In the Matter of the Mental Illness of K. B. C., Patient. K. B. C., Appellant, v. COUNTY OF ITASCA, Respondent, and Arthur E. Noot, Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Public Welfare, Respondent, In Re D. L., Psychopathic Personality. In Re the Mental Illness of M. W. M. W., petitioner, Appellant, v. COUNTY OF BROWN, Respondent, and Arthur E. Noot, Commissioner of Public Welfare, Respondent.
Nos. 51729, 51730 and 52084.
Supreme Court of Minnesota
July 24, 1981
308 N.W.2d 495
YETKA, Justice.
Warren Spannaus, Atty. Gen., and John L. Kirwin, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., St. Paul, for Noot, Commr. of Mn. Dept. of Public Welfare.
Robert W. Johnson, County Atty., and James J. Weber, Jr., Asst. County Atty., Anoka, for County of Anoka.
R. T. Rodenberg, County Atty., New Ulm, for County of Brown.
Thomas L. Johnson, Hennepin County Atty., Peter J. Fransway, Asst. County Atty., Anne E. Peek, Staff Atty., Minneapolis, for amicus curiae.
Heard, considered, and decided by the court en banc.
YETKA, Justice.
D. L. was committed to a state hospital as a psychopathic personality in 1979. In 1980, he petitioned the Anoka County Probate Court for a change of commitment status under
K. C. was committed to a state hospital as mentally ill and dangerous in 1974. At one time he had been provisionally discharged, but the provisional discharge was revoked. In 1980, he petitioned the Itasca County Probate Court for a change of commitment status under
M. W. was committed to a state hospital as mentally ill and dangerous in 1974. In 1980, he petitioned the Brown County Probate Court for a change of commitment status under
The issues raised on this appeal are:
1. Must patients who have been committed as mentally ill and dangerous, or as psychopathic personalities, pursue remedies of discharge and change of commitment status exclusively under
2. Do the remedies and procedures available to patients under
1. All three petitioners sought to change their commitment status in the probate court under
Any interested person may petition the court of commitment or the court to which venue has been transferred for an order adjudicating that a patient is not now in need of continued hospitalization or for an order adjudicating that an individual is not now mentally ill, mentally deficient, or inebriate, or for an order restoring a patient to legal capacity, or for such other order as the court may deem just and equitable.
Where such patient was found by the committing court to be dangerous to the public or to have a psychopathic personality, such patient shall not be discharged or provisionally discharged except upon order of the commissioner and no such discharge or provisional discharge shall be ordered by the commissioner unless he is satisfied that the patient is capable of making an acceptable adjustment in society and unless the commissioner has received a favorable recommendation to that effect by a majority of the special review board appointed and acting under
section 253A.16 . A petition for an order of discharge or provisional discharge shall be filed with the commissioner and may be filed by the patient or by the head of the hospital.
The probate court dismissed D. L.‘s petition under
D. L. does not dispute the finding that he was really seeking a discharge. Instead, he argues that
K. C.‘s
We need not decide whether petitioner is an interested person with standing to pursue a remedy under
M. W. has already received a provisional discharge under
Appellant M. W. does not specify why the relief he seeks is important other than to state the “mentally ill” label carries with it less social stigma than the “mentally ill and dangerous” label.
The commissioner argues that if M. W. was given the relief he seeks, a complete discharge would be easier for him to acquire in the future. A patient who is “mentally ill” may be discharged by the head of a state hospital or by the probate court. See
Obtaining a complete discharge in the future would still require M. W. to go through the same procedure as he did for his provisional discharge.
We do accept the argument, however, that a patient should be able to have the “dangerous” label removed if circumstances warrant.
We therefore hold that psychopathic personalities and patients found to be dangerous to the public may, after commitment, petition the commissioner under
2. Appellants also object to the constitutionality of being limited to the remedies available through
Referring to probate court jurisdiction, Minnesota‘s constitution provides that “[o]riginal jurisdiction in law and equity for... all guardianship and incompetency proceedings... shall be provided by law.”
When the “restoration to capacity” cases were decided many years ago, the law in Minnesota equated commitment for mental illness with legal incompetence and guardianship. This is not true of the present law. See id. (commitment not a determination of incompetency); cf.
Finally, the discharge remedies under
