Paugh v. Henrico Area Mental Health

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 6, 2013
Docket121562
StatusPublished

This text of Paugh v. Henrico Area Mental Health (Paugh v. Henrico Area Mental Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paugh v. Henrico Area Mental Health, (Va. 2013).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

MICHAEL PAUGH OPINION BY v. Record No. 121562 JUSTICE CLEO E. POWELL June 6, 2013 HENRICO AREA MENTAL HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENTAL SERVICES

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY James S. Yoffy, Judge

In this appeal, Michael Paugh argues that the circuit

court erred in using the date that the special justice entered

the order committing him as the date upon which to evaluate the

evidence on his appeal to the circuit court. He further

contends that the circuit court erred in admitting the

preadmission screening report into evidence in its entirety.

Finally, Paugh asserts that the evidence was insufficient to

involuntarily commit him on the day of his circuit court

hearing. 1 We hold that Code § 37.2-821 requires that the

circuit court determine whether an individual meets the

requirements for involuntary commitment on the date of the

circuit court hearing. Because we so hold, we do not reach the

issue of whether Code § 37.2-816 permits the admission of the

entirety of the preadmission screening report into evidence.

1 Rule 5:17(c)(1)(iii) provides that “[a]n assignment of error that does not address the findings or rulings in the trial court . . . is not sufficient.” Because the trial court did not hold that Paugh met the conditions for involuntary commitment on the date of the circuit court hearing, Paugh’s third assignment of error is insufficient and we decline to 1 I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On March 19, 2012, a Henrico County Magistrate issued a

temporary detention order for Michael Paugh. The following

day, a special justice involuntarily committed Paugh pursuant

to Code § 37.2-817. Paugh appealed.

In a hearing in circuit court on May 18, 2012, the

Commonwealth offered Paugh’s preadmission screening report for

admission into evidence. That report contained information,

relayed by Henrico Police, from Loretta Ewing, Paugh’s friend,

about why she contacted the police. Ewing believed that Paugh

was suicidal because of his contentious divorce, financial

problems, and substance abuse history. She informed police

that he had written “good-bye” letters to his daughters that he

read to her, one of which the police located. Ewing also told

the police that she believed that Paugh possessed guns. Paugh

objected to the narrative statement in the preadmission

screening report being admitted in its entirety because Ewing’s

narrative statement was not a fact as contemplated by Code §

37.2-816. The Commonwealth argued that the statements were

adoptive admissions by Paugh or business records. The circuit

court held that the report was admissible in its entirety.

Paugh also argued that the issue before the circuit court

was a de novo determination of whether he was committable on

address it. 2 the day of the hearing, not a review of whether he met the

conditions for involuntary commitment on the date of his

admission. The court ruled that “common sense” required that

it conduct a de novo appeal of whether Paugh should have been

admitted on March 19, 2012, not on the day of the hearing.

As to the merits of the petition for involuntary

commitment, the Commonwealth argued that Paugh had been

properly admitted on March 19, 2012, but informed the court

that because Paugh had been released Paugh no longer met the

criteria for involuntary commitment and the Commonwealth would

not seek further hospitalization or treatment. After reviewing

the evidence and hearing argument, the circuit court determined

that there was clear and convincing evidence that Paugh was a

danger to himself on March 19, 2012 and, therefore, the

Involuntary Commitment Order was valid. The court then denied

Paugh’s appeal.

II. ANALYSIS

This appeal presents an issue of first impression for this

Court: in a de novo appeal of a general district court or

special justice’s determination that a person meets the

requirements for involuntary commitment, is the circuit court

to evaluate the evidence as of (i) the date of admission, (ii)

the date of the lower court’s hearing, or (iii) the date of the

3 circuit court hearing of the de novo appeal? 2

We review a circuit court’s interpretation of statutes de

novo. Jones v. Williams, 280 Va. 635, 638, 701 S.E.2d 405, 406

(2010). This Court has

repeatedly . . . stated the principles of statutory construction that apply when a statute . . . is clear and unambiguous. In such circumstances, a court may look only to the words of the statute to determine its meaning. The intention of the legislature must be determined from those words, unless a literal construction would result in a manifest absurdity. Thus, when the legislature has used words of a clear and definite meaning, the courts cannot place on them a construction that amounts to holding that the legislature did not intend what it actually has expressed.

Hubbard v. Henrico Ltd. P’ship, 255 Va. 335, 339, 497 S.E.2d

335, 337 (1998)(citations omitted).

Code § 37.2-821(B) provides that an appeal

shall be heard de novo in accordance with the provisions set forth in §§ 37.2-802, 37.2-804, 37.2-804.1, 37.2-804.2, and 37.2- 805, and (i) § 37.2-806 or (ii) §§ 37.2-814 through 37.2-819, except that the court in its discretion may rely upon the evaluation

2 The Commonwealth argues that this issue is moot because Paugh has been released from commitment. Paugh, however, is subject to collateral consequences in this case because the trial court’s ruling allowed the initial commitment order from the special justice to remain intact. This Court has previously held that a case is not moot where collateral consequences remain. E.C. v. Va. Dep’t of Juvenile Justice, 283 Va. 522, 530-36, 722 S.E.2d 827, 831-34 (2012); see also Tazewell Cnty. Sch. Bd. v. Brown, 267 Va. 150, 158, 591 S.E.2d 671, 674 (2004) (holding that the collateral consequences of a civil judgment prevented it from being moot). 4 report in the commitment hearing from which the appeal is taken instead of requiring a new evaluation pursuant to § 37.2-815. Any order of the circuit court shall not extend the period of involuntary admission or mandatory outpatient treatment set forth in the order appealed from.

Specifically, Code § 37.2-821(B) indicates that “[a]n order

continuing the involuntary admission shall be entered only if

the criteria in [Code] § 37.2-817 are met at the time the

appeal is heard.” (Emphasis added.)

Code § 37.2-821(B) provides a de novo trial in the circuit

court. See also Code § 16.1-113.

The purpose of this two-tier trial system is to allow a party aggrieved by a final judgment of the general district court to have the case tried again by the circuit court as if the case originally had been instituted there. Such an appeal is in effect a statutory grant of a new trial, in which the perfected appeal annuls the judgment of the district court as completely as if there had been no previous trial. If the judgment of the general district court is reversed, the circuit court is required to enter an order or judgment “as ought to have been made or given by the judge of the court from which the appeal was taken.” Code § 16.1-113.

Ragan v. Woodcroft Village Apts., 255 Va. 322, 327, 497 S.E.2d

740, 742 (1998)(citations omitted). 3

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