In Re Easly

771 A.2d 844, 2001 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 113, 2001 WL 180958
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 26, 2001
Docket1219 C.D. 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 771 A.2d 844 (In Re Easly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Easly, 771 A.2d 844, 2001 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 113, 2001 WL 180958 (Pa. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

KELLEY, Judge.

Nancy Thaler, Deputy Secretary of Mental Retardation (Secretary), Department of Public Welfare (Department), appeals from a May 8, 2000 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Venango County (trial court) denying her motion for post trial relief from the trial court’s April 12, 2000 order. The April 12, 2000 order granted the Secretary’s Petition for Mental Retardation Commitment (Petition), committed Ruth Easly to Polk Center pursuant to Section 406 of the Mental Health Mental Retardation Act of 1966 (MH/MR Act of 1966),1 and imposed restrictions upon any future removal of Ms. Easly from Polk Center.2

1. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The facts and procedural history of this matter, as found by the trial court, are as follows. Ms. Easly was born on December 2, 1927. Until her admission in 1942 at the age of fourteen to Polk Center, Ms. Easly resided with her family in Hastings, Cam-bria County, Pennsylvania.3 Although Ms. Easly is seventy-two years old, she functions within the profound range of mental retardation as a result of a mechanical injury at birth. Ms. Easly has a communication age equivalent to one year, ten months, and daily living skills equivalent to two years, eight months. She has a socialization age of one year, six months, and a mental age of two years, one month, with an IQ of fourteen. Ms. Easly can walk but suffers from debilitating medical problems such as hiatel hernia, which causes her chest pains, hypercholesterolemia, scalp seborrhea and asteorosis. Ms. Easly is on medication, including carafte, skin lotion and mevacor, for her hypercholesterole-mia.

Ms. Easly is accurately described as very small in stature, very unassuming and a very quiet person. When with a group of people, she likes to remain on the periphery and watch. She is fully ambulatory and has the capacity to communicate verbally. Ms. Easly enjoys looking at the [847]*847pictures in magazines, watching television, and going to church.

No court proceeding was initiated to place Ms. Easly at Polk Center. When she was committed at age fourteen, her parents would have had the authority to commit her as a voluntary commitment. In 1998, Stephen Dvorchak, Ms. Easly’s nephew, petitioned the trial court to be appointed plenary guardian of the person and estate of Ms. Easly. On July 6, 1998, the trial court, after a hearing, concluded that Ms. Easly was incapacitated and that a plenary guardian of her person and estate should be appointed. As a result, Mr. Dvorchak was appointed as plenary guardian.

The Department, pursuant to its plan for compliance with Part A of Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990(ADA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12181-12134,4 began out processing from institutional settings, such as Polk Center, patients who the health care professionals determined could function in a community setting. The professional staff at Polk Center, as part of a team, concluded that Ms. Easly could function appropriately in a community group home, and began planning for her removal to a community group home. Thereafter, the professional staff at Polk Center, Cambria County Mental Health/Mental Retardation (Cambria Co'unty MH/MR) administration and the Cambrian Hills Center (a community based residential facility), collectively determined that community placement in Cambria County would be in Ms. Easly’s best interest because Ms. Easly had originally come from Cambria County. Dialogue was opened with Ms. Easly’s family; however, the family opposed Ms. Easly being removed from Polk Center.

Cambrian Hills is located in Portage, Cambria County, Pennsylvania and is owned and operated by Northwestern Human Services of Pennsylvania. Pursuant to Section 419 of the MH/MR Act, 50 P.S. § 4419, the facility director at Polk Center authorized a leave for Ms. Easly from Polk Center to Cambrian Hills Center as a trial visit.5 Ms. Easly first visited the facility in Cambria County in May 1998. Ms. Easly visited again in the summer and fall of 1998 and had her first overnight trip on December 28 and 29 of 1998. Ms. Easly was then transferred to Cambrian Hills beginning February 9, 1999. The Secretary contends that the trial visit was successful and the plan was to discharge Ms. Easly from Polk Center; however, the discharge was delayed temporarily to permit continued prescription services through Polk Center.

Mr. Dvorchak, as Ms. Easly’s guardian, vigorously opposed Ms. Easly’s placement at Cambrian Hills and threatened litiga[848]*848tion. Cambria County, through its mental health/mental retardation service unit, concluded that there were issues concerning whether Ms. Easly had been improperly placed at Cambrian Hills and at Mr. Dvorchak’s insistence, returned Ms. Easly from the group home in Cambria County to Polk Center on May 18, 1999, where she now resides.

On May 24, 1999, the Secretary filed a Petition for Mental Retardation Commitment with this Court, requesting that we exercise original jurisdiction and issue a commitment order for Ms. Easly’s care at Cambrian Hills “so as to permit her to there reside in peace without fear of precipitous, unauthorized relocation such as she recently suffered.” Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 10a. Mr. Dvorchak, as guardian, filed preliminary objections challenging venue and jurisdiction. On June 8, 1999, this Court entered an order transferring the matter to the trial court.

Upon transfer, the trial court appointed Virginia Sharp, Esquire, as guardian ad litem for Ms. Easly. At a pre-hearing conference, the parties agreed that the trial court would be required to determine whether the Department is required, when it changes the placement of a person such as Ms. Easly, from Polk Center to a community facility, to use administrative procedure and afford the family or guardian a hearing under Title 55 of the Pennsylvania Code.

Hearings before the trial court were scheduled for August 23 and 24, 1999. Upon the conclusion of the hearings, the trial court, with agreement of all parties, visited Ms. Easly at Polk Center on August 26, 1999. The trial court’s observations were memorialized in a memorandum and submitted into evidence as court exhibit 2.

After the trial court’s visit with Ms. Easly at Polk Center, the trial court reopened the record, at the request of counsel for Mr. Dvorchak, and the court received additional testimony on September 14, 1999. During the course of the hearings, the trial court received testimony from eight witnesses called by the Secretary and ten witnesses called by the guardian. The trial court also considered five exhibits submitted by the Secretary, seven exhibits submitted by Mr. Dvorchak as the guardian, two exhibits submitted by Attorney Sharp as the guardian ad litem, and three court exhibits.6

In rendering its decision, the trial court first determined that Section 406 of the MH/MR Act of 1966 provides a proper vehicle to dispose of the issues presented.7 [849]*849Second, the trial court determined that a guardian, especially a family member guardian, who, by virtue of court appointment of guardianship and because of the traditional and statutory fiduciary responsibility reposed in the guardian, must be at least a participant in the decision concerning matters affecting the care and treatment of the incapacitated person.

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In Re Easly
771 A.2d 844 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
771 A.2d 844, 2001 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 113, 2001 WL 180958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-easly-pacommwct-2001.