In Re Detention Of: P.p.

431 P.3d 550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 11, 2018
Docket50773-1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 431 P.3d 550 (In Re Detention Of: P.p.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Detention Of: P.p., 431 P.3d 550 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON Division Two

DIVISION II December 11, 2018

In the Matter of the Detention of: No. 50773-1-II

P.P. PUBLISHED OPINION STATE OF WASHINGTON; JOHNATHAN SHARRETTE, PH.D.; and SUKHINDERPAL AULAKH, M.D.,

Petitioners, v.

P.P.,

Respondent.

BJORGEN, J. — The State filed a petition for involuntary commitment after the superior

court declared P.P. incompetent to stand trial on felony charges. The superior court granted the

petition for involuntary commitment, dismissed the felony charges against P.P., and ordered that

P.P. be involuntarily committed for a period not to exceed 180 days.

P.P. appeals the involuntary commitment order, arguing that the superior court erred

when it concluded that the law does not allow him to become a good faith voluntary patient. P.P.

also argues that our court should remand this matter to the superior court for de novo review of

the commissioner’s findings of fact. P.P. concedes that the order is moot, but the State and P.P.

both agree on the need to clarify whether an individual who has been found incompetent to stand

trial on felony charges may become a good faith voluntary patient instead of being involuntarily

committed. We agree and reach the merits because it is a matter of continuing and substantial

public interest. No. 50773-1-II

On the merits, we hold the law does not provide mentally ill persons found incompetent

to stand trial for felony charges the legal opportunity to become good faith voluntary patients.

We affirm the superior court’s involuntary commitment order.

FACTS

In 2017, the State charged P.P. with three counts of felony indecent exposure and one

count of voyeurism. The superior court found P.P. incompetent to stand trial, dismissed his

criminal charges, and committed him to a state hospital for an involuntary 72-hour evaluation

and treatment period for the purposes of civil commitment.

After the 72-hour evaluation, Dr. Sukhinderpal Aulakh and Dr. Johnathan Sharrette filed

a petition for a 180-day involuntary civil commitment on the basis of former RCW 71.05.280(3)

and (4) (2015). At the beginning of the involuntary civil commitment hearing, P.P. requested

that he be found a good faith voluntary patient and that the petition be dismissed. The

commissioner denied the motion, but invited the parties to brief the issue and continued the

hearing.

At the next hearing, the commissioner determined that petitioners are required to prove

that an individual is not a good faith voluntary patient at 90- and 180-day civil commitment

hearings. The commissioner then heard testimony on this issue.

Dr. Sharrette testified that, in his opinion, he did not believe P.P. would in good faith

seek voluntary treatment. He stated that P.P. recently lied to an evaluator during a competency

evaluation. He also testified that P.P. had recently left a voluntary hospitalization after only

seven days and that his explanation for doing so was because he felt the hospitalization was

doing him no good. In addition, Dr. Sharrette testified that P.P. explained to him that he believed

a computer controlled his physical, emotional, and hormonal body. Dr. Sharrette also provided

2 No. 50773-1-II

testimony regarding his concerns about medical compliance in the community, P.P.’s lack of

insight into the benefit of treatment, and his long hospitalization history.

After hearing testimony from both Dr. Sharrette and P.P., who admitted that he lied to the

competency evaluator to avoid potential hospitalization, the commissioner found that P.P. did

not meet the criteria for a good faith voluntary patient. The commissioner further found that P.P.

committed acts constituting the felony indecent exposure and that, due to his mental illness, he

was likely to commit similar felony acts in the future. The commissioner entered an order for

involuntary commitment not to exceed 180 days.

P.P. filed a motion for revision with the superior court, seeking to be found a good faith

voluntary patient. The petitioners’ then filed a cross motion for revision. At the hearing on the

motions, the superior court found that P.P. would not be a good faith voluntary patient.

Specifically, the superior court stated,

Even if the good faith voluntary status is available, it’s been demonstrated, as previously noted, that the respondent is not a good faith volunteer based on his failure to comply with voluntary treatment at the UW [University of Washington] Medical Center in 2015, when he left after seven days, because the treatment wasn’t helping, as well as his admission to providing inaccurate information to skew the results of the competency evaluation and avoid further treatment and his admission that he wants to get out of treatment and that it doesn’t really work.

The most recent involuntary hospitalization is not helpful in establishing a track record because it doesn’t establish that he’s a good faith volunteer when he has the complete freedom to walk away.

Verbatim Report of Proceedings (Aug. 11, 2017) at 33-34.

On August 11, 2017, the superior court entered an order that denied P.P.’s motion for

revision and granted the petitioners’ cross motion to revise. The superior court also concluded

that “RCW 71.05.280, and RCW 71.05.320 do not require Petitioners to prove ‘good faith

voluntary’ status prior to civil commitment.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 135. Therefore, and

3 No. 50773-1-II

consistently with the arguments made, we read the superior court’s ruling to conclude that the

State is not required to prove good faith voluntary status because P.P. did not have an

opportunity under the relevant statutes to become a good faith voluntary patient. Based on this

conclusion, the order stated,

The Court Commissioner’s July 14, 2017 order is revised striking the “finding” on page 2, lines 8-9 that “during any commitment hearing, 14, 90, or 180 day hearing, the issue of voluntary admission may be raised” and replacing it with this Court’s conclusion of law that petitioner is not required to prove “good faith voluntary status prior to civil commitment.”

CP at 135-36.

P.P. appeals.

ANALYSIS

I. MATTERS OF CONTINUING AND SUBSTANTIAL PUBLIC INTEREST

P.P. concedes that his case is technically moot because the 180-day involuntary

commitment order has expired. However, both P.P. and the State agree that we should decide his

case on the merits because the issue presented involves a matter of continuing and substantial

public interest. Assuming without deciding that P.P.’s appeal is moot,1 we agree that we should

reach the merits because this case involves a matter of continuing and substantial public interest.

Even if an appeal is moot, we may still reach the merits if it involves “matters of

continuing and substantial public interest.” Sorenson v. Bellingham, 80 Wn.2d 547, 558, 496

P.2d 512 (1972). The criteria to be considered in determining whether a continuing and

substantial public interest is involved include: (1) the public or private nature of the question

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