In Re Rks III

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 13, 2025
Docket374355
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Rks III (In Re Rks III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Rks III, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re RKS III.

KENNIDY COBURN, UNPUBLISHED August 13, 2025 Petitioner-Appellee, 1:42 PM

v No. 374355 Kent Probate Court RKS III, LC No. 25-932913-MI

Respondent-Appellant.

Before: O’BRIEN, P.J., and BOONSTRA and WALLACE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent, RKS III, appeals as of right the probate court’s order requiring respondent to involuntarily undergo mental-health treatment pursuant to the Mental Health Code, MCL 330.1001 et seq. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In January 2025, a social worker petitioned the trial court to order the hospitalization of, and assisted outpatient treatment for, respondent because respondent was “endorsing homicidal ideation” toward his grandmother and father with a “plan and intent to harm” his father, and respondent was having visual and auditory hallucinations of “things burning” and “each emotion [having] a voice.” The petition was supported by two “clinical certificates.”

The first clinical certificate was signed by psychiatrist Jamie McLean. McLean represented that she had personally examined respondent at Network180, and that respondent told McLean that he could “see himself killing his dad and grandma [because] of physical [and] verbal abuse he [had] endured from them in the past.” McLean further represented that respondent said to a clinician that he did not want treatment because he did not “want it to dull his desire to kill his dad.” In McLean’s opinion, respondent was a person requiring treatment under the Mental Health Code, and she recommended hospitalization.

-1- The second clinical certificate was signed by psychiatrist Jonathon Dozeman. Dozeman represented that he had personally examined respondent at Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services, and had also reviewed respondent’s records. Those records, according to Dozeman, stated that respondent was brought in for treatment because he was having “homicidal ideation” towards his grandmother and father and “expressed a calculated plan to kill [his] father and get away with it,” but he declined treatment. In Dozeman’s examination of respondent, respondent admitted to having “murderous thoughts” but denied having a plan. Like McLean, Dozeman opined that respondent was a person requiring treatment under the Mental Health Code, and he recommended a combination of hospitalization and assisted outpatient treatment.

The trial court held a hearing on the petition for mental-health treatment, at which Dozeman testified in support of the petition. According to Dozeman, after meeting with respondent, Dozeman diagnosed him with “[t]rauma and stressor related disorder.” The basis for this diagnosis, Dozeman explained, was a combination of his examination of respondent and his review of respondent’s records. Dozeman elaborated that, according to respondent’s records, during an evaluation at Network180, he admitted to having “homicidal thoughts towards his father and grandmother,” “endorsed having a calculated plan to kill his father, expressed belief that he would be able to get away with it, and . . . declined treatment, at the time, because he did not want the treatment to get rid of his homicidal thoughts toward[] his father.” With Dozeman, respondent admitted to his homicidal thoughts but “declined that he had a plan or intent” to act on them. Dozeman was not aware of respondent acting on his homicidal thoughts in any way other than telling Network180 that “he had a calculated plan” for killing his father. When asked whether respondent was a danger to himself, Dozeman said that he believed that respondent was “mainly . . . a danger to others.”

After the petition was filed, respondent was admitted to a facility where Dozeman practiced, and Dozeman testified about respondent’s behavior while there. According to Dozeman, since being admitted, respondent had gone “on a three-day hunger strike,” “was largely uncooperative,” denied the “need for treatment,” and minimized “the severity of the situation.” Dozeman also believed that respondent had shown “poor judgment” in that “[h]e was prepared to let his bearded dragon . . . die rather than communicate with his family to take care of” it while he was away. On the treatment front, Dozeman explained that respondent was refusing “medication treatment,” despite previously taking medication with success, because respondent did not think it was “a good idea to get back on medication.” Respondent had also begun saying that his homicidal thoughts were “in the rearview mirror,” which Dozeman did not believe because he had recently heard respondent “ask[ing] God to keep himself and others safe from his vengeful thoughts.” This, Dozeman believed, showed that respondent had “some insight to the severity of the situation, even though he’s mostly minimizing it with us.” Dozeman opined that respondent did not fully understand the need for treatment because he thought that “his homicidal thoughts [were] justified.”

After Dozeman finished testifying, respondent declined to testify, and the trial court issued a ruling from the bench. The court found that petitioner had established by clear and convincing evidence that respondent was a person requiring treatment under the Mental Health Code; that respondent posed “a direct risk of harm” to others, particularly his father and grandmother; and that respondent did not understand his need for treatment and had demonstrated an unwillingness

-2- to voluntarily participate in treatment. Accordingly, the trial court granted the petition and ordered hospitalization of respondent.

This appeal followed.

II. HEARSAY

Respondent contends that the probate court reversibly erred by considering two statements that constituted inadmissible hearsay: (1) the statement that respondent had a “plan” to kill his father and (2) the statement that respondent did not want treatment because he did not “want it to dull his desire to kill his dad.”

Respondent failed to raise an objection to these statements before the probate court, so his arguments are unpreserved, and our review is for plain error affecting substantial rights. See In re MAT, ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW3d ___ (2024) (Docket No. 369255); slip op at 6.

Hearsay is an out-of-court statement that a party offers “to prove the truth of the matter asserted in the statement.” MRE 801(c). Hearsay is inadmissible absent an exception. MRE 802. The rules of evidence, however, do not strictly apply to “hearings under Chapters 4, 4A, 5, and 6 of the Mental Health Code, MCL 330.1400 et seq., during which the court may consider hearsay data that are part of the basis for the opinion presented by a testifying mental health expert.” MRE 1101(b)(10). “Hearsay data” refers to “documents not personally prepared by the witness.” In re MAT, ___ Mich App at ___ n 3; slip op at 7 n 3 (quotation marks, citation, and brackets omitted).

First addressing the statement that respondent had a “plan” to kill his father, it was not obviously inadmissible. True, the statement was hearsay—Dozeman’s clinical certificate stated that respondent had “expressed a calculated plan to kill father” according to a “report” that Dozeman had reviewed, and Dozeman testified at respondent’s hearing that respondent had “a calculated plan to kill his father” “[a]ccording to documentation from Network180.” But Dozeman testified that he relied on these documents when diagnosing respondent, so the court was permitted to consider the statement pursuant to MRE 1101(b)(10).1

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In Re Rks III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rks-iii-michctapp-2025.