¶ 1. Judith G. appeals from an order for protective placement under Wis. Stat. § 55.06, which directed that she be "placed in the least restrictive placement commensurate with her needs as designated by the Milwaukee County Department on Aging." Ms. G. has since died. We decide the appeal nevertheless because of the importance of the issue it raises and, given the age and health condition of many of the persons for whom protective placement is sought, the issue may otherwise evade appellate review.
See State ex rel. Jones v. Gerhardstein,
¶ 2. As material to this appeal, Wis. Stat. § 55.06(ll)(a) permits a guardian to have a ward taken into immediate protective custody if, from the guardian's "personal observation... it appears probable" that the ward "will suffer irreparable injury or death ... as a result of... infirmities of aging... if not immediately placed" in protective-placement custody. 2 Wisconsin Stat. § 55.06(11)(b) requires that "[u]pon detention, a petition shall be filed under [Wis. Stat. § 55.06] sub. 2 by the person making such emergency placement and a preliminary hearing shall be held within 72 hours, excluding Saturdays, Sundays and *821 legal holidays, to establish probable cause to believe the grounds for protective placement under sub. (2)." Wisconsin Stat. § 55.06(2) permits certain persons, including guardians, to:
[P]etition the circuit court to provide protective placement for an individual who:
(a) Has a primary need for residential care and custody;
(c) As the result of.. . infirmities of aging... is so totally incapable of providing for his or her own care or custody as to create a substantial risk of serious harm to oneself or others.
¶ 3. The issue presented by this appeal is whether the circuit court loses competence to adjudicate a person's need for protective placement if the probable-cause hearing is not held within seventy-two hours after the person was taken into custody, or whether, as the trial court determined, the seventy-two-hour clock can be reset by the simple expedient of filing a new petition for protective placement. We hold that the circuit court loses competence if the probable-cause hearing is not held within seventy-two hours after the person is first taken into custody, and that the mere filing of a new petition does not start the clock anew. Accordingly, we reverse.
I.
¶ 4. The following are the undisputed facts that are material to this appeal. On March 6, 2000, the circuit court determined after a hearing that Ms. G. was, as phrased in the March 29, 2000, order entered on *822 that determination, "incapable of caring for herself by reason of the infirmities of aging and senile dementia and [was] a proper subject for a limited guardianship." The circuit court appointed Kindcare, Inc., as the corporate "guardian of the person and estate of' Ms. G. See Wis. Stat. §§ 880.33(5m) & 880.35 (approved nonprofit corporations may be appointed as guardian of the person and estate of an incompetent). The March 29th order directed Kindcare to review Ms. G.'s then living arrangements "utilizing the criteria of least restrictive placement."
¶ 5. On May 2, 2000, Kindcare filed a petition seeking Ms. G.'s temporary emergency protective placement, alleging that she was "a suitable person" under Wis. Stat. § 55.06(11). On May 2, 2000, Kindcare also filed a petition for protective placement against Ms. G. On May 3, 2000, Kindcare moved Ms. G. from where she was living to the skilled-nursing area of the Jewish Home and Care Center in Milwaukee. Kindcare did not get a court order authorizing the move, and a probable-cause hearing in connection with the move was not held within seventy-two hours of the move. Kindcare filed an amended protective-placement petition on May 16, 2000.
¶ 6. Ms. G. sought to have the amended petition for protective placement dismissed because of the circuit court's failure to hold a probable-cause hearing within seventy-two hours. The matter was heard by the circuit court on June 23, 2000. Although Kindcare represented to the circuit court that Ms. G. consented to being moved to the Jewish Home and Care Center, Ms. G.'s counsel disagreed, contending that Ms. G. was moved "against her will."
¶ 7. The circuit court ruled at the June 23rd hearing that moving Ms. G. on May 3, 2000 triggered *823 the need for a seventy-two-hour probable-cause hearing under Wis. Stat. § 55.06(ll)(b). As noted, there was no such hearing. Accordingly, the circuit court dismissed "without prejudice" the amended petition for protective placement filed against Ms. G. and granted her petition for habeas corpus. Kindcare then indicated that it would simply "refile" the petition, which it did that day. Neither party contends that anything in Ms. G.'s condition changed between May 3, 2000, and June 23, 2000. The June 23rd petition is substantively identical to the amended petition that was filed on May 16, 2000.
¶ 8. June 23, 2000, was a Friday. The circuit court set the probable-cause hearing under Wis. Stat. § 55.06(11)(b) for Monday, June 26, 2000. At that time, Ms. G. moved to dismiss the June 23rd petition. The circuit court denied her motion. After taking testimony from Kindcare's executive director, the circuit court found probable cause for the May 3, 2000, move. A four-day jury trial was held in mid-July, 2000, and Ms. G. was found to be "in need of protective placement." The jury also found that "a nursing home setting" was "the least restrictive environment" for Ms. G. The order for protective placement from which this appeal was taken was entered on the verdict.
II.
[I, 2]
¶ 9. Whether a circuit court may adjudicate the merits of a protective-placement petition filed under Wis. Stat. § 55.06(11) is a matter of statutory analysis that we review
de novo. State ex rel. Sandra D. v. Getto,
¶ 10. As we have seen, there are two ways under § 55.06 that a guardian may seek a ward's protective placement. First, the guardian may file a petition for protective placement. Wis. Stat. § 55.06(2). If this route is followed, the ward may not be protectively placed unless there is a finding "by clear and convincing evidence that the individual to be placed is in need of placement." Wis. Stat. § 55.06(7).
¶ 11. Second, a guardian may seek to have the ward "immediately placed" if "from personal observation ... it appears probable" that the ward "will suffer irreparable injury or death... as a result of. . . infirmities of aging" if not taken into custody immediately. Wis. Stat. § 55.06(ll)(a). This emergency protective placement is governed by Wis. Stat. § 55.06(ll)(b), which provides:
Upon detention, a petition shall be filed under sub. (2) by the person making such emergency placement and a preliminary hearing shall be held within 72 hours, excluding Saturdays, Sundays and legal holidays, to establish probable cause to believe the grounds for protective placement under sub. (2).
If the court finds probable cause for the emergency detention, the court "may order temporary placement up to 30 days pending the hearing for a permanent placement." Wis. Stat. § 55.06(ll)(c). Thus, a person taken into emergency custody under § 55.06(ll)(a) may not be held for more than thirty days after a finding of probable cause without a final trial on whether perma
*825
nent protective placement is warranted.
N.N. v. County of Dane,
¶ 12. The legislature imposed tight timetables in connection with the involuntary detention of persons alleged to be incapable of caring for themselves in recognition of the significant liberty interest a person has in living where and under what conditions he or she chooses.
See Sandra D.,
¶ 13. There are three decisions that light our path:
N.N., State ex rel. B.S.L. v. Lee,
¶ 14. In
B.S.L.,
a juvenile under the age of fourteen was placed at an inpatient facility under Wis. Stat. ch. 51.
B.S.L.,
¶ 15. B.S.L. appealed, contending that the dismissal was an adjudication on the merits under Wis.
*827
Stat. Rule 805.14(7) ("Unless the court in its order for dismissal otherwise specifies for good cause recited in the order, any dismissal under this section operates as an adjudication upon the merits.") and that, therefore, the principles of claim preclusion barred the proceedings on the second emergency-detention affidavit.
Id.,
¶ 16. In connection with B.S.L.'s claim-preclusion argument, we held that the dismissal was ordered before any testimony was heard at the scheduled final hearing and that, therefore, the dismissal was not on the merits.
Id.,
¶ 17.
Sandra D.,
like
N.N.,
concerned the thirty-day limit in Wis. Stat. § 55.06(ll)(c). We held that the circuit court lost competence to proceed with the final
*828
hearing on a petition for protective placement because that hearing was not held within the thirty days.
Sandra D.,
¶ 18. As we have seen, Wis. Stat. § 55.06(7) prevents the detention of the subject of a protective-placement petition unless there has been a finding by
*829
clear and convincing evidence that the person "is in need of placement,"
"[ejxcept
for emergency placement or temporary placement under" Wis. Stat. 55.06(11). (Emphasis added.) Here, and unlike the situation in
B.S.L.,
there was
no
compliance with the "time limits required by [the] statute [here, § 55.06(ll)(b)] . . . during the first proceeding for continued detention."
See B.S.L.,
¶ 19. This comports with the legislature's intent to limit significantly the time the subject of a protective-placement petition must spend in involuntary detention without court approval.
See Sandra D.,
By the Court. — Order reversed.
Notes
Wisconsin Stat. § 55.06(ll)(a) provides in full:
If from personal observation of a sheriff, police officer, fire fighter, guardian, if any, or authorized representative of a board designated under s. 55.02 or an agency designated by it it appears probable that an individual will suffer irreparable injury or death or will present a substantial risk of serious physical harm to others as a result of developmental disabilities, infirmities of aging, chronic mental illness or other like incapacities if not immediately placed, the person making the observation may take into custody and transport the individual to an appropriate medical or protective placement facility. The person making placement shall prepare a statement at the time of detention providing specific factual information concerning the person's observations and the basis for emergency placement. The statement shall be filed with the director of the facility and shall also be filed with any petition under sub. (2). At the time of placement the individual shall be informed by the director of the facility or the director's designee, both orally and in writing, of his or her right to contact an attorney and a member of his or her immediate family and the right to have an attorney provided at public expense, as provided under s. 967.06 and ch. 977, if the individual is a child or is indigent. The director or designee shall also provide the individual with a copy of the statement by the person making emergency placement.
In light of our resolution of this appeal, we do not discuss Ms. G.'s other arguments.
See Gross v. Hoffman,
