In re Zornow

31 Misc. 3d 450
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Misc. 3d 450 (In re Zornow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York 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 Zornow, 31 Misc. 3d 450 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

William P. Polito, J.

Background

On or about May 18, 2010 the petitioner, Carole Zornow, applied to the court to be appointed guardian for her mother, Joan M. Zornow, under the Mental Hygiene Law, primarily to make end of life decisions. Her mother is 93 years old, suffering from advanced Alzheimer’s, and residing in a nursing home. There was a dispute between her and the other six siblings, mainly involving previously enacted MOLSTs (medical orders on life-sustaining treatments). The primary dispute was a blanket directive denying her mother food and water if it could not be administered orally (hereafter referred to as artificial feeding). Also, it was further directed that she be denied hospitalization for future medical conditions. On the return date of July 13, 2010, after review of the submissions, and discussion with counsel, the court approved by agreement the petitioner and her brother Douglas Zornow as temporary coguardians, and advised that should the need arise in the interim in which an imminent decision needed to be made for their mother, upon which they could not agree, immediate application could be made to the court for resolution. The court in the best interests of the patient also temporarily revoked all of the MOLSTs, except the DNR, as it could not identify any statutory authority or immediate basis for such directives. (Order dated Aug. 25, 2010; Matter of Nimon, 15 AD3d 978 [4th Dept 2005].) The court also issued a separate letter order dated August 25, 2010 identifying the issues to be resolved, and requested prior submissions to determine the existence of any factual disputes returnable September 21, 2010. The attorney for Douglas Zornow failed to submit any statutory authority for the prior MOLSTs, and, although acknowledging no health care proxy or written direc[452]*452tives were enacted by his mother, contended that his mother verbally indicated to him and the other siblings that artificial feeding be denied her if she were unable to take food and water orally. The petitioner denied such directions were given, stated that her mother had indicated the contrary by affirmatively requesting artificial feeding, and further, while lucid, her mother had also repeated such direction to her nurse, who recorded it in the nursing home health care records. The court then by letter dated November 3, 2010 scheduled a hearing date for November 23, 2010 and identified specific issues to be addressed. The court invited additional evidentiary submissions prior to the hearing date to which the parties complied. The petitioner’s siblings then elected not to participate in the hearing or to attend the same, although they did agree to the sole appointment of Catholic Family Center, and would abide in that organization’s future decision, but relied on their papers submitted regarding the current dispute on artificial feeding. They opposed the appointment of their sister. At the hearing, the court determined that even if the other siblings had testified as indicated in their affidavit regarding their mother’s wishes it was too vague, too general, not related to, and prior to any specific condition, and, therefore, did not comply with the “clear and convincing” standards required by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Westchester County Med. Ctr. (O’Connor) (72 NY2d 517 [1988]). In addition, the court found that based on the affidavit of the petitioner and the undisputed documented hospital or nursing home records of the mother, that her request under those specific conditions did show by clear and convincing evidence that she wished to receive artificial feeding. Accordingly, the prior directives and MOLSTs, except for the DNR, were permanently revoked. The court made the necessary findings under the Mental Hygiene Law regarding the need for appointment of a guardian for the incompetent person, and appointed the petitioner and Catholic Family Center as coguardians. The court appointed the petitioner as she was the person with whom her mother resided for the past several years during her early illness, had cared for her, had been extremely solicitous of her mother’s care and best interests, and had been gifted the house by her mother 16 years earlier. Since the brother and other siblings refused appointment, but did agree to an appointment of Catholic Family Center, that co-appointment was made to allow all the siblings to have an opportunity for a say in the future decisions, and to protect their right to see their mother out of the presence of the petitioner. Also, any idiosyncrasies of the sister as alleged could be balanced by Catholic Family Center, which would still give the [453]*453mother the benefit of all her children at the nursing home, and the petitioner’s more solicitous efforts. Further, the court determined that the applicable principles to be applied to Mrs. Zornow’s end of life decision were those of her Roman Catholic religious belief. The court advised that it would review those principles to determine their application especially to the particular area of dispute, viz., under what condition should artificial feeding continue and when should it terminate, and would submit a written decision thereon, as well as the parameters of the coguardian’s authority. No objection was made to the process. (See Borenstein v Simonson, 8 Misc 3d 481 [Sup Ct, Queens County, Martin E. Ritholtz, J., 2005] [where the fact-finding court used the same process on the identical issue under the Mental Hygiene Law and a health cary proxy on behalf of an Orthodox Jewish person, and arrived at a similar resolution]; Mental Hygiene Law § 81.12 [b]; State Administrative Procedure Act § 306 [1].)

Decision

Mrs. Joan Zornow, a Roman Catholic, is obligated by her religious beliefs to continue to receive artificially administered food and water under each of the three statutory conditions, absent the particular and specific restrictive medical conditions hereafter stated. Therefore, any purported authorization and enactment of a general MOLST, or any directive for Mrs. Zornow by her guardians as surrogate decision makers, which would deprive her of artificially administered food and water, when the medical conditions allowed for such withdrawal by the patient’s Catholic religion and moral beliefs are not in existence, particularly, an imminent death, and an inability of the food and water “to accomplish its proper finality, which is the hydration and nourishment of the patient” (Attachment 1, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, Commentary on Nutrition and Hydration), would be a violation of the statutory law, and invalid.

Further, blanket directives are not readily amenable to Catholic end of life determinations as they are for intentional terminations of life based on a “quality of life” ethic, which is morally prohibited to Catholics. Therefore, MOLSTs and blanket directives should not be used on behalf of Mrs. Zornow, as was improperly done here, unless particularized to the specific principles applicable to the specific medical conditions actually encountered or to be encountered. The latter method of specificity without a MOLST (except for DNR) will also allow consulta[454]*454tion opportunity with the family, and their input, before choosing to receive or forgo further care or treatment, where allowable, when the actual medical condition occurs.

The coguardians in making decisions shall consult with each other and the siblings.

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Related

In re Doe
53 Misc. 3d 829 (New York Supreme Court, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
31 Misc. 3d 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-zornow-nysupct-2010.