The PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
Alexander Nathan BAILIE, Defendant and Appellant.
Court of Appeal of California, Third District.
*762 Patricia L. Watkins, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
Karen Keating Jahr, County Counsel, and David A. Hamilton, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Bill Lockyer, Attorney General, Thomas R. Yanger, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Joseph O. Egan, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, and Catherine H. Brown, Deputy Attorney General, for Department of Developmental Services as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Respondent.
RAYE, J.
Following a contested hearing, the Shasta County Superior Court, sitting without a jury, found that defendant Alexander Nathan Bailie is a mentally retarded person who is a danger to himself and others. *763 (Welf. & Inst.Code, § 6500.)[1] Defendant was committed to the Department of Developmental Services (DDS) for one year.
On appeal, defendant contends reversal is required because (1) the trial court failed to advise him of his right to a jury trial or to secure his waiver of that right, and (2) the statutory scheme does not require, the petition did not allege, and the plaintiff (county counsel) did not prove that his mental retardation makes it seriously difficult for him to control his dangerous behavior. For the reasons that follow, we conclude both points have merit.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In September 2005, at the request of the Director of the Far Northern Regional Center (FNRC), the Shasta County Counsel filed a section 6500 petition for an order committing defendant to DDS for care and treatment. The petition alleged that defendant "is a mentally retarded person who is a danger to himself or others," as set forth in the affidavit of an FNRC service coordinator. The facts supporting the petition are not at issue and need not be set forth in this opinion.
On October 25, 2005, the parties appeared in court on the petition. According to the clerk's minutes, defendant's counsel "advise[d] the Court that [defendant] is not in agreement with the Petition and is requesting the Court hold a contested hearing." The minutes make no reference to a jury trial.
The reporter's transcript does not contain the foregoing request for a contested hearing. Nor does the transcript contain an advisement of the jury trial right or defendant's waiver of that right.
At the hearing, county counsel presented the testimony of psychologist Jan Freemon, FNRC service coordinator Cynthia Nordstrom, and therapist Russell York, Ph.D. The defense presented testimony from defendant's mother and from defendant.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court found that defendant "is kind of a danger to himself and others." Defendant was committed to DDS until October 25, 2006.[2]
DISCUSSION
I
Defendant contends reversal is required because the trial court failed to advise him of his right to jury trial or to secure his waiver of that right. We agree.
In People v. Alvas (1990)
The equal protection violation was as follows: "Effective July 1, 1969, the Legislature enacted a sweeping revision of the mental health laws (§ 5000 et seq.), known as the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act (hereafter LPS Act). The LPS Act, which expressly excludes the mentally retarded (§ 5002), applies, inter aha, to those who as a result of mental disorder are a danger to themselves or others or are gravely disabled, and provides for 72-hour and 14day periods of detention for treatment and evaluation. (§§ 5150, 5170, 5200, 5225, and 5250.) If further detention is required, sections 5300, 5301, and 5304 provide the procedural mechanism for commitment and recommitment periods of 180 days each. With respect to these extended commitments, the trial court is statutorily required (§ 5302) to advise the defendant of his right to a jury trial on the allegations. No similar safeguard exists for those accused of being dangerously mentally retarded." (Alvas, supra,
After resolving the equal protection claim, Alvas stated that, "[although the parties have not so argued, we believe the same conclusion is compelled' under a due process analysis." (Alvas, supra,
The Shasta County Counsel requests that we revisit Alvas, based in part on the civil jury trial provisions of the California Constitution and statutes. Counsel notes that a Welfare and Institutions Code section 6500 commitment "must be deemed essentially civil in nature." (Cramer v. Tyars (1979)
County counsel's reliance on these provisions is misplaced. To the extent that Alvas's holding rests upon the federal equal protection clause, which proscribes the "disparate treatment in involuntary commitments between the two classes [LPS Act commitments and section 6500 commitments]," the minimum state standards for jury trial waiver in civil cases are not determinative. (Alvas, supra,
County counsel relies upon several cases in which the committed person's counsel expressly waived a jury trial. (People v. Masterson (1994)
In People v. Rowell (2005)
It is not necessary to determine whether Rowell and its antecedents have undermined Alvas's due process analysis. Alvas `s equal protection analysis remains sound, inasmuch as the Legislature has not amended sections 5302 or 6500 to remedy the disparate treatment of jury trial advisements.
Citing People v. Howard (1992)
II
Defendant contends section 6500 violates due process because it does not require proof that a person's mental retardation causes him or her to have serious difficulty in controlling dangerous behavior. (See, e.g., In re Howard N. (2005)
Section 1800 et seq. provides a mechanism for the extended detention of dangerous persons. Specifically, it provides for the civil commitment of a person at the time he or she would otherwise be discharged from a Division of Juvenile Justice (formerly California Youth Authority) commitment. Howard N., supra,
After analyzing federal and state decisional law concerning other civil commitment schemes such as those involving sexually violent predators and incompetent criminal defendants, Howard N. held that in order to preserve the constitutionality of section 1800 et seq., the "extended detention scheme should be interpreted to contain a requirement of serious difficulty in controlling dangerous behavior." (Howard N., supra,
In Howard N., the court noted that its prior decisions in People v. Williams (2003)
In People v. Galindo (2006)
County counsel relies on Quinn, supra,
Quinn addressed three issues, which we consider in turn. The defendant in Quinn contended "his commitment was unlawful because there was no proof that he was dangerous because of mental retardation. Section 6500 states `no mentally retarded person may be committed to the State Department of Developmental Services ... unless he or she is a danger to himself ... or others.' `"To determine legislative intent, a court begins with the words of the statute, because they generally provide the most reliable indicator of legislative intent." [Citation.]' [Citation.] [¶] The words of this statute contain no requirement that the dangerous condition be caused by mental retardation. `[S]ection 6500 singles out the mentally retarded ... and permits their involuntary confinement ... upon proof of mental retardation and dangerousness to self or others....' [Citation.] The causation Quinn seeks to add is not the language of the statute." (Quinn, supra, 86 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1293-1294,
The court in Quinn next considered the defendant's contention that "the Legislature intended that some commitment statutes require proof of causation and section 6500 does not show the legislative intent not to require it for the mentally retarded. [Citation.]" (Quinn, supra,
Quinn rejected the contention, stating: "The Legislature recognized that the medical care for the retarded and attendant legal procedures differ from those for the mentally ill. [Citations.] [¶] To adopt Quinn's position would remove many of the mentally retarded from the protection of the statute. It would undermine the goal to assist all of these helpless people and expose some of them to death or serious danger. We conclude that the evidence that Quinn was dangerous and mentally retarded was, by itself, sufficient to authorize commitment under section 6500." (Quinn, supra,
But Howard N.'s due process requirements do not exclude from section 6500 the "helpless people" described by Quinn; rather, they exclude only those people who have no "serious difficulty in controlling" their "dangerous behavior," or in other words, those people whose dangerousness is within their own control. (Howard N., supra,
Quinn lastly considered the defendant's contention that "the absence of a causational requirement in section 6500 violates his right to equal protection of the laws. His attempt to support this theory is based on differences between statutes involving the mentally ill and the retarded." (Quinn, supra,
Quinn also rejected this contention, explaining that "these two groups are not similarly situated and there is a rational basis for treating them differently. [Citation.] The legislative scheme recognized that medications and treatments for the mentally ill may not work for the mentally retarded. Section 6500 does not discriminate against the mentally retarded; it distinctly accommodates their unique condition. [Citation.] `These schemes are not unconstitutional on equal protection grounds because the classifications are based upon accepted factual and medical differences between the mentally retarded and mentally ill.' [Citation.] [¶] The Legislature rationally decided to provide special protection for the mentally retarded. Section 6500 furthers the state's compelling interest to protect all the retarded persons who are dangerous, and not just those whose violence is caused by retardation. This does not violate Quinn's right to equal protection of the laws." (Quinn, supra, 86 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1294-1295,
Thus, the foundation of Quinn's equal protection analysis is its observation that "medications and treatments for the mentally ill may not work for the mentally retarded." (Quinn, supra,
As in Howard N., we conclude the Legislature would prefer to construe the section 6500 scheme as including a requirement of serious difficulty in controlling dangerous behavior, rather than invalidate the scheme in its entirety. (Howard N., supra,
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed.
We concur: BLEASE, Acting P.J., and HULL, J.
NOTES
Notes
[1] All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise indicated.
[2] "Commitments under section 6500 are for a one-year period. Where the appellate decision is rendered beyond that period, the appeal is technically moot. [Citation.]" (People v. Quinn (2001)
