In Re The Detention Of Jerry Altman , Jerry Altman ( 2006 )


Menu:
  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 69 / 05-0077
    Filed October 27, 2006
    IN RE THE DETENTION OF JERRY ALTMAN,
    JERRY ALTMAN,
    Appellant.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Webster County, Kurt L. Wilke
    (pretrial) and William C. Ostlund (trial), Judges.
    Appellant appeals his commitment as a sexually violent predator.
    AFFIRMED.
    Mark C. Smith, First Assistant State Public Defender, and Matthew S.
    Sheeley, Assistant State Public Defender, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Mary E. Tabor, Thomas H.
    Miller, and Denise A. Timmins, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee,
    State of Iowa.
    2
    TERNUS, Chief Justice.
    The respondent, Jerry Altman, appeals from a judgment finding him
    to be a sexually violent predator under Iowa Code chapter 229A (2003). He
    claims the trial court erred in failing to grant his motion for judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict based on the State’s alleged failure to present
    substantial evidence that Altman’s antisocial personality disorder
    predisposed him to commit sexually violent offenses to a degree that would
    constitute a menace to the health and safety of others as required by the
    statute.   See Iowa Code §§ 229A.2(5), (11), 229A.7(5).          Altman also
    challenges a district court order authorizing the release of his confidential
    mental health records to the State. We find no basis for reversal in either of
    the assigned errors, and so we affirm the judgment.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    The State filed this action to have the respondent declared a sexually
    violent predator so, if successful, the State could civilly commit Altman
    under Iowa’s sexually violent predator law, Iowa Code chapter 229A. Under
    that statute, a “sexually violent predator” is defined as
    a person who has been convicted of or charged with a sexually
    violent offense and who suffers from a mental abnormality
    which makes the person likely to engage in predatory acts
    constituting sexually violent offenses, if not confined in a secure
    facility.
    
    Id. § 229A.2(11)
    (emphasis added).        A person is “likely to engage in
    predatory acts of sexual violence” if “the person more likely than not will
    engage in acts of a sexually violent nature.” 
    Id. § 229A.2(4).
    A “mental
    abnormality” is also defined in the statute:
    “Mental abnormality” means a congenital or acquired condition
    affecting the emotional or volitional capacity of a person and
    predisposing that person to commit sexually violent offenses to a
    degree which would constitute a menace to the health and safety
    of others.
    3
    
    Id. § 229A.2(5)
    (second emphasis added).
    After the State commenced this action, but prior to trial, the State
    requested that the court order Altman to release the records of his prior
    mental health hospitalizations to the State.        Over the respondent’s
    objection, the court ordered Altman to authorize the release of his records.
    Altman assigns this ruling as error on appeal.
    The State’s case proceeded to a jury trial. The record made at trial
    reveals that Altman was convicted in 1977 for lascivious acts with a seven-
    year-old girl. He was found with his penis exposed in front of the child,
    whose pants had been pulled down. His semen was found on the victim. In
    2004 he was convicted of assault with intent to commit sexual abuse after
    he attacked a woman. Altman’s semen was found on the victim’s panties.
    Altman also had an extensive history of other criminal acts commencing
    with a shoplifting charge when he was eleven. As an adult, he has had over
    forty arrests and multiple convictions, reflecting a life of substance abuse,
    assaultive behavior, and continual criminality.
    At trial, the State’s expert, Dr. Harry Hoberman, testified Altman
    suffered from an antisocial personality disorder that was the primary reason
    for his criminal sexual behavior, as well as for his other criminal offenses.
    Dr. Hoberman stated Altman’s disorder predisposed him “to be . . . violent
    toward other people, including to commit sex offenses.”              It was
    Dr. Hoberman’s opinion that Altman’s predisposition to commit sexual
    offenses was substantial enough to make Altman a risk to others and make
    it more likely than not that he would reoffend. Dr. Hoberman acknowledged
    on cross-examination, however, that Altman was “[n]ot more predisposed to
    commit sexually violent offenses compared to criminal offenses in general.”
    Nonetheless, Dr. Hoberman believed it was more likely than not that Altman
    would commit another sexual offense.
    4
    The respondent called Dr. Craig Rypma as an expert witness.
    Dr. Rypma agreed that Altman suffered from an antisocial personality
    disorder. He disagreed, however, that this disorder predisposed the
    respondent to commit sexually violent acts in particular. Rather, according
    to Dr. Rypma, Altman had a predisposition for “general recidivism.”
    The respondent challenged the sufficiency of the State’s evidence in
    motions for directed verdict, arguing the State demonstrated at best that he
    was predisposed to commit a wide variety of criminal acts.            Altman
    contended the statute requires that a respondent’s risk to the community
    be primarily sexual in nature. The trial court denied the respondent’s
    motions and submitted the case to the jury. The jury found the defendant
    was a sexually violent predator.        The court subsequently denied the
    respondent’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict in which
    Altman made the same challenge to the evidence asserted in his motions for
    directed verdict. That ruling is assigned as error on appeal. We address it
    first.
    II. Motion for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict.
    A. Scope of review. Our review is for correction of errors at law.
    Gibson v. ITT Hartford Ins. Co., 
    621 N.W.2d 388
    , 391 (Iowa 2001). We
    evaluate whether substantial evidence exists to support the State’s case.
    See 
    id. “Evidence is
    substantial when a reasonable mind would accept it as
    adequate to reach a conclusion.” Johnson v. Dodgen, 
    451 N.W.2d 168
    , 171
    (Iowa 1990). In making this determination, we view the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the nonmoving party. 
    Gibson, 621 N.W.2d at 391
    .
    B. Discussion. As noted above, in order to establish that Altman is a
    sexually violent predator, the State was required to prove the respondent
    suffered “from a mental abnormality” that makes him “likely to engage in
    predatory acts constituting sexually violent offenses, if not confined in a
    5
    secure facility.” Iowa Code § 229A.2(11). To establish that Altman has a
    “mental abnormality,” the State had to prove that Altman’s condition
    “predispos[es] [him] to commit sexually violent offenses to a degree which
    would constitute a menace to the health and safety of others.”          
    Id. § 229A.2(5)
    . The respondent claims the State’s proof that his condition
    predisposes him to commit sexually violent offenses was deficient.
    Altman acknowledges that an antisocial personality disorder can be a
    mental disorder that predisposes an individual to commit sexually violent
    offenses to a degree that constitutes a menace to the health and safety of
    others. See In re Det. of Hodges, 
    689 N.W.2d 467
    , 470 (Iowa 2004); In re
    Det. of Barnes, 
    689 N.W.2d 455
    , 458 (Iowa 2004). He claims, however, that
    his condition does not predispose him to commit sexual offenses to a degree
    that would constitute a menace to the health and safety of others. He
    points out that the respondents in Hodges and Barnes had extensive
    histories of sexual misconduct.     Thus, he concludes, “the pattern of
    antisocial behavior in these cases was one where sexual offending was the
    rule rather than the exception.”    In contrast, he notes, his antisocial
    behavior manifested itself almost exclusively through crimes that were
    nonsexual in nature.
    Preliminarily, we note that a close examination of Hodges and Barnes
    reveals that the extent of the respondents’ nonsexual offenses was not
    discussed in those cases. See In re Det. of 
    Hodges, 689 N.W.2d at 468-69
    (reviewing respondent’s history of sexual offending, but not stating that
    these were the only type of crimes committed by the respondent); In re Det.
    of 
    Barnes, 689 N.W.2d at 456
    (same). So those decisions cannot be read to
    interpret section 229A.2(5) to require that a respondent’s sexual crimes
    predominate over other types of criminal conduct.
    6
    Turning to an examination of the statute, we find no language in
    section 229A.2(5) that can be interpreted to require a respondent’s risk to
    others be primarily sexual in nature. Section 229A.2(5), defining “mental
    abnormality,” merely requires that a respondent’s condition “predispos[e]
    that person to commit sexually violent offenses to a degree which would
    constitute a menace to the health and safety of others.”          Iowa Code
    § 229A.2(5) (emphasis added). Similarly, a “sexually violent predator” is
    defined in part as a person who is “likely to engage in predatory acts
    constituting sexually violent offenses.” 
    Id. § 229A.2(11)
    . Both the definition
    of “mental abnormality” and the definition of “sexually violent predator” are
    focused on the likelihood that the respondent will commit a sexual offense.
    If a respondent’s mental abnormality is such that he is likely to commit
    future sexually violent crimes, the fact that the particular respondent may
    be even more likely to commit other types of offenses does not detract from
    his risk as a sexual predator.
    We do not think the due process concern discussed in Barnes alters
    this interpretation of the statute. In Barnes, we observed due process
    requires that the evidence “ ‘must be sufficient to distinguish the dangerous
    sexual offender whose serious mental illness, abnormality, or disorder
    subjects him to civil commitment from the dangerous but typical recidivist
    convicted in an ordinary criminal case.’ ” In re Det. of 
    Barnes, 689 N.W.2d at 458
    (quoting Kansas v. Crane, 
    534 U.S. 407
    , 413, 
    122 S. Ct. 867
    , 870,
    
    151 L. Ed. 2d 856
    , 862-63 (2002)).        The individualized determination
    required by chapter 229A—that the particular respondent is likely to
    commit sexually violent offenses in the future—serves to distinguish the
    dangerous sexual offender from the typical recidivist.
    Having determined there is no statutory requirement that the
    respondent be predisposed to commit primarily sexual offenses, we must
    7
    now determine whether the evidence in this record supports a finding that
    Altman’s mental condition predisposes him to commit sexually violent
    offenses “to a degree which could constitute a menace to the health and
    safety of others” if he is not confined.           Iowa Code § 229A.2(5).
    Dr. Hoberman testified that Altman’s antisocial personality disorder affected
    the respondent’s ability to control his emotions and behavior. The doctor
    specifically noted that Altman
    has certain thinking styles . . . that also predispose him to
    sexually offend. . . . Mr. Altman is someone who feels [he] has
    a sense of entitlement that if he sees someone that he wants to
    be sexual with, he’s going to be sexual with that person.
    Whether they are consenting or not or of age . . . .
    Dr. Hoberman concluded the characteristics of Altman’s mental condition
    make it more likely than not that he will commit sex offenses in the future if
    not confined in a secure facility. Although Dr. Rypma testified to a contrary
    conclusion, “[i]t was for the jury to decide which of the experts was more
    credible . . . and whose opinion . . . the jury would accept.” Mercy Hosp. v.
    Hansen, Lind & Meyer, P.C., 
    456 N.W.2d 666
    , 672 (Iowa 1990).
    We think Dr. Hoberman’s opinion that Altman would likely reoffend
    sexually in the future was sufficient to distinguish the respondent from the
    typical criminal recidivist. Consequently, there was substantial evidence to
    support the jury’s finding that the respondent was a sexually violent
    predator. Therefore, the trial court did not err in denying the respondent’s
    request for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
    III. Motion to Release Mental Health Records.
    As noted earlier, the respondent challenges the district court’s order
    requiring him to authorize the release of confidential mental health records
    to the State. He claims this discovery is contrary to the provisions of
    chapter 229A. See Bousman v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    630 N.W.2d 789
    , 796 (Iowa
    8
    2001) (“[A] court has no discretion to issue a discovery order that lacks
    factual support or is in contravention of governing constitutional or
    statutory provisions.”). We review this ruling for an abuse of discretion.
    See 
    id. A brief
    review of the pertinent statutory provisions is helpful. The
    chapter 229A process may be commenced when the agency with jurisdiction
    over a confined person convicted of a sexually violent offense gives written
    notice to the attorney general and a statutory multidisciplinary team of the
    anticipated discharge of the person. See Iowa Code § 229A.3(1)(a). The
    multidisciplinary team then assesses whether the person meets the
    definition of a sexually violent predator and forwards its assessment to the
    attorney general. See 
    id. § 229A.3(4).
    With the assistance of a prosecutor’s
    review committee, the attorney general then determines whether the person
    meets the definition of a sexually violent predator. See 
    id. § 229A.3(5).
    If
    the prosecutor’s review committee determines the person meets the
    definition of a sexually violent predator, the attorney general may file a
    petition under chapter 229A. 
    Id. § 229A.4(1).
    With this background, we turn to the statutory discovery provisions.
    After receiving notice of a person’s anticipated discharge and before filing a
    petition, the prosecuting attorney or attorney general may require “the
    production of documentary evidence.” 
    Id. § 229A.5A(1).
    Section 229A.5A(1)
    states “the prosecuting attorney or attorney general shall have the same
    powers and limitations . . . as provided by this chapter and by the Iowa
    rules of civil procedure.” 
    Id. Section 229A.14
    addresses the release of
    otherwise confidential information:
    Notwithstanding any provision in the Code regarding
    confidentiality to the contrary, any relevant information and
    records which would otherwise be confidential or privileged,
    except information subject to attorney-client privilege and
    9
    attorney work product, shall be released to the agency with
    jurisdiction or the attorney general for the purpose of meeting
    the notice requirement provided in section 229A.3 and
    determining whether a person is or continues to be a sexually
    violent predator.
    
    Id. § 229A.14
    (emphasis added).
    There is no dispute here that the records sought by the State are
    relevant. The dispute centers on whether the records are sought “for the
    purpose of meeting the notice requirement provided in section 229A.3 and
    determining whether a person is or continues to be a sexually violent
    predator.”   
    Id. (emphasis added).
       The respondent argues confidential
    records may be obtained only to satisfy both purposes simultaneously.
    From this premise, he concludes discovery of confidential materials is
    reserved for the time period preceding the filing of a chapter 229A petition
    because only then would the records be needed to meet “the notice
    requirement” of section 229A.3. See 
    id. We reject
    this interpretation of section 229A.14.      It rests on the
    conclusion that the legislature used the word “and” in a conjunctive sense.
    But that conclusion is not automatic.
    “It is a well-known rule of statutory construction that the
    courts will construe disjunctive words as conjunctive, and vice
    versa, and will disregard technical rules of grammar and
    punctuation, when necessary to arrive at the intent of the
    legislative body.”
    Green v. City of Mt. Pleasant, 
    256 Iowa 1184
    , 1212, 
    131 N.W.2d 5
    , 23 (1964)
    (quoting State ex rel. Winterfield v. Hardin County Coop., 
    226 Iowa 896
    , 916,
    
    285 N.W. 219
    , 229 (1939)); see Ahrweiler v. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    226 Iowa 229
    , 235, 
    283 N.W. 889
    , 891 (1939) (stating that “in construing statutes the
    word and may be interpreted as a disjunctive and . . . the words and and or
    are convertible, as the sense may require when necessary to effectuate the
    10
    intent of the legislature”). Consequently, we must examine the legislature’s
    intent to determine whether “and” is used as a conjunctive or disjunctive.
    We think it significant that section 229A.14 does not expressly state
    the discovery permitted by that statute is limited to the pre-petition period.
    Moreover, the attorney general is allowed access to otherwise confidential
    records   “[n]otwithstanding   any    provision   in   the   Code   regarding
    confidentiality to the contrary.” Iowa Code § 229A.14. The breadth of this
    provision indicates the importance the legislature attached to ensuring the
    availability of accurate and complete information regarding a respondent’s
    medical and psychiatric history. We can think of no legislative purpose
    served by allowing the use of the respondent’s confidential mental health
    records to make the preliminary assessment of whether the respondent
    meets the definition of sexually violent predator, but not allowing these
    highly relevant records to be used in the actual court proceeding at which
    the jury determines whether the respondent is, in fact, a sexually violent
    predator. In addition, the phrase at the end of the statute—“or continues to
    be a sexually violent predator”—suggests that confidential records may be
    used during annual reviews and petitions for discharge. See 
    id. § 229A.14
    (emphasis added); see also 
    id. §§ 229A.8
    (providing for annual reviews to
    determine whether the respondent continues to meet the definition of
    sexually violent predator), 229A.10 (allowing director of human services to
    file a petition for discharge, which can lead to a hearing on whether the
    respondent continues to meet the definition of sexually violent predator).
    We conclude it is most consistent with legislative intent to interpret
    the word “and” as used in section 229A.14 to be disjunctive. Thus, section
    229A.14 allows the discovery of confidential or privileged records for the
    purpose of “meeting the notice requirement” and, in addition, allows the
    discovery of confidential or privileged records for the purpose of
    11
    “determining whether a person is or continues to be a sexually violent
    predator.” Therefore, the attorney general may obtain the respondent’s
    confidential mental health records after a chapter 229A petition has been
    filed.    Consequently, the district court did not abuse its discretion in
    ordering the respondent to authorize the release of his mental health
    hospitalization records for review by the State’s expert.
    IV. Conclusion.
    Substantial evidence supports the jury’s finding that the respondent
    is a sexually violent predator. We reject Altman’s contention that, before he
    may be committed under chapter 229A, the State must prove his greatest
    risk to the public is the likelihood of future sexual offenses. The State need
    only establish that more likely than not the respondent will commit
    additional sexually violent offenses. The fact that it is likely he will also
    commit other crimes does not detract from his risk as a sexual predator.
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in ordering the release of
    the respondent’s mental health records. This discovery is authorized by
    section 229A.14, which allows the attorney general to obtain otherwise
    confidential or privileged information to assist in the determination of
    whether a respondent “is or continues to be a sexually violent predator.”
    Finding no basis for reversal, we affirm.
    AFFIRMED.
    All justices concur except Hecht, J., who takes no part.