KC v. State

771 P.2d 774, 1989 WL 24702
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1989
DocketC-88-9
StatusPublished

This text of 771 P.2d 774 (KC v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KC v. State, 771 P.2d 774, 1989 WL 24702 (Wyo. 1989).

Opinion

771 P.2d 774 (1989)

K.C., Appellant (Respondent),
v.
The STATE of Wyoming, Appellee (Petitioner).

No. C-88-9.

Supreme Court of Wyoming.

March 20, 1989.

Robert G. Pickering of Bailey, Pickering, Stock & Welch, Cheyenne, for appellant.

Joseph B. Meyer, Atty. Gen., John W. Renneisen, Deputy Atty. Gen., for appellee.

Before CARDINE, C.J., and THOMAS, URBIGKIT, MACY and GOLDEN, JJ.

URBIGKIT, Justice.

Presented by this appeal is the difficult and socially pervasive concern of government responsibility — administrative, judicial and legislative — for the adequacy of care to be provided the mentally ill. Sufficiency of care and treatment was directly contested in the involuntary civil commitment of this admittedly mentally ill and severely disturbed adult to the Wyoming State Hospital (State Hospital) in Evanston, Wyoming, the state's only domiciliary institution. Consequently, alternative arrangements were requested, and the discretionary authority of the district court was questioned in this direct appeal of the involuntary commitment order as well as through a petition for extraordinary writ of prohibition. With the petition phrased in the contours of constitutional deprivation and functional denial, the writ was not granted at initial request. This court, with this combined appeal, affirms the district court's actions.

FACTS

On March 22, 1988, an application for involuntary hospitalization was filed in the First Judicial District Court of Laramie County, Wyoming following a suicide attempt by K.C., an individual with a history of medical problems and prior institutionalization at the State Hospital. K.C., with this history, had been under the local supervision of the Department of Public Assistance and Social Services (D-PASS) as a person with a recognized mental disturbance. In Laramie County, commitment cases are initially handled by a designated court commissioner who immediately appoints a medical examiner and establishes a detention hearing with present counsel appointed to represent the individual. Collaterally *775 involved in factual overlay was a pending divorce and the previous loss of custody of her two children.

Hospitalized by emergency detention ordered as a result of the commitment petition, a hearing was held on March 22, 1988, eventuating a continuing order for further examination with a designated medical examiner and hearing on March 28, 1988. It is from the March 28, 1988 hearing which produced the findings of the commissioner and subsequent order of the district court that this proceeding results. The commissioner found K.C. to be a mentally ill person within the criteria of W.S. XX-XX-XXX(a)(viii)[1] and recommended hospitalization in finding "that the proposed patient is mentally ill and recommends that she be involuntarily hospitalized." The commissioner then further said:

With regard to the appropriate location of the proposed patient's involuntary hospitalization, however, I do not feel that the Wyoming State Hospital is the appropriate site for involuntary hospitalization. Counsel for the proposed patient argued, and submitted a trial brief in support, that treatment at the Wyoming State Hospital would violate the proposed patient's right to treatment under the doctrine established in Clark v. Cohen, 794 F.2d 1979[79] Third Circuit (1988) and Wyatt v. Stickney[,] 325 Fed.Supp. 781, N.D.[M.D.]Ala. (1971). The proposed patient has previously been hospitalized, during April and May of 1987, at the Wyoming State Hospital. Her testimony at the hearing indicated that she did not receive treatment adequate, in the opinion of your Commissioner, to meet the constitutional right to treatment. Dr. Merrell testified that the proposed patient needs inpatient care for a period of at least six (6) months and perhaps as long as a year, depending upon the availability of programs transitional from the institution to the community. Dr. Merrell testified that to his knowledge, there are no community halfway house programs available in the State for psychiatric patients and that in his opinion, no hospital in Wyoming other than the State Hospital, is qualified to accept long-term patients (that is, patients whose condition requires a stay of greater than eight to ten weeks). Your Commissioner finds that counsel for the proposed patient has demonstrated a substantial likelihood that adequate treatment will not be received at the State Hospital and that other instate alternatives are not available.
Pursuant to the provisions of W.S. section 25-10-110(j),[[2]] consideration of the *776 "least restrictive and most therapeutic alternatives" available for involuntary hospitalization and the proposed patient's right to treatment, for the reasons set out above, I cannot recommend that the proposed patient be hospitalized at the Wyoming State Hospital, unless enforceable assurances are made that the constitutionally requisite treatment will be received.
Therefore, it is your Commissioner's further recommendation that the Court enter an Order requiring the Department of Health and Social Services to locate and fund a placement either in or out of state which will satisfy the proposed patient's right to treatment or, in the alternative, that a plan of treatment be developed by the State Hospital which will meet the right to treatment standard as interpreted and enforced by the District Court. The Order is recommended to include a time limit of twenty (20) days within which to develop either alternative. [State's attorney] shall prepare the recommended Order.

Except as to the place of hospitalization, the recommendations of the commissioner for the involuntary hospitalization of K.C. were approved by order of the district court. The district court specifically rejected any alternative placement or search for alternative care and held "[t]hat the proposed patient be hospitalized and transported forthwith to the Wyoming State Hospital at or near Evanston, Wyoming." The district court's order further provided:

2. That, in conformity with W.S. § 25-10-113, the patient, within 15 days of admittance, shall be examined, the patient's record shall be reviewed and a plan of treatment for the patient shall be developed.
3. That, within 20 days of admittance, a copy of the Patient's plan of treatment shall be forwarded to this Court and an additional copy shall be forwarded to the patient's attorney, * * *.

With alternative medical care placement denied, K.C. initially pursued two courses of action. K.C. appealed the involuntary commitment order and simultaneously filed a petition with this court to secure a writ of prohibition denying placement of her at the State Hospital. This court declined to issue the writ of prohibition which would have resulted in the immediate delay of hospitalization at the State Hospital, and K.C. has been institutionalized at the State Hospital since mid-April; unless recently released, which is not a matter of record here.

This court will consider the direct appeal and the writ conjunctively as a single case now presented, essentially testing the propriety of the action of the district court in denying the finding of the commissioner that alternative mental institutional care should be required for this mentally ill person. K.C. phrases, as submitted questions:

1. Whether an involuntarily civilly committed individual is entitled to habilitation?
2.

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Bluebook (online)
771 P.2d 774, 1989 WL 24702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kc-v-state-wyo-1989.