Conservatorship of T.M. ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 1/5/21 Conservatorship of T.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
    ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    Conservatorship of the Person of T.M.
    PUBLIC GUARDIAN OF                                                     A158986
    CONTRA COSTA COUNTY,
    Petitioner and Respondent,                                     (Contra Costa County
    Super. Ct. No. MSP1400841)
    v.
    T.M.,
    Objector and Appellant.
    T.M., a 43-year-old woman who suffers from schizophrenia, appeals
    from an order of November 8, 2019, reappointing the Public Guardian of
    Contra Costa County as conservator of her person under the Lanterman-
    Petris-Short (LPS) Act (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 5000 et seq.)1 effective
    October 8, 2019, for the sixth consecutive year. Because the order appealed
    from expired even before briefing was complete in the appeal, and because
    T.M. raises only an insufficiency of the evidence issue, we shall dismiss the
    appeal as moot.
    Further undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and
    1
    Institutions Code unless otherwise indicated.
    1
    I. BACKGROUND
    On September 5, 2019, the Public Guardian filed a petition to be
    reappointed as conservator of T.M.’s person for the sixth year in a row,
    including the opinions of two psychiatrists that she was gravely disabled as a
    result of mental illness. (§§ 5350, 5361.) T.M. initially had been conserved
    when the Public Guardian was appointed as her temporary conservator in
    June 2014 and conservator for the ensuing year in October 2014. The Public
    Guardian has been continuously reappointed in every year since. (§ 5361.)
    Whether a conservatorship under the LPS Act may be established or
    renewed turns on whether the conservatee is “gravely disabled” as a result of
    a mental disorder. (§§ 5350, 5361.) “Grave disability” is defined as a
    “condition in which a person, as a result of a mental health disorder, is
    unable to provide for his or her basic personal needs for food, clothing, or
    shelter.” (§ 5008, subd. (h)(1)(A).) The Public Guardian must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the proposed conservatee is gravely disabled.
    (Conservatorship of Roulet (1979) 
    23 Cal.3d 219
    , 235.) The testimony of one
    witness may be sufficient to support such a finding. (Conservatorship of
    Jesse G. (2016) 
    248 Cal.App.4th 453
    , 461.)
    At trial on the reappointment petition, the Public Guardian’s case
    consisted of the testimony of Dr. Michael Levin and the testimony of T.M.
    herself. The testimony showed that T.M. was diagnosed with mental
    disorders beginning about age 25. Dr. Levin, testifying as an expert witness
    in psychiatry and grave disability, gave her a differential present diagnosis of
    schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.
    Though she was earlier housed in a state hospital, about six or eight
    months before the trial, she was moved to Villa Fairmont in San Leandro,
    also a locked facility but one with fewer restrictions. We are informed T.M.
    2
    has now been moved to Pathways, a less restrictive, unsecured facility,
    apparently as a result of a court order filed November 8, 2019, by Judge
    Susanne Fenstermacher, whose “grave disability” finding is here on appeal.2
    T.M.’s illness renders her subject to delusions and audio hallucinations.
    She does not believe she is schizophrenic, but rather attributes her symptoms
    to being clairvoyant and able to predict the future. She claims she can hear
    her son on the phone before he calls her, and that she can hear his voice and
    the voices of other people without a phone. She believes former President
    Barack Obama is her father.
    Regardless of whether she calls it schizophrenia or clairvoyance, she
    knows that she must follow a complicated health regimen. She was able at
    trial to name her medications: atenolol, atropine, magnesium, clozapine
    (Clozaril), Depakote (a mood stabilizer), Prozac, Ativan, Protonix, Neurolax,
    sertraline, and DSS. At Villa Fairmont, T.M.’s medications were
    administered by the facility’s staff. They told her when it was time to take
    her various medications, they dispensed the proper dosage, and she would
    line up with the other patients to receive her pills three times a day. A nurse
    watched to make sure she swallowed her pills. She was medication-
    compliant for at least the two months prior to the hearing. She promised she
    would take her medications if allowed to live on her own.
    T.M. testified she could care for herself by arranging an Uber ride,
    calling a taxi, or taking public transit to a shelter initially, and then she
    2 The Public Guardian filed a request for judicial notice in this court
    and a request to take evidence on appeal, seeking to augment the record with
    the Public Guardian’s petition for reappointment filed August 27, 2020, and
    additional court minute orders showing the renewed petition was set for
    court trial on November 10, 2020. We granted the Public Guardian’s motion
    in its entirety.
    3
    would contact her family for support.3 She testified she had lived on her own
    in an apartment in Rodeo for seven years, paying rent with social security
    income, before her conservatorship was established.4 She also claimed she
    could get a job working at Nike or at the radio station, 99.1.
    T.M. planned to have her medications and groceries delivered to her.
    She also understood she needed to have her blood tested monthly, and she
    planned to go to the El Portal Clinic (in San Pablo) to get tested. She
    testified the clinic would also help her budget her money for food and would
    take her shopping for clothes.
    At the end of her testimony, T.M. read a letter she had written to the
    judge. In it, she insisted she was “very capable of managing on [her] own,”
    she repeated many of her ideas about how she could cope on her own, and
    reasserted her desire to live independently in Rodeo or with her family.
    Dr. Levin opined that T.M. suffers from schizophrenia, and though her
    condition has improved due to medication, she remained at that point in time
    gravely disabled due to her mental illness. His reasons were: (1) she has a
    major mental illness and is in denial about her mental illness; (2) she has a
    complicated medical regimen and has always relied on help for compliance;
    and (3) she has not yet had an opportunity to demonstrate independent
    3 T.M.’s mother lived in Pittsburg, California through much of the time
    T.M. was conserved, but by 2019 she lived in Louisiana. T.M. had a sister
    and a son who may have lived locally, but their addresses were unknown. At
    one time she had a grandfather who may have lived locally, but his address
    was unknown. None of her relatives had filed statements with the court
    indicating a willingness to help provide food, shelter or clothing to T.M. (See
    § 5250, subd. (d)(2) [relative must provide written consent to help
    conservatee].)
    4The record shows, however, that between 2003 and 2013 she had
    frequent need of mental health services, often for crisis intervention.
    4
    functioning and her plans for housing and the future were “vague and
    unformed.” He also testified that she needed regular supervision in
    administering her psychotropic medications and a psychiatrist overseeing her
    medication regimen.
    As Dr. Levin pointed out, Clozaril, an atypical antipsychotic
    medication, must be closely monitored for effectiveness and side effects,
    including changes to the patient’s white blood cell count. In order to
    maintain her Clozaril prescription, T.M. was required to have a complete
    blood count every month to monitor her white blood cell count. Dr. Levin
    confirmed that the El Portal Clinic would test her blood, as T.M. testified, but
    he emphasized that the drug requires a “complicated protocol that requires
    coordination and attention to detail,” and collaboration with a lab and a
    pharmacy. T.M. had worked with the staff and doctors at El Portal Clinic
    previously and testified they had helped her comply with medication
    requirements before by visiting her daily to remind her to take her
    medications. But Dr. Levin questioned whether T.M. would be “organized
    enough, structured enough, [to be] able to make the arrangements” and
    pointed out that if she were to fail to take the medication, it might mean
    restarting the drug and retitrating the dosage.5
    5 “[I]f a conservatee is not presently gravely disabled, an LPS
    conservatorship could not be extended because of a perceived likelihood of
    future relapse.” (Conservatorship of Walker (1989) 
    206 Cal.App.3d 1572
    ,
    1577.) If a conservatee will not or cannot take her medication without
    supervision, and a mental disorder makes her unable to provide for her food,
    clothing, or shelter without such medication, then the trier of fact may find
    her gravely disabled. (Conservatorship of Guerrero (1999) 
    69 Cal.App.4th 442
    , 445–447; 2 CACI No. 4002.)
    5
    At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Fenstermacher6 found T.M. had
    “made tremendous progress in her current placement. She’s medication
    compliant. She participates in groups. She takes care of her own ADL’s
    [activities of daily living], and she conducts herself appropriately . . . both in
    the facility and under passes.” The court found by clear and convincing
    evidence that T.M.’s residence at Villa Fairmont was unnecessarily
    restrictive and that the “least restrictive and most appropriate” placement for
    her would be in an unlocked board and care facility.
    The judge nevertheless found T.M. remained gravely disabled and
    granted the Public Guardian’s reappointment petition for another year. She
    also found, based on clear and convincing evidence, that T.M. lacked capacity
    to exercise her right to refuse or consent to treatment related specifically to
    her being gravely disabled, including psychotropic medications, and the court
    restricted her rights in that regard, over the objection of T.M.’s attorney.
    (§ 5357.) Finally, the judge ordered T.M. not to own a firearm or any other
    deadly weapon through the course of her renewed conservatorship. The order
    reappointing the Public Guardian as T.M.’s conservator, along with letters of
    conservatorship were filed November 8, 2019.
    II. DISCUSSION
    The sole issue raised in this appeal is that the evidence is insufficient
    to support the trial court’s finding that T.M. was gravely disabled. T.M.
    argues there was no substantial evidence to support the disputed finding.
    6Judge Fenstermacher had a long familiarity with T.M.’s case, having
    been the judge to first order her subject to a year-long conservatorship in
    2014 and a petition for rehearing in 2015. Judge Fenstermacher also
    reappointed the Public Guardian as conservator in October 2018 and
    presided over proceedings resulting in T.M.’s move to Villa Fairmont.
    6
    An LPS conservatorship appointment or reappointment order lasts for
    one year only, by operation of law. (§ 5361; cf. Prob. Code, § 1860 [Probate
    Code conservatorship lasts until court terminates it or conservatee dies].)
    The order here under review expired on October 7, 2020. At that point the
    appeal became moot. “If relief granted by the trial court is temporal, and if
    the relief granted expires before an appeal can be heard, then an appeal by
    the adverse party is moot.” (Environmental Charter High School v. Centinela
    Valley Union High School Dist. (2004) 
    122 Cal.App.4th 139
    , 144.)
    The opening brief in this appeal was filed July 29, 2020; on August 27,
    2020, the Public Guardian filed a petition to be reappointed as T.M.’s
    conservator (§ 5361); the responding brief in this appeal was filed on
    October 26, 2020; a trial was scheduled to be held on the Public Guardian’s
    reappointment petition on November 10, 2020, and the reply brief was filed
    in this appeal on November 16, 2020.
    The Public Guardian now asks us to dismiss the appeal on grounds
    that it is moot. The Public Guardian argues the only relief this court could
    grant would result in a new trial, when such a trial has already been
    conducted on November 10, 2020, on the renewed petition or soon will be.7
    We agree that the appeal is now moot.
    In general, it is a court’s duty to decide “ ‘ “actual controversies by a
    judgment which can be carried into effect, and not to give opinions upon moot
    questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or rules of law
    which cannot affect the matter in issue in the case before it.” ’ ” (Eye Dog
    Foundation v. State Board of Guide Dogs for the Blind (1967) 
    67 Cal.2d 536
    ,
    541.) When, during the pendency of an LPS conservatorship appeal, through
    7The parties have not informed us of the outcome of the November 10,
    2020 trial in briefing, if in fact trial went forward as scheduled.
    7
    no fault of the proposed conservator, an event occurs such that the appellate
    court cannot grant any effectual relief, the appeal becomes moot and should
    ordinarily be dismissed. (Conservatorship of J.Y. (2020) 
    49 Cal.App.5th 220
    ,
    223, 225, review granted Aug. 19, 2020, S263044; see People v. Alsafar (2017)
    
    8 Cal.App.5th 880
    , 882–883 [Mentally Disordered Offender]; Conservatorship
    of Joseph W. (2011) 
    199 Cal.App.4th 953
    , 960 (Joseph W.) [but exercising
    discretion to address important issue likely to evade review].)
    There are three discretionary exceptions to the rule against
    adjudicating moot claims. “A court ordinarily will dismiss an appeal when it
    cannot grant effective relief, but may instead ‘exercise its inherent discretion
    to resolve an issue when [1] there remain “material questions for the court’s
    determination” [citation], [2] where a “pending case poses an issue of broad
    public interest that is likely to recur” [citation], or [3] where “there is a
    likelihood of recurrence of the controversy between the same parties or
    others.” ’ ” (In re David B. (2017) 
    12 Cal.App.5th 633
    , 644 (David B.)
    [juvenile dependency appeal].)
    The first and second David B. exceptions are not at issue here. The
    only issue T.M. raises on the merits is insufficiency of the evidence. That is
    not a matter of widespread interest, but rather a fact-intensive inquiry into
    T.M.’s individual mental health status. As such, it does not fall within the
    second broad public interest exception to the mootness doctrine identified in
    David B., supra, 12 Cal.App.5th at page 644.
    But T.M. argues the issue on appeal need not be one of general or
    widespread interest, so long as it is likely to recur between the parties.
    (Conservatorship of Carol K. (2010) 
    188 Cal.App.4th 123
    , 133 (Carol K.).) She
    points out that probable future repetition of an issue that is likely to evade
    review is a basis to overlook mootness and address the merits, even when the
    8
    future cases affected would likely be only similar petitions between these two
    parties. Citing Carol K., T.M. suggests the mootness doctrine should not
    apply because the issues raised are capable of repetition and, due to the short
    duration of the order reappointing the Public Guardian and the normal time
    required to obtain relief on appeal, the errors would tend to evade review
    unless we address them here. She invokes, in essence, David B.’s third
    exception to mootness. (David B., supra, 12 Cal.App.5th at p. 644.)
    We find T.M.’s argument unavailing. Even if the issue of T.M.’s grave
    disability arises in the future between T.M. and the Public Guardian, no
    future case will be affected by the sufficiency of the evidence in the hearing
    on October 29, 2019. In those future reappointment proceedings the Public
    Guardian will be required to prove grave disability anew. (§ 5361.) Each
    future case will have its own record to review, and our review of the
    sufficiency of the evidence now for a trial that occurred in 2019 would have no
    bearing on a future grave disability finding. “Despite the nuanced variation
    in [the] articulations of when an appellate court may proceed to decide an
    otherwise moot appeal, the common thread running through the cases is that
    doing so is appropriate only if a ruling on the merits will affect future
    proceedings between the parties or will have some precedential consequence
    in future litigation generally.” (David B., supra, 12 Cal.App.5th at p. 654,
    italics added.)
    On whether the issue is one likely to evade review, we cannot accept an
    argument that LPS one-year appointment orders are inevitably destined to
    be mooted out before they expire, so that appellate review becomes effectively
    unavailable. (Cf. Conservatorship of Bones (1987) 
    189 Cal.App.3d 1010
    ,
    1014–1015 [appeal involving 180-day involuntary treatment order was
    subject to mootness exception because it raised a “significant question”
    9
    tending to evade review].) Here, through no fault of the parties, there was a
    long delay in preparing the record.8 In the absence of such delays, we will not
    assume it is unduly difficult to get a disposition on appeal before the one-year
    conservatorship expires. (See Conservatorship of Forsythe (1987)
    
    192 Cal.App.3d 1406
    , 1409 [adopting policy to entertain such cases on
    “expedited appeal”]; California Rules of Court, rule 8.240 [motion for calendar
    preference].) Moreover, we do not believe “tend[ing] to evade review” is
    enough to justify exercise of our discretion where the resolution of the moot
    appeal will have no impact on future cases. (David B., supra, 12 Cal.App.5th
    at pp. 653–654.)
    T.M. relies almost exclusively on Carol K., supra, 
    188 Cal.App.4th 123
    for the proposition that conservatorship appeals need not be dismissed as
    moot if the issues on appeal could arise in future disputes between the
    parties. Carol K. involved not simply an issue of insufficiency of the evidence,
    but also an issue about the correct interpretation of the LPS Act and the
    showing required for a grave disability finding. (Carol K., at pp. 136–137.) In
    Carol K., the error of law, if not addressed in the moot appeal, would be
    subject to repetition in future conservatorship proceedings. (Id. at pp. 133,
    136–137; see Conservatorship of Baber (1984) 
    153 Cal.App.3d 542
    , 546–548
    [guardian’s appeal raising issue of correctness of jury instruction and other
    legal issues was not moot].) Likewise, in Joseph W., the court of appeal
    overlooked that the appeal was moot and exercised its discretion to hear an
    8 A notice of appeal was filed October 31, 2019 (California Rules of
    Court, rule 8.104(d)(2)), but completion of the record was delayed until
    May 8, 2020, allegedly due to understaffing at the superior court and delays
    occasioned by the coronavirus pandemic. Though a request for expedited
    preparation of the record could have been made, this appears to explain the
    delay in the submission of briefs.
    10
    appeal raising an issue of statutory interpretation relating to the
    conservatee’s right to a jury trial. (199 Cal.App.4th at p. 960.) The alleged
    error in Carol K., Baber, and Joseph W., if established in the moot appeal,
    could likely prevent repetition of the same error in a future hearing between
    the parties on a reappointment petition.
    The same is not true where, as here, the only issue on appeal is
    insufficiency of the evidence of grave disability. In such cases, the issue is
    not one the resolution of which will eliminate future error or future prejudice.
    Each annual appointment is a separate proceeding; a decision about the
    sufficiency of the evidence in one trial for reappointment will not affect the
    outcome in a later trial for reappointment of a conservator, even if the
    hearings both involve the same conservatee. Thus, we recognized long ago
    that an expired trial court order is “technically moot,” but subject to an
    exception to the doctrine if the issue raised in the underlying appeal is an
    important one and likely to recur. (North Bay Regional Center v. Sherry S.
    (1989) 
    207 Cal.App.3d 449
    , 454; accord, People v. Quinn (2001)
    
    86 Cal.App.4th 1290
    , 1293.)
    It is true that appellate courts have frequently overlooked mootness
    and addressed an appeal from an expired conservatorship order on the
    merits. (Conservatorship of George H. (2008) 
    169 Cal.App.4th 157
    , 161, fn. 2
    [mootness argument is “uniformly raised, and uniformly rejected”]; e.g.,
    Conservatorship of Susan T. (1994) 
    8 Cal.4th 1005
    , 1011, fn. 5 [finding
    exception to mootness where important issue raised was “capable of
    recurring, yet of evading review”]; cf. Conservatorship of Walker (1987)
    
    196 Cal.App.3d 1082
    , 1088, fn. 1 [“not moot”].) The two circumstances in
    which this is proper are: (1) when the appeal raises significant legal issues,
    the determination of which will affect other cases, or (2) when there is a
    11
    likelihood of recurrence of the issues in future litigation between the parties,
    the resolution of which will likely affect future proceedings between them.
    This appeal is moot because the order from which T.M. appeals has
    terminated, and the appeal raises only a sufficiency of the evidence claim.
    Any error identified by us on appeal would have no bearing on the
    determination of grave disability in a later proceeding. T.M.’s mental
    condition is changeable and any later petition for reappointment of a
    conservator would have to be based upon facts present at the time of trial on
    the new petition. (§ 5361.)
    The reestablishment of an LPS conservatorship is not a continuation of
    earlier proceedings, nor can the trial court rely on earlier findings to
    establish a subsequent conservatorship. (Cf. People v. J.S. (2014)
    
    229 Cal.App.4th 163
    , 169–170 [determining Mentally Disordered Offender
    status requires some findings that must be proven every year, and some that
    are “static”].) Rather, the petition to reestablish a conservatorship is a new
    and independent proceeding at which the proposed conservator must
    establish that the conservatee remains presently gravely disabled. (§ 5361;
    Conservatorship of Murphy (1982) 
    134 Cal.App.3d 15
    , 18–19; Conservatorship
    of Benvenuto (1986) 
    180 Cal.App.3d 1030
    , 1034; Conservatorship of Walker,
    supra, 206 Cal.App.3d at p. 1577.) That is, each subsequent petition for
    reappointment of an LPS conservator is resolved as a stand-alone
    determination, independently of any LPS conservatorship that preceded it.
    (See § 5361; Conservatorship of Ben C. (2007) 
    40 Cal.4th 529
    , 543 [“focus [is]
    primarily on the conservatee’s current needs and progress, rather than on a
    retrospective consideration of conditions that may no longer exist”].)
    We are aware of no “collateral consequences” of a finding of grave
    disability, such as might be the case if such a finding could subsequently be
    12
    used to some adverse purpose. (See People v. DeLeon (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 640
    ,
    645–646; Conservatorship of Wilson (1982) 
    137 Cal.App.3d 132
    , 136.) If T.M.
    is relieved of her conservatorship, and the Public Guardian later wants to
    petition for conservatorship again, no presumption arises on the basis of her
    prior conservatorship. (§ 5368.) And though Carol K. suggests the stigma
    attached to a grave disability finding could support an exception to mootness
    (188 Cal.App.4th at p. 133; accord, Wilson, at p. 136), we question how much
    stigma actually attaches to an individual grave disability finding that was
    the sixth in a series of such findings.
    Finally, T.M. is not entirely without a remedy if she remains under a
    conservatorship. Indeed, the LPS Act provides the conservatee with a
    “panoply of safeguards.” (Conservatorship of Ben C., supra, 40 Cal.4th at
    p. 543.) “At any time, the conservatee may petition the superior court for a
    rehearing as to his [or her] status as a conservatee.” (§ 5364.) After six
    months, she may petition again for a rehearing. (Ibid.) The conservatee also
    has that right to contest the terms of a commitment and any rights denied
    him or her (§ 5358.3), and a right to the least restrictive placement option
    (§ 5358, subd. (a)(1)(A)). Of course, she may appeal if letters of
    conservatorship issue as a result of the 2020 petition for reappointment
    (Prob. Code, § 1301, subd. (a)), and she may request calendar preference
    (California Rules of Court, rule 8.240). If she could show “ ‘unreasonable
    consequences’ ” would ensue “because of the limitations of the statutory
    review mechanisms,” she would also be entitled to writ relief. (In re Gandolfo
    (1984) 
    36 Cal.3d 889
    , 898.)
    13
    III. DISPOSITION
    The appeal is dismissed as moot. The parties to bear their own costs on
    appeal.
    STREETER, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    POLLAK, P. J.
    TUCHER, J.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A158986

Filed Date: 1/5/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/5/2021