In re M.G. on Habeas Corpus.
H050341
Filed 12/22/22
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION; (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. 20MH043843)
Petitioner M.G. was detained in a locked behavioral health facility under the authority of
We conclude
I. BACKGROUND
To achieve its aims, the law provides for gradually increasing periods of temporary confinement with an opportunity at each step to determine whether further confinement is necessary. If a mentally ill person presents a danger to self or others, a law enforcement officer can take the person into custody for placement at a state approved facility for evaluation and treatment up to 72 hours. (
If the court finds the detainee does not meet the statutory criteria for involuntary detention, he or she must be ordered released. (
In this case, M.G. was detained in August 2022 for the 14-day confinement allowed by
When the hearing was convened on M.G.‘s habeas corpus petition, the court informed the parties that neither interpreter was available that day. The hearing was continued for two days, to Thursday, September 1. The superior court reasoned that due process requires M.G. be assisted by an interpreter, and the unavailability of an interpreter constituted good cause to continue the hearing beyond the two-day statutory timeframe.
On August 31, M.G. petitioned this court for a writ of habeas corpus granting her release. We ordered the facility where she was detained to show cause why the relief should not be granted. After we issued the order to show cause, counsel notified us M.G. had been released. Since we cannot grant the relief requested in M.G.‘s habeas corpus petition—release from confinement—we must deny her petition as moot. We nonetheless elect to decide the question here despite its technical mootness. The statutory interpretation issue presented is one of first impression. And because the associated temporary confinement can last at most 14 days, a challenge to its propriety will routinely evade appellate review. (See In re Webb (2019) 7 Cal.5th 270, 273 [appropriate to decide moot question where important to provide guidance in future cases and where the question will consistently evade review].)
II. DISCUSSION
M.G. asserts her continued confinement was unlawful because the superior court failed to conduct an evidentiary hearing within two judicial days of her August 26 request. She argues that under
The treatment facility reads the statute to mean that as long as a hearing date has been set to occur within two judicial days of a petition‘s filing, the court has complied with the statute, even if the hearing ultimately occurs outside the two-day timeframe. As practical as that interpretation may be, the statutory language is not susceptible of that meaning. The words “to be held” preclude such an interpretation: the court shall either release the person or “order an evidentiary hearing to be held within two judicial days.” (
Interpreting the statute as urged by the facility would render it entirely ineffective. The purpose of the two-day requirement is to ensure a detainee can obtain judicial review of the 14-day detention while it is meaningful. The facility‘s interpretation would allow for an evidentiary hearing regarding the propriety of a detention to be held after the maximum time of detention has expired. We will not interpret a statute in a way that frustrates its fundamental purpose. (California School Employees Ass‘n. v. Governing Board (1994) 8 Cal.4th 333, 340.)
The unavailability of necessary interpreters appears to have been a legitimate reason for delay—as the superior court noted, conducting the hearing without them would present significant due process issues. But the statute does not contain language which would allow a continuance beyond
The Legislature expressly stated in the statute its goal to ensure prompt judicial review for persons detained under
It is also important to consider whether construing a requirement as mandatory promotes the statutory objective or undermines it. (Conservatorship of Jose B. (2020) 50 Cal.App.5th 963, 972.)
III. DISPOSITION
The order to show cause is discharged and the petition for habeas corpus is denied as moot.
Grover, J.
WE CONCUR:
Bamattre-Manoukian, Acting P.J.
Wilson, J.
H050341
In re M.G. on Habeas Corpus
| Trial Court | Santa Clara County Superior Court Superior Court No. 20MH043843 |
| Trial Judge | Hon. Jacqueline M. Arroyo |
| Attorney for Petitioner M.G. | Brandon L. Li Office of the Public Defender, Santa Clara County |
| Attorneys for Real Party in Interest Crestwood Center San Jose | Alan L. Martini Sheuerman, Martini, Tabari & Garvin |
| Attorneys for Public Guardian of Santa Clara County | Allen Brandt Office of the County Counsel, Santa Clara County |
H050341 - In re M.G. on Habeas Corpus
