Opinion No. Oag 25-87, (1987)

76 Op. Att'y Gen. 103
CourtWisconsin Attorney General Reports
DecidedMay 1, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 Op. Att'y Gen. 103 (Opinion No. Oag 25-87, (1987)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. Oag 25-87, (1987), 76 Op. Att'y Gen. 103 (Wis. 1987).

Opinion

JAMES J. DUVALL, District Attorney Buffalo County

You ask three questions relating to protective placements under chapter 55, Stats. Several of the issues you have raised are discussed in 65 Op. Att'y Gen. 49 (1976).

Your first question is as follows: "1. What is the definition of `residence' for venue purposes in Chapter 55?"

In my opinion, the definition of residence for venue and other purposes under chapter 55 is physical presence plus intent to remain in a place of fixed habitation.

Section 55.06(3)(c), Stats., which is the venue provision to which you refer, provides that "[a] petition may be filed either in the county of legal settlement or the county of residence of the person to be protected." Section 49.01(8g), in turn, provides as follows: "`Residence' means the voluntary concurrence of physical presence with intent to remain in a place of fixed habitation. Physical presence is prima facie evidence of intent to remain." This section is specifically referred to as the definition of residence in section 55.06(8): "[T]he appropriate board designated under s. 55.02 or an agency designated by it having responsibility for the place of legal residence of the individual as provided in s. 49.01(8g) shall make a recommendation for placement."

In addition, the definition of residence contained in section49.01(8g) is adopted under section 51.01(14) as the definition of residence both for purposes of commitment under section 51.20, and for the purpose of determining county responsibility for provision of services under sections 51.42(1)(b) and 51.437(4)(a) and (c). *Page 104 With respect to the process of placement in a facility, commitment and protective placement are closely tied together.See generally 65 Op. Att'y Gen. 49 (1976). See also 66 Op. Att'y Gen. 249 (1977). Although section 55.06(3)(c) permits a protective placement petition to be filed in the county of legal settlement, except for the assignment of guardian ad litem fees, "[t]he retention of the references to legal settlement . . . can best be explained as a `legislatively dropped stitch.'" 65 Op. Att'y Gen. at 52. With the exception noted, I reiterate my predecessor's conclusion that "legal settlement determinations were not intended to play a part in the 51.42 and 51.437 programs." 65 Op. Att'y Gen. at 51.

In connection with your first inquiry, you also state the following:

Individual people have, of their own will, while competent and not pursuant to a court order, moved to certain counties which possess facilities which they find desirable. At times these people then become incompetent and proper subjects for Chapter 55. The counties with such facilities have taken a hard-line, stating that these persons retained "residency" in the county from which they originated despite their voluntary move and have refused Chapter 55 placement or services.

In 65 Op. Att'y Gen. at 52, it was stated that the definition of residency contained in what is now section 49.01(8g) creates a rebuttable presumption with respect to legal residency for purposes of protective placement and commitment. After that opinion was issued, however, the Legislature amended section55.06 so as to specifically cross-reference the definition of residency contained in section 49.01(8g) into the protective placement statutes. See ch. 430, sec. 69, Laws of 1975. By virtue of this amendment, it is my opinion that the definition of residency contained in section 49.01(8g) is now controlling for all purposes with respect to protective placement and commitment. In addition to the statutory amendment, two other factors favor this conclusion.

First, in enacting chapters 51 and 55, it seems likely that the Legislature did not contemplate the occurrence of the type of "facility shopping" which you describe. Second, both sections51.42(1)(b) and 51.437(4)(a) place responsibility upon each county board for providing care and treatment to "citizens residing within its county . . . ." This language indicates that the Legislature also *Page 105 intended that only one county would be responsible for the provision of services to the individual protectively placed.

Under the circumstances, it might have been preferable if the Legislature had used the term domicile, rather than residence, in chapters 51 and 55. See generally 61 Op. Att'y Gen. 245 (1972).Also see Estate of Daniels, 53 Wis.2d 611, 614-15,193 N.W.2d 847 (1972). Some concepts relevant to the law of domicile are contained in section 49.01(8r), which permits a guardian to make choices as to residency if the ward is incompetent, and in section 51.22(4), which provides that if placement outside the county is authorized by the 51.42 board, "the placement does not transfer the patient's legal residence to the county of the facility's location while such patient is under commitment." Even though concepts related to the law of domicile are relevant to a determination of residency under section 49.01(8g), in certain circumstances it may be fairly easy for an individual to change his or her legal residence within the meaning of that statute.

Although your factual description is very general in nature, given the definition of residence selected by the Legislature, in situations where the subject of the protective placement is physically present, intent to remain in a place of fixed habitation is the controlling factor in determining residence.Compare Miller v. Sovereign Camp W. O. W., 140 Wis. 505, 508,122 N.W. 1126 (1909). In such situations, if the individual intends to remain in a place of fixed habitation within the county where he or she is physically present, it is my opinion that that county may not refuse to provide placement or services or attempt to assign financial responsibility for such placement or services to another county.

In connection with your second question, you state that "[other] counties have maintained Chapter 55 actions based on `residence' in the venue section of Chapter 55, but then found them nonresidents for placement purposes and either placed them to the board of another county or placed them to their own board but assigned the cost of providing care to another county." You then pose the following question: "2. May the court placing the individual under Chapter 55 either place such individual through another county's board or, in the alternative, place the individual through its own [county's] board, but assign financial responsibility for such placement to another county?" *Page 106

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79 Op. Att'y Gen. 181 (Wisconsin Attorney General Reports, 1990)

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