In re Julie M.

2021 IL 125768, 190 N.E.3d 763, 454 Ill. Dec. 781
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2021
Docket125768
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2021 IL 125768 (In re Julie M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois 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 Julie M., 2021 IL 125768, 190 N.E.3d 763, 454 Ill. Dec. 781 (Ill. 2021).

Opinion

2021 IL 125768

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

(Docket No. 125768)

In re JULIE M., a Person Found Subject to Involuntary Admission (The People of the State of Illinois, Appellee, v. Julie M., Appellant).

Opinion filed December 16, 2021.

JUSTICE GARMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

Justices Theis, Michael J. Burke, Overstreet, and Carter concurred in the judgment and opinion.

Chief Justice Anne M. Burke dissented, with opinion, joined by Justice Neville.

OPINION

¶1 Carle Foundation Hospital (Carle) filed a petition for the emergency admission by certification of respondent, Julie M., to a mental health facility pursuant to Chapter III, article VI, of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code (Mental Health Code) (405 ILCS 5/1-100 et seq. (West 2018)). Id. ch. III, art. VI. Respondent moved to dismiss, arguing that the petition was untimely filed under sections 3-604 and 3-610. Id. §§ 3-604, 3-610. The Champaign County circuit court denied the motion and ordered respondent to be involuntarily committed for no more than 90 days. The appellate court found that the capable-of-repetition-yet- evading-review exception to the mootness doctrine applied and then affirmed.

¶2 To determine whether the petition was timely under sections 3-604 and 3-610, we must determine the precise start/stop triggers for those deadlines, whether they apply to respondent, and when respondent was admitted to a mental health facility pursuant to article VI. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 Respondent’s Medical and Psychiatric Care

¶5 Respondent arrived at Carle on September 14, 2018, via emergency medical services after swallowing batteries in an apparent suicide attempt. Members of the Carle staff were familiar with respondent because she had been treated at Carle just weeks before this incident, also for swallowing batteries. In fact, this was her third time swallowing batteries in 2018. Respondent had been previously diagnosed with multiple mental illnesses.

¶6 Carle does not have a psychiatric ward. Rather, it has a psychiatric team that provides for the psychiatric needs of patients housed throughout the hospital. Thus, respondent was not placed in any kind of specific mental health ward, unit, or section. Rather, she was housed on what the parties refer to generally as the “medical floor.”

¶7 Respondent underwent an endoscopy on the day of her presentation, and one of the batteries was found in her esophagus. Another endoscopy was performed the next day, September 15, but no battery was recovered. On September 17, the psychiatric team consulted with respondent, marking the earliest instance in the record of affirmative psychiatric treatment. The psychiatric team met with respondent again on September 19. On September 20, respondent underwent a colonoscopy in an effort to remove the remaining batteries. Doctors observed severe internal damage caused by battery acid but were not able to recover the

-2- batteries. Surgery was consulted, and on September 21, respondent underwent open surgery, which resulted in the removal of the final battery.

¶8 Respondent’s care was comanaged by both medical and psychiatric teams. Dr. Renato Alcaraz, an internal medicine hospitalist, cared for her on the medical side during her surgical recovery while the psychiatry team, led by Dr. Benjamin Gersh, continued to see respondent regularly. Respondent’s psychiatric medication was increased. Throughout her stay, respondent expressed suicidal ideations and attempted to hurt herself on several occasions. As a result, she required sitters to supervise her at all times.

¶9 Dr. Alcaraz believed that respondent was medically stable for discharge from a surgical standpoint on September 28. In his opinion, the wound was healing well and showed no signs of complication by that point. However, he recognized that an actual discharge would not occur until all care teams involved in a patient’s case agreed. Dr. Gersh was not ready to discharge respondent on September 28. He distinguished between “medically stable for discharge” and “medically appropriate for discharge.” Given that respondent had a history of swallowing foreign objects, Dr. Gersh did not feel it appropriate to discharge her while she still had medical staples in her abdomen. Furthermore, Dr. Gersh was concerned with the fact that respondent had nowhere else to go at that time because the local psychiatric facilities would not accept “medically complicated people” like respondent, no family appeared able or willing to care for her, and the only other option being considered by respondent and her mother was a homeless shelter. Dr. Alcaraz would later testify that considerations regarding where the patient would go after discharge are typical before issuing the actual discharge order, even if the patient were medically stable and had no psychiatric issues. Respondent remained in the hospital past September 28 without any discharge.

¶ 10 On October 3, her surgical staples were removed. On October 4, Dr. Gersh determined that respondent was medically appropriate for discharge. At 2 p.m., a petition for emergency admission by certification was executed by a hospital social worker. Two certificates were executed at 2:30 p.m. and 5:04 p.m., each attesting to a personal examination of respondent and concurring with the need for immediate hospitalization. The first certificate, executed by Dr. Gersh, attested to the fact that respondent “has been medically cleared today.” The second certificate,

-3- executed by Dr. Emily Buirkle, stated that respondent “was deemed medical appropriate for discharge on 10/4/2018.” No actual discharge order appears to have been issued by Carle. On October 5, the petition and both certificates were filed with the circuit court at 8:24 a.m.

¶ 11 Circuit Court Proceedings

¶ 12 Prior to the commitment hearing on the petition, respondent moved to dismiss the petition on the grounds that she had been detained involuntarily without petition, examination, or certificate from September 28 to October 5 in violation of sections 3-604 and 3-610 of the Mental Health Code (id. §§ 3-604, 3-610). According to respondent’s motion, she had been medically cleared on September 28 yet remained “detained at the Facility involuntarily and refused discharge from the Facility against medical advice.” 1 She argued that sections 3-604 and 3-610 require that a petition or certificate, respectively, be executed within 24 hours of her involuntary detention.

¶ 13 At the commitment hearing, the circuit court first heard testimony and argument on the motion. Dr. Alcaraz, Dr. Gersh, and two nurses testified to the facts of respondent’s care. Relevant here, Dr. Gersh testified that respondent was discharged by Dr. Buirkle on October 4, marking the “end of her medical stay” and her “transition to a ‘psych stay.’ ” The court ultimately denied the motion to dismiss:

“The more difficult question is, whether that certification on October the 4th was timely done. The law requires that someone who’s being held involuntarily must—the certificate must be filed within 24 hours. She was medically there because of a surgery to remove a battery. The surgery took place on September the 21st. She was then [seen] by Dr. Alcaraz from the 25th to the 30th. It was his opinion that she was medically stable and could be discharged, I believe he testified to, on the 28th.

1 “Against medical advice” as used by Carle refers to a note in the patient’s medical file.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 IL 125768, 190 N.E.3d 763, 454 Ill. Dec. 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-julie-m-ill-2021.