In Re the Commitment of A.N.B.

614 N.E.2d 563, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 788, 1993 WL 172597
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1993
Docket41A01-9209-CV-304
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 614 N.E.2d 563 (In Re the Commitment of A.N.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana 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 the Commitment of A.N.B., 614 N.E.2d 563, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 788, 1993 WL 172597 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

BAKER, Judge.

Sixteen-year-old A.B., found to be "schizo-affective, paranoid, suicidal, [and] satanical," desperately requires "long-term educational, structured, locked residential protective placement[.]" Record at 21. The trial court ordered the Indiana Division of Mental Health 1 to assume all financial responsibility for A.B.'s care, maintenance, and educational needs as of May 11, 1991, the day A.B. was involuntarily committed. Must the Division pay as ordered?

The Division claims 1) under no cireum-stances can it be held responsible for the cost of A.B.'s care pending admission to a state facility, and 2) under the present circumstances it cannot be held responsible for A.B.'s care onee A.B. is admitted to a state facility. We agree and therefore reverse.

FACTS

As in In re the Commitment of T.J. (1993), Ind.App., 614 N.E.2d 559 the operative facts underlying A.B.'s involuntary commitment are not contested. A.B. was abused during her early childhood. She suffers from visual and auditory hallucinations, paranoia, and severe depression. She has threatened to locate and kill her biological mother. She has attempted suicide because the devil so commanded. She is not able to be educated properly through normal classroom instruction. On April 25, 1991, A.B.'s adoptive parents reluctantly filed a petition for her involuntary commitment.

After serving notice to the Division and appointing counsel for A.B., the trial court held A.B.'s involuntary commitment hearing on May 6, 1991. On May 17, 1991, the trial court found A.B. to be "mentally ill" and ordered her committed to Larue D. Carter Memorial Hospital in Indianapolis, a state mental health institution, which a local coordinating committee had advised was the most appropriate and least restrictive facility for A.B.'s placement.

The trial court anticipated-correctly, as it turns out-that Larue Carter would be unwilling to accept A.B. due to a chronic shortage of beds. It ordered that in the event Larue Carter refused A.B.'s immediate placement, A.B. was to be committed to the Division for placement pursuant to IND.CODE 12-26-2-9, which provides that if the patient is refused admission because of inadequate resources, the Division "shall make arrangements" for admission to an "appropriate facility." 2 Moreover, pending A.B.'s admission to Larue Carter or other appropriate facility, the trial court ordered the Division to assume financial responsibility for A.B. as follows:

It is further ORDERED the Commissioner of Indiana Department of Mental Health shall assume all financial responsibility for the care and maintenance of [A.B.] effective May 11, 1991 and that the Commissioner be responsible for [A.B.'s] educational needs as provided by law.

Record at 22 ("Paragraph 57).

In the meantime, the trial court both ordered A.B. to remain in private care at *565 Our Lady of Mercy Hospital in Dyer, Indiana, and sent a copy of the order to the Division. It is Paragraph 5-requiring the Division to assume financial responsibility for A.B. as of May 11, 1991-the Division challenges today.

As expected, Larue Carter claimed it had inadequate resources to accept A.B. and refused to admit her. 3 Despite A.B.'s desperate situation, and despite its obligation under IND.CODE 12-26-2-9, the Division made no arrangements to place A.B. in an alternative facility, and "in the meantime" turned from days and weeks into months. Finally, on November 6, 1991, almost six months later, Larue Carter admitted A.B.

DISCUSSION AND DECISION

At the outset we wish to commend the parties for their superior presentations at oral argument held April 28, 1998. Both sides' preparation and candor greatly heightened our understanding and aided our review of the dispute.

As a second preliminary matter, we observe that unlike In re the Commitment of T.J., supra, in this case the Division has relinquished its personal jurisdiction challenge. At oral argument, the Division conceded the notice it received was adequate and acknowledged that its primary concern was the trial court's requirement that it bear the cost of A.B.'s treatment. Thus, we address the financial question only.

Article IX, See. 1 of the Indiana constitution obligates the General Assembly "to provide, by law, for the support of institutions for the education of the deaf, the mute, and the blind; and for the treatment of the insane." The term "insane" encompasses those individuals who are "mentally ill." In re Mental Commitment of M.P. (1987), Ind., 510 N.E.2d 645, 646. The duty to provide treatment for the mentally ill is also statutory. Id.; IND.CODE 12-27-2-1. As discussed below, the General Assembly has allocated the costs of commitment to the patients, their families, the counties, and the State, depending on the particular circumstances of each case.

Responding to its constitutional and statutory obligations, the General Assembly created and funded a Division of Mental Health, see IND.CODE 12-21-1-1, and several mental health facilities like Larue Carter, but these have proven to be woefully inadequate to meet the current demand. Recognizing the limitations of the existing state institutions, the General Assembly authorized the Division's director to contract with approved community mental health centers for the care of those patients for whom there is simply inadequate space or staff at the state facilities. See IND.CODE 12-21-2-7; IND.CODE 12-26-2-9. Indeed, due to insufficient resources, it is now common for patients to be "farmed out" to private facilities pending admission to state institutions. As we understand it, even these private facilities are overwhelmed.

Care Pending Admission

Chapter 10 of IND.CODE 12-26 governs care pending admission to a facility. Once the trial court has committed a mentally ill individual, the trial court "shall consult with the superintendent or the attending physician concerning the method of caring for the individual pending admission to the facility." IND.CODE 12-26-10-1L. The trial court may then order temporary placement in the "least restrictive suitable facility[.J' IND.CODE 12-26-10-2. An individual may not be confined in a county jail unless the individual is found to be dangerous and violent, there is no other suitable facility available, and the trial court orders placement in a county jail. IND.CODE 12-26-10-8. Finally,

[i]f the comfort and care of an individual are not otherwise provided:

1) from the individual's estate;
2) by the individual's relatives or friends; or
*566 8) through financial assistance from the division of family and children or a county department;
the trial court may order the assistance furnished and paid for out the general fund of the county.

IND.CODE 12-26-10-4.

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Bluebook (online)
614 N.E.2d 563, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 788, 1993 WL 172597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-commitment-of-anb-indctapp-1993.