State v. Clayton

625 P.2d 99, 95 N.M. 644
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1981
DocketNos. 4615, 4735
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 625 P.2d 99 (State v. Clayton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Clayton, 625 P.2d 99, 95 N.M. 644 (N.M. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

WOOD, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, the State challenges the propriety of district court orders which contain specific provisions for the habilitation of developmentally disabled adults. We discuss: (1) the trial court’s authority; (2) separation of powers; and (3) attorney fees.

Both cases involve petitions by the Health and Environment Department, see § 43-1-13(C), N.M.S.A.1978, for extended residential placement of patients who had previously been admitted to the State Hospital at Las Vegas. Clayton was admitted to the hospital in 1938; Martinez in 1974.

In both cases the Department submitted an “Individual Habilitation Plan,” § 43-1-13(B), supra, and in both cases, after an evidentiary hearing at which the patient was represented by counsel, § 43-l-13(D), supra, the trial court committed the patients for residential placement for a period not to exceed six months. Section 43-1-13(E), supra. This part of the trial court’s orders is not contested.

Clayton

In June, 1979 the petition concerning Clayton alleged that she suffered from a developmental disability described as schizophrenia and moderate organic brain syndrome. Medical testimony at the evidentiary hearing on this petition, uncontradicted, was that the diagnosis of schizophrenia was inaccurate. On the motion of the attorney for the State, the trial court struck the schizophrenia allegation and found, as a fact, that the diagnosis was moderate organic brain syndrome. The uncontradicted testimony was that the appropriate placement would be the Meadows Home, that Clayton was on the list to go to Meadows, that the plan was to send her there on a bed-available basis, and that procedures had been initiated to have Clayton transferred to the Meadows Home. The testimony is also uncontradicted that without a placement at Meadows, the “least restrictive means” placement would be at the State Hospital. The trial court’s order committed Clayton to the State Hospital.

In December, 1979 the Department again sought a six-month residential placement. The first December petition again alleged schizophrenia, but the second petition changed the allegation to moderate organic brain syndrome. At a hearing on January 9, 1980, the trial court was under the mistaken impression that it had instructed the State to transfer Clayton to the Meadows facility. This mistaken impression is of no legal consequence in this case. The record of this hearing is to the effect that no attempt had been made to transfer Clayton to the Meadows facility; compare the evidence reviewed in the preceding paragraph concerning the June, 1979 hearing. The trial court continued the matter and directed that procedures be instituted immediately to transfer Clayton from the State Hospital to the Meadows facility.

A hearing on February 7, 1980 brought out only that the “Federal Government” had not processed the paper work in connection with a transfer to Meadows. The matter was continued.

At a hearing on February 21, 1980, there was discussion between the court and counsel for the State as to whether, because of federal funding, federal regulations controlled admissions to the Meadows facility, but this problem posed by the State was not developed and is not involved in this appeal. The record shows that an application for transferring Clayton to the Meadows facility was submitted to the Professional Standards Review Organization, which denied the application because of the diagnosis. The diagnosis submitted by the Department was schizophrenia rather than organic brain syndrome.

There are statements in the transcript of the February 21, 1980 hearing that patients had been admitted at Meadows since June, 1979; when the Department offered to present testimony in support of the statements, the trial court accepted the statements as true. The trial court gave counsel opportunity to present further testimony; none was offered.

The trial court found:

1. The respondent has a developmental disability which disables her so greatly that residential services would be in her best interests.
2. The developmental disability from which the respondent suffers is organic brain syndrome, secondary to “typhoid” fever.
3. Residential placement at Meadows Hospital in Las Vegas, New Mexico, is the appropriate place for the respondent to be placed at this time, and is consistant [sic] with the least drastic means principle.
6. The petitioner has not proceeded in good faith in trying to transfer the respondent to the proper facility by not forwarding the proper information concerning the respondent’s condition to the proper authorities in order that she would receive clearance to be transfered [sic] to Meadows Hospital.
7. There is no evidence that the placement of the respondent in Meadows Hodpital [sic] would endanger the eligibility of Meadows Hospital to recieve [sic] Federal funds for its continued operation.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the respondent be committed and transfered [sic] to Meadows Hospital, Las Vegas, New Mexico as expeditiously as possible, and as soon as space is made available, for residential placement for a period not to exceed six months.

The Department’s position in the trial court, and here, is that the “administrative discretion to determine who shall be admitted to the Meadows Home . . . rests by Statute with the Secretary of Health and Environment for the State of New Mexico, and his designees” and not with a district judge. Thus, the State does not challenge the trial court’s findings; the State’s claim is that the trial court lacked authority to direct the placement of Clayton in the Meadows facility.

Martinez

The petition concerning Martinez alleged that he suffered from a developmental disability described as severe mental retardation. The medical testimony, uncontradicted, was that the mental retardation was “with psychosis”. The individual habilitation plan submitted by the Department described Martinez’s specific problems as limited communication skills, complete lack of self-care and basic living skills except for self-feeding, and lack of awareness of danger, such as sitting on a heater until burned. Martinez’s need for a secure, supervised treatment facility is not questioned.

A description of goals for Martinez included “[i]ncrease attending behaviors and attempt training of selfcare skills by enrollment in unit Behavioral training program”. The plan stated a proposed staff involvement to achieve these goals as “Activity therapy, Research Staff to provide appropriate behavioral training program”.

Testimony at the hearing was that the only therapy which had been provided Martinez in the past was four, 30-minute sessions each week with a music therapist; that nothing had been done to improve Martinez’s language skills and that Martinez’s functioning level was too low for vocational activities.

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Related

State v. Baca
2019 NMSC 014 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
625 P.2d 99, 95 N.M. 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-clayton-nmctapp-1981.