In The Matter of L.T.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 15, 2023
DocketWD86405
StatusPublished

This text of In The Matter of L.T. (In The Matter of L.T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri 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 The Matter of L.T., (Mo. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

IN THE MATTER OF L.T., Appellant. WD86405 OPINION FILED: August 15, 2023

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Nodaway County, Missouri The Honorable Robert Lewis Rice, Judge

Before Special Division: Cynthia L. Martin, Presiding Judge, Thomas N. Chapman, Judge, and Janet Sutton, Judge

L.T. appeals from a judgment ordering him to be involuntarily detained for a

period not to exceed an additional ninety days for inpatient treatment at Mosaic Medical

Center in Maryville, Missouri based on findings that he has a mental illness and

continues to present a likelihood of serious harm to himself or others. This court ordered

the appeal expedited pursuant to section 632.430. 1 The briefing schedule was shortened

and the case was docketed for oral argument on August 15, 2023.

1 All statutory references are to RSMo 2016 as supplemented through June 28, 2023, unless otherwise noted. Many subsections in Chapter 632 have been amended, effective August 28, 2023. The amendments would have had no substantive impact on this case, although they do, in some instances, affect the numbering of some of the statutory subsections referred to in this case. The Judgment is affirmed.

Factual and Procedural Background

L.T. is an adult male who resides in Maryville, Nodaway County, Missouri. On

June 12, 2023, he was involuntarily detained for treatment as a mental health patient at

Mosaic Medical Center - Maryville ("Mosaic") for twenty-one days. 2

On June 28, 2023, Mosaic filed a petition for additional involuntary detention and

treatment ("Petition") in the Circuit Court of Nodaway County pursuant to section

632.340. The Petition sought a determination that L.T. has a mental illness by reason of

which he continues to present a likelihood of serious harm to himself or others, and an

order that L.T.'s detention for involuntary inpatient treatment be extended for an

additional period not to exceed ninety days.

The Petition alleged that L.T. has a long-standing diagnosis of paranoid

schizophrenia with poor response to treatment and medication; that L.T's condition has

progressed to the point that Mosaic feels the need to pursue guardianship; that L.T.'s

current detention had been preceded by frequent and increasing interactions with law

enforcement initiated by neighbors and by L.T. himself; and that L.T. is in a frequent

psychotic and fearful state with delusional thinking exacerbated by chronic non-

compliance with prescribed medication. The Petition also alleged that since his June 12,

2023 admission to the hospital, L.T. has been acting out physically; punching windows;

hitting security; screaming expletives at computer screens while slamming his fists on the

2 L.T.'s involuntary detention for twenty-one days was presumably pursuant to the authority of section 632.335.1, and is not at issue in this appeal. 2 desk; threatening to "kill somebody;" threatening to destroy property; and engaging in

verbal and physical intimidation.

The Petition attached a pre-printed verification form that was signed by S.M,

APRN, 3 and by L.S., RN. 4 Under oath, S.M. verified that she "has examined [L.T.] and

hereby swears and affirms that the statements made in the foregoing application are true

to the best of [her] knowledge and belief."

As required by section 632.340.2, a list of proposed witnesses was filed at the

same time as the Petition. The witness list identified, among others, Dr. R.W., a

psychiatrist. An order setting a hearing on the Petition for July 6, 2023, was also filed

with the Petition.

On Thursday, July 6, 2023, the Petition came before the trial court for hearing. At

the beginning of the hearing, counsel for L.T. made an oral motion to dismiss the

Petition, supplemented by filed suggestions in support. L.T. argued that section

632.330.2(9) required the Petition to be verified by either a psychiatrist who treated L.T.,

or by a licensed physician and a mental health professional who treated L.T., and that

although S.M. signed the verification on the line designated for a psychiatrist's signature,

she is not a psychiatrist as defined by section 632.005(22), and is instead an APRN as

indicated by the designation she placed next to her signature. L.T. acknowledged that

S.M. is a mental health professional as defined by section 632.005(13), but because

S.M.'s signature was not accompanied by the signature of a licensed physician as required

3 "APRN" refers to an advanced practice registered nurse. 4 "RN" refers to a registered nurse. 3 by section 632.330.2(9), L.T. argued that the Petition was not properly verified. L.T.

argued that defective verification of the Petition deprived the trial court of jurisdiction to

enter any further orders in the matter other than an order dismissing the Petition. 5

The trial court took L.T.'s motion to dismiss under advisement and proceeded to

hear evidence in the case. Mosaic admitted the testimony of Dr. R.W., a psychiatrist who

had been employed for eleven months with Mosaic, and who has been a part of L.T.'s

treatment team during multiple admissions to the hospital. During his testimony, Dr.

R.W. verified, without objection, that the allegations in the Petition were true and correct

as of the day that the Petition was filed. Mosaic also admitted the testimony of J.W., a

Maryville police officer, who has been involved in frequent encounters with L.T. in

response to calls from L.T.'s neighbors and L.T. himself.

At the close of the evidence, the trial court denied L.T.'s motion to dismiss, and

found that Dr. R.W.'s trial testimony sufficiently supplied the verification required by

section 632.330.2(9). The trial court then found that the evidence established that L.T.

has a mental illness and as a result continues to present a likelihood of serious harm to

himself or another and needs continued detention and treatment, and that the least

restrictive environment for continued detention and treatment can be provided at Mosaic.

5 L.T.'s motion to dismiss also argued that because the Petition was not properly verified, its filing on June 28, 2023 was a nullity, resulting in L.T. being unlawfully detained beyond his initial 21-day involuntary hold (which expired on July 3, 2023). And, though not addressed in the filed suggestions in support, L.T. orally argued that the Petition should be dismissed because a hearing on the Petition had not been conducted within four judicial days as required by section 632.340.2. These claims, which were also denied by the trial court, are not further addressed because they have not been raised as issues on appeal. 4 The trial court ordered L.T. placed in the custody of the Missouri Department of Mental

Health to be involuntarily detained for a period not to exceed ninety days. A written

judgment was entered accordingly by the trial court on July 6, 2023 ("Judgment"). L.T.

filed a notice of appeal on July 11, 2023.

Standard of Review

A judgment entered after a court-tried case will be sustained on appeal "unless

there is no substantial evidence to support it, unless it is against the weight of the

evidence, [or] unless it erroneously declares the law or erroneously applies the law." In

the Matter of Todd, 767 S.W.2d 589, 590 (Mo. App. E.D. 1988) (citing Murphy v.

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