United States of America Ex Rel. John J. Carroll, Appellant-Petitioner v. John F. McNeill Supt. Of Matteawan State Hospital, Appellee-Respondent

294 F.2d 117, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3821
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 1961
Docket26731_1
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 294 F.2d 117 (United States of America Ex Rel. John J. Carroll, Appellant-Petitioner v. John F. McNeill Supt. Of Matteawan State Hospital, Appellee-Respondent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America Ex Rel. John J. Carroll, Appellant-Petitioner v. John F. McNeill Supt. Of Matteawan State Hospital, Appellee-Respondent, 294 F.2d 117, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3821 (2d Cir. 1961).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Circuit Judge.

From September 26, 1950 to date the appellant, John Carroll, has been held in custody in Matteawan State Hospital (Matteawan), a New York State “hospital for insane criminals” 1 located within the Southern District of New York.

*118 Appellant applied to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus. He alleged that his detention in Matteawan is depriving him of his liberty without due process of law and is denying him the equal protection of the laws, and that therefore his detention is in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. The petition was dismissed and an application for leave to appeal in for-ma pauperis was denied. Application for permission to appeal was then made to us. We granted the leave and, without opinion, remanded the case to the district court for a hearing upon the merits. After the hearing held upon remand the petition was again dismissed. We issued a certificate of probable cause, and, pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. § 2253, the within appeal was taken from that final order of dismissal.

In 1934 petitioner was convicted in the New York courts of the crime of robbery, second degree. He was sentenced to serve from two to four years in prison. He served his sentence and was discharged on March 17, 1938. Fifteen years after this conviction, on January 7, 1949, pursuant to an order of certification of a Justice of the New York State Supreme Court, issued under New York Mental Hygiene Law, § 74, Chapter 27 of McKinney’s Consolidated Laws, 2 appellant was committed to Pilgrim State *119 Hospital (Pilgrim), one of several New York State hospitals existing for the care and treatment of the mentally ill of the state, an institution under the governance of the State Department of Mental Hygiene. Appellant does not challenge the propriety of this commitment order, or his continued detention thereafter at Pilgrim pursuant to a certificate of need of continued care and treatment, all as provided for in § 74. On December 21, 1949, appellant escaped from Pilgrim. The following day, December 22, 1949, the Senior Director of Pilgrim addressed a letter to the Commissioner of Mental Hygiene requesting that appellant be transferred to Matteawan pursuant to New York Correction Law, § 412, which provides:

“§ 412. Transfers from other state hospitals to Matteawan state hospital
“The commissioner of mental hygiene may, by order in writing, transfer to the Matteawan state hospital any insane inmate of another state hospital, who was held under any other than a civil process, committed thereto upon the order of a court of criminal jurisdiction or of a judge or justice of such a court; or any patient who has previously been sentenced to a term of imprisonment in any correctional institution, and who still manifests criminal tendencies, or any such patient who has previously been an inmate of the Matteawan state hospital. (Emphasis ours.)
“Any inmate who has been transferred to the Matteawan state hospital pursuant to this section may thereafter again be transferred to any appropriate institution in the department of mental hygiene or the department of correction upon the order of the commissioner of mental hygiene and the consent of the head of the department having jurisdiction of the institution to which the inmate is to be transferred. The superintendent of Matteawan state hospital may discharge a patient who has recovered or who has improved so as to be no longer dangerous to himself or others. All persons committed to said Matteawan state hospital shall be a charge upon the state.”

The director’s letter, to which a copy of appellant’s clinical summary was attached, referred to appellant’s prior conviction and prison record and contained a statement that in the course of his escape from Pilgrim appellant had assaulted a hospital attendant and fractured his skull. The letter, therefore, classified appellant as one “who has previously been sentenced to a term of imprisonment in any correctional institution, and who still manifests criminal tendencies, * * * ” On January 4, 1950, a written order was issued by the Department of Mental Hygiene authorizing the transfer of petitioner to Matteawan pursuant to § 412. Appellant was apprehended on September 23, 1950 and was returned to Pilgrim on September 25. The order of January 4 was then forthwith executed and on September 26, 1950 appellant was transferred to Matteawan where he has since remained.

Had it not been for petitioner’s 1934 conviction for robbery, the only way in which petitioner could have been transferred to Matteawan in 1950 was pursuant to New York Mental Hygiene Law, § 85, the relevant parts of which are set forth in full in the margin. 3

*120 Section 85 provides for detailed judicial proceedings leading to a court certification that the mentally ill patient is dangerous and that the safety of the institutional environment requires his transfer to Matteawan. It provides that a commission of three disinterested persons shall examine the patient and report findings to the court. The patient is entitled to be represented by counsel during the proceedings. However, under New York Correction Law, § 412 these usual procedural safeguards are denied to a mentally ill patient who has been previously sentenced to a term of imprisonment in a correctional institution even though the determination that he is mentally ill is made after the completion of his criminal sentence. Such a patient, as appellant, may be transferred, summarily, without any hearing whatsoever, to Matteawan pursuant to § 412.

We are of the opinion that the denial of a judicial transfer procedure arbitrarily discriminates against those-patients who have fully served prior sentences for crimes and have subsequently been admitted by civil process to a state-institution of the type of Pilgrim, and denies to this class of patients the equal protection of the laws guaranteed to. them by the Fourteenth Amendment.

During the hearing before the-district judge, and during the argument on appeal, counsel for petitioner made efforts to distinguish the purpose of the two institutions. He correctly pointed out that Matteawan is denominated as-a “hospital for insane criminals” and that Matteawan expressly does not deal with mentally ill persons committed into-state custody by civil process, with the-exception of those transferred from other institutions pursuant to the New York Mental Hygiene Law, § 85 and the New York Correction Law, § 412. See New York Correction Law, § 400, supra, footnote 1. Counsel attempted through wit *121 nesses to show that Matteawan partook more of the character of a jail than a hospital, and, among other claimed differences, sought to prove that the treatment accorded the mentally ill at Pilgrim was far superior to that offered at Matteawan.

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294 F.2d 117, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-ex-rel-john-j-carroll-appellant-petitioner-v-ca2-1961.