IN THE MATTER OF THE COMMITMENT OF C.M. IN THE MATTER OF THE COMMITMENT OF A.B. IN THE MATTER OF THE COMMITMENT OF C.Y. IN THE MATTER OF THE COMMITMENT OF C.R. IN THE MATTER OF THE COMMITMENT OF J.G. IN THE MATTER OF THE COMMITMENT OF J.C. IN THE MATTER OF THE COMMITMENT OF T.P. (L-2721-19, L-2722-19, L-2719-19, L-2720-19, L-2723-19, AND L-2840-19, CAMDEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) (CONSOLIDATED) ( 2020 )


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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    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4684-17T2
    A-5338-17T2
    A-5553-17T2
    A-0015-18T2
    A-5046-18T2
    A-5436-18T2
    A-5437-18T2
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    COMMITMENT OF C.M.
    ________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    COMMITMENT OF A.B.
    ________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    COMMITMENT OF C.Y.
    _________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    COMMITMENT OF C.R.
    _________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    COMMITMENT OF J.G.
    ________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    COMMITMENT OF J.C.
    _________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    COMMITMENT OF T.P.
    ____________________________
    Argued April 2, 2019 in A-4684-17 and A-0015-18 -
    Decided April 15, 2019
    Submitted May 21, 2019 in A-5338-17 and A-5553-17 -
    Decided June 19, 2019
    Re-argued telephonically May 6, 2020 –
    Decided June 1, 2020
    Before Judges Fisher and Rose.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Camden County, Docket Nos. L-2721-19,
    L-2722-19, L-2719-19, L-2720-19, L-2723-19, and
    L-2840-19.
    Lorraine Hunter-Hoilien, Deputy Public Defender,
    argued the cause for appellants C.M., A.B., C.Y., C.R.,
    J.G., J.C., and T.P. (Joseph E. Krakora, Public
    Defender, attorney; Lorraine Hunter-Hoilien, and Amy
    B. Denero, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, on the
    brief).
    Christopher J. Riggs, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent New Jersey Division of Mental
    Health and Addiction Services in A-5338-171 (Gurbir
    S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney; Melissa H.
    1
    In a footnote to its brief, DMHAS states that it "is only party to one of the
    consolidated matters," referring to A.B.'s appeal (A-5338-17), and that "because
    DMHAS is only party to A.B., the legal argument is focused predominantly on
    those facts." DMHAS, however, has presented arguments regarding the other
    appeals and, in essence, has acted as a de facto amicus curiae in those other
    matters, for which we are appreciative.
    A-4684-17T2
    2
    Raksa, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Patrick
    Jhoo, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).
    Theodore E. Baker, Cumberland County Counsel,
    argued the cause for respondent County of Cumberland
    in A-5437-18 (Theodore E. Baker, Cumberland County
    Counsel, attorney; Theodore E. Baker, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    In these consolidated appeals, we consider whether temporary involuntary
    civil commitment orders may be sustained despite having been entered more
    than seventy-two hours after execution of screening certificates, contrary to the
    requirements of both statute and rule.     We conclude that the due process
    deprivations and the failure to comply with the applicable time frames require
    reversal of all the temporary commitment orders in question.
    Previously, we considered two groups of trial court orders that denied –
    on mootness grounds – motions to vacate temporary commitment orders. The
    first group – the appeals of C.M., A.B., C.Y., and C.R. – were decided by way
    of a reported opinion, In re Commitment of C.M., 
    458 N.J. Super. 563
    (App.
    Div. 2019), in which we explained that although technically moot, there were
    compelling reasons entitling the parties to a ruling on the merits.        In an
    unreported opinion a few months later, we reached the same conclusion in the
    second group, appeals filed by A.B. and C.Y. In re Commitment of A.B. and
    A-4684-17T2
    3
    C.Y., Nos. A-5338-17 and A-5553-17 (App. Div. June 19, 2019). We directed,
    in both those sets of appeals, that the remand proceedings be completed within
    thirty days, and we expressly welcomed expedited appeals by any party
    aggrieved by the anticipated trial court orders so that there would be no undue
    delay in the resolution of these matters. 
    C.M., 458 N.J. Super. at 570
    ; A.B., slip
    op. at 3.
    Following our remand, the trial judge conducted a case management
    conference and determined a need for full-blown evidentiary hearings at which
    the committed persons, the medical personnel, and others would be expected to
    testify. Believing this approach was inconsistent with our mandate and after
    being denied reconsideration, appellants sought immediate review. We agreed
    that the extensive factual hearings compelled by the trial judge were unnecessary
    and, by order, vacated the case management order.         We also directed the
    reassignment of these cases to another judge and ordered the completion of the
    remand proceedings within thirty days.
    The assignment judge conferenced these cases and then – due to a need to
    recuse – forwarded the matter to another judge, who promptly denied appellants'
    motions to vacate the temporary commitment orders for reasons expressed in an
    oral opinion. During the course of those proceedings, another similarly situated
    A-4684-17T2
    4
    individual, J.G., moved to vacate a temporary order entered in the same
    vicinage; that matter was consolidated in the trial court with the others and
    decided the same way, leading to J.G.'s separate appeal to this court. Later still,
    two other similarly situated individuals, J.C., and T.P., moved to vacate
    temporary commitment orders; those motions were denied and they appealed as
    well. The appeals of all these individuals – C.M., A.B., C.Y., C.R., J.G., J.C.,
    and T.P. – were consolidated. 2
    We need not provide additional detail about this convoluted procedural
    history and instead will now briefly explain why the judge's denial of appellants'
    motions to vacate the temporary commitment orders must be reversed.
    The judge denied the motions because he concluded that the orders could
    have been entered had commitment been pursued in another manner. To explain,
    there are two ways in which involuntary commitment of these appellants could
    have been ordered: either through a screening service in the manner described
    by N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.10(a) (subsection (a)), or by an independent application as
    described in N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.10(b) (subsection (b)). In step with that statutory
    scheme, Rule 4:74-7(b) also recognizes that an action for commitment "shall be
    2
    For the most part we will simply refer to these individuals as "the appellants"
    unless specified by their initials.
    A-4684-17T2
    5
    commenced either through a screening service referral or upon independent
    applications for a temporary court order . . ."3 (emphasis added). The temporary
    commitment orders here resulted from applications that were commenced with
    the screening service; the judge, however, denied the motion to vacate the
    temporary orders because the timing of their entry would have been acceptable
    had the independent-application process been followed. And therein lies the
    fallacy in the trial judge's decision.
    The process described in subsection (a) was pursued in each of these
    cases. This process permits individuals to be held against their will for twenty-
    four hours while a screening service provides treatment and conducts an
    assessment. N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.5. Upon a psychiatrist's finding of a need for
    involuntary commitment, a screening certificate must be completed, N.J.S.A.
    30:4-27.5(b), and thereafter the facility may involuntarily detain the individual
    without court order "for no more than 72 hours from the time the screen
    certificate was executed." N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.9(c). During that same time frame,
    the facility must initiate involuntary committal court proceedings.
    Ibid. 3 The Rule
    recognizes a third route – "an action for commitment to outpatient
    treatment may alternatively be commenced through the conversion procedure
    set forth in [Rule 4:74-7(f)(3)]" – not relevant here.
    A-4684-17T2
    6
    There was no compliance with critical aspects of this process in all the
    consolidated matters.     C.M., C.Y., A.B. and J.C. were each assessed by a
    certified mental health screener who executed a screening document
    recommending involuntary inpatient psychiatric commitment; they were then
    held for eight, four, five, and two days, respectively, prior to the execution of
    the first psychiatrist's screening certificate. In total, they were held for nine, six,
    five, and six days, respectively, prior to the entry of temporary commitment
    orders. The first screening certificates concerning C.R., J.G., and T.P. were
    timely but those individuals were then detained for six, six, and nine days,
    respectively, before temporary commitment orders were entered. These facts
    are undisputed 4; they demonstrate beyond question that the statutory limitations
    were exceeded, as the DMHAS seems to concede.5
    4
    For that reason, the first motion judge's insistence upon a burdensome and
    costly evidentiary hearing was clearly erroneous.
    5
    DMHAS recognizes the statutory time restrictions were breached,
    acknowledging, for example in A.B.'s case that "the screening center's initial
    physician's certificate was completed outside the statutory timeframe by one to
    two days . . ." (emphasis added). Although the DMHAS's position as to the other
    cases is not entirely clear, see n.1, above, its overall approach in these appeals
    assumes that the time frames were breached in all cases: "The question
    presented by this appeal is whether the hospitals' failure to meet the relevant
    time frames . . . precludes substantive consideration of the merits of [the] clinical
    need for civil commitment" (emphasis added).
    A-4684-17T2
    7
    The motion judge did not vacate the temporary commitment orders in light
    of those undisputed facts. The judge instead held that the orders could be
    justified because had the optional process outlined in subsection (b) been
    pursued, there would have been no due process violation. 6 Again, it may be true
    that this alternative approach would have justified the temporary commitment
    orders in question, but that's not what happened. Commitment was pursued
    under subsection (a). That was the path taken and that circumstance limits our
    consideration of the validity of the temporary commitment orders. We, thus,
    reverse because there is no doubt that the procedures clearly and unambiguously
    outlined in subsection (a) were exceeded in each of the cases before us.
    Notwithstanding that obvious conclusion, the State expresses concern, as
    did the trial judge, about whether the departure from subsection (a)'s immutable
    constraints may be forgiven because the appellants' release would have
    generated a risk of harm to themselves or others. We disagree. Concern for the
    well-being of appellants and others does not justify an erosion of the committed
    6
    This approach to denying relief to the appellants suggests to us the judge's
    recognition that the process described in subsection (a) was violated.
    A-4684-17T2
    8
    person's due process rights.7 That concern should instead cause those seeking
    commitment to act with the speed both required and expected by law and
    constitutional principles. We must not lose sight that these time frames were
    erected because civil commitment "constitutes a significant deprivation of
    liberty." Addington v. Texas, 
    441 U.S. 418
    , 425 (1979); see also In re S.L., 
    94 N.J. 128
    , 137 (1983) (recognizing that "because commitment effects a great
    restraint on individual liberty, th[e] power of the State is constitutionally
    bounded"). Our response to a violation should not be to weaken the individual's
    due process rights but to encourage – through enforcement of those due process
    rights – those who pursue commitment to honor the individual's rights.8
    7
    We are mindful that we did say in In re Z.O., 
    197 N.J. Super. 330
    , 339 (App.
    Div. 1984), "a court should not be obliged by minor time delay to dismiss an
    application for hospitalization of a person who two physicians say would be a
    danger to self or others outside of the hospital." That, however, was preceded
    by our statement that the weighing of the significance of minor delays may occur
    "absent constitutional violation."
    Ibid. As we have
    held, restraining appellants
    against their will beyond the time frames allowed by legislation is a
    constitutional violation. In any event, we are not bound by Z.O., which
    examined statutory procedures since repealed and replaced by those we
    consider, even if it could be viewed as applying to the circumstances presented
    here.
    8
    The legislative time frames for seeking and obtaining an involuntary civil
    commitment have not been shown to impose a hardship on the State or care
    facilities. Although the cases before us are more numerous than one would hope,
    they are limited to one region of the State and we assume an aberration easily
    A-4684-17T2
    9
    The orders under review are reversed. We remand to the trial court only
    for the immediate entry of orders vacating the temporary commitment orders in
    each of these cases.
    correctible. We reject the invitation to ignore the legislatively-compelled time
    frames simply because these matters were not handled with sufficient
    expedience.
    A-4684-17T2
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-4684-17T2-A-5338-17T2-A-5553-17T2-A-0015-18T2-A-5046-18T2-A-5436-18T2-A-5437-18T2

Filed Date: 6/1/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 6/1/2020