People v. Scripps Health CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 29, 2025
DocketD084069
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Scripps Health CA4/1 (People v. Scripps Health CA4/1) 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
People v. Scripps Health CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 8/29/25 P. v. Scripps Health CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF D084069 CALIFORNIA,

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No.: 37-2021- v. 00036840-CU-MC-CTL) SCRIPPS HEALTH,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Timothy B. Taylor, Judge. Affirmed. Mara W. Elliott and Heather Ferbert, City Attorneys, M. Travis Phelps, Assistant City Attorney, Mark Ankcorn, Chief Deputy City Attorney, and Kevin B. King, Deputy City Attorney, for Plaintiff and Appellant. Horvitz & Levy, Mark A. Kressel and Gaspard Rappoport; Higgs Fletcher & Mack, William M. Low, Paul J. Pfingst, Jacob T. Spaid and Steven M. Brunolli, for Defendant and Respondent. The People appeal a judgment following a bench trial. They contend (1) that the trial court made factual findings that were not supported by substantial evidence and (2) that the trial court abused its discretion in denying a motion for leave to designate an expert witness after the deadline to do so had passed. We disagree with both contentions. Hence we affirm. I. BACKGROUND1 At the heart of this case is a man, J.N., who the People have described as having “a troubling medical history of schizophrenia, delusions, long-term depression, command hallucinations to kill himself, and suicidal behavior including overdosing, attempting to get hit by a truck and cut[ting] his arms, and threatening to cut his throat with a knife.” A. J.N.’s Admission to the BHU In early September 2019, when J.N. was 67 years old, Connie Johnson, an investigator at the Office of the City Attorney (OCA), encountered him naked, delusional, and incoherent in a bedbug-infested independent living facility (ILF). The encounter led to J.N. being admitted to the Scripps Mercy Behavioral Health Unit (BHU), a locked facility within Scripps Mercy Hospital, where he remained—receiving treatment from a Scripps Health (Scripps) medical team—for the next 100 days. B. Appointment of a Conservator Several weeks into J.N.’s stay at the BHU, one of the physicians treating him there—psychiatrist Smit Chauhan—recommended that J.N. be placed in a conservatorship. The county Office of the Public Conservator (OPC) agreed. Thereafter, in response to a petition by the OPC, Judge

1 “Under the applicable rules of appellate review, we summarize the facts in the light most favorable to the judgment.” (E.G. v. M.L. (2024) 105 Cal.App.5th 688, 693, citing Brekke v. Wills (2005) 125 Cal.App.4th 1400, 1405 and Cassim v. Allstate Ins. Co. (2004) 33 Cal.4th 780, 787. “We describe conflicting evidence only as relevant to [the appellant’s] contentions on appeal.” (E.G., at p. 693.)

2 Frederick Maguire entered an order in which he appointed public conservator Mark Sellers to be J.N.’s conservator. The order included a finding that “[a] Closed (locked) Treatment Facility” would be “[t]he least restrictive placement available and necessary to achieve the purpose of treatment for the conservatee.” C. J.N.’s Discharge from the BHU In mid-December Dr. Chauhan decided to discharge J.N., not to a

locked treatment facility, but to New Horizons, an ILF.2 Eight days later Johnson went to New Horizons and encountered J.N. filthy, unkempt, with feces on his bedding and on the clothes he was wearing, and unable or unwilling to respond when asked if he had been taking his medications. D. The Enforcement Action After the post-discharge encounter described above, the OCA initiated this civil enforcement action on behalf of the People, asserting a single claim against Scripps under Business & Professions Code section 17200 (the Unfair Competition Law, or UCL). The thrust of the claim was that Scripps’s conduct in discharging J.N. to an ILF instead of to a locked treatment facility constituted criminal and civil elder abuse, and a criminal and civil contempt of the court’s conservatorship order, amounting to violations of the UCL. During pretrial proceedings, the court ruled on numerous motions. Among these was a motion by Scripps seeking summary judgment and a motion (discussed post) by the People requesting leave to designate an expert witness after the deadline to do so had passed. The court denied each of these two motions. Thereafter, it presided over a five-day bench trial that included testimony from 12 witnesses.

2 This was not the bedbug-infested ILF where Johnson had encountered J.N. three and a half months earlier, but rather a different ILF.

3 1. Testimony Regarding J.N.’s Progress During His Treatment at the BHU, and Regarding Outplacement At trial Dr. Chauhan and BHU nurse Virtud Oloan testified that, during the period of time J.N. was being treated by Scripps, his physical and mental health significantly improved. He gained weight, he participated in therapeutic programs, he performed almost all activities of daily living, he started washing his own laundry, he began socializing with other patients, his judgment improved, and his understanding of his mental condition and treatment improved as well. But, as time wore on, J.N. became increasingly depressed and frustrated at the duration of his confinement—which was about 10 times longer than that of the other patients whom he would see come and go. Thus, he began pressing the medical team to discharge him. As J.N.’s depression deepened, Dr. Chauhan concluded that “continuing him on an inpatient unit was actually not benefiting him” and that, for this reason, a suitable placement outside of Scripps Mercy should be found for him. Outplacement options for a patient in a conservatorship can include, in descending order of restrictiveness: (1) a state hospital; (2) a closed (locked) facility, such as, for example, what is known in the industry as an institute of mental disease (IMD); (3) an open (residential) treatment facility; (4) a board and care or assisted living facility; (5) a crisis residential facility; and (6) an ILF. But—according to testimony of Scripps’s expert witness—psychiatrist Michael Plopper, systemic regulatory, financial, and other types of

4 dysfunction3 affecting the residential care facility industry often make it difficult to find suitable placements for individuals with severe mental illnesses. And, according to Dr. Chauhan, the medical team at Scripps ran up against this problem in its efforts to place J.N.: “Would I have wanted him to be on a high level of care? Of course. . . . My preferred choice was the higher level of care, a locked facility for . . . [a] certain amount of time, but those options were not available. We left no stone unturned in our efforts to find all the reasonable alternative disposition options.[4] And because the patient had significant progress . . . in his condition and his improvement of his symptoms, I believed that he deserve[d] a chance to be able to be discharged and work on [the] recovery phase of his treatment.”

Ultimately, an ILF named New Horizons was the only facility the Scripps staff could find that would accept J.N. This particular ILF was owned and operated by Margie DeGuzman, a psychiatric nurse who interviewed J.N. at the BHU. DeGuzman told the Scripps team that she would ensure J.N. took his medications, and she gave the team the name of a pharmacy that she preferred to work with. Dr. Chauhan was not alone in concluding it was appropriate to discharge J.N. to an ILF. Nurse Oloan concurred in this decision; and so, too,

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People v. Scripps Health CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-scripps-health-ca41-calctapp-2025.