt testified there was an imminent threat of injury to C.V. as a result of her delusional disorder because:

Some of the things that she’s been doing is going to people’s places and she has gone to Mr. Wyse’s home on several occasions at night and sometimes when he has been sleeping. And that could be a danger either to him or to herself because sometimes people, if they don’t know and there is a prowler, sometimes they protect themselves. And that would be a significant concern.

Based on her observations of C.V.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 MT 307, 384 P.3d 1048, 385 Mont. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cv-mont-2016.