In Re Guardianship of G.S.

953 A.2d 414, 157 N.H. 470
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 11, 2008
Docket2007-387
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 953 A.2d 414 (In Re Guardianship of G.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Guardianship of G.S., 953 A.2d 414, 157 N.H. 470 (N.H. 2008).

Opinion

HICKS, J.

The appellant, G.S., appeals from the order of the Merrimack County Probate Court (Hampe, J.) appointing a guardian over his person. We affirm.

The record supports the following. G.S. was serving a sentence at the Northern Correctional Facility (NCF) when he began to display delusional behavior. He was transferred to the Secure Psychiatric Unit (SPU) on or around December 21,2005, because of his increasingly “paranoid, irritable [and] uncooperative” behavior and his refusal to comply with “treatment and attempts to work through prescriptions or treatment for discharge.” At the SPU, his delusional behavior intensified. G.S. refused medical testing, including testing for contagious diseases, out of fear that the tests might be poisoned or tampered with in some way by the prison staff. When prison meals were delivered to his cell, he expressed similar fears of tampering and often stored food in his cell until it spoiled and was discovered by prison staff. Additionally, G.S. expressed a fear that certain correctional officers intended to harm him. He refused to leave his cell when those staff members were on duty, resisted their efforts to maintain control over him and threatened to assault them.

G.S. was diagnosed with delusional disorder. He does not agree with his diagnosis, however, and refuses to participate in mental health treatment because he is adamant that he does not have a “mental condition that requires treatment.” Because the SPU staff feared that G.S.’s continued refusal to acknowledge his mental illness and cooperate with the treatment team’s recommended treatment plan was likely to result in harm to his health and safety, the New Hampshire Department of Corrections (DOC) filed a petition for guardian of incapacitated person on May 12, 2006.

At the hearing on the petition, the probate court heard testimony from G.S.’s treatment team. The director of the SPU, James Knoll, M.D.; G.S.’s treating psychiatrist at the SPU, Mareosa Santiago, M.D.; and a court-appointed psychologist, Eric Mart, Ph.D., testified that G.S. suffers from delusional disorder and does not believe that he has a mental illness. *472 Furthermore, these mental health professionals agreed that G.S.’s delusional disorder impairs his ability to make informed decisions about his mental health care. Additionally, the court heard testimony about G.S.’s mental health and behavior at the SPU from Louise Coulombe, R.N., a nurse at the SPU; Nancy Denu, Senior Psychiatric Social Worker at the SPU; Heidi Guinen, Senior Psychiatric Social Worker at the NCF; and G.S.

On May 4, 2007, the probate court found, pursuant to RSA 464-A:9, III (2004) that G.S. was incapacitated and appointed the office of public guardian as guardian over his person. In the guardianship order, the court rendered the four findings required by RSA 464-A:9, III (a)-(d); namely:

(a) The person for whom a guardian is to be appointed is incapacitated; and
(b) The guardianship is necessary as a means of providing continuing care, supervision, and rehabilitation of the individual, or the management of the property and financial affairs of the incapacitated person; and
(c) There are no available alternative resources which are suitable with respect to the incapacitated person’s welfare, safety, and rehabilitation or the prudent management of his or her property and financial affairs; and
(d) The guardianship is appropriate as the least restrictive form of intervention consistent with the preservation of the civil rights and liberties of the proposed ward.

Additionally, the court determined that:

[Notwithstanding [G.S.’s] obvious intelligence, he is suffering from a mental illness, Delusional Disorder, which prevents him from making informed decisions regarding his health care decisions and makes him unable to provide for his health care.
He has suffered and will continue to suffer substantial harm because his incapacity has resulted and will continue to result in his incarceration in the most restricted unit of the secure psychiatric unit.

On appeal, G.S. contends that the probate court’s finding of incapacity is erroneous because the court equated “substantial harm” in RSA 464-A:2, XI (2004) with his continued assignment “in the most restricted unit of the secure psychiatric unit,” as opposed to assignment to a less restrictive level. Additionally, G.S. argues that the probate court erred in finding that the *473 evidence demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt that he is incapacitated and that no less restrictive alternative to guardianship exists.

We begin by considering the probate court’s interpretation of the phrase “substantial harm” and its subsequent finding of incapacity. “Incapacity” is defined as a

legal, not a medical, disability and [is] measured by functional limitations. It shall be construed to mean or refer to any person who has suffered, is suffering or is likely to suffer substantial harm due to an inability to provide for his personal needs for food, clothing, shelter, health care or safety.

RSA 464-A:2, XI.

G.S. maintains that the “substantial harm” contemplated by RSA 464-A:2, XI is limited to harm resulting from an inability to provide for one’s “personal needs for food, clothing, shelter, health care or safety.” RSA 464-A:2, XI. G.S. contends that since the court’s finding of incapacity was not based upon one of the defined categories of harm outlined in the statute and was instead rooted in his continued incarceration in the most restrictive unit of the SPU, it was erroneous.

We disagree, however, with G.S.’s characterization of the probate court’s decision. The court specifically found that G.S.’s mental illness “prevents him from making informed decisions regarding his health care decisions and makes him unable to provide for his health care.” This express finding demonstrates that the probate court considered the factors delineated in RSA 464-A:2, XI and made a determination of incapacity based, in part, upon the harm that would likely result from G.S.’s inability to make informed health care decisions.

Additionally, “[n]othing in the plain language of the statute requires that the probate court provide written illumination of all facts used in making its ultimate findings with regard to paragraph III (a) through (d).” In re Guardianship of Kapitula, 153 N.H. 492, 495 (2006). In the instant case, the fact that the probate court explicitly mentioned G.S.’s confinement in the most restrictive unit of the SPU and the detrimental effect that his mental illness has on his health care decisions does not mean that it “implicitly rejected” all other evidence of incapacity, as G.S. contends. Accordingly, we are not persuaded that the probate court erroneously interpreted the guardianship statute.

We next consider whether the evidence supports the probate court’s findings beyond a reasonable doubt that G.S. is incapacitated and that no less restrictive alternative to guardianship exists. “Because [G.S.] challenges the sufficiency of the evidence,” “[o]ur task is to review the record to

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Bluebook (online)
953 A.2d 414, 157 N.H. 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guardianship-of-gs-nh-2008.