State v. KS

196 P.3d 30, 223 Or. App. 476
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 29, 2008
Docket061070509, A134072
StatusPublished

This text of 196 P.3d 30 (State v. KS) 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. KS, 196 P.3d 30, 223 Or. App. 476 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

196 P.3d 30 (2008)
223 Or. App. 476

In the Matter of K.S., Alleged to be a Mentally III Person.
STATE of Oregon, Respondent,
v.
K.S., Appellant.

061070509, A134072.

Court of Appeals of Oregon.

Submitted May 16, 2008.
Decided October 29, 2008.

*31 Lance D. Perdue, Portland, filed the brief for appellant.

Hardy Myers, Attorney General, Mary H. Williams, Solicitor General, and Jeff J. Payne, Assistant Attorney General, filed the brief for respondent.

Before HASELTON, Presiding Judge, and ARMSTRONG, Judge, and ROSENBLUM, Judge.

ROSENBLUM, J.

The trial court committed appellant to the custody of the Mental Health Division after finding that, because of a mental disorder, he is a danger to himself and others. ORS 426.005(1)(d)(A); ORS 426.130. On de novo review, State v. North, 189 Or.App. 518, 520, 76 P.3d 685 (2003), we conclude that there is sufficient evidence to support the conclusion that appellant is a danger to others. Because we affirm the trial court on that basis, we do not reach the question of whether appellant is a danger to himself.

We take the following facts from the record. Although we do not reach the question whether appellant is a danger to himself, some of the evidence that supported that ground for the trial court's decision is pertinent to whether appellant is a danger to others. We therefore include that evidence in our recitation of the facts.

Appellant immigrated to the United States with his family as a young child. At the time of the commitment hearing, on October 26, 2006, he was 26 years old and lived primarily with his parents but sometimes stayed with one of his sisters. In approximately 1999 or 2000, appellant began exhibiting symptoms of schizophrenia, including paranoia, delusions of persecution, and auditory and visual hallucinations. Appellant believes that some of his hallucinations are real; he acknowledges that others are voices in his head.

Around the time he began exhibiting symptoms, appellant physically attacked one of his sisters, although the record does not indicate the nature of the assault or whether she suffered any injuries. In 2000, he was hospitalized in a psychiatric unit for about a week and was prescribed Risperidal. The medication helped diminish his symptoms to a degree but did not stop them altogether. Appellant stopped taking the medication about two months before the hearing, claiming concerns about side effects. His family attempted to convince appellant to resume taking the medication, but he refused. Appellant told the precommitment investigator that he sometimes uses alcohol and that it helps with the auditory hallucinations, but his sister testified that his behavior is worse when he drinks.

Appellant believes that people, both strangers and family friends, frequently direct racial slurs at him.[1] For example, he also believes that his sisters' boyfriends come to the family's home and make racist comments to him when no one else is listening. Not long before the hospitalization leading to this commitment proceeding, appellant physically confronted the boyfriend of one of his sisters, requiring one of his parents to step in between the two men to prevent any escalation. *32 At the hearing, appellant acknowledged having threatened to assault the boyfriend. Appellant told the precommitment investigator that he "wanted to scare him for what he did."

Appellant's relationship with his family was very strained. He expressed considerable frustration and anger that no one in the family believed that he was being persecuted, often punching the walls and doors in the house. His family feared that he would harm them if he remained in the home without taking his medication. In early October 2006, appellant got into a fight with his family and left the house for a few days, sleeping under a bridge. On October 12, shortly after he returned home, he was intoxicated and had an angry outburst in which he punched a hole in one of the walls and destroyed property in the back yard. His parents were terrified and called the police. When the police arrived, appellant told one of the officers, "[G]o ahead, shoot me. Do it. I don't care." Appellant was placed on the hospital hold that led to this commitment proceeding. Neither appellant's sister nor his parents will allow him to live with them again unless his condition improves.

Once in the hospital, appellant was treated with antipsychotic and anti-anxiety medications. On October 18, six days after appellant was hospitalized, the precommitment investigator obtained a two-week "diversion from commitment," asserting that appellant would continue to be treated with medication.[2]

Appellant's sister visited him at the hospital. He told her that he "didn't care about anything anymore, and that basically he was tired of people doing what they were doing, [that is,] talking about him and conspiring against him and he just didn't care about what happened to him anymore." He also told her that "the staff and the other patients there [were] talking about him," and that he was "tired of it" and "just really sick of it. And that if he could do something, he would."

The diversion was unsuccessful and ended early. On October 22, four days after the diversion was ordered, appellant came to believe that another patient had poisoned him with snake venom in a hospital recreation room. According to appellant, he was having trouble breathing, and the other patient began flicking his tongue in and out like a snake to indicate that he had poisoned appellant. He responded by flipping over a table and throwing a chair at it, breaking the table. The commitment hearing was held four days later.

Appellant has limited insight with respect to his mental illness. Before the hearing, appellant alternately acknowledged and denied that he is schizophrenic. At the hearing, while his sister was testifying, appellant vehemently denied that he suffers from a mental disorder. Later, during his own examination, he again stated, "I don't have a mental illness," but then immediately acknowledged that he hears voices and that his medication helped reduce them to "whispering." Appellant asserted that he could distinguish between hallucinated voices and real ones, although he was adamant that the racist remarks that he hears are real.

Before the hearing, appellant told the precommitment investigator that the voices in his head wanted him to "do something bad," though he did not know precisely what. At the hearing, he stated at one point that the voices "giv[e] me clues or something" but that he did not remember specifically what they said. At another point, he said that he had flipped over the table and thrown the chair in the hospital because he thought that the voices in his head wanted him to do it because he had "walked away so many times" before, adding, "You don't understand how many times I've walked away from situations like that." He went on to say,

"Yeah, so that's—that's why I thought I had to do that, you know, because it kept on getting worser and worser and worser. You know, for the first like what, two or three years, it was just name calling. After that they came in the house and started doing that, you know."

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Related

State v. North
76 P.3d 685 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2003)
Schritter v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
36 P.3d 739 (Arizona Supreme Court, 2001)
State v. King
34 P.3d 739 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2001)
State v. P. B.
171 P.3d 1042 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2007)
State v. M. L. F.
188 P.3d 368 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2008)
State v. K.S.
196 P.3d 30 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 P.3d 30, 223 Or. App. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ks-orctapp-2008.