Shannon J. v. R.A.J.

554 N.W.2d 809, 1996 N.D. LEXIS 240
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1996
DocketCivil No. 960288
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 554 N.W.2d 809 (Shannon J. v. R.A.J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shannon J. v. R.A.J., 554 N.W.2d 809, 1996 N.D. LEXIS 240 (N.D. 1996).

Opinion

MESCHKE, Justice.

When a patient, who is dangerously and mentally ill, refuses the most effective long-term medicine, should a forced-medication order conditionally authorize more than one combination of medicines, depending on later refusals? To answer that question, RAJ. appealed an order for forced medication. We modify and affirm it.

On August 19, 1996, his son petitioned in Ward County for involuntary hospitalization of R.A.J., a 62-year-old, retired farm laborer. The petition alleged RAJ. was “paranoid, irrational, possibly borderline schizophrenic,” and “likely to injure himself or other persons if allowed to remain at liberty.” The verified petition described predi[810]*810cate acts: “Drinks hard liquor, drives intoxicated, makes statements about shooting somebody, [and] points loaded rifle at another person.” After a preliminary hearing, the trial court found probable cause to believe R.A.J. was mentally ill and required treatment, and ordered him civilly committed for not over 14 days to the State Hospital for evaluation.

At the Hospital, Dr. William Pryatel diagnosed R.A.J. with a longstanding bipolar disorder, a recent hypomanie episode, and alcohol abuse. Dr. Pryatel reported R.A.J. needed hospitalization for mental illness and chemical dependency. After a commitment hearing, delayed by agreement until August 28,1996, the Stutsman County trial court did not conclude that R.A.J. was chemically dependent, but satisfactorily concluded he had a mental illness that substantially impaired him, and that he should be hospitalized and treated at the Hospital for up to 90 days. In a separate order, the trial court found R.A.J. had been offered and refused clinically appropriate medications needed for his illness; the prescribed medications were the least restrictive intervention for his treatment needs; and the benefits of the medications outweighed the known risks to R.A.J. The trial court authorized the Hospital to “medicate [R.A.J.] involuntarily with Haldol and Tegretol or Risperdal and Tegretol until November 26,1996.”

R.A.J. only appealed from the order for forced medication. Since he had changed his mind and agreed on August 26 to take Ris-perdal, R.A.J. contends he had not refused all medications so the medications ordered were unnecessary. The Hospital says the recommended regimen for R.A. J. begins with either of two “major” tranquilizers, Risperdal or Haldol, and continues with a long-term mood stabilizer, Tegretol, because they are both needed for effective treatment. The Hospital thus urges, when the uneontradicted expert testimony prescribes a combination of medicines and the patient only consents to one, the patient has effectively refused necessary treatment.

For an order authorizing forced medication, a trial court must find, by clear and convincing evidence, that:

(1) ... the proposed prescribed medication is clinically appropriate and necessary to effectively treat the patient and there is a reasonable expectation that if the person is not treated as proposed there exists a serious risk of harm to that person, other persons, or property;
(2) ... the patient was offered that treatment and refused it or ... the patient lacks the capacity to make or communicate a responsible decision about that treatment;
(3) ... prescribed medication is the least restrictive form of intervention necessary to meet the treatment needs of the patient; and
(4) ... the benefits of the treatment outweigh the known risks to the patient.

NDCC 25-03.1-18.1(l)(a). The court must consider all relevant evidence presented, including:

(1) The danger the patient presents to self or others;
(2) The patient’s current condition;
(3) The patient’s past treatment history;
(4) The results of previous medication trials;
(5) The efficacy of current or past treatment modalities concerning the patient;
(6) The patient’s prognosis; and
(7) The effect of the patient’s mental condition on the patient’s capacity to consent.

NDCC 25-03.1-18.1(2)(a). Also, NDCC 25-03.1 — 18.1(2)(b) directs medication may not be imposed solely for punishment or for the convenience of the hospital’s staff. Moreover, under NDCC 25-03.1-18.1(3), an order for forced medication cannot go beyond ninety days.

As in involuntary hospitalization cases, a trial court’s findings by clear and convincing evidence that the patient needs appropriately prescribed medication and refuses it are findings of fact. In Interest of J.S., 528 N.W.2d 367, 368 (N.D.1995); In Interest of R.N., 513 N.W.2d 370, 371 (N.D.1994). As these eases also instruct, we review these findings under a more probing clearly-erroneous standard.

[811]*811R.A.J. needs treatment for a Bipolar II Disorder that can cause significant impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. According to Dr. Pryatel, R.A.J. is in a major depressive hypo-manic state with hyperactivity, agitation, irritability, grandiosity, paranoid delusions, sleeplessness, rambling speech, and pressured speech, all seen by Hospital staff. According to RAJ.’s wife, between previous hypomanic episodes in 1981, 1985, and 1989, R.A.J. had functioned well though after 1989 was more depressed. The doctor analogized RAJ.’s condition to a diabetic, who must take insulin to keep his disease in check without a cure. Once in remission after a course of medication, R.A.J. would likely be released on outpatient treatment.

Dr. Pryatel testified that R.A.J. had responded well to Tegretol in the past, but this time R.A.J. had refused at first to take either it or any major tranquilizer. On August 16, Dr. Pryatel and Dr. Kottke had offered R.A.J. a major tranquilizer, either Risperdal, an oral form, or Haldol, an injectable form, to be given together with Tegretol. Dr. Pryatel expected to take R.A.J. off the major tranquilizer within weeks when the appropriate blood level was achieved for the slower acting mood stabilizer, Tegretol. While he acknowledged some other physicians might prescribe a different major tranquilizer, like Prolixin, or a different mood stabilizer, like Depakote or Lithium, Dr. Pryatel believed the prescribed combination of medications for R.A.J. was the only appropriate and the least restrictive treatment.

R.A.J., however, refused all medications until two days before his hearing, when he suddenly agreed to take Risperdal. Dr. Pryatel was not sure why R.A.J. changed his mind, but believed another patient had recommended Risperdal to him. R.A.J. took an evening dose and another one the next morning before medication was suspended by staff under a policy that avoided medication for 24 hours before a court hearing. See NDCC 25-03.1-16. R.A.J. had not used Risperdal in the past, and was “really amazed” when he took it, since it “seemed to round out that high speed thing I was working on” and it brought “me down to that old business sense.” He had no problems with it, slept well for longer than he usually could, and was “absolutely” willing to continue on Ris-perdal. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
554 N.W.2d 809, 1996 N.D. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-j-v-raj-nd-1996.