State v. A. M. W.

340 Or. App. 473
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 14, 2025
DocketA184553
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 340 Or. App. 473 (State v. A. M. W.) 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
State v. A. M. W., 340 Or. App. 473 (Or. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

No. 426 May 14, 2025 473

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

In the Matter of A. M. W., a Person Alleged to have Mental Illness. STATE OF OREGON, Respondent, v. A. M. W., Appellant. Marion County Circuit Court 24CC02379; A184553

Matthew L. Tracey, Judge pro tempore. Submitted March 18, 2025. Joseph R. DeBin and Multnomah Defenders, Inc., filed the brief for appellant. Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General, and Elise Josephson, Assistant Attorney General, filed the brief for respondent. Before Aoyagi, Presiding Judge, Egan, Judge, and Joyce, Judge. AOYAGI, P. J. Reversed. 474 State v. A. M. W.

AOYAGI, P. J. Appellant was committed to the custody of the Oregon Health Authority for a period not to exceed 180 days, based on her having a mental disorder that caused her to be unable to provide for her basic needs and to be a dan- ger to others. On appeal, she does not contest that she has a mental disorder (schizophrenia), but she challenges the suf- ficiency of the evidence to establish inability to meet basic needs or dangerousness. She asks that we reverse the judg- ment of commitment and related firearms order. We agree that the evidence was legally insufficient and, accordingly, reverse. Appellant has not requested de novo review but, rather, challenges the sufficiency of the evidence as a mat- ter of law. Our task, therefore, is to view the evidence and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favor- able to the trial court’s disposition and determine whether the evidence was legally sufficient to support civil com- mitment. State v. L. R., 283 Or App 618, 619, 391 P3d 880 (2017). Whether the evidence was legally sufficient to sup- port civil commitment is a question of law. State v. A. D. S., 258 Or App 44, 45, 308 P3d 365 (2013). “Ultimately, in view of the clear-and-convincing-evidence standard of proof that applies in civil commitment proceedings, the question for us as the reviewing court is whether a rational factfinder could have found that it was highly probable that appellant was a danger to herself or others,” or unable to provide for her basic needs, as a result of a mental disorder. State v. S. A. R., 308 Or App 365, 366, 479 P3d 618 (2021) (internal quotation marks omitted). INABILITY TO MEET BASIC NEEDS A person who has a mental disorder that causes them to be “[u]nable to provide for basic personal needs that are necessary to avoid serious physical harm in the near future, and is not receiving such care as is necessary to avoid such harm,” ORS 426.005(1)(f)(B), may be involuntarily committed under ORS 426.130(1)(a)(C). Food, water, and medical care are examples of basic personal needs. State v. M. A., 276 Or App 624, 631, 371 P3d 495 (2016). To meet the Cite as 340 Or App 473 (2025) 475

standard, “the state must prove two things: (1) that the indi- vidual’s inability to provide for their basic personal needs puts them at a nonspeculative risk of serious physical harm and (2) that the serious physical harm is likely to occur in the near future.” State v. P. D., 333 Or App 738, 742, 553 P3d 1063 (2024) (internal quotation marks omitted). As to the second requirement, which is a temporal requirement, “the evidence must establish not only that a person’s inability to attend to a basic need risks the person suffering an adverse medical consequence, but also how soon that adverse conse- quence is likely to occur.” State v. R. L. M., 309 Or App 545, 550, 482 P3d 201 (2021) (emphasis in original). Here, before her commitment, appellant was living on the streets, as it was not feasible for her family to house her given her behavior. Appellant was frequently found to be covered in her own urine and feces, poorly clothed, thirsty, and hungry—and she did not discriminate between spoiled and fresh foods in terms of eating anything that came to hand. On one occasion, appellant’s mother found her sitting in the dirt “in the middle of the beating sun, red, with no food or water” and, on another occasion, lying face down on the concrete in front of a Walgreens eating frosting from an unknown source. Two weeks before the commitment hear- ing, the civil commitment investigator met appellant at a motel. Appellant was disheveled, her pants “were barely hanging on by a shoestring,” and she kept going outside in 40-degree weather without shoes on such that her “feet were purple.” Appellant could not seem to comprehend the investigator’s requests that she put on shoes. The investiga- tor met with appellant again on the day of the hearing and found her jail cell to be “[v]ery messy” and “malodorous,” with what appeared to be urine on the floor. Viewed in the light most favorable to the state, the foregoing evidence, while painting a tragic picture of appel- lant’s life with schizophrenia, was not enough to permit the trial court to conclude that appellant faces a nonspeculative risk of serious physical harm that is likely to occur in the near future, for purposes of a basic-needs commitment under ORS 426.005(1)(f)(B). Although it is unclear how she obtains food, appellant is not food adverse, and there is no evidence 476 State v. A. M. W.

that she is malnourished or underweight. (The record shows that appellant is five feet eight inches tall and weighed 145 pounds when taken into custody a week before the commit- ment hearing.) Indeed, the record shows that appellant eats whenever food is available and eats heartily when her fam- ily buys her meals. Appellant’s willingness to eat spoiled food, such as spoiled fruit found in her sister’s car, may put her at some risk of harm, as it is common knowledge that eating spoiled food poses some health risks, but there is no evidence of the severity or likelihood of any such harm on this record. As for hydration, appellant was once observed with chapped lips, a condition for which one possible cause is dehydration, but there is no evidence of water avoidance or a history of dangerous dehydration. There was simply insufficient evidence for the trial court to conclude that appellant’s eating or drinking habits put her at risk of serious physical harm in the near future. See State v. C. H., 306 Or App 63, 68, 473 P3d 60 (2020) (con- cluding that the appellant’s eating habits did not support a basic-needs commitment, where there was no evidence that she “was malnourished, losing weight, or that there was a risk of any other serious physical harm in the near future as a result of her failure to obtain food”); State v. M. B., 300 Or App 522, 527, 452 P3d 1006 (2019) (“With respect to the evidence related to food, the record shows that appellant had struggled, at least recently, with obtaining adequate food, but it does not establish that appellant’s challenges in obtaining food had reached the point of putting her at risk of serious physical harm in the near future.”). As for the observed instances of appellant going out- side barefoot in cold weather or not protecting herself from the sun in hot weather, there is no evidence that she has suf- fered any actual harm from such disregard of weather con- ditions or, more importantly, that her failure to adequately protect herself from exposure to the natural elements is at a point where it puts her at nonspeculative risk of serious physical harm occurring in the near future. Cf. M. B., 300 Or App at 527 (“[A]ppellant had a sunburn and minor cuts on her head, which do not appear to have been considered medically concerning.”). Cite as 340 Or App 473 (2025) 477

We therefore conclude that the evidence was legally insufficient for a basic-needs commitment.

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Related

State v. T. L.
346 Or. App. 414 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2026)
State v. A. M. W.
340 Or. App. 473 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2025)

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Bluebook (online)
340 Or. App. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-a-m-w-orctapp-2025.