In re Rosenberg

65 A.3d 203, 211 Md. App. 305, 2013 WL 1828973, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 1, 2013
DocketNo. 2744
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 A.3d 203 (In re Rosenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Rosenberg, 65 A.3d 203, 211 Md. App. 305, 2013 WL 1828973, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 44 (Md. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

KRAUSER, C.J.

Merilee Rosenberg, appellant, underwent brain surgery, in 2008, for Parkinson’s disease. Unable thereafter to manage her financial affairs due to the side effects of her surgery and her Parkinson’s disease, she consented to the appointment of a guardian over her property by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. Two years later, believing that she had sufficiently recovered to resume control over her affairs, she urged the court-appointed guardian of her property to request a hearing, before the Montgomery County circuit court, to determine whether the property guardianship should be terminated.

After a hearing was held, as requested, the Montgomery County circuit court denied her request to terminate the [308]*308guardianship. That decision prompted this appeal, which presents three issues. Rephrased so as to facilitate review, they are:

I. Whether the circuit court applied an incorrect legal standard in deciding to continue the guardianship of the property;
II. Whether the circuit court erred in failing to consider a less restrictive alternative to guardianship; and
III. Whether there was sufficient evidence to support the circuit court’s decision to continue the guardianship of the property.

Because we conclude that the circuit court did not apply the correct legal standard in declining to terminate the guardianship of Ms. Rosenberg’s property, we vacate that decision and remand for further proceedings. On remand, it is our view that the circuit court may consider less restrictive alternatives to a full guardianship of property, if it deems such a course of action fitting and appropriate.

Background

Ms. Rosenberg was born in 1942. After earning a Ph.D. in French, she was employed as a professor of French and German at the University of Tennessee. Then, after moving to Washington, D.C., and earning a law degree, she worked as an attorney for the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, where she specialized in federal contract law.

When Ms. Rosenberg was 54 years old, she was diagnosed as suffering from Parkinson’s disease. During the ten-year period that followed, her condition deteriorated, and, despite “massive doses” of medication, her symptoms worsened. As a consequence, her neurologist, Thomas Hyde, M.D., suggested that she undergo “deep brain stimulation.”1

[309]*309When she was admitted to Suburban Hospital, in the summer of 2008, for that procedure, two physicians examined her “to determine whether she was competent to consent to medical treatment and handle her financial matters.” After they found that she was competent to consent to medical treatment, though not competent to manage her finances, they obtained her consent to undergo deep brain stimulation.

Following that surgery, Ms. Rosenberg experienced, in the words of Dr. Hyde, “some postoperative medical problems that impaired her cognitive function”; in fact, she was, at least initially, “much worse off after the surgery than ... before.” When the time came to discharge her to “an acute rehabilitation facility,” the hospital filed a petition, in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, seeking the appointment of “a temporary and permanent guardian of the property” for Ms. Rosenberg. A guardian was necessary, the hospital opined, “to manage Ms. Rosenberg’s finances and property to assist in creating a discharge plan” and then “to consent to decisions regarding long term care.”

The hospital further stated that Robert McCarthy, Esquire, appellee, was willing to serve as temporary and permanent guardian of Ms. Rosenberg’s property and was qualified for appointment under Maryland law,2 and that Ria Rochvarg, Esquire, was “willing to serve as the attorney for [Ms. Rosenberg] if appointed by the Court.” The circuit court promptly entered orders appointing Ms. Rochvarg as counsel to represent Ms. Rosenberg and Mr. McCarthy as the temporary guardian of her property. Although Ms. Rochvarg, as counsel [310]*310for Ms. Rosenberg, initially requested that the guardianship petition be denied, Ms. Rosenberg ultimately consented to an order appointing Mr. McCarthy as the guardian of her property*

Mr. McCarthy, in his words, acted as “a heavy-handed guardian of the property” and, as he later admitted, “a pseudo-guardian of the person” (presumably, he meant “quasi-guardian”). He hired Ms. Felice Grunberger, a social worker, to act as his “private case manager” and to make sure that Ms. Rosenberg’s needs were addressed.

While Mr. McCarthy saw the guardianship as indefinite, Ms. Rosenberg did not. In her view, the arrangement was temporary and solely one that applied to her property and not her person. In fact, she claimed that when she discussed the matter with Ms. Rochvarg, she was advised by her that it “should take about three months to recover and then [they] could have the guardianship dismissed.”

After Ms. Rosenberg was discharged from Suburban Hospital, she was admitted to a rehabilitation hospital and then a nursing home and, after that, an assisted-living facility. The following year, as Ms. Rosenberg’s condition gradually improved, it was agreed that she would move to an apartment in Washington, D.C. Mr. McCarthy signed the lease for Ms. Rosenberg. Assisted by Ms. Grunberger, as well as an aide, who visited three days a week, four or five hours at a time, Ms. Rosenberg began living in the apartment in July 2010. Ms. Grunberger, among other things, monitored Ms. Rosenberg’s medications, as she was then taking eight different medications for various illnesses,3 and the aide helped her to shop for groceries and to perform such routine chores as preparing meals, grooming, bathing, and dressing.

At some point, Ms. Rosenberg felt she was now capable of living on her own. Mr. McCarthy felt otherwise. In a letter [311]*311to “interested persons,”4 dated August 2, 2010, Mr. McCarthy wrote that the move to the Washington, D.C., apartment would, in his view, “be a complete disaster,” as Ms. Rosenberg both lacked “the capacity to organize her own affairs” and suffered from “very poor judgment.” Ms. Rosenberg could live independently, he opined, but it would require the help of “twenty-four hour aides” at a prohibitive cost.

Predictably, Ms. Rosenberg had an entirely different view of her capabilities. Asserting that she was now able to handle the challenge of independent living, she urged Mr. McCarthy to seek a review hearing before the circuit court for the purpose of determining whether the guardianship should be terminated, and, thereafter, he filed a motion to set a review hearing “for the possible modification and/or termination” of her guardianship. A hearing was held, at Mr. McCarthy’s request, on July 27, 2010. At that time, the circuit court, at Mr. McCarthy’s suggestion, appointed Patricia T. Nay, M.D., to perform an independent medical evaluation of Ms. Rosenberg to “determine” if she had “recovered from the disability requiring [the] imposition” of the guardianship “to an extent” that it was now “appropriate” to terminate that guardianship. Upon making that appointment, the court ordered that, after Dr. Nay’s report was completed, a hearing be held on Ms. Rosenberg’s motion to terminate guardianship. The court then declared that, at that hearing, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
65 A.3d 203, 211 Md. App. 305, 2013 WL 1828973, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rosenberg-mdctspecapp-2013.