This case concerns the rights of involuntarily committed mentally ill patients in Massachusetts to refuse antipsychotic drugs. It has involved all court levels in the federal system and the highest court of Massachusetts.
On April 27, 1975, Rubie Rogers and six other plaintiffs, all present or former mental patients in the May and Austin Units of the Boston State Hospital, filed suit against various officials and staff members of the hospital. The plaintiffs sought injunctive and monetary relief from the defendants’ practices concerning the forcible medicаtion and seclusion of patients in non-emergencies. Following certification of the plaintiff class and a lengthy trial, the district court granted plaintiffs injunctive relief on both their medication and seclusion claims, but denied plaintiffs’ claims for damages under federal and state law.
Rogers v. Okin,
Defendants appealed only from the district court’s order enjoining the forcible use
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of antipsychotic medication. Defendants did not appeal from the district court’s order enjoining the seclusion of patients аgainst their will.
See Rogers v. Okin,
On April 20, 1981, the Supreme Court granted certiorari to decide whether an involuntarily committed mental patient has a constitutional right to refuse treatment with antipsychotic drugs.
With certiorari pending in the Supreme Court, on April 23, 1981, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court issued its opinion in
In re Guardianship of Roe,
In light of
Roe
and under the United States Supreme Court’s “settled policy to avoid unnecessary decisions of constitutional issues”,
After briefing and oral argument as to a proper course on remand, we certified nine questions of state law to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. On November 29, 1983, the Massachusetts court issued detailed answers that clarified the nature and extent of a patient’s substantive and procedural rights under Massachusetts statutory, regulatory, and common law.
Rogers v. Commissioner,
Before we acted on the Supreme Judicial Court’s answers, the United States Supreme Court decided
Pennhurst State School & Hospital v. Halderman,
— U.S. -,
We pause to note the irony that results from rereading the Supreme Court’s
Mills v. Rogers
opinion in light of
Pennhurst.
In 1982, the Supreme Court avoided decision of a difficult federal constitutional question by remanding to this court, urging us to dispose of the case on state law grounds.
1. Mootness & Abstention
Before reaching the merits of this appeal, we must briefly address defendants’ contentions that this case is now moot or that abstention would be appropriate. Defendants argue that the Supreme Judicial Court’s answers to our certified questions have mooted the federal constitutional issues by providing state law grounds sufficient to dispose of the case. The Supreme Court has stated that “a federal constitutional issue ... might be mooted ... by a state court determination of pertinent state law”.
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
A state court decision can render a federal action moot only if the state decision has provided such relief so that any possible federal relief would not affect the rights and duties of the parties. In such a case, no live controversy would exist. Because a federal decision on the merits would be an advisory opinion, federal courts would lack jurisdiction. The Supreme Judicial Court’s answers, however, although setting the stage, do not directly grant the patients the relief that they sought. Those answers do not constitute a directly enforceable judgment. A plaintiff could not obtain from a federal or state court a contempt citation for defendants’ violations of the answers in Rogers v. Commissioner. A federal court injunction or declaration of federal rights, however, if appropriate, would provide the patients with meaningful legal relief.
The Supreme Judicial Court’s careful delineation of the parties’ rights and duties under state law has by no means ended the underlying controversy.
3
In determining jurisdiction, we should not simply assume that the defendants will comply with the dictates of state law as set out in the Supremе Judicial Court’s answers. Those answers are not self-executing, and they were handed down recently enough so that they constitute aspirations not as yet translated into a record of compliance sufficient to eliminate any reasonable expectation “that the alleged violation
*5
[of federal law] will recur”.
4
County of Los Angeles v. Davis,
We further note that the
availability
of relief in state courts under state law following
Rogers v. Commissioner
does not preclude this federal action. A plaintiff alleging a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 need not first exhaust state judicial remedies.
See Monroe v. Pape,
Nor do we believe that abstention would be appropriate at this stage of the litigation. In
Mills v. Rogers,
the Supreme Court directed this court to determine whether either certification of state law questions or abstention would be appropriate.
II. Due Process
The only issue now before us concerns the rights, under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, of involuntarily committed mentally ill patients to refuse antipsychotic medication. 6 The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has simplified our task by providing clear, comprehensive answers to our nine certified questions of state law.
The federal due process clause provides procedural protections for state-created substantive liberty interests.
See, e.g.,
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Mills v. Rogers,
1. Civil involuntary commitmеnt of a person to a state mental institution does not constitute a determination of incompetency to make treatment decisions. “[T]he right to make treatment decisions is an essential element of the patient’s general right ‘to manage his affairs’”.
Rogers v. Commissioner,
390 Mass, at 494-97,
2. A patient declared to be incompetent is entitled to a “substituted judgment” treatment decision. 7 The decision does not attempt to determine the objective “best interests” of the patient, but rathеr seeks to approximate with as much accuracy as possible the actual, subjective wants and needs of the patient. 390 Mass, at 499-501, 458 N.E,2d 308.
3. The “substituted judgment” decision requires consideration of at least the six factors listed in
In re Guardianship of Roe,
383 Mass, at ---,
4. “[0]nly if a patient poses an imminent threat of harm to himself or others, and only if there is no less intrusive alternative to antipsychotic drugs, may the Commonwealth invoke its police powers without prior court approval to treat the patient by forcible injection of antipsychotic drugs over the patient’s objection.”
Id.
at 510-11,
5. The state may, under its parens patriae power, treat a patient “against his will to prevent the ‘immediate, substantial, and irreversible deterioration of a serious mental illness,’ ..., in cases in which ‘even the smallest of avoidable delays would be intolerable.’”
Id.
at 511-12,
6. To continue treatment in such a therapeutic emergency, the treating doctors must seek an adjudication of incompetency, and, if the patient is adjudicated incompetent, a substituted judgment treatment plan. 390 Mass, at 512,
The Supreme Judicial Court also recognized certain state-created procedural protections against forcible medication of in *7 voluntarily committed mentally ill patients. The court held:
1. The incompetency determination must be made by a judge (not by a doctor or other state official), in one of four permissible state judicial forums.
Rogers v. Commissioner,
390 Mass, at 496-99,
2. A judge (not a doctor or a guardian) must make the substituted judgment treatment decision for a patient who has been adjudicated incompetent. “The parties ‘must be given adequate notice of the proceedings, an opportunity to be heard in the trial court, and to pursue an appeal.’”
Id.
at 501-04,
3. Following the determination of an appropriate treatment plan, a guardian (or the judge, if a guardian is not readily available) must monitor the treatment process to ensure that the substituted judgment treatment plan is followed. 390 Mass, at 504 & n. 20,
4. The use of antipsychotic medication as a chemical restraint must comply with Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, § 21, and regulations promulgated thereunder, 104 Code Mass.Regs. § 3.12. 390 Mass, at 509-10,
Although state procedural rules generally do not create federally protected rights,
see, e.g., Olim v. Wakinekona,
The determination that state procedural rules create liberty interests under the due process clause does not answer the question of what process is due under the Constitution. Procedural minima prescribed by the due process clause are not necessarily coextensive with procedures
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prescribed by state law. Where state procedures fall below the minimum requirements of the due process clause, those procedurеs are invalid.
See Vitek v. Jones,
As the United States Supreme Court anticipated in
Mills v. Rogers,
Massachusetts law requires
judicial
process for determining whether an involuntarily committed mentally ill patient is incompetent to make his own treatment decision. State law also requires
judicial
process for making the substituted judgment treatment decision. Although we do not decide the issue, the Supreme Court intimated in
Mills v. Rogers,
The Third Circuit recently approved, on due process grounds, less protective state procedures for the forcible medication of involuntarily committed mentally ill patients.
See Rennie v. Klein,
As we survey remedial possibilities, we see that the extremes are not available to us: a declaration of mootness or abstention would not be justified; and an injunction ordering Massachusetts оfficials to comply with the terms of Rogers v. Commissioner is barred by Pennhurst. It would of course be possible to attempt to identify the minimum standards of due process required by the Constitution and enjoin adherence to these standards. But to prolong this litigation solely to require conduct meeting lower standards than those presently in force under state law makes little sense.
This does not mean that the plaintiffs obtain nothing. Largely as a result of their actions in this proceeding, the Supreme Judicial Court has declared that the involuntarily committed mentally ill patients in Massachusetts state institutions enjoy the full panoply of rights set forth in
Rogers v. Commissioner,
On remand the district court shall issue a declaration stating that the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s recognition of substantive and .procedural rights of involuntarily committed mentally ill patients in Massachusetts has created for those patients a liberty interest protected under the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution. The sources of the patients’ liberty interest appear in the ten numbered paragraphs on pages 6-7 of this opinion. The district court shall also terminate its injunction governing the forcible medication of involuntarily committed mentally ill patients in Massachusetts. The district court may also address the issue of attorneys’ fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs to plaintiffs.
Notes
. For a more detailed description of the holdings of the district court and of this court, see
Mills v. Rogers,
. For another recent
pre-Pennhurst
instance of the Court avoiding federal constitutional questions by remanding to the court of appeals for consideration of potentially dispositive state law questions, see
Estelle v. Bullard,
. The Supreme Court remanded
Estelle v. Bullard, see supra
note 2, for reasons similar to those underlying the Court’s remand in
Mills v. Rogers.
The Fifth Circuit’s dismissal of
Bullard v. Estelle,
. Of course, failure to comply with state law would not automatically violate due process. Where substantive rights and procedural protections under state law exceed the minima required by the federal due process clause, actions that violate state law may nonetheless satisfy the requirements of federal due process.
. We do not mean to ascribe any bad faith to defendants. Their resistance may well have arisen not from a belief that defendants were not bound by the Supreme Judicial Court’s expression of state law, but rather from a belief that under Pennkurst the federal courts would lack jurisdiction to enforce, via contempt proceedings, defendants' compliance with an agreement to abide by the Supreme Judicial Court’s answers.
. Defendants have attempted tо revive an issue that has long since dropped from this case. They argue that in light of
Pennkurst
we should dismiss the district court’s seclusion injunction, which is based entirely on state law.
See Rogers v. Okin,
. The Massachusetts Suрreme Judicial Court had adopted the substituted judgment standard for deciding whether to administer medical or surgical treatment to incompetent patients in
Superintendent of Belchertown v. Saikewicz,
. The Supreme Judicial Court presented this standard after cataloguing known abuses of antipsychotic medication by officials who claimed to act in the incompetent patient's best interests, but who in fact followed agendas of convenience, punishment, and behavior modification. 390 Mass, at 508-09,
. The relevant New Jersey statutes and regulations are summarized in
Rennie v. Klein,
