In Re MG

408 A.2d 653
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 24, 1979
Docket1-79, 20-79, 21-79, 30-79 and 56-79
StatusPublished

This text of 408 A.2d 653 (In Re MG) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re MG, 408 A.2d 653 (Vt. 1979).

Opinion

408 A.2d 653 (1979)

In re M. G., A. G., J. G., E. F. and T. T.

Nos. 1-79, 20-79, 21-79, 30-79 and 56-79.

Supreme Court of Vermont.

October 24, 1979.

*654 William J. Reedy, Vermont Legal Aid, Inc., Brandon, for students.

M. Jerome Diamond, Atty. Gen., Montpelier, and William Allen Kelk, Asst. Atty. Gen., Waterbury, for State.

Before BARNEY, C. J., DALEY, LARROW and HILL, JJ., and SMITH, J. (Retired), Specially Assigned.

BARNEY, Chief Justice.

In 1978 the Legislature set up legal machinery for a regular review of commitments to the Brandon Training School, a state operated institution providing custodial care and treatment for the mentally retarded. A special unit of the district court was established to carry out this review function. This same sort of procedure had already been provided for at the State Hospital at Waterbury, as well as at any other hospitals in the state providing hospitalization for the insane. See 18 V.S.A. §§ 7801-7803.

The legislative purposes are quite clear. There is, first, a check on the validity and necessity of the institutionalization. Second, machinery is provided whereby at early and regular intervals the continuing necessity for requiring those admitted to remain at the school is reviewed. In keeping with its designation as a school those who have been admitted are referred to by the statute as "students." Under these legislative directives the students are given a way to challenge, on a regular and repetitive basis, the legal justification for their institutionalization whether on the basis of improvement in mental health and competence, or on the ground of unjustified admission in the first instance. The concern of the Legislature stems from, and centers on, the fact that commitments to that school are a kind of confinement or restraint on personal liberty, an area of constitutional sensitivity.

The procedure for review is spelled out in 18 V.S.A. § 8810(e) dealing with the hearing provided for:

(e) If, upon completion of the hearing and consideration of the record, the court finds at the time of the hearing that the person admitted satisfies the criteria for initial admission to the training school, excluding residence, his continued admission to the training school is in accord with the law, and he is receiving treatment, education, rehabilitation and remedial care which is adequate and which does not appear upon reasonable inquiry to be available to him in a less restrictive environment, then the court shall order that the person's admission shall continue. Unless demonstrated to the contrary, less restrictive environments shall include community programs, residential and non-residential, which are appropriate to the needs and abilities of the person admitted.

The criteria for initial admission, excluding residence, referred to in that section, are found in 18 V.S.A. § 8805. They may be summarized as requiring determinations that the person is mentally retarded, is not afflicted with a contagious disease, is not violently mentally ill, and that there is suitable space available for accommodating a person of his mental classification, emotional stability and social maturity. Additionally, although not in controversy here, the issue of immediate and substantial risk of injury to the student himself, or others, in cases of release from the Brandon Training School was dealt with by the reviewing judges.

Several cases involving this review procedure were argued at about the same time. Although more than one judge was involved and the results were not identical in all cases, the legal issues were the same and the matters have, therefore, come to be disposed of in this single opinion. The State seeks review of the conditional discharges of M.G., A.G., J.G. and E.F. The *655 denial of a discharge to T.T. is being appealed on his behalf.

M.G. is thirty years old and mildly retarded. He has the equivalent social age of a seventeen year old. At the time of the hearing there were appropriate placements, that is to say, living arrangements available, if they could be coordinated with suitable employment. He had previously been on community placement which had come to an end through no fault of his, but rather of the home operator. His treatment team recommended him for placement in the community. The findings recite that the programs necessary for the student's support and habilitation are available in the community, but acknowledge that no appropriate community placement for this student has yet been located. The lower court granted the application for discharge by granting a conditional discharge with its operation delayed to allow the school to locate an appropriate placement. Failure to make that placement within a reasonable time was made grounds for further review.

E.F. is slightly more retarded than M.G. and is fifty-one years old. He is able to care for himself independently as far as personal care and needs, but would not be able to take care of himself without assistance if he became ill, and would need supervision in managing his finances. His treatment team recommended placement in the community, and, at the time of hearing, he was under consideration for several "possible" placements. The lower court made an order of delayed conditional discharge substantially as was the case with M.G.

T.T. is more retarded than either of those previously discussed. He is twenty-one years old and has been at the school since January, 1964. His retardation is classified as moderate with an I.Q. of forty. He suffers from Sturge-Weber Syndrome which is congenital. Among other things it causes some paralysis of his left side, early glaucoma of the right eye and petit mal seizures. The seizures are controlled by medications which must be administered to the student at prescribed times. He presently participates in off-campus programs in the town of Brandon designed to improve his vocational and social skills. The lower court found that, if released, the student could not, without extensive supervision, provide for his needs for nourishment, medical care, shelter or self-protection, and denied release on the ground that no lesser restrictive environment was appropriate other than the Brandon Training School itself. The court did order that he be moved to a less restrictive dormitory setting.

Two other students, A.G. and J.G., were also ordered conditionally discharged and placements have now apparently been found for them. Since we do not understand that the State wishes to undo these placements, we will not review them. The appeals of M.G., E.F., and T.T. remain for disposition.

The dispute between the parties centers on the statutory language speaking of alternate sources of treatment "available to him in a less restrictive environment." The students argue that once it is established that an alternative placement less restrictive than the Brandon Training School is appropriate for the student, there is a duty on the part of the state to provide that alternative even if it does not presently exist. The State, on the other hand, argues that students otherwise eligible for discharge are not entitled to release under the statutory provisions unless there is an adequate and appropriate community placement available for them.

As frequently happens in the law the problems represented by these cases derive from a conflict between two desirable and beneficial objectives. One is the constitutional concern for personal liberty, the other is the custodial duty of care owed those who cannot safely function without supervision.

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In re M. G.
408 A.2d 653 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
408 A.2d 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mg-vt-1979.