Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA JANE DOE I, by her conservator,
Linda Tarlow, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
Civil Action 01-2398 (RC) v.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
Defendant. MEMORANDUM OPINION
In 2001, three women with significant intellectual disabilities brought this case against the District of Columbia, which cared for them through the agency now known as the Department on Disability Services. The plaintiffs alleged that the District improperly authorized elective medical procedures to be performed on them, and thereby violated their constitutional rights. After many years and the death of two plaintiffs, whose estates have maintained the action, the District now moves to dismiss the second amended complaint. For the reasons stated below, that motion will be denied and this case brought to a close as expeditiously as the court can fairly manage.
I. BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs in this case, who are proceeding by pseudonym, each allege that the District illegally authorized elective surgical procedures to be performed on them, in violation of their constitutional rights. Two plaintiffs, known as Jane Does I and III, had their pregnancies aborted in 1984 and 1978, respectively. 2d Am. Compl. ¶¶ 14–20. In 1994, Jane Doe II underwent eye surgery to correct her extropia, a condition in which one eye deviates from the other. ¶¶ 47–49. Jane Does I and III chiefly contend that their abortions were illegally *2 authorized because constitutionally-required procedural protections were not observed. Id. ¶¶ 28, 30. Jane Doe II primarily argues that the District was required to obtain consent from her mother, who was her court-appointed advocate. ¶¶ 48, 57. [1]
The plaintiffs began this suit as a challenge to the policies under which the District provided substituted consent to medical procedures for intellectually disabled patients who were under its care and unable to make their own medical decisions. Proceeding under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the plaintiffs sought both damages and an injunction barring the District from continuing to use the substituted consent policy that was then in force. The Honorable Henry H. Kennedy, Jr. granted the injunction, concluding that D.C. Code § 21-2210(b) required the District to make an effort to determine the wishes of an incompetent patient with regard to an elective surgery, rather than simply acting in the patient’s best interests. Because the District did not, under its then-current policy, inquire into the subjective wishes of incompetent patients in its care, Judge Kennedy found that it violated those patients’ constitutionally-protected liberty interests in bodily integrity, as established by local law. See Doe v. District of Columbia , 374 F. Supp. 2d 107, 112–16 (D.D.C. 2005) (preliminary injunction); Doe v. District of Columbia , 232 F.R.D. 18, 32–34 (D.D.C. 2005) (permanent injunction).
On appeal, the D.C. Circuit vacated the injunction. After plaintiffs’ counsel represented
that their clients “lack the mental capacity to make healthcare decisions,” the Circuit set out to
determine whether local statutory law, on the one hand, or federal constitutional law, on the
other, requires the District “to consider the healthcare wishes of intellectually disabled patients
(such as the plaintiffs here) who have always lacked mental capacity to make healthcare
*3
decisions for themselves.”
Doe ex rel. Tarlow v. District of Columbia
,
a “decision to grant, refuse or withdraw consent” on behalf of a patient who lacks the mental capacity to make medical decisions “shall be based on the known wishes of the patient” if those wishes are ascertainable. D.C. Code § 21-2210(b). But “if the wishes of the patient are unknown and cannot be ascertained,” the decision “ shall be based on . . . a good faith belief as to the best interests of the patient.” Id. It is undisputed here that plaintiffs have always lacked “sufficient mental capacity to appreciate the nature and implications of a health-care decision, make a choice regarding the alternatives presented or communicate that choice in an unambiguous manner.” Id. § 21-2202(5); see also Does I Through III v. District of Columbia , 232 F.R.D. 18, 32 (D.D.C.2005); Tr. of Oral Arg. at 21, 27. Because plaintiffs have never been able to make informed choices regarding their medical treatment, their true wishes with respect to a recommended surgery “are unknown and cannot be ascertained” for purposes of § 21-2210(b). Therefore, the District of Columbia is correct that the “best interests” standard applies to the . . . plaintiffs in this case.
Id. at 381 (citations altered and emphases deleted) (first ellipsis in original). The Circuit went on to hold that the then-current consent policy complied with both § 21-2210(b) and the constitutional guarantee of due process. Id. at 382–84. It therefore directed the entry of judgment for the District “with respect to plaintiffs’ claims for declaratory and injunctive relief.” Id. at 384. The Circuit concluded by noting that “damages claims brought by Jane Doe I, Jane Doe II, and Jane Doe III based on alleged incidents that occurred more than a decade ago, before the adoption of the [then-current substituted consent] policy” were still pending before the district court. The Circuit recognized that the damages claims were not before it, and “therefore [did] not address them.” Id.
On remand, Judge Kennedy granted summary judgment to the District on most of the
damages claims. Although the plaintiffs argued that the District only acquired the authority to
*4
provide substituted consent for incompetent patients in 1998,
[2]
Judge Kennedy found that the
contrary holding was implicit in the Circuit’s opinion denying injunctive relief. Relying on the
law-of-the-case doctrine, he ruled that, although the Circuit had not addressed the plaintiffs’
“damages claims . . . based on alleged incidents that occurred more than a decade ago, before the
adoption” of the then-current substituted consent policy,
Doe
,
Judge Kennedy later granted the plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint to add the
claim that “the abortions performed on Jane Does I and III were unauthorized because . . . only a
court can properly consent to the performance of an abortion on an incompetent woman.”
Does
v. District of Columbia
,
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) tests the legal
sufficiency of a complaint.
Browning v. Clinton
,
A court considering this type of motion presumes the factual allegations of the complaint
to be true and construes them liberally in the plaintiff's favor.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Philip
Morris, Inc.
,
The court need not accept as true inferences unsupported by facts set out in the complaint
or legal conclusions cast as factual allegations.
Warren v. District of Columbia
,
III. ANALYSIS
The intellectually disabled, like others, “have and retain their substantive constitutional
rights,”
City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Ctr.
,
Of course, even rights so fundamental as the right to have children are not absolutely
immune from government infringement. “Freedom from bodily restraint has always been at the
core of the liberty protected by the Due Process Clause from arbitrary governmental action,” but
the government may nonetheless confine someone “if it shows ‘by clear and convincing
evidence that the individual is mentally ill and dangerous’” to himself or others.
Foucha v.
Louisiana
,
By the same token, the Supreme Court has never reconsidered its holding that
compulsory sterilization can comport with the requirements of substantive due process—that the
public interest may sometimes justify involuntary sterilization.
See Buck v. Bell
,
Jane Does I and III allege that no procedural protections were provided before the District authorized their abortions. Like sterilization, compulsory abortion infringes on a woman’s right to have children. Although it may be a lesser infringement, it is still a significant one. As the leading scholars on the subject have noted:
On the one hand, when a young woman has an abortion, that does not mean she can never have any children . . . . On the other hand, . . . abortion . . . is a final, irreversible procedure in one sense: It ends the fetus’s potential life. . . . *9 Abortion can also effectively be permanent in another sense. When contrasted with sterilization, the reversibility of abortion is stressed . . . . But in fact if the caretaker is going continually to supervise and to opt for abortion . . . the effect on the subject’s ability to reproduce is the same.
M ARTHA A. F IELD & V ALERIE A. S ANCHEZ , E QUAL T REATMENT FOR P EOPLE WITH M ENTAL
R ETARDATION : H AVING AND R AISING C HILDREN 140 (1999). Such an infringement of a
fundamental right may, sometimes, be sufficiently justified to satisfy the requirements of
substantive due process. But it must
always
be attended by procedural protections “appropriate
to the nature of the case.”
Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.
,
In its motion to dismiss, the District argues that the only procedural protection to which
Jane Does I and III were entitled was to have a competent professional exercise appropriate
judgment as to whether an abortion was in each patient’s best interests. The District cites
Youngberg v. Romeo
,
In
Youngberg
, the Supreme Court “consider[ed] . . . for the first time the substantive
rights of involuntarily committed mentally retarded persons under the Fourteenth Amendment to
the Constitution.” at 314 (footnote omitted).
[3]
Pennsylvania, which had ordered the
*10
commitment of Nicholas Romeo, conceded that he had “a right to adequate food, shelter,
clothing, and medical care,” but disputed his right to “safety, freedom of movement, and
training.”
Id.
at 315. The Court first addressed the question of safety. Having previously held
that it was cruel and unusual punishment to hold convicted criminals in unsafe conditions, the
Court deduced that it must therefore also “be unconstitutional to confine the involuntarily
committed—who may not be punished at all—in unsafe conditions,”
Youngberg
,
But the existence of those rights was not the end of the analysis, because a patient’s “liberty interests in safety and freedom from bodily restraint . . . . are not absolute; indeed to some extent they are in conflict.” Id. at 319–20. The Youngberg Court explained:
In operating an institution [for the intellectually disabled], there are occasions in which it is necessary for the State to restrain the movements of residents—for example, to protect them as well as others from violence. . . . And an institution cannot protect its residents from all danger of violence if it is to permit them to have any freedom of movement. The question then is not simply whether a liberty interest has been infringed but whether the extent or nature of the restraint or lack of absolute safety is such as to violate due process.
Id.
at 320. To answer that question requires “balancing [a patient’s] liberty interests against the
relevant state interests.” at 321. And “[i]f there is to be any uniformity in protecting these
*11
interests, this balancing cannot be left to the unguided discretion of a judge or jury.”
Id.
Instead,
“decisions made by the appropriate professional are entitled to a presumption of correctness,”
id.
at 324, and “liability may be imposed only when the decision by the professional is such a
substantial departure from accepted professional judgment, practice, or standards as to
demonstrate that the person responsible actually did not base the decision on such a judgment,”
id.
at 323;
see also id.
at 323 n.30 (“By ‘professional’ decisionmaker, we mean a person
competent, whether by education, training or experience, to make the particular decision at
issue.”). The
Youngberg
Court held that “the Constitution only requires that the courts make
certain that professional judgment in fact was exercised,”
id.
at 321 (quoting
Romeo v.
Youngberg
,
In
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Social Services Department
,
. . . stand[s] . . . for the proposition that when the State takes a person into its custody and holds him there against his will, the Constitution imposes upon it a corresponding duty to assume some responsibility for his safety and general well- being. The rationale for this principle is simple enough: when the State by the affirmative exercise of its power so restrains an individual’s liberty that it renders him unable to care for himself, and at the same time fails to provide for his basic human needs . . . it transgresses the substantive limits on state action set by . . . the Due Process Clause. The affirmative duty to protect arises . . . from the limitation which it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own behalf. In the substantive due process analysis, it is the State’s affirmative act of restraining the individual’s freedom to act on his own behalf—through incarceration, institutionalization, or other similar restraint of personal liberty—which is the ‘deprivation of liberty’ triggering the protections of the Due Process Clause, not *12 its failure to act to protect his liberty interests against harms inflicted by other means. at 199–200 (citations omitted).
Many circuits have read this language to imply that
voluntarily
committed mental
patients are not entitled to the “
Youngberg
rights” of food, shelter, clothing, medical care, safety,
and training because the state has not affirmatively acted to restrain their freedom.
Campbell v.
State of Washington Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs.
,
Most circuits regard the voluntary or involuntary nature of confinement as a question of
fact rather than formality, determined by whether a patient is actually free to leave.
See, e.g.
,
Campbell
,
Patients who are voluntarily confined do not enjoy
Youngberg
rights, but they
“nevertheless possess other substantive due process rights to be free of certain state interference
in their lives.”
Torisky
,
*16
To sum up: under
Youngberg
, the involuntarily committed enjoy the right to a minimum
level of care and safety, and the state may (sometimes and for some reasons) physically restrain
them. Seen one way, the state’s authority to impose bodily restraints is the necessary
consequence of its obligation to ensure reasonable safety.
See Youngberg
,
By contrast, the state may physically restrain a voluntarily committed individual if—and
*17
only if—he has consented to the restraint. It may not confine or restrain him against his will
without affording him the benefit of a constitutionally adequate hearing.
See Foucha
, 504 U.S.
at 80;
Addington
,
With that framework in mind, the court returns to the District’s argument that, under
Youngberg
, it had the power to authorize the abortions of Jane Does I and III, limited only by the
requirement that it employ appropriate professional judgment when exercising its authority. As
discussed above,
Youngberg
governs cases of involuntary commitment, and provides the
government with the explicit authority to impose physical restraints pursuant to professional
judgment. The District’s argument from
Youngberg
has three fatal flaws. First, Jane Does I and
III do not allege that they were involuntarily committed. To the contrary, in their motion papers
they claim that they were committed
voluntarily
. Pltfs.’ Opp. at 15. Although the court must
confine itself to the pleadings on this motion to dismiss, it must also draw any reasonable
inferences in the plaintiffs’ favor. The court therefore assumes that the plaintiffs’ commitment
was voluntary, in which case the
Youngberg
regime simply does not apply.
See Campbell
, 671
F.3d at 843;
Torisky
,
Although
Youngberg
does not prove its case, the District could still prevail by showing
either that Jane Does I and III in fact consented to their abortions, or that those procedures were
ordered for adequate reasons, pursuant to constitutionally acceptable procedures. Here, those
inquiries—usually separate—are bound up in each other. No one suggests that Jane Does I and
III were competent to consent to their abortions; indeed, their counsel conceded their
incompetence on appeal.
See Doe
,
And in any case, the court cannot determine the adequacy of the procedural protections provided to Jane Does I and III in the course of determining their incompetency and authorizing their abortions without knowing what those procedures were—information that is not currently before the court. For that reason and others discussed above, the court will not dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims that their rights to have children were unlawfully infringed.
Nor will the court dismiss the claim of Jane Doe II that her constitutional rights were
violated when the District ignored or overrode the wishes of her mother with respect to her
surgery. The validity of that claim is the law of this case.
See Doe
,
The District’s remaining arguments can be discussed in brief. The District argues that
the plaintiffs’ right to decline medical treatment was not violated, and the plaintiffs concede the
point.
See
Pls.’ Opp. at 15. The District also notes, correctly, that despite the complaint’s
discussion of sterilization,
see, e.g.
, 2d Am. Compl. ¶¶ 24–26, no plaintiffs allege that they have
been sterilized.
[10]
Next, the District argues that the plaintiffs’ claims for violations of the
*20
Mentally Retarded Citizens Constitutional Rights and Dignity Act of 1978, D.C. Code §§ 7-
1301.01
et seq
., should be dismissed. Under that law, “any person who violates or abuses any
rights or privileges protected by this chapter
shall be liable for damages as determined by law
,
for court costs and for reasonable attorneys’ fees.” § 7-1305.14(c) (emphasis added). One
judge in this district has found that this language does not create a private right of action,
reasoning that “[a]lthough the statute may create a statutory duty, the fact that it allows for
damages ‘as determined by law’ suggests that the statute creates only a common law remedy,”
Karaahmetoglu v. Res-Care, Inc.
,
claims based on D.C. Code § 7-1305.13 should be dismissed, because that law only provides for
prospective relief. The court will not consider those arguments on this motion.
See Am.
Wildlands v. Kempthorne
,
IV. CONCLUSION
This case involves weighty allegations that have long awaited resolution. For the reasons discussed above, the court concludes that they must remain unresolved somewhat longer, and will therefore deny the District’s motion to dismiss.
Rudolph Contreras United States District Judge Date: February 1, 2013
Notes
[1] Jane Doe I proceeds by her conservator, Linda Tarlow. Jane Does II and III have passed away over the course of this litigation. Their estates proceed by their personal representatives.
[2]
See In re Gillis
,
[3] As the District notes, the Fourteenth Amendment does not apply to the District of
Columbia,
see District of Columbia v. Carter
,
[4] Mr. Romeo argued that training would allow him to reduce his aggressive behaviors,
thereby increasing his physical safety and reducing the need for bodily restraints.
Youngberg
,
[5] The Sixth Circuit has since noted that “
Higgs
is an unpublished opinion that does not
bind this court in the way that a published opinion does.”
United States v. Tennessee
, 615 F.3d
646, 653 (6th Cir. 2010);
see also Lanman v. Hinson
,
[6] It is unclear whether the Second Circuit accepts this line of authority. Before
DeShaney
, it held that voluntary residents of a state school for the mentally retarded were
entitled to certain
Youngberg
rights.
See Society for Good Will to Retarded Children, Inc. v.
Cuomo
,
[7] Although this circuit has not addressed the question directly, it has noted the
importance of “formal indicia in assessing whether custody attaches for
DeShaney
purposes.”
Smith v. District of Columbia
,
[8] Because none of these cases concerned an individual who was in fact held against his will without the benefit of a formal commitment proceeding, the courts did not have occasion to note the serious procedural due process concerns that such a situation would raise.
[9]
Id.
at 446 (citing
Zinermon
,
[10] The court understands that the complaint’s references to sterilizations and putative
classes may presage a motion to join additional parties or to re-certify a class action. The court
will of course consider any such motions when made, but notes that the Circuit has held
injunctive relief to be unavailable,
see Doe
,
