On December 28, 1982, the ward was involuntarily committed to Boumewood Hospital (Boumewood), and in January, 1983, the Probate Court entered an order appointing
The petition for involuntary commitment in this case was not filed under the provisions of G. L. c. 123, 2 but under an alternative commitment procedure, G. L. c. 201, § 14. This statute empowers the Probate Court to appoint temporary guardians with authority to commit and treat their wards. The commitment procedure of G. L. c. 201 specifically provides some, but not all, of the procedural protections of G. L. c. 123. The ward challenges the guardianship orders of the Probate Court on two bases. She argues that commitment pursuant to G. L. c. 201, § 14, is unconstitutional, because it violates her rights to due process and equal protection of the laws and that, even if G. L. c. 201, § 14, is constitutional, the Probate Court did not comply with it in this case. We agree that the guardianship orders in this case were invalid and we conclude that G. L. c. 201, § 14, as we interpret it, is not unconstitutional.
The facts and procedural background of the case are summarized from the transcript of the hearing of June 20 and June 21, 1983, on the motion for temporary guardianship in the Probate Court, and the findings of the judge.
3
The ward is a twenty-eight year old woman with a history of psychological problems. At the time of the hearing in June, 1983, she was diagnosed as suffering from chronic schizophrenia. Prior to her admission to Boumewood in December, 1982, she had been hospitalized three times.
4
She has been treated intermit
Since 1975, when she was not hospitalized the ward lived either with her parents, with friends, or at a boarding house. She completed two semesters at Orange County Community College, where she received average grades. During the summer of 1977, she worked as a night bookkeeper, maid, and telephone operator at a hotel in New Paltz, New York.
In December, 1982, she was living at home with her parents. On December 28, her parents admitted her to Boumewood for ten days pursuant to G. L. c. 123, § 12.
7
On January 6, 1983, a
After the ward’s motion to vacate the August 17 order was denied in the Probate Court, she appealed to the Appeals Court, where her motion to stay the decree of permanent guardianship was granted, for the reason “that the decree appears to be erroneous due to a lack of compliance with statutorily mandated notice requirements.” The ward’s application for direct appellate review of the guardianship orders was granted by this court. Neither the ward’s parents nor the Attorney General appeared before this court. 8 Briefs were submitted by the ward and as amicus curiae by the Mental Health Legal Advisors Committee.
Our view of this case turns on two orders, both issued pursuant to G. L. c. 201, § 14: the order entered January 6, 1983, which appointed a temporary guardian with the authority to treat and commit, and the order entered on August 17, 1983, which appointed a permanent guardian, also with the authority to treat and commit. We hold that both orders were invalid.
1. The Attorney General’s failure to appear in this action was based on a belief that the constitutional issues raised in the ward’s appeal are moot either because the ward is no longer hospitalized or because of the Appeals Court’s stay of the permanent guardianship order. As we have said before, issues which involve the rights of the mentally ill are classic examples of issues that are “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
Hashimi
v.
Kalil,
2. A single justice of the Appeals Court, in ruling on the ward’s motion for a stay, suggested that the permanent guardianship order entered on August 17 was invalid because the ward was not provided with notice as required by G. L c. 201, § 7.
10
Failure to comply with G. L. c. 201, § 7, requires that a permanent guardianship order be invalidated.
Laurenza
v.
Laurenza,
We feel compelled to add a word about the fact that the final order of the Probate Court was issued five months after the initial hearing. Although we understand that litigation of any kind is prone to delays, a delay of this length in the context of a commitment proceeding is unacceptable. Proceedings which determine whether a person is to be confined to a mental hospital should be resolved with the utmost dispatch, as the requirements for expeditious action of G. L. c. 123, §§ 7 and 12, demonstrate.
3. The order appointing a temporary guardian entered January 6 was also invalid. This order was not considered by the single justice of the Appeals Court, presumably because it had expired by its own terms ninety days after entry. As we noted above, however, a temporary order by its very nature would be insulated from appellate review if the doctrine of mootness were literally applied. This temporary order is also invalid for lack of notice. It was issued pursuant to G. L. c. 201, § 14. Although that section does not require that the court give the prospective ward notice that petition for guardianship has been filed, 11 it does require that she be present at the hearing, absent a finding of extraordinary circumstances” (in which case her counsel'must be present). No such finding was made and there appears in the record no reason for the ward’s absence.
Extraordinary circumstances justifying the ward’s absence are not enough, however, to justify such an order. For G. L. c. 201, § 14, also provides that the court can only authorize commitment or treatment of the ward in an ex parte proceeding “in cases of extreme emergency ... if it finds that the remedies under the emergency provisions of [G. L. c. 123, § 12] are not applicable or would not be available to deal with the present emergency.”
4. Because the temporary guardianship order is no longer in effect and because the two orders were not entered in accordance with the provisions of G. L. c. 201, §§ 7 and 14, we need not resolve the ward’s claims that the statutory scheme violates her rights to due process and equal protection of the laws. We note, however, that if the provisons of the statute as we have just described them are complied with, in particular if a temporary guardian is authorized to treat or commit a ward only upon specific written findings that there is so extreme an emergency that the procedures of G. L. c. 123, § 12, are not sufficient, no constitutional infirmity will result. Since G. L. c. 201, § 14, is only to be used when G. L. c. 123, §12, cannot be, the application of the two statutes does not create an equal protection problem. Similarly, G. L. c. 201, § 14, as interpreted here, requires the presence, of the ward except in extraordinary circumstances. When the ward cannot be present, she must be represented by counsel. When so intrpreted the guardianship statute is not deficient in a due process sense.
5. The ward makes numerous other arguments which call into question the validity of the proceeding in the Probate Court. For
6. In conclusion, we hold that the temporary and permanent guardianship orders were not issued in accordance with the statutory provisions of G. L. c. 201, §§ 7 and 14, and therefore were invalid, and that as we interpret it G. L. c. 201, § 14, is not unconstitutional. The order appointing a permanent guardian is vacated.
So ordered.
Notes
She had been transferred from Boumewood in Brookline to the Pocasset Mental Health Center (Pocasset) on Cape Cod.
General Laws c. 123, §§ 1-55, as appearing in St. 1970, c. 888, § 4. This amendment to the Mental Health Code has been characterized as “one of the most comprehensive statutory housecleanings in modem history.” Flaschner, The New Massachusetts Mental Health Code — A “Magna Carta” or A Magna Maze, 56 Mass. L.Q. 49, 60 (1971).
Additional facts will be presented as required in our discussion of the issues.
These three occasions involved five different hospitals. In the summer of 1975, she was committed to Frankfort General Hospital in Germany, then transferred to Walter Reed Hospital in Washington, D.C., and finally
“Antipsychotic” drugs are “medications such as Thorazine, Mellaril, Prolixin, and Haldol that are used in treating psychoses, particularly schizophrenia.”
Rogers
v.
Okin,
For example, while at Pocasset, she was taking Lithium Carbonate in combination with Prolixin to increase its therapeutic value. She was also receiving Cogentin, a drug which counteracts the side effects of Prolixin. The common side effects of Prolixin are dystonia or tardive dyskinesia, which are manifested by spasmodic twitching of the shoulder muscles, spasms of the face, rhythmic spastic movements of the lips and tongue, and spastic torticollis (some of the neck muscles are abnormally distorted, so that the neck is bent and the head titled toward one shoulder or the other). Martin, Hazards of Medication 360 (1971). These side effects can be so unpleasant that the patient will want to stop the Prolixin medication altogether.
General Laws c. 123, § 12(a), as amended through St. 1982, c. 614, § 12, provides in pertinent part: “Any physician ... or a qualified psychologist. . . after examining a person has reason to believe that failure to hospitalize such person would create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental illness may restrain or authorize the restraint of such person and apply for the hospitalization for a ten day period ... at a private facility .... If an examination is not possible because of the emergency nature of the case and because of the refusal of the person to consent to such examination, the physician or qualified psychologist, on the basis of
The ward’s parents have stated they will proceed no further, either in the Probate Court or on appeal.
A temporary guardianship may be extended for an additional ninety days, Rule 29B of the Probate Courts, as amended (1982) (Rule 29B), but even 180 days would not be enough time to complete the normal appellate process. It is not our wish to encourage the issuance of successive commitment orders, rather it is to be hoped that the duration of involuntary orders for guardianship or commitment would be kept to a minimum, whether or not an appeal was pending.
General Laws c. 201, § 7, as amended through St. 1974, c. 845, § 5, provides in pertinent part, that “the court shall cause not less than seven days’ notice of the time and place appointed for the hearing to be given to the alleged mentally ill . . . person.”
Rule 29B of the Probate Courts, as amended, states that written notice of a petition for guardianship shall be given to the ward at least seventy-two hours in advance, but the court may waive that requirement. A reading of the rule that permits waiver of notice in the absence of emergency or other compelling reasons renders the rule of doubtful validity.
