Rinne v. Matteucci

521 P.3d 170, 322 Or. App. 653
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 16, 2022
DocketA175397
StatusPublished

This text of 521 P.3d 170 (Rinne v. Matteucci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rinne v. Matteucci, 521 P.3d 170, 322 Or. App. 653 (Or. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Submitted March 31, affirmed November 16, 2022, petition for review denied March 30, 2023 (370 Or 827)

NICOLAS RINNE, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Dolores MATTEUCCI, Superintendent, Oregon State Hospital, Defendant-Respondent. Marion County Circuit Court 20CV08061; A175397 521 P3d 170

Plaintiff appeals from the trial court’s dismissal of his writ of habeas cor- pus. Plaintiff filed his petition for habeas corpus relief while a separate petition for judicial review of a third order continuing the Psychiatric Security Review Board’s (PSRB’s) putative jurisdiction over him was pending. He argues that PSRB’s third order is deficient for the same reasons as its first two orders, which we previously reversed. As a result, he contends that the third order, and conse- quently his continued confinement, is not legal, and that dismissal of the writ was erroneous. Held: Because plaintiff challenged only the reasoning in the cur- rent order underlying his restraint without questioning whether that order pre- cludes habeas corpus relief under ORS 34.330, he has failed to state a claim upon which habeas corpus relief can be granted. Affirmed.

Courtland Geyer, Judge. Ryan T. O’Connor and O’Connor Weber LLC filed the brief for appellant. Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General, and Rolf C. Moan, Assistant Attorney General, filed the brief for respondent. Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Powers, Judge, and Hellman, Judge. ORTEGA, P. J. Affirmed. 654 Rinne v. Matteucci

ORTEGA, P. J. Plaintiff is confined at the Oregon State Hospital (OSH), where he was originally placed by the Psychiatric Security Review Board (PSRB) after being found guilty except for insanity on multiple criminal charges in 1999. He has sought discharge from PSRB’s jurisdiction multiple times; we previously reversed two of PSRB’s orders con- tinuing his commitment for insufficient evidence. Rinne v. PSRB, 299 Or App 275, 448 P3d 654 (2019) (Rinne I); Rinne v. PSRB, 297 Or App 549, 443 P3d 731 (2019) (Rinne II). Once plaintiff’s petition for judicial review of a third order was pending, he sought habeas corpus relief which the trial court ultimately dismissed. He appeals from that dismissal arguing that, because PSRB’s third order is deficient for the same reasons as the first two, the third order, and conse- quently his continued confinement, is not legal. However, Oregon’s habeas corpus laws are not meant to provide a vehicle to challenge the merits of an order that maintains an individual’s confinement. Accordingly, we affirm. We begin with the history of PSRB’s jurisdiction and plaintiff’s confinement. Plaintiff was found guilty except for insanity of a number of criminal charges in 1999 and was placed under the jurisdiction of the PSRB “for a maximum period of time not to exceed 60 years.” In 2015 and 2017, he appeared before PSRB seeking jurisdictional discharge, based on the recommendation of defendant, the superinten- dent of OSH, alleging that he no longer had a jurisdictional diagnosis. On both occasions, PSRB found by a preponder- ance of the evidence that a qualifying mental illness, “Other Specified Anxiety Disorder,” combined with his pedophilia to result in “a substantial danger to others,” meeting the requirements for maintaining its jurisdiction under ORS 161.341 and ORS 161.351. Plaintiff sought judicial review of both commitment orders. In two separate opinions, this court reversed both orders, concluding that the record in both instances did not include substantial evidence to support PSRB’s findings that “petitioner suffers from a qualifying mental disease or defect that renders him a substantial danger to others.” Rinne II, 297 Or App at 566; Rinne I, 299 Or App at 276-77. More Cite as 322 Or App 653 (2022) 655

specifically, we explained that, based on prior case law, pedo- philia is a personality disorder and that a personality disor- der does not qualify as “mental disease or defect.” Rinne II, 297 Or App at 553 (sexual conduct disorders are personal- ity disorders for purposes of PSRB jurisdiction and “there is no dispute that pedophilia is a sexual conduct disorder and therefore not a qualifying mental disease or defect for purposes of PSRB jurisdiction”). For that reason, in order for PSRB’s orders to stand, the respective records needed to include substantial evidence that petitioner’s qualifying men- tal disease or defect, other anxiety disorder, caused him to be dangerous in a manner that his pedophilic disorder did not already cause. Id. at 553-54, 566; Rinne I, 299 Or App at 276- 77. We concluded that the records underlying each order did not supply sufficient evidence to reach that determination. In both cases, we remanded without further instructions. After we issued those two decisions, PSRB “exam- ined [its] options for redeciding a remanded matter * * * [and] ultimately determined that the best way to proceed was to reopen the record for a [consolidated] supplementary hearing to take additional evidence.” After that supplemen- tal hearing, PSRB issued a third order continuing plain- tiff’s commitment. In that order, PSRB noted that it “is able to retain jurisdiction of [someone whom PSRB] know[s] to be an indisputably dangerous person, when his cluster of symptoms are conceptualized as a qualifying mental dis- ease or defect, but [ ] is forced to discharge him when those same symptoms are conceptualized as a non-qualifying mental disease or defect.” PSRB concluded that plaintiff is affected by multiple qualifying mental disorders, including bipolar and related disorder, illness anxiety disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder, and that one or more of those diagnoses “combines with his Pedophilic Disorder to make him more dangerous than he would be without it.” Plaintiff again sought judicial review of PSRB’s third commitment order, arguing that PSRB “employed essentially the same reasoning rejected by this court in Rinne I and Rinne II on essentially the same record.” Plaintiff then separately filed his petition for habeas corpus relief. Plaintiff’s initial petition for habeas corpus relief followed Rinne I and Rinne II and argued that those 656 Rinne v. Matteucci

decisions effectively ended PSRB’s jurisdiction over him and thus ended its authority to continue his confinement. Under that reasoning, he maintained that anything other than his immediate discharge exceeded PSRB’s and the superinten- dent’s authority. The superintendent responded by asserting, among other things, that because we remanded both Rinne I and Rinne II back to PSRB, PSRB was within its rights to reevaluate the case without immediate discharge, and that plaintiff remained under PSRB’s jurisdiction unless and until a determination to the contrary was made by PSRB or the courts. PSRB’s supplemental hearing, described above, was held nearly four months after plaintiff filed his initial habeas petition, and its third order continuing his commitment was issued an additional two months after that. Plaintiff filed his replication after the third order was issued, necessar- ily pivoting to address how the third order factored into his habeas argument. He maintained that he challenged his confinement under ORS 34.610(1) and (2),1 alleging that OSH continues to unlawfully confine him on the basis of an invalid and unlawful order issued by PSRB.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McClintock v. Schiedler
859 P.2d 580 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1993)
Rinne v. Psychiatric Sec. Review Bd.
443 P.3d 731 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2019)
Allen v. Premo
284 P.3d 1199 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
521 P.3d 170, 322 Or. App. 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rinne-v-matteucci-orctapp-2022.