Ruby v. Massey

452 F. Supp. 361
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMay 16, 1978
DocketCiv. H-76-315
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 452 F. Supp. 361 (Ruby v. Massey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruby v. Massey, 452 F. Supp. 361 (D. Conn. 1978).

Opinion

RULING ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

BLUMENFELD, District Judge.

The plaintiffs in this ease are three sets of natural parents who challenge the refus *363 al of the University of Connecticut Health Center to perform what the Center con- • cedes to be “medically indicated” sterilizations upon their severely mentally retarded 1 and physically handicapped daughters.

Statement of the Case

The complaint in this action seeks injunctive and declaratory relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and 28 U.S.C. § 2201. Plaintiffs request an injunction ordering the defendant University of Connecticut Health Center and named physicians employed by the Center to “refrain from refusing” to perform surgical hysterectomies 2 on their three non-institutionalized mentally retarded children and a declaratory judgment that the defendants' failure to perform the hysterectomies is unconstitutional as a violation of their right to privacy, to equal protection of the laws, and to due process of law.

The three girls (Susan aged 12, Valerie aged 13, and Lynn aged 15) are severely mentally retarded and physically handicapped (blind-deaf). Susan and Valerie have no useful communication abilities; Lynn has only minimal ability to communicate. 3 Although at present the girls are residents of a special school during the week, and live with their parents on the weekends, custodial care is inevitable for each of them because of their grossly impaired mental functioning and physical handicaps. 4 The Diamonds have sought Valerie’s admission to one of the two state institutions for the retarded since 1968. Priscilla Pearl has sought Lynn’s admission since 1970. Neither girl is apt to be admitted to a state institution in the foreseeable future. 5

Each of the girls shows signs of sexual development. Susan began to menstruate in July 1975. She suffers severe and painful cramping before and during her menstrual periods, as well as great psychological distress. Susan cannot care for her own hygienic needs during menstruation, and it is highly unlikely that she will ever be able to do so. 6 Neither Valerie nor Lynn has begun to menstruate yet, but it is equally unlikely that either girl will be able to care for her own hygienic needs during menstruation.

The girls are presumably capable of conceiving, but if they were to become pregnant, they would be subject to grave risks because they are incapable of communicating with a physician about their own physical condition — i. e., whether they have had fainting spells, whether they are in pain, whether they can feel the fetus move, whether they are in labor. 7 Moreover, it is most unlikely that any of the girls would ever be able to use, reliably or safely, any of the standard means of contraception. 8 They cannot communicate with a physician about pain they might be suffering from an IUD, from an infection or ectopic pregnancy, and they are unable to check themselves *364 to see if an IUD has been expelled. 9 In terms of preventive health care, the girls cannot be examined internally or tested (for cervical cancer, venereal disease, vaginal infection) without being put under a general anesthetic each time, with all the dangers posed by that process. 10

The plaintiffs havq consulted with a number of physicians and social workers who have concluded that therapeutic uterectomies (sterilizations) are “medically indicated.” The defendants’ agent, Dr. Osborne, agrees that the sterilizations are “medically indicated.” He is professionally qualified to perform the surgery and he is willing to do so.

The John Dempsey Hospital, where the surgery would be performed, is a constituent part of the University of Connecticut Health Center, and routinely provides medical care and treatment, including “medically indicated” surgery for children of normal intelligence and retarded children who live in Connecticut. For such surgery, the informed consent of the child’s parent(s) is considered legally sufficient. In the instant case, the defendants have refused to put the girls under general anesthetic for purposes of internal examinations preparatory to sterilizations, and have refused to perform the sterilizations “on the grounds that there is no legislative authority authorizing parental consent for such operations in Connecticut.” The defendants have stipulated 11 that their refusal “is based solely upon their legal counsel’s judgment that the plaintiff parents’ consent to have such surgery performed ... is not now or may not be in the future legally sufficient to protect the Health Center against possible civil liability.” This concern is apparently widespread among Connecticut hospitals, for the plaintiffs unsuccessfully sought to have the sterilizations performed at several other (private) hospitals in the state before bringing the instant action. 12

Two factors are said to account for the hospitals’ fear of civil liability. First, there is no statute which expressly empowers parents and/or guardians of retarded persons to give legally sufficient consent to such sterilizations; 13 and second, there is no Connecticut statute which expressly authorizes the sterilization of mentally incompetent persons in general (private) hospitals.

It will be helpful to distinguish between two discrete claims made by the parents: (1) that their right as parents to familial privacy entitles them to give legally sufficient consent to the sterilization of their daughters; and (2) that their daughters are entitled to the benefits of Conn.Gen.Stat. § 19-569g, which does provide for sterilization of inmates of certain state institutions. The statute, which is set forth in the margin, 14 allows the institutions’ superintend *365 ents to submit the sterilization question to a board of doctors, and then to apply to a probate court for judicial authorization to perform the operations. There is a decided difference between having access to such a statutory procedure, by which authority for a sterilization may be obtained, and having the authority as parents to give valid consent. 15

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Bluebook (online)
452 F. Supp. 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruby-v-massey-ctd-1978.