W.M. v. State
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IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
FIFTH DISTRICT
JULY TERM 2008
WANDA MCKINNEY,
Appellant,
v.
Case No. 5D07-3762
STATE OF FLORIDA, et al.,
Appellees.
________________________________/
Opinion filed August 22, 2008
Appeal from the Circuit Court
for Orange County,
Lawrence R. Kirkwood, Judge.
Robert Wesley, Public Defender, and
Rosemarie Farrell, General Counsel,
Office of the Public Defender, Orlando, for
Appellant.
Bill
McCollum,
Attorney
General,
Tallahassee, and Helen Brewer Fouse,
Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for
Appellee, State of Florida.
Jack E. Holt, III, and T'anjuiming A. Marx,
of Grower, Ketcham, Rutherford, Bronson,
Eide & Telan, P.A., Orlando, for Appellee,
Florida Hospital.
PLEUS, J.
Wanda McKinney appeals a circuit court’s order subjecting her to six months of
additional involuntary mental health treatment. McKinney was originally picked up by
police at the Orlando airport where she was found in an agitated state and appeared to
be suffering from mental health problems. The police took her to the psychiatric unit at
Florida Hospital to have an involuntary psychiatric evaluation done pursuant to the
Baker Act. 1 Based on the examination, Florida Hospital filed a petition for involuntary
inpatient placement to request involuntary psychiatric care at Florida Hospital in
Orlando. Under Florida’s Mental Health Act, section 394.467, Florida Statutes (2007),
the circuit court is required to make the initial mental health determination and, in this
case, the circuit court found that McKinney was in need of treatment and committed her
to involuntary treatment for a three week period. At the end of the three week period,
McKinney had not responded to treatment. The hospital administrator petitioned for a
hearing to order continued treatment, the circuit court held a hearing, and the court
determined six additional months of treatment were warranted. McKinney argues that
the circuit court did not have jurisdiction to order the continued treatment.
Especially where it addresses hearings for continued involuntary inpatient
treatment, section 394.467 is not a model of clarity. However, based on a full reading of
the statute, it is clear that the procedure followed by the circuit court in this case
comports with the Legislature’s intent. Stated succinctly, the facts of this case are that
the circuit court initially ordered a short-term treatment period and, when McKinney did
not improve, the court committed her to a longer treatment period at a state-run mental
health facility.
For the reasons discussed below, because the initial three week
treatment period was short-term treatment at a receiving facility, the circuit court
retained jurisdiction to order further treatment.
1
Section 394.463, Florida Statutes (2007), provides that a person may be taken
to a receiving facility for psychiatric evaluation where it is suspected that the person
suffers mental illness and may need treatment.
2
Although the statute indicates that hearings for continued involuntary treatment
are to be administrative, the circuit court retains concurrent jurisdiction over the
involuntary commitment proceedings. When the statute is read in its entirety, it is clear
that the Legislature’s intent was that the administrative hearing requirement applies
after a patient is committed to a long-term treatment period at a treatment facility.
Section 394.467, Florida Statutes, governs involuntary inpatient placement. After
setting out in subsection (1) the criteria for involuntary inpatient placement, the statute
next provides that a person meeting the criteria can be admitted to involuntary care:
(2) ADMISSION TO A TREATMENT FACILITY.— A patient
may be retained by a receiving facility or involuntarily placed
in a treatment facility upon the recommendation of the
administrator of a receiving facility where the patient has
been examined and after adherence to the notice and
hearing procedures provided in s. 394.4599.
The
recommendation must be supported by the opinion of a
psychiatrist and the second opinion of a clinical psychologist
or another psychiatrist, both of whom have personally
examined the patient within the preceding 72 hours, that the
criteria for involuntary inpatient placement are met . . . .
If a party is determined to meet the criteria for commitment, the facility administrator
should file a petition with the court to seek involuntary placement:
(3)
PETITION FOR INVOLUNTARY INPATIENT
PLACEMENT.— The administrator of the facility shall file a
petition for involuntary inpatient placement in the court in the
county where the patient is located . . . .
Subsections (4) and (5) address the right to counsel and hearing continuances,
respectively.
Subsection (6) provides that the court shall hold the hearings for
involuntary placement and specifically grants the circuit court authority to order
involuntary treatment for a six month period:
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(6)
HEARING
ON
INVOLUNTARY
INPATIENT
PLACEMENT.—
(a)1. The court shall hold the hearing on involuntary
inpatient placement within 5 days, unless a continuance is
granted . . . .
2. The court may appoint a general or special
magistrate to preside at the hearing . . . .
....
(b) If the court concludes that the patient meets the
criteria for involuntary inpatient placement, it shall order that
the patient be transferred to a treatment facility or, if the
patient is at a treatment facility, that the patient be retained
there or be treated at any other appropriate receiving or
treatment facility, or that the patient receive services from a
receiving or treatment facility, on an involuntary basis, for a
period of up to 6 months. The order shall specify the nature
and extent of the patient's mental illness. The facility shall
discharge a patient any time the patient no longer meets the
criteria for involuntary inpatient placement, unless the patient
has transferred to voluntary status.
(Emphasis added). Finally, subsections (7)(a) and (b) require that any petitions for
involuntary inpatient treatment beyond those ordered by the circuit court shall be
administrative in nature:
(7)
PROCEDURE FOR CONTINUED INVOLUNTARY
INPATIENT TREATMENT.—
(a) Hearings on petitions for continued involuntary
inpatient placement shall be administrative hearings and
shall be conducted in accordance with the provision of s.
120.57(1), except that any order entered by the
administrative law judge shall be final and subject to judicial
review in accordance with s. 120.68.
(b) If the patient continues to meet the criteria for
involuntary inpatient placement, the administrator shall, prior
to the expiration of the period during which the treatment
facility is authorized to retain the patient, file a petition
requesting authorization for continued involuntary inpatient
placement.
The request shall be accompanied by a
statement from the patient's physician or clinical psychologist
justifying the request, a brief description of the patient's
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treatment during the time he or she was involuntarily placed,
and an individualized plan of continued treatment.
(Emphasis added). The remainder of subsection (7) addresses the procedures to be
followed by the administrative law judge hearing the petition for continued treatment.
McKinney argues that the language in subsection (7) regarding continued
involuntary inpatient treatment divests the circuit court of jurisdiction over continued
treatment, no matter how short the initial treatment period might be. In other words, she
argues that any hearing for continued treatment must be an administrative hearing even
if it follows a very brief initial commitment period. We disagree for several reasons.
Although subsection (7)(a) references administrative hearings, this does not
mean that the circuit court relinquishes jurisdiction. In Liebman v. State, 555 So. 2d
1242 (Fla. 4th DCA 1989), the Fourth District addressed the argument that it was
unconstitutional for an administrative hearing officer to order continued involuntary
placement under section 394.467. Liebman recognized that a circuit court must make
the initial incompetency determination. Id. at 1243. This is so because article V,
section 20, of the Florida Constitution provides that the circuit courts “shall have
exclusive original jurisdiction . . . of proceedings relating to . . . the determination of
incompetency.”
Liebman, 555 So. 2d at 1244 (quoting the Florida Constitution).
However, the Legislature can establish commissions or grant administrative officers
quasi-judicial power in matters connected with the functions of their office. Id. at 1243
(quoting article V, section 1, of the Florida Constitution). Thus, administrative agencies
can have jurisdiction over continued involuntary placement proceedings ”so long as a
circuit court makes the initial determination.”
Id. at 1243. However, as the Fourth
District recognized, “Such jurisdiction can be exercised concurrently with the original,
5
nonexclusive jurisdiction given to circuit courts over the same matters." Id. at 1244
(emphasis added).
Liebman addressed the confusion surrounding the administrative hearing
requirement.
In 1971, section 394.467 provided that a hearing officer should hear
petitions for continued hospitalization. Id. at 1245. In 1972, the Legislature passed
section 26.012, Florida Statutes, “which provided that the circuit court should have
exclusive original jurisdiction of proceedings relating to involuntary hospitalization and
the determination of incompetency.” Id. (internal quotations omitted) Finally, in 1978,
section 394.467 was amended to provide that the mandates of section 120.57 must be
followed in hearings for continued involuntary hospitalization – reaffirming that the
Legislature “inten[ded] to have hearings on continuation of involuntary hospitalization
handled under the APA.” Id. However, most importantly for the instant matter, the
Fourth District again recognized the continuing jurisdiction of the circuit court:
"[H]earing officers assigned pursuant to section 394.467(7), Florida Statutes, (1987),
have concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit court to conduct hearings on petitions for
continuation of involuntary hospitalization." Id. (emphasis added). Because the circuit
court retains concurrent jurisdiction, the question becomes: When can the circuit court
exercise its concurrent jurisdiction and when should an administrative hearing be held?
A full reading of the statutory scheme reveals that the Legislature did not intend for the
administrative hearing requirement to apply until a person has been committed to longterm involuntary treatment.
Under this statutory scheme, there is a distinction between a "receiving facility"
such as Florida Hospital, and a "treatment facility."
6
Section 394.455(26), Florida
Statutes (2007), defines a "receiving facility" as "any public or private facility designated
by the department to receive and hold involuntary patients under emergency conditions
or for psychiatric evaluation and to provide short term treatment." (Emphasis added).
Section 394.455(32) defines a "treatment facility" as:
[A]ny state-owned, state -operated, or state-supported
hospital, center, or clinic designated by the department for
extended treatment and hospitalization, beyond that
provided for by a receiving facility, of persons who have a
mental illness, including facilities of the United States
Government, and any private facility designated by the
department when rendering such services to a person
pursuant to the provisions of this part.
As referenced above, subsection 394.467(7)(a) provides that hearings for continued
involuntary treatment should be administrative, but does not itself distinguish between
receiving and treatment facilities. However, rule 65E-5.300(1), Florida Administrative
Code, which implements the statute, does distinguish between the two:
In order to request continued involuntary inpatient
placement, the treatment facility administrator shall, prior to
the expiration of the period during which the treatment facility
is authorized to retain the person, file a request for continued
placement . . . . The petition shall be filed with the Division
of Administrative Hearings within 20 days prior to the
expiration date of a person’s authorized period of placement
or, in the case of a minor, the date when the minor will reach
the age of majority.
(Emphasis added).
This rule fully comports with the language in subsection
394.467(7)(b) which, in discussing petitions for continued involuntary inpatient
treatment, references placement in "the treatment facility."
The administrative rule,
consistent with subsection (7)(b) requires an administrative petition only where the
patient is in a state -sanctioned treatment facility – the agency gains jurisdiction at that
point. The quasi-judicial exercise of power by the administrative officer is constitutional
7
in such a situation because the Florida Constitution allows such power in connection
with the functions of the administrative offices. Liebman, 555 So. 2d at 1243.
In this case, the initial treatment ordered for McKinney was at Florida Hospital,
where she received her initial psychiatric evaluation and short-term, three week
inpatient treatment. Florida Hospital fits the statutory definition of a receiving facility.
Thus, when the administrator of this receiving facility filed a petition for continued
involuntary placement, the receiving facility administrator was not required to file with
DOAH under Rule 65E-5.300 – the rule, consistent with subsection 394.467(7)(b), only
requires “treatment facility" administrators to do so. More importantly, because the
treatment ordered was short-term, the circuit court properly exercised jurisdiction to
order further treatment. However, once long-term treatment is ordered, a petition for
continued treatment must be addressed in an administrative hearing under section
394.467.2
Finally, we observe that absurd results would flow from acceptance of
McKinney's position. Requiring administrative hearings following court-ordered periods
of short-term initial treatment makes little sense. As a practical matter, in this case,
Florida Hospital would have had to file a petition for continued treatment under rule 65E2
The apparent intent of the Legislature is to give the circuit court jurisdiction for
short-term treatment – up to six months. § 394.467(6)(b) (“If the court concludes that
the patient meets the criteria for involuntary inpatient placement, it shall order that the
patient . . . be treated . . . on an involuntary basis, for a period of up to 6 months.”).
However, the Legislature intended long-term treatment to be subject to administrative
procedure. § 394.467(7), Fla. Stat. This intent, that short-term treatment is for the court
and long-term treatment requires administrative hearings, is also reflected in other
Florida statutes. See, e.g., § 945.43, Fla. Stat. and § 945.45, Fla. Stat. (effective
October 1, 2008) (authorizing courts to admit prison inmates to mental health treatment
for periods up to six months but contemplating administrative hearings for continued,
long-term treatment).
8
5.300 the day immediately after McKinney’s placement in inpatient care. McKinney was
involuntarily committed for three weeks, or twenty-one days. Rule 65E-5.300 provides
that the petition for continued treatment must be filed twenty days prior to the expiration
of the hospitalization period. The petition, therefore, would have to be filed on her
second day of commitment. The entire purpose of having short term commitment is to
commit a person for as short a period as possible.3 If a patient responds to initial
treatment, there is no need to continue.
If a petition for continued treatment were
required one day after admittance into a receiving facility, there would be no opportunity
to observe whether treatment is working and/or whether further treatment might be
necessary. Ultimately, a short-term three week initial hospitalization period could never
be ordered as a practical matter. Such a result clearly conflicts with the stated “intent of
the Legislature that the least restrictive means of intervention be employed based on
the individual needs of each person.” § 394.453, Fla. Stat.
Where a person is committed to short-term treatment, the circuit court may
properly exercise its concurrent jurisdiction over the involuntary commitment
proceedings. Where such treatment becomes long-term, administrative hearings are
required. In this case, the circuit court properly exercised its concurrent jurisdiction to
re-visit its initial order for short-term commitment.
Accordingly, we affirm.
AFFIRMED.
MONACO, J., and EARP, J., Associate Judge, concur.
3
§ 394.453, Fla. Stat.
9
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