State v. T. Z.

401 P.3d 1265, 287 Or. App. 8, 2017 WL 3160633, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 921
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 26, 2017
Docket15CC02212; A161993
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 401 P.3d 1265 (State v. T. Z.) 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. T. Z., 401 P.3d 1265, 287 Or. App. 8, 2017 WL 3160633, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 921 (Or. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

ORTEGA, P. J.

In this civil commitment case, appellant challenges a trial court order that continued her commitment under ORS 426.301 and ORS 426.303 (providing for further commitment and a hearing if the continued commitment is contested) on the basis that she is still a person with a mental illness under the expanded criteria defining mental illness, ORS 426.005(l)(f)(C) (including persons with a chronic mental illness, see 287 Or App at 12-13), and requires further treatment. In appellant’s view, that determination lacked clear and convincing evidence. Appellant also assigns error to the trial court’s determination that she was a danger to herself, ORS 426.005(l)(f)(A). The state concedes that the record was insufficient to support that determination, and we accept the state’s concession. As for the expanded criteria determination, we view the record in the light most favorable to the trial court’s determination and review the evidence, as supplemented and buttressed by permissible derivative inferences, to assess whether, when so viewed, the record was legally sufficient to permit a rational factfinder to reach that same outcome. See State v. M. A., 276 Or App 624, 625, 371 P3d 495 (2016) (citing Dept. of Human Services v. N. P., 257 Or App 633, 639, 307 P3d 444 (2013)). Under that standard, we reverse.1

Appellant, 40 years old at the time of her recom-mitment hearing in April 2016, suffers from schizoaffective disorder, which means that appellant’s perceptions of her environment are distorted (she hears people saying things that are not said and sees things that are not there) and she has dramatic swings in mood, from euphoria to striking out at individuals when angered. Appellant’s disorder has progressively worsened since she was at least 16, when she was involved in a car accident that resulted in a traumatic brain injury and a coma. In addition to her disorder and memory problems, appellant experienced significant pain after breaking her ankle two months before the recommitment hearing, and she also has chronic pain in her left arm due [10]*10to an injury to nerves in her neck and shoulder. The chronic pain has led to addictions to opiate medications and heroin use.

For appellant’s disorder, she received a daily dose of 30 milligrams of Haldol, an antipsychotic medication. She believed, however, that she did not have a mental illness, that all of her problems stemmed from her chronic pain issues, and that she consequently needed only opiate medication. In an unsupervised setting, appellant would stop taking the Haldol or decrease the dosage because she believed that she did not need it and because she would forget to take it due to her memory problems. Whenever she stopped taking Haldol, appellant would decompensate; her delusions and hallucinations worsened.

Appellant had been hospitalized several times in the three years before her recommitment hearing, including a hospitalization at Oregon State Hospital (OSH) that began in March 2015 and continued until the time of her recom-mitment hearing. However, the record contains little or no information about appellant’s other hospitalizations. The March 2015 OSH hospitalization occurred because, during a trial visit to a residential treatment facility, she had “become aggressive, tried to attack the staff, and tried to break down the windows” of the office in which the staff had sequestered themselves. On December 1, 2015, appellant had a verbal altercation with another female patient at OSH and hit her with a coat. And, on December 22, 2015, appellant struck and hit a hospital staff member in the stomach as the staff member was holding her down on the toilet. During the latter two incidents, hospital staff members were able to redirect appellant.

In February 2016, an interdisciplinary treatment team met and put appellant on “ready to place” status—that is, the team determined that appellant was eligible to be discharged from the hospital to a community placement. Later that same month, appellant broke her ankle, which resulted in her becoming more psychotic, irritable, and verbally argumentative and aggressive. Her doctors adjusted her medication to treat her pain from the ankle injury, and revoked her ready-to-place status. Her treating psychiatrist, [11]*11Dr. McCullars, clarified at the recommitment hearing, however, that appellant’s status was not revoked because she had exhibited any recent violent or dangerous behavior or posed a substantial risk to others. Indeed, McCullars testified that she had not seen any symptoms of violence in the 30 days preceding the recommitment hearing and, when pressed by appellant’s counsel, acknowledged that appellant had not exhibited “any sort of violent acts” since the December 22, 2015, incident.

McCullars believed that appellant was not ready to be discharged from the hospital because her doctors were trying to control her pain and determine if her pain issues were driving the psychosis. She admitted that appellant was currently asymptomatic of “aggressive” psychosis and was doing much better but still had concerns about appellant’s memory and a baseline psychosis. Moreover, if appellant failed to take her antipsychotic medication, McCullars believed that she was in danger of decompensating and “striking] out at imaginary perceptions and hurt[ing] other people.” In McCullars’s view, appellant “needs supervision for the rest of her life in terms of medication management and ensuring that she does not put herself in harm’s way.”

As to the trial court’s basis for recommitting appellant because her condition satisfied the expanded criteria, the court concluded:

“With regards to the expanded criteria ***, [w]e have a number of commitments from 2014, 2015. The testimony is that there is at least one, probably two, from the doctor, from Dr. McCullars, without a specific date as to that. And there is nothing to contradict that statement. So I will find that [appellant] is chronically mentally ill as defined by statute. That she is over 18 years of age.”

The court did not make express findings for two of the expanded criteria, ORS 426.005(1)(f)(C)(iii), (iv). See 287 Or App at 12-13. The court also found that appellant’s mental disorder did not interfere with her ability to meet her basic personal needs, ORS 426.005(l)(f)(B), and did not make her dangerous to others, ORS 426.005(l)(f)(A). Although the court determined that appellant was a danger to herself, [12]*12ORS 426.005(l)(f)(A), the state concedes that that determination was in error.

This appeal puts at issue two areas of the civil commitment laws that we have addressed infrequently.

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Related

State v. T. L.
345 Or. App. 572 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2025)
State v. H. H. J. (In re H. H. J.)
436 P.3d 75 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
401 P.3d 1265, 287 Or. App. 8, 2017 WL 3160633, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-t-z-orctapp-2017.