IN THE MATTER OF S.H. IN THE MATTER OF D.M. (MNCC-00107017 AND CASC-1029-17, MONMOUTH COUNTY, CAMDEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (CONSOLIDATED) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2019 )


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  •                                   RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NOS. A-0837-17T2
    A-0881-17T2
    IN THE MATTER OF S.H.
    ________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF D.M.
    ________________________
    Argued January 14, 2019 – Decided January 29, 2019
    Before Judges Sabatino, Haas and Mitterhoff.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Monmouth County, Docket No. MNCC-
    00107017; and Camden County, Docket No. CASC-
    1029-17.
    Carol J. Sands, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
    argued the cause for appellant S.H. (Joseph E. Krakora,
    Public Defender, attorney; Carol J. Sands, of counsel
    and on the briefs).
    Stanley M. Shur, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
    argued the cause for appellant D.M. (Joseph E.
    Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Stanley M. Shur,
    of counsel and on the briefs).
    Anne E. Walters, Assistant County Counsel, argued the
    cause for respondent State of New Jersey (Christopher
    A. Orlando, Camden County Counsel, attorney; Anne
    E. Walters, on the briefs).
    PER CURIAM
    In these back-to-back appeals, which we now consolidate for purposes of
    this opinion, appellants S.H. and D.M. seek review of the September 12, 2017
    civil commitment orders that continued their involuntary inpatient commitments
    pending referral to the Involuntary Outpatient Commitment (IOC) program for
    evaluation. Appellants contend that deficiencies in the proceedings that resulted
    in these orders denied them substantive and procedural due process. Our review
    of the record in light of these contentions satisfies us that the September 12
    orders must be reversed. 1
    I.
    We begin by summarizing the well-established legal principles that
    govern our review. "The case for involuntary commitment must be presented
    by County Counsel [(the county)]." In re Commitment of Raymond S., 
    263 N.J. 1
     In light of this determination, and for the reasons discussed at the end of this
    opinion, we do not address appellants' additional assertion that two
    informational memoranda prepared by the Administrative Office of the Courts
    concerning the conversion of patients from inpatient to outpatient involuntary
    commitment programs should be invalidated or modified.
    A-0837-17T2
    2
    Super. 428, 432 (App. Div. 1993). If a "court finds that there is probable cause
    to believe that [a] person . . . is in need to involuntary commitment to treatment,"
    the court "shall issue a temporary order authorizing the assignment of the person
    to an outpatient treatment provider or the admission to or retention of the person
    in the custody of the facility[.]" N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.10(g); see also R. 4:74-7(c).
    The court must ensure that the placement "is both appropriate to the person's
    condition and is the least restrictive environment, pending a final hearing." 
    Ibid.
    "[O]ur Legislature and the New Jersey Supreme Court have promulgated
    statutes and rules to ensure that no person is involuntarily committed . . . without
    having been afforded procedural and substantive due process."                 In re
    Commitment of T.J., 
    401 N.J. Super. 111
    , 119 (App. Div. 2008) (first alteration
    in original) (quoting Raymond S., 263 N.J. Super. at 431). Thus, to continue an
    individual's involuntary inpatient or outpatient commitment after a temporary
    commitment order, a court must find "by clear and convincing evidence
    presented at [a] hearing that the patient is in need of continued involuntary
    commitment" to treatment. R. 4:74-7(f)(1). The Legislature had defined this to
    mean
    that an adult with mental illness, whose mental illness
    causes the person to be dangerous to self or dangerous
    to others or property and who is unwilling to accept
    appropriate treatment voluntarily after it has been
    A-0837-17T2
    3
    offered, needs outpatient treatment or inpatient care at
    a short-term care or psychiatric facility or special
    psychiatric hospital because other services are not
    appropriate or available to meet the person's mental
    health care needs.
    [N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.2(m).]
    At the hearing to determine whether a commitment should be continued,
    the individual has the following legislatively-prescribed rights:
    a.    The right to be represented by counsel or, if
    indigent, by appointed counsel;
    b.    The right to be present at the court hearing unless
    the court determines that because of the person's
    conduct at the court hearing the proceeding
    cannot reasonably continue while the person is
    present;
    c.    The right to present evidence;
    d.     The right to cross[-]examine witnesses; [2] and
    e.    The right to a hearing in camera.
    [N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.14.]
    Rule 4:74-7(e) specifically provides that "[n]o final order of commitment
    to treatment shall be entered except upon hearing conducted in accordance with
    2
    The importance of the right of cross-examination cannot be understated. "It
    has long been held that cross-examination is the 'greatest legal engine ever
    invented for the discovery of the truth.'" State ex rel J.A., 
    195 N.J. 324
    , 342
    (2008) (quoting California v. Green, 
    399 U.S. 149
    , 158 (1970)).
    A-0837-17T2
    4
    the provisions of these rules." In addition to the requirements set forth in
    N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.14, Rule 4:74-7(e) mandates that the county's application to
    commit an individual to treatment "shall be supported by the oral testimony of
    a psychiatrist on the patient's treatment team who has conducted a personal
    examination of the patient as close to the court hearing date as possible, but in
    no event more than five calendar days prior to the court hearing." Any expert
    witness called to testify at the hearing must "prepare a written report and shall
    make it available to the court and all counsel no later than one business day prior
    to the hearing." 
    Ibid.
    As we made clear over twenty-five years ago, "[t]hese procedural and
    substantive standards must be scrupulously followed." Raymond S., 263 N.J. at
    432. Indeed, our Supreme Court has noted that Rule 4:74-7 was adopted "in
    order to correct a long standing history of procedural abuses in the civil
    commitment process and to ensure that no person may be involuntarily
    committed . . . without having been afforded full procedural due process." In re
    D.C., 
    146 N.J. 31
    , 43 (1996) (quoting Pressler & Verniero, Current N.J. Court
    Rules, cmt. 1 on R. 4:74-7 (1995)). The Court further stated
    that the adoption of the rule reflects an increasing
    concern for the mentally ill and a "growing realization
    that, traditionally, persons alleged to be suffering from
    mental illness have been committed on ex parte orders
    A-0837-17T2
    5
    entered without representation of counsel, without
    adequate notice, without adequate proofs and in general
    violation of the most fundamental concepts of due
    process."
    [Ibid. (quoting Pressler & Verniero, cmt. 1 on R. 4:74-
    7 (1995)).]
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial judge "shall, by an opinion or
    memorandum decision, either written or oral, find the facts and state its
    conclusions of law thereon in all actions tried without a jury[.]" R. 1:7-4(a).
    While a judge need not author a lengthy written opinion, or deliver an hour-long
    oral ruling to meet this requirement in every case, he or she must always state
    what facts form the basis of his or her decision, and then weigh and evaluate
    those facts in light of the governing law "to reach whatever conclusion may
    logically flow from" those facts. Slutsky v. Slutsky, 
    451 N.J. Super. 332
    , 357
    (App. Div. 2017). Because justice requires no less, "[a]ll conclusions must be
    supported." 
    Ibid.
    In addressing the critical need for meticulous fact finding in the context
    of commitment hearings, we have observed that the "[o]mission of this duty is
    particularly problematic where the decision is discretionary; without findings
    relevant to the legal standards the litigants and the reviewing court 'can only
    speculate about the reasons' for the decision." In re Commitment of M.M., 384
    A-0837-17T2
    
    6 N.J. Super. 313
    , 332 (App. Div. 2006) (quoting Rosenberg v. Bunce, 
    214 N.J. Super. 300
    , 304 (App. Div. 1986)). Accordingly,
    [t]he importance of the individual and public interests
    implicated by civil commitment "demonstrate the
    particular necessity . . . for the trial judge to comply
    assiduously with the mandate of . . . [the] myriad [of]
    cases pointing out the importance of findings." In re
    Commitment of S.D., 
    212 N.J. Super. 211
    , 218-19
    (App. Div. 1986).         A judge presiding over a
    commitment hearing is vested with extraordinary
    responsibility; when the judge does not apply the legal
    standards and find the relevant facts, our subsequent
    correction of the abuse of discretion is a poor remedy
    for the ill.
    [M.M., 384 N.J. Super. at 332-33 (alterations in
    original).]
    "Under the civil commitment law, a hearing is an evidence-gathering
    proceeding." In re Commitment of B.L., 
    346 N.J. Super. 285
    , 307 (App. Div.
    2002) (citing N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.14).     Thus, all the formalities attendant to
    hearings conducted by our courts apply equally to commitment hearings
    conducted under Rule 4:74-7. "As such, witnesses must be sworn, particularly
    the psychiatrists.   Without swearing in the witnesses, there are no proofs
    presented at the hearing. Due process requires that a court must have proofs ,
    'which lead to the decision[.]'" B.L., 
    346 N.J. Super. at 307
     (alteration in
    original) (quoting Callen v. Gill, 
    7 N.J. 312
    , 319 (1951)).
    A-0837-17T2
    7
    In addition, Rule 1:2-3 provides that "[t]he verbatim record of the
    proceedings shall include references to all exhibits and, as to each, the offering
    party, a short description of the exhibit stated by the offering party or the court,
    and the marking directed by the court." We have said that "the trial judge has
    the ultimate responsibility of conducting adjudicative proceedings in a manner
    that complies with required formality in the taking of evidence and the rendering
    of findings." N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. J.Y., 
    352 N.J. Super. 245
    ,
    264 (App. Div. 2002) (criticizing, among other things, the trial judge's review
    and consideration of documents "without any identification for the record").
    The failure to adequately identify documents for the record "not only violate[s]
    basic rules of trial practice, R. 1:2-3, but inhibit[s] the appellate process by
    depriving the appellate court of a complete record on appeal." 
    Ibid.
    II.
    Unfortunately, appellants did not receive these required procedural
    protections, and we now highlight the deficiencies in each of their respective
    hearings.
    A-0837-17T2
    8
    A.    S.H.'s Hearing
    On August 18, 2017, S.H. was temporarily committed on an inpatient
    basis at CentraState Medical Center. After an initial hearing, this commitment
    was continued on August 30, 2017.
    S.H. was then transferred to Northbrook Behavioral Health Center
    (Northbrook). The next hearing, which took place on September 12, 2017, is at
    the center of S.H.'s current appeal. The entire hearing transcript is only two
    short pages long.
    At the beginning of the hearing, S.H.'s attorney advised the trial court that
    "[t]his matter is contested" and that S.H. "asks for a discharge as soon as
    possible." The attorney further stated that S.H. did not want to remain at
    Northbrook, where she could be evaluated for treatment on an outpatient basis
    through the IOC program.
    The court criticized the attorney's position, stating that if S.H. was
    discharged, she would not be able to participate in the IOC program, which
    would "hurt" her. The attorney replied, "Yeah, I certainly don't want to harm a
    client. I just feel I have to let the [c]ourt know what she wants." The court then
    stated that it was "going to continue the hospitalization for two weeks" and
    conduct the next hearing on September 26 where he would consider a "referral
    A-0837-17T2
    9
    to IOC."    He also told the attorney that she could "send a letter to the
    [Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)] in Trenton" because "[t]hat's who
    your issue is [sic]." The court filed an order later that day continuing S.H.'s
    commitment until the September 26 hearing, and stating that she "may not be
    discharged before the IOC hearing date." Significantly, the court made no
    finding by clear and convincing evidence that S.H. was in need of continued
    involuntary commitment to treatment by reason of a mental illness which caused
    her to be dangerous to herself, others, or property. R. 4:74-7(f)(1).
    Other than having an attorney assigned to her, S.H. did not receive any of
    the required protections due to involuntary committees as provided by the
    statutes and court rules discussed above. No psychiatrist testified at the hearing,
    and no witnesses were sworn or cross-examined. S.H. was never given the
    opportunity to present any evidence.
    The county asserts that the trial court had a report prepared by S.H.'s
    psychiatrist on September 8, but no report was marked into evidence or
    referenced in any fashion by the court. 3 The court did not make any findings of
    3
    The county has also filed a supplemental appendix that includes one page from
    a "transcript of opening appearances and stipulations." The cover page of this
    document indicates that it is from a proceeding conducted on September 12, but
    does not list the name of any individual committee. Moreover, the court
    A-0837-17T2
    10
    fact supporting its conclusory ruling that S.H. should remain committed on an
    inpatient basis while she was evaluated for possible participation in the IOC
    program.
    The court's cryptic reference to S.H.'s attorney having a problem with the
    AOC is not adequately explained anywhere in the record. Appellants assert that
    the court was referring to their disagreement with two informational memoranda
    issued by the AOC to all Assignment Judges on October 17, 2013, and July 24,
    2017, concerning the use of an "Amended Temporary Order for Involuntary
    Commitment to Treatment of an Adult (Conversion from Involuntary Patient
    Commitment to Involuntary Outpatient Commitment)." Again, however, we
    cannot be certain if that is the case because neither memorandum was marked
    into evidence, or specifically identified for the record.
    announces at the beginning of the transcript that "[i]t's September 17, 2017 for
    the Northbrook Hospital in Blackwood, New Jersey." Thus, we cannot be sure
    if this transcript has any connection to S.H.'s case, which was heard on
    September 12. After the court began the proceeding, the county's attorne y
    stated, "Stipulations are the qualifications of the doctors, the admissibility of the
    medical report subject to cross-examination and a review period of [ninety]
    days." As noted above, the court never mentioned any report submitted in S.H.'s
    case, did not require the oral testimony of S.H.'s psychiatrist, and never
    permitted cross-examination.
    A-0837-17T2
    11
    On September 26, 2017, the court placed S.H. on Conditional Extension
    Pending Placement (CEPP), and her attorney has advised us that S.H. "was
    discharged before the next hearing date of October 17, 2017."
    B.     D.M.'s Hearing
    On August 14, 2017, D.M. was temporarily committed on an inpatient
    basis at Northbrook. Like S.H., his commitment status was continued after an
    initial hearing, and the conduct of his subsequent, separate hearing on September
    12, 2017 is also at the heart of D.M.'s present appeal. 4
    The transcript of this proceeding indicates that after a brief discussion
    between D.M.'s attorney and the court about whether a psychiatrist had actually
    prepared a report concerning D.M., 5 an "unidentified speaker" stated on the
    record that there was a recommendation that for a "two-week referral to IOC." 6
    4
    The same municipal court judge presided at both commitment hearings on
    September 12.
    5
    D.M.'s attorney argued that the report was prepared by a staff person r ather
    than by the psychiatrist. The court stated it would rule on the objection at a later
    time, but that did not occur. As it did in S.H.'s case, the county has included a
    copy of a September 8, 2017 psychiatrist's report for D.M. in its appendix.
    However, this report was not marked into evidence or referred to by the court in
    its decision.
    6
    This recommendation is not adequately explained further in the record. We
    assume that the "unidentified speaker" suggested that D.M. be evaluated for
    A-0837-17T2
    12
    D.M.'s attorney objected, and asked that the "conditions" for D.M.'s release or
    his conversion to the IOC program "be established now."
    As it did at S.H.'s hearing, the court criticized D.M.'s position, stating that
    if D.M. were discharged, he would not receive the benefits of possibly
    participating in the outpatient program.      The court also stated that D.M.'s
    attorney's "complaint" was with the AOC, and suggested that the attorney write
    a letter to Trenton to voice his concern.
    The county and the court then elicited the following testimony from the
    psychiatrist, without swearing in the psychiatrist on the record:
    [County counsel]: I'll skip over the preliminaries. Is it
    your opinion that [D.M.'s] currently unable to care for
    himself?
    [Psychiatrist]:   He's had a repeated pattern of this
    and returning to the hospitals with rapid medication
    non-compliance in the community. And the IOC is a
    good solution. It was my understanding that this was
    all agreed to.
    The Court:          Did you discuss that with [D.M.]?
    [Psychiatrist]:     I did.
    The Court:          Did he agree with it?
    [Psychiatrist]:     Yes.
    possible conversion to the IOC program, and that the next hearing be scheduled
    in two weeks.
    A-0837-17T2
    13
    Based upon this meager testimony, and without giving D.M.'s attorney the
    opportunity to cross-examine the psychiatrist or produce any proofs of his own,
    the court held:
    I'm going to order the continued hospitalization for two
    weeks. I find that the Doctor's testimony is absolutely
    credible, convincing. And, he discussed this with
    [D.M.]. [D.M.] agreed. This is an issue that the Public
    Defender's Office has, which has no basis for this
    [c]ourt to consider. I don't care what that Public
    Defender's opinion is.
    As was the case at S.H.'s hearing, the court failed to make any of the required
    findings to justify the continued commitment. The court did not find by clear
    and convincing evidence that D.M. had a mental illness which caused him to be
    dangerous to himself, others, or property, and that he needed further treatment.
    The court's September 12 order provided that D.M.'s commitment was to
    continue, with the next review hearing scheduled for September 26. The order
    also stated: "Referral to IOC Program, Patient May Not Be Discharged Before
    IOC Hearing Date." At the September 26 hearing, the court converted D.M. to
    IOC, and required him to follow the IOC treatment plan.
    A-0837-17T2
    14
    III.
    S.H. and D.M. have both appealed from the orders the court issued on
    September 12, 2017, continuing their commitments while they were evaluated
    for the IOC program. 7     Both appellants initially contend that "the trial court
    violated their substantive and procedural due process rights by refusing to allow
    [them] a hearing on [their] right to be free from involuntary inpat ient and
    outpatient commitment." We agree.
    We review the decision to continue an individual's civil commitment
    utilizing an abuse of discretion standard.       D.C., 
    146 N.J. at 58-59
    . When
    reviewing civil commitment decisions, "we afford deference to the trial court's
    supportable findings." T.J., 
    401 N.J. Super. at 119
    . We "reverse[] only when
    7
    As noted above, S.H. and D.M. have now received the relief they sought in
    terms of their individual commitment status. However, their challenges to the
    orders are not moot, and the county reasonably does not argue otherwise. "It is
    well settled in New Jersey that an appeal in these types of cases is not moot,
    even if the patient is no longer confined, when the patient remains liable for his
    or her hospital bill, and a finding in the patient's favor will entitle the patient to
    a credit for any period of illegal commitment." B.L., 
    346 N.J. Super. at 292
    .
    Moreover, were appellants' commitments to stand unchallenged, the September
    12 orders could affect their future status if they are later recommitted. See
    N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.5(b) (stating that "[i]f a person has been admitted three times
    or has been an inpatient for [sixty] days at a short-term care facility during the
    preceding [twelve] months, consideration shall be given to not placing the
    person in a short-term care facility").
    A-0837-17T2
    15
    there is a clear error or mistake[.]" M.M., 384 N.J. Super. at 334. However, we
    "must consider the adequacy of the evidence." Ibid.
    Applying these standards, we are constrained to conclude that the sparse
    record developed by the trial court simply did not support his finding that either
    appellant was in need of continued involuntary commitment. In S.H.'s case, the
    court did not take any oral testimony from a psychiatrist, did not demonstrate
    that it reviewed any written expert report, and made none of the required
    findings by clear and convincing evidence that S.H. was is in need of continued
    involuntary commitment to treatment.        While a psychiatrist made a brief
    appearance at D.M.'s hearing, this expert was never sworn, no written report was
    entered in evidence, and the court did not permit cross-examination. The court
    also failed to find by clear and convincing evidence that D.M. was in need of
    continued involuntary commitment to treatment.           Because no competent
    evidence was entered in either case to justify the court's decision to continue
    S.H.'s and D.M.'s commitments, the September 12 orders must be reversed.
    In addition, the court did not scrupulously protect appellants' procedural
    due process rights as established by the governing statutes and court rules.
    Raymond S., 263 N.J. Super. at 432. A psychiatrist only appeared in D.M.'s
    case, even though oral testimony by a psychiatrist is required at every
    A-0837-17T2
    16
    commitment hearing. The psychiatrist who briefly testified at D.M.'s hearing
    was not sworn in as a witness, and the court did not give D.M.'s attorney the
    opportunity to cross-examine this expert before abruptly ending the testimony.
    No expert reports were marked for identification or formally introduced in
    evidence. Although the record is not clear whether S.H. or D.M. were prepared
    to offer evidence of their own at their respective hearings, the court did not
    afford them the opportunity to do so. The court's conclusory findings in each
    case were insufficient to meet the requirements of Rule 1:7-4(a).
    Under these circumstances, we reverse both of the September 12 orders.
    IV.
    Finally, we discern no basis for entertaining appellants' further argument
    that the AOC's October 17, 2013, and July 24, 2017 informational memoranda
    concerning the IOC program need to be invalidated or modified because they
    allegedly interfere with a patient's right to be converted to outpatient status or
    discharged. The September 12 orders have been reversed for the reasons we
    have detailed above and, therefore, there is simply no need to address further
    possible grounds to support our decision.
    Indeed, "[t]he notion that a court of appeals . . . can decide issues
    unnecessary to the outcome of the case results in the wholesale issuance of
    A-0837-17T2
    17
    advisory opinions, a practice our judicial decision-making system categorically
    rejects." State v. Rose, 
    206 N.J. 141
    , 189 (2011). We are not persuaded that
    this is a matter of significant public importance warranting our determination of
    abstract legal issues where there is no longer a controversy between the parties
    because the September 12 orders have been declared invalid. See Zirger v. Gen.
    Accident Ins. Co., 
    144 N.J. 327
    , 330 (1996) (noting that "[o]rdinarily, our
    interest in preserving judicial resources dictates that we not attempt to resolve
    legal issues in the abstract").
    We also decline to accept appellants' invitation to consider the substance
    of these memoranda because the record they developed before the trial court
    concerning the memoranda is plainly inadequate to permit a reasoned analysis
    of the issues they attempt to raise on appeal for the first time. See Sente v.
    Mayor & Mun. Council of Clifton, 
    66 N.J. 204
    , 205 (1974) (dismissing appeal
    where the "record . . . [is] so unsatisfactory that we cannot be confident of
    reaching the correct result" on a novel and far-reaching constitutional issue);
    State v. Hughes, 
    230 N.J. Super. 223
    , 227 (App. Div. 1989) (noting "meager
    factual presentation" supported court's decision not to consider an issue on
    appeal).
    A-0837-17T2
    18
    Here, appellants and the court discussed perceived issues with "the AOC"
    at both hearings. However, the October 17, 2013, and July 24, 2017 memoranda
    were never specifically identified by appellants to the court as the source of
    these concerns. Appellants did not mark or introduce either memorandum into
    evidence, did not present any oral argument outlining their specific positions
    concerning the documents, made no written motion objecting to the court's
    alleged reliance on the instructions set forth in the memoranda for the handling
    of IOC cases, and did not file motions for reconsideration that might have cured
    these deficiencies. The court also did not render a specific ruling on the vague
    concerns appellants expressed at the hearing, in contrast to the more detailed
    systematic arguments they now press on appeal, and merely advised appellants'
    attorneys to contact the AOC if they were not satisfied with his decision.
    We generally decline to consider issues that were not adequately presented
    at trial. Nieder v. Royal Indem. Ins. Co. 
    62 N.J. 229
    , 234 (1973). As the
    Supreme Court has cogently explained:
    Appellate review is not limitless. The jurisdiction of
    appellate courts rightly is bounded by the proofs and
    objections critically explored on the record before the
    trial court by the parties themselves. Although "[o]ur
    rules do not perpetuate mere ritual[,]" we have insisted
    that in opposing the admission of evidence, a litigant
    must "make known his position to the end that the trial
    court may consciously rule upon it." State v. Abbott,
    A-0837-17T2
    19
    
    36 N.J. 63
    , 76 (1961). This is so because "[t]he
    important fact is that the trial court was alerted to the
    basic problem[.]" 
    Id. at 68
    . In short, the points of
    divergence developed in the proceedings before a trial
    court define the metes and bounds of appellate review.
    [State v. Robinson, 
    200 N.J. 1
    , 19 (2009) (alterations in
    original).]
    We will not depart from these well-established precedents here. In the
    October 17, 2013 memorandum, the AOC identified a problem that short -term
    care facilities (STCFs) were experiencing when patients became "clinically
    appropriate" for outpatient treatment prior to their next scheduled hearing. In
    those limited instances, the memorandum stated that the trial court could
    temporarily commit a patient in a STCF to the IOC through the issuance of a
    form temporary order that was appended to the memorandum.
    The July 24, 2017 memorandum stated that judges were not properly using
    the form order. According to the memoranda, judges were incorrectly allowing
    parties to submit consent orders that did not contain the proofs necessary to
    establish that a conversion from inpatient to outpatient treatment should occur.
    Therefore, the memorandum advised the Assignment Judges to ensure that the
    trial judges in each vicinage complied with the governing standards in making
    their decisions.
    A-0837-17T2
    20
    We see nothing in these memoranda that prevented the trial judge in this
    case from considering a conversion request at the September 12 hearings, or
    granting it if all of the applicable requirements were met. However, nothing in
    the truncated record indicates that Northbridge's chief executive officer had
    sought to convert either appellant to outpatient treatment,8 or completely
    discharge them from commitment either in advance of, or at, the September 12
    hearing, and the court did not permit appellants to present such a case, assuming
    that they even intended to do so at that proceeding. In sum, the absence of a
    fully developed factual record and specific legal arguments raised before the
    trial court concerning the memoranda prevent us from more definitively
    addressing these documents in this opinion.
    Contrary to appellants' arguments, whether the memoranda should remain
    in effect is not an issue that will likely recur without opportunity for
    adjudication. This is so because, in a future case, a party could readily prepare
    an appropriate motion in advance of the hearing that would give the trial court
    the opportunity to carefully consider the legal contentions raised, review the
    8
    Rule 4:74-7(f)(3) sets forth the procedures that the chief executive officer of
    a psychiatric facility or hospital must follow when "apply[ing] to the court
    between the time periods for review of the commitment for an order changing
    the placement of the patient from an inpatient setting to an outpatient setting."
    A-0837-17T2
    21
    specific documents that formed the basis for the motion, and make a reasoned
    determination on the basis of a fully developed factual record that would permit
    further appellate review.9   Because that did not occur here, we are unable to
    consider appellants' challenge to the memoranda.
    Reversed.
    9
    We note that the second memorandum was issued on July 24, 2017, less than
    two months before the September 12 hearings at issue here. It is therefore
    possible that the court and the attorneys who regularly handle commitment
    matters were not fully familiar with the procedures discussed in the memoranda
    at that juncture. Thus, rather than pursuing litigation concerning the
    memoranda, the concerns expressed by appellants for the first time on appeal
    might be able to be more satisfactorily addressed through additional training for
    judges and attorneys, or by further clarification of the purpose of the temporary
    order form through discussions by the Office of the Public Defender with the
    AOC.
    A-0837-17T2
    22