Lyle R. GOETZ, individually, and on behalf of all others
similarly situated, Plaintiff-Appellant,
Mark Cans and Anna Selletti, individually, and on behalf of
all others similarly situated, Intervenors-Appellants,
v.
The Honorable Matthew CROSSON, in his official capacity of
chief administrator of the courts of New York, and Dr.
Richard C. Surles, in his official capacity of Commissioner
оf the New York State Office of Mental Health, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 1630, Docket 93-9357.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued June 6, 1994.
Decided Nov. 28, 1994.
William M. Brooks, Mental Disability Law Clinic, Touro College, Huntington, NY, for plaintiff-appellant and intervenors-appellants.
Barbara K. Hathaway, Asst. Atty. Gen. of the State of N.Y., New York City (G. Oliver Koppell, Atty. Gen. of the State of N.Y.), for defendants-аppellees.
Before: WINTER and WALKER, Circuit Judges, and POLLACK, District Judge.*
WINTER, Circuit Judge:
A class of involuntarily committed patients in New York State mental hospitals appeals from Judge Goettel's decision that New York's procedures for the appointment of independent psychiatrists in involuntary commitment or retention heаrings, as applied in Dutchess County, comport with due process. The members of the class also challenge a discovery order of the district court. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
This action is before us for the second time. See Goetz v. Crosson,
We briefly set out the legal context in which the issues before us arose. Due process requirements impose two conditions that must be proven by clear and convincing evidence to commit or retain a person involuntarily. First, the person must be mentally ill and require involuntary treatment. Second, the person must pose a "substantial" thrеat of physical harm either to himself or others. These conditions are incorporated in the New York Mental Hygiene Law that governs involuntary civil commitment. N.Y.Mental Hyg. Law Secs. 9.27-9.39 (McKinney 1988). The details concerning the procedures for commitment and retention are set out in our prior opinion. Goetz I,
Before commitment, an involuntary patient is generally examined by at least two psychiatrists who must determine that the patient meets the requisite conditions. Following commitment, an involuntary patient has access to an elaborate process governing retention. Initially, a patient can be retained without court order for only sixty days. Subsequent orders for six months and thereafter one year may be obtained. The patient may request a hearing before a court to review a commitment and/or retention. Throughout these extensive proceedings, the patient has a right tо counsel. If the patient cannot afford representation, then the court may appoint counsel. N.Y.Jud.Law Sec. 35(1)(a) (McKinney 1983).
The court may appoint one or two psychiatrists to examine the patient and testify at commitment or retention hearings. These psychiatrists must give independеnt opinions and may not be associated with the state. Goetz I,
Appellants assert that the appointment of an independent psychiatrist in Dutchess County delays the retention proceeding by four to six weeks due to (i) the fact that there is only one physician on the Dutchess County panel that provides independent psychiatrists and (ii) the low fees paid to independent psychiatrists.
DISCUSSION
To prevail on a motion for summary judgment, the moving party must demonstrate that (i) there are nо genuine issues of material fact and (ii) the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Involuntary civil commitment proceedings result in a significant deprivation of liberty and therefore must satisfy due process. Addington v. Texas,
As to the first factor, the patient has a liberty interest implicated by the procedures used to appoint an independent psychiatrist. Involuntary commitment to a psychiatric facility is obviously a significant restriction on an individual's liberty. Vitek,
Regarding the second Mathews factor--the probable value of the additional safeguards in question and possibility of an erroneous deprivation--a more prompt examination and report by an independent psychiatrist could have some value because it might in some cases prevent an erroneous deprivation. The value, of course, would result from the reduced time that еrroneously committed patients would spend in the facility. This time implicates the liberty, financial, and reputational interests of erroneously committed patients.
The damage to the patient's interests is limited, however, and does not involve the "massive curtailment of liberty" at issue in Vitek, Humphrey, and Addington. Aрpellants concede that a delay of two weeks would not violate any constitutional standard. At the outside, therefore, the damage to patients' interests involves a delay of two to four weeks in getting a hearing with the benefit of an assessment by an independent psychiatrist. Because there is no constitutional requirement of such an assessment, the damage to the patient's interests is limited to those cases in which the presiding judge desires the aid of an independent psychiatrist. Goetz I,
We believe the third Mathews factor is decisive. At bottom, swiftness or delay in obtaining the services of an independent psychiatrist is the result of the size of the pool of available psychiatrists in the geographic area who are not associated with the state and thus have a practice outside the institution in which the particular patient is confined. Such a practice will generally entail professional obligations, such as appointments with regular patients, that may preclude an immеdiate response to a request from a presiding judge in a commitment or retention hearing.
The delay of which appellants complain is thus directly related to the number of psychiatrists in or near Dutchess County who are not associated with the state. Some of the psychiatrists in Dutchess County arе associated with a state-run facility and thus are not suitable to serve as an independent psychiatrist. Those who are suitable generally have obligations that preclude them from acting immediately upon a request to serve as an independent psychiatrist.1 Appellants suggest that the $200 pаyment for an independent psychiatric assessment is too low and a cause of the delay. However, the presiding judge has discretion to pay more when he or she believes it necessary, and the record reflects that payments in excess of $200 are made. At least one payment in excess of $1,000 is in the record. Moreover, the record does not support the conclusion that greater fees would eliminate the delay.
Appellants' benchmark for a constitutionally timely access to independent psychiatrists is Manhattan and the Bronx--where the delay is said to consist оf one to two weeks. Because the procedures do not vary between counties, there is either a greater concentration, or less likely, greater underutilization, of psychiatrists in Manhattan and the Bronx than in Dutchess County. However, we do not believe that constitutional standards fashioned under Mathews are governed by the demographics of regions other than those in which the confinement or retention hearing is actually held. The third Mathews factor requires a hard look at the realities of the case at hand, not a comparison to best-case scenarios.
What is lacking in appellants' arguments are practical remedies for the delay resulting from the number of psychiatrists available in Dutchess County. Appellants do not offer any credible evidence that additional psychiatrists, as yet unidentified, are available to conduct independent evaluations within Dutchess County. It would be possible, although quite expensive, for the state to retain psychiatrists on a stand-by basis--for example, to keep one day a week open--in case such an examination and report were requested. However, the independence of such a psychiаtrist would be open to serious challenge because he or she would be receiving, and perhaps would be dependent upon, substantial amounts of money from the state for essentially no work. Indeed, one of the causes of the present litigation is appellants' suspicion that psychiatrists associated with the state harbor a preference for confinement. A psychiatrist retained by the state to be available at short notice would hardly escape a similar suspicion.
The state might also pay psychiatrists to commute from New York City to examine and report on a patient in Dutchess County. However, this remedy would be very expensive because commuting to Dutchess County to conduct an examination of the patient and interviews of others would require the absence of the physician from his or her regular office for at least a day--and perhaрs days. The remedy thus also assumes the availability of psychiatrists who always have upcoming days entirely without appointments. The record does not support the proposition that such psychiatrists are regularly available, or that, if available, they would be suitable consultants. Moreover, a psychiatrist with the required flexibility in scheduling would appear to earn little apart from periodic appointments in Dutchess County and would be deemed dependent upon income as a state-paid independent psychiatrist.2
Appellants' final claim is that the restrictions placed by the district court upon discovery constituted error. Discovery rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion. See Murphy v. International Business Machs. Corp.,
We do not bеlieve that the record demonstrates a limitation of appellants' substantial rights. The scope of the remand was to determine the constitutionality of the procedures for appointing an independent psychiatrist "where the presiding judge determines that such testimony [of an independent рsychiatrist] is necessary to a reliable assessment of a patient." Goetz I,
The disallowance of questions relating to the processes of judicial decision was hardly error. See Fayerweather v. Ritch,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Milton Pollack, United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation
Appellants note that psychiatric reports in competency hearings for criminal defendants, see N.Y.Crim.Prоc.Law Secs. 730.10-730.70 (McKinney 1984), can be obtained more swiftly than in confinement hearings. However, the issues in a competency hearing--ability to understand the charges and participate in one's defense, id. Sec. 730.10(1)--seem far less complex and more quickly resolved than the issues in a confinement hеaring--danger to oneself or to others. Whereas the former issues may generally be resolved simply by interviewing the defendant, the latter issues generally require interviews of institution staff, friends of the patient, and relatives
Appellants argue that the delay in obtaining the assistance of an independent рsychiatrist chills patients in requesting such assistance. This argument applies only to those patients who expect to be discharged before such assistance would be available, and the asserted harm is again the delay in release. We see no need to add to the discussion in the text with regard to this argument
