Wisconsin Department of Corrections v. Saenz

2007 WI App 25, 728 N.W.2d 765, 299 Wis. 2d 486, 2007 Wisc. App. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 25, 2007
Docket2005AP2750
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2007 WI App 25 (Wisconsin Department of Corrections v. Saenz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wisconsin Department of Corrections v. Saenz, 2007 WI App 25, 728 N.W.2d 765, 299 Wis. 2d 486, 2007 Wisc. App. LEXIS 48 (Wis. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

DEININGER, J.

¶ 1. The circuit court entered an ex parte order that authorized the Department of Corrections to have medical staff "provide to Jerry G. Saenz any medication, feeding or hydration, by force or otherwise," deemed medically necessary to protect and maintain Saenz's health. Three weeks later, the court conducted a hearing on Saenz's requests for an examination by an independent physician, an evidentiary hearing and vacation of the treatment order. The court denied these requests and entered an order making its prior treatment order "permanent." Saenz claims the circuit court erred in entering the final order because it deprived him of liberty without his being accorded due process as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. We agree, reverse the appealed order and remand to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

*492 BACKGROUND

¶ 2. Jerry Saenz is an inmate at Waupun Correctional Institution (WCI). The Department of Corrections (DOC) petitioned the Dodge County Circuit Court for an order authorizing it to forcibly administer medical treatment, including food and hydration, to Saenz. The petition, accompanied by affidavits from a deputy warden and a physician, alleged the following:

1. Jerry Saenz is an inmate in the custody and control of the Wisconsin Department of Corrections and is currently housed at the Waupun Correctional Institution (WCI) in Waupun, Wisconsin.
2. Mr. Saenz[] has accepted only two meals since [three weeks before the petition] and has consumed minimal fluids since that date. At this time, medical staff at WCI have determined that Mr. Saenz is suffering from moderate to severe malnutrition and dehydration.
3. Mr. Saenz has indicated he is refusing food and fluids because he is protesting the conditions in segregation. Since beginning his hunger strike Mr. Saenz has lost at least 24 pounds. Mr. Saenz is currently lethargic, refusing to get out of bed and will not verbally respond to staff.
4. The Department is reliably informed by medical opinion that unless Mr. Saenz receives medical treatment, including forced hydration or forced feeding within the next 24 to 48 hours, he is at great risk of suffering serious harm or death.
5. The death of an inmate at a correctional institution under the circumstances described herein would jeopardize the safety, security and good order of said institution. This order is necessary to maintain the security of the institution and the safety of the staff and other inmates housed there, preserve the health and *493 safety of Mr. Saenz, prevent the manipulation of the corrections system by Mr. Saenz and prevent the state from incurring additional significant medical costs which may result if Mr. Saenz suffers medical complications as a result of his actions.

Neither the petition nor the supporting affidavits cited legal authority in support of the Department's request.

¶ 3. In his supporting affidavit, the WCI deputy warden characterized Saenz's actions as a "ploy periodically used by inmates as a means of manipulating the correctional system and staff." He averred that the Department's interest in forcibly feeding and hydrating Saenz was based on the following:

[I]f Jerry Saenz dies as a result of a hunger strike, the security at WCI would be significantly adversely affected. It will be adversely affected because inmates expect staff will exercise prudent actions to protect inmates' health, safety and welfare. The failure of correctional staff to take life saving actions and allowing an inmate to die while in custody will destabilize the correctional population. It will also do so because it jeopardizes the inmates' reliance on staff to act in inmates' best interests.
. . . [T]o allow an inmate to die by self-imposed starvation will give rise to rumors that staff mistreated the dead inmate, thus causing his death. Inmates are naturally suspicious of staff and correctional management and seldom know all of the information about an incident such as an inmate death and so believe the worst.

The warden also alluded in his affidavit to a 1983 incident at WCI when an inmate's suicide sparked a riot that resulted in several prison staff members being taken hostage.

*494 ¶ 4. The Department also submitted an affidavit from a physician employed by WCI. The physician averred that Saenz had eaten only two meals in the past three weeks, he had lost twenty-four pounds and laboratory tests performed on Saenz's urine showed "moderate to severe dehydration and malnutrition." The doctor opined "to a reasonable degree of medical certainty" that, if Saenz "does not receive hydration and/or nutrition within 24 to 48 hours, he will be at risk of suffering intravascular collapse and/or possibly death."

¶ 5. On the same day the Department filed its petition, the circuit court issued an "Order Authorizing Medical Treatment of Jerry G. Saenz," which directed the following:

[A]ny licensed physician, or a person acting under his or her direction and control, may evaluate and provide to Jerry G. Saenz any medication, feeding or hydration, by force or otherwise, which in his or her medical judgment is necessary to protect and maintain the health of Jerry G. Saenz while he remains in the legal custody of the Department of Corrections.

Upon receiving a copy of the order, Saenz sent a letter to the court requesting a hearing to "address . . . the Department's] proposed petition calling for blanket and intrusive medical procedures" and to provide the court with an opportunity to "first hand judge Mr. Saenz'[s] mental and physical capabilities, appearance and the like." He also asked the court to "vacate its blanket order" and for the appointment of an independent physician to examine him.

¶ 6. The circuit court, three weeks after it entered the ex parte treatment order, conducted a hearing on Saenz's requests. Both the Department's counsel and Saenz, pro se, appeared by telephone. The court stated at the beginning of the hearing that its purpose was "to *495 determine whether or not an evidentiary hearing is appropriate for the Court to reconsider the order previously entered requiring involuntary feeding of Mr. Saenz." The Department's counsel affirmed its view that the ex parte order was "permanent unless the Court indicates otherwise," explaining that it wished to avoid having "to go back into court every other week asking for basically the same relief."

¶ 7. Saenz asserted at the hearing that, pursuant to the court's order, he had been forcibly fed or hydrated "on three or four different occasions even though I was eating and drinking," claiming that he had "drank like ten cups of [water] . .. right in front of 'em." Saenz informed the court that he intended to dispute the facts the Department had alleged in its petition, and he explained the reasons for his behavior as follows:

I'm a mentally ill prisoner, your Honor. Been certified as such.

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Related

Commissioner of Correction v. Coleman
38 A.3d 84 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2012)
Wisconsin Department of Corrections v. Lilly
2011 WI App 123 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
2007 WI App 25, 728 N.W.2d 765, 299 Wis. 2d 486, 2007 Wisc. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisconsin-department-of-corrections-v-saenz-wisctapp-2007.