In re A.R.C.
No. 22-0987
Supreme Court of Texas
February 16, 2024
Argued October 25, 2023
JUSTICE YOUNG delivered the opinion of the Court.
A court may not order involuntary civil commitment unless the State complies with a host of substantive and procedural requirements. Only one such requirement is at issue here: that, in counties where “a psychiatrist is available,” a psychiatrist must complеte at least one of two required “certificates of medical examination for mental illness.”
The factual background is largely undisputed. Respondent A.R.C., then a 34-year-old
The results of Dr. Paez‘s examination were troubling enough to trigger a series of filings and actions that took place on Tuesday, July 26. Dr. Paez prepared a certificate of medical examination based on his evaluation of A.R.C. He also filed an application for temporary court-ordered mental-health services. In both filings, Dr. Paez stated that A.R.C. presented a substantial risk of serious harm to himself or others. Around the same time, the El Paso County Attorney filed a motion for an order of protective custody in reliance on thеse medical records. The probate court soon signed the requested order. Among other things, the order set two hearings in rapid succession: a probable-cause hearing for the morning of Thursday, July 28, and a final hearing for the morning of Monday, August 1.
The central role of the probable-cause hearing was to determine whether A.R.C. “present[ed] a substantial risk of serious harm to [himself] or others to the extent that [he could not] be at liberty pending the [final] hearing.”
On the following morning—Friday, July 29—another physician, Dr. Kutcher-Diaz, examined A.R.C. and then signed a second certificate of medical examination. Dr. Kutcher-Diaz, like Dr. Paez, was a second-year psychiatry resident. In his certificate, he determined that A.R.C. was mentally ill and that this mental illness made it likely that A.R.C. would cause serious harm to himself. This second certificate of medical examination before the final hearing was necessary to comply with a statutory requirement:
A hearing on an application for court-ordered mental health services may not be held unless there are on file with the court at least two certificates of medical examination for mental illness completed by different physicians each of whom has examined the proposed patient during the preceding 30 days. At least one of the physicians must be a psychiatrist if a рsychiatrist is available in the county.
On the morning of August 1, as the final hearing was about to commence, A.R.C. filed a motion to dismiss based on the State‘s alleged noncompliance with
The court rejected A.R.C.‘s contention that the doctors did not qualify as psychiatrists under the statute, finding that both “[c]ertificates [were] in compliance with the
On appeal to the Eighth Court of Appeals, A.R.C. again argued that the residents did not qualify as psychiatrists and that, even if they did, the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the probate court‘s commitment order. Although the forty-five-day period had passed and A.R.C. was no longer involuntarily committed, the cоurt of appeals concluded that the dispute was not moot. We agree. An involuntary-commitment order imposes collateral consequences under federal and state law. See, e.g.,
On the merits, a divided court of appeals agreed with A.R.C.‘s argument that the residents were not psychiatrists within the statute‘s meaning and did not reach his alternative contentions. The court vacated the probate court‘s order and dismissed the application. 657 S.W.3d 585, 595 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2022). According to the majority, this conclusion did not require it to determine what “psychiatrist” means. Id. at 592. Its chief rationale was that the statute defines “physician” to expressly include physician-in-training permit holders, like the residents in this case, but does not define “psychiatrist” the same way. Id. at 593. Justice Palafox dissented. She would have looked to whаt “psychiatrist” means and would have held that the term, as used in the statute, includes the psychiatry residents here. Id. at 597–98 (Palafox, J., dissenting).
We agree with Justice Palafox. The statute does not now and since its original enactment in 1957, see Mental Health Code, 55th Leg., R.S., ch. 243, 1957 Tex. Gen. Laws 505, never has defined “psychiatrist.” A nonexistent definition‘s failure to refеrence physician-in-training permits cannot resolve whether psychiatry residents qualify as psychiatrists. Other statutory provisions, however, combined with the ordinary meaning of “psychiatrist,” show that the certificates signed by Dr. Paez and Dr. Kutcher-Diaz complied with
First, the statute makes clear that psychiatrists are a subset оf the larger class of physicians. Two physician-signed certificates are necessary in larger counties, and “one of the physicians must be a psychiatrist.”
Second, the statute includes a detailed definition of “physician.” That definition is directly relevant to residency status because, under the statute, a “physician” is
(A) a person licensed to practice medicine in this state;
(B) a person employed by a federаl agency who has a license to practice medicine in any state; or (C) a person authorized to perform medical acts under a physician-in-training permit at a Texas postgraduate training program approved by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, the American Osteopathic Association, or the Texas Medical Board.
So psychiatrists are physicians, and physiciаns include those practicing under a physician-in-training permit. The residents’ status as psychiatrists therefore turns on whether the word “psychiatrist” conveys a meaning that excludes Dr. Paez and Dr. Kutcher-Diaz, despite their status as physicians in a psychiatry-residency program. The court of appeals was thus mistaken tо conclude that
With no statutory definition of that term, we must apply its ordinary meaning. This Court has considered a blend of standard and medical dictionaries when interpreting otherwise undefined medical terms. See, e.g., Tex. State Bd. of Exam‘rs of Marriage & Fam. Therapists v. Tex. Med. Ass‘n, 511 S.W.3d 28, 35–36 (Tex. 2017). Following this approach, we have no trouble concluding that the term “psychiatrist” has a plain and discernible meaning that reaches the two residents here.
An array of dictionaries reflects the basic point that—whether taken from the perspective of 1957, when what is now
Psychiatrists, in short, are physicians who speciаlize their practice in psychiatry. Because everyone agrees that Dr. Paez and Dr. Kutcher-Diaz qualify as physicians under
To be a specialist under these definitions, it is sufficient but not necessary to be board certified. Board-certified psychiatrists are especially well credentialed specialists, not those who are minimally qualified to be called specialists. The statutе easily could impose such a heightened standard—requiring not merely a psychiatrist, but a board-certified one, for example—yet
Thus, physicians who primarily limit their practice to psychiatry—and certainly such physicians who have received advanced training in psychiatry—are physicians who specialize in psychiatry. Both Dr. Kutcher-Diaz and Dr. Paez qualify. Both had received advanced training in psychiatry before entering the second year of their psychiatry residencies. At the final hearing, Dr. Kutcher-Diaz testified that he had admitted patients during his first year of residency when he worked at the El Paso Psychiatric Center and that, as a second-year resident, his medical practice involved “treat[ing] patients with mеntal illness.” The amicus brief for Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso offers further context. By their second year, it observes, the residents had completed “a six month rotation at the State of Texas Hospital-El Paso Psychiatric Center treating exclusively mentally ill patients, a five month rotation in internal medicine, and a one month rotation in neurology.”
We hold that a physician who can be said to specialize in psychiatry qualifies as a psychiatrist under
The label “psychiatry residency” does not resolve the question, of course. If a hypothetical residency delayed specialized psychiatric training or delayed residents’ ability to primarily practice psychiatry, those residents would not qualify as “psychiatrists” until the residency afforded them those opportunities. Such a hypothetical residency does not affect this case because Dr. Kutcher-Diaz and Dr. Paez had clearly passed any dividing line between psychiatrists and non-psychiatrists by the time they completed A.R.C.‘s certificates of medical examination.
Our discussion of the minimum statutory requirement for qualification as a “psychiatrist” should not obscure that, under
We finally observe that while the parties ably address pоlicy grounds for one view of “psychiatrist” or another, our decision does not embrace or reject any of them. We merely give the statute the meaning that its text and structure require. The Texas Constitution provides that “[n]o person shall be committed as a person of unsound mind except on
competent medical
We hold that the residents in this case were “physicians” who specialized their practices in psychiatry and thus qualified as “psychiatrists” under
Evan A. Young
Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: February 16, 2024
