North Bay Regional Center v. SHERRY S.

207 Cal. App. 3d 449, 256 Cal. Rptr. 129, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 50
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1989
DocketA039381
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 207 Cal. App. 3d 449 (North Bay Regional Center v. SHERRY S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Bay Regional Center v. SHERRY S., 207 Cal. App. 3d 449, 256 Cal. Rptr. 129, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 50 (Cal. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Opinion

CHANNELL, J.

I. Introduction

Respondent North Bay Regional Center (NBRC) filed a petition in the superior court for an order admitting appellant Sherry S. to Stockton State Hospital. The petition was granted. On appeal Sherry’s attorney contends that the order must be set aside because NBRC was not authorized to prosecute such a petition.

The appeal presents an issue which we understand to be of statewide concern: What is the proper procedure for admitting to a state hospital 1 a severely developmentally disabled but nondangerous adult who is not represented by a parent, guardian, or conservator? Both parties seem to contend that the governing statutes do not afford a clear remedy. We conclude, on the contrary, that the governing statutes contemplate the appointment of the Director of Developmental Services as the client’s conservator. In the absence of some demonstrated inadequacy in this procedure, the adoption of a judicially fashioned procedure, as occurred here, is unwarranted.

II. Facts

Sherry is 21 years old. She has an I.Q. under 20. Estimates of her developmental age equivalence range between four months and two years. She cannot walk or use language. She is incontinent. Even with assistance, she cannot bring her hand to her mouth to use a spoon to feed herself. She is extremely particular about who feeds her, and if she is agitated or upset by her environment she will gag or choke, risking aspiration of food. She occasionally injures herself through a severe reflex which causes her to bite *453 her lip, causing bleeding. A psychologist testified that she is “profoundly retarded” and “very gravely disabled.”

Sherry has not caused or threatened harm to herself or others, and suffers from no known emotional or mental disorder other than mental retardation. However, a psychologist agreed that “she’s dangerous to herself in the sense [that] if you wheeled her out on the street and nobody took care of her, she would die.”

At the time of trial in June 1987, Sherry’s family had not seen her in several years and called only rarely to check on her welfare. For the seven years preceding trial she was cared for in a nursing home for severely developmentally disabled individuals. However, Sherry’s difficult feeding needs had come to exceed the scope of the services available at the home. Her social worker conducted two statewide searches for an alternative community placement, but the facilities contacted indicated that Sherry’s eating skills were so poor that she would require more attention than they could provide. The social worker then contacted state hospitals, and found an “appropriate bed” at the state hospital in Stockton.

Apparently acting at the request of NBRC, the Napa County District Attorney’s office filed a petition for Sherry’s admission to the state hospital under Welfare and Institutions Code section 6500, which provides for the involuntary commitment of a mentally retarded person found to be “a danger to himself or others.” Sherry was represented in that proceeding by the public defender’s office. Noting that the issue might be one of “form over substance,” Sherry’s counsel suggested that section 6500 was inapplicable because it was directed at “a person that is physically assaultive to others or themselves.” He opined that Sherry’s admission should have been sought under In re Hop (1981) 29 Cal.3d 82 [171 Cal.Rptr. 721, 623 P.2d 282]. The trial court denied the district attorney’s petition on the ground that Sherry was not dangerous within the meaning of section 6500. 2

NBRC asked the district attorney’s office to file a second petition for state hospitalization, this time on the ground that Sherry was “gravely disabled.” Although the district attorney’s office had apparently made a practice of filing such petitions in the past, the deputy district attorney assigned to Sherry’s case declined to do so because he believed he lacked authority to seek hospitalization on grounds of grave disability.

Faced with this refusal, the regional center filed a petition in its own name, under the stated authority of In re Hop, supra, seeking Sherry’s *454 placement in a state hospital on the ground that she is “a developmentally disabled person who is . . . gravely disabled and ... in need of state hospitalization, and . . . unable or unwilling to consent to such admission and treatment . . . .’’At the hearing Sherry was again represented by the public defender. At the close of evidence her attorney expressed reservations about the legality of the petition but observed, “She has no place that she can stay. The care home is at the point that they intend to just deposit [Sherry] with the Regional Center.” Therefore, he said, he would “accede” to the court’s “jurisdiction to grant the petition,” but would probably appeal from the order.

The trial court granted the petition. It found that Sherry was gravely disabled, that the least restrictive placement for her was a state hospital, and that she was unable or unwilling to consent to admission. It noted that she “obviously needs desperately to be cared for properly and it’s a life threatening situation.” Citing In re Hop, supra, the court ordered Sherry admitted to the Department of Developmental Services for placement in a state hospital. The order was to expire one year from the date of the hearing.

This appeal is from the order granting NBRC’s petition.

III. Mootness

The order appealed from expired by its terms on June 8, 1988. It appears that in July 1988, the San Joaquin County Superior Court made an order extending Sherry’s hospitalization, upon the petition of NBRC. That order has apparently been appealed to the Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District. The present appeal is therefore technically moot. (See Conservatorship of Bones (1987) 189 Cal.App.3d 1010, 1014 [234 Cal.Rptr. 724].) However, the case presents a significant question which is likely to recur, namely, what procedure should be followed for the state hospital placement of a severely developmentally disabled adult who cannot consent to admission. The importance of this question is reflected in materials filed by the parties indicating that varying and sometimes disparate practices and procedures have been adopted by affected agencies around the state. (See Schwartz & Heifer, Do Constitutional Rights Exist If No One Is Listening? The Legacy of In re Hop (Fall 1987) Cal. Regional Centers J., pp. 1, 3-4; Off. Legis. Analyst, Judicial Reviews of State Developmental Center Placements: Implementation of the In re Hop Decision (1988) pp. 10-12, 22-26 (hereinafter, Judicial Review of Placements).)

Moreover the superior court from which the present appeal arises has an apparent practice of limiting its admission orders to a duration of one year, making it likely that any such order will expire before an appeal can be *455 determined.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 Cal. App. 3d 449, 256 Cal. Rptr. 129, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-bay-regional-center-v-sherry-s-calctapp-1989.