*1309 Opinion
Deidre B. appeals from a judgment reestablishing conservatorship of her person. She contends the trial court violated her due process rights by accepting a stipulation filed by her attorney stating she consented to the reestablishment and waived her right to a formal hearing. We reject this contention.
We also reject Deidre’s assertion that we should consider a postjudgment declaration in which Deidre raises new factual allegations challenging her knowing consent to the stipulated reestablishment. Although filed with the trial court after the judgment, this declaration was never presented to the trial court for a ruling. When a conservatee seeks to challenge his or her consent after entry of a stipulated judgment, these new factual allegations should be resolved at the trial court level through a petition for rehearing or a habeas corpus petition. Pursuit of appellate remedies without obtaining a ruling from the trial court merely prolongs the process without providing the conservatee the opportunity to seek timely relief.
We affirm the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
On October 21, 2008, the San Diego County Public Conservator filed a petition to reestablish a conservatorship of Deidre under the Lanterman-Petris-Short (LPS) Act on the grounds that she remained gravely disabled and was unable to provide for her basic needs of food, clothing, and shelter. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 5000 et seq.) 1 The public conservator sought to place Deidre in a board and care facility and to impose various disabilities on her. 2 The petition was supported by the declarations of two physicians attesting to Deidre’s mental illness (chronic paranoid schizophrenia), her inability to provide for her basic needs, and her need for placement in a board and care facility.
Deidre and the public defender’s office were served with the citation, a copy of the petition, and a notice of the hearing date. These documents set forth the basis for the reestablishment, the requested disabilities and placement at a board and care facility, and the conservatee’s right to counsel, to appear at the hearing, and to request a jury trial.
*1310 On January 28, 2009, Deidre’s appointed attorney (Deputy Public Defender Susan Mclnemey) filed with the court a “Stipulation of Attorney to Reestablish L.P.S. Conservatorship.” The stipulation, signed under penalty of perjury by Mclnemey, stated that on January 26, 2009, she had personally contacted Deidre by telephone and discussed the reestablishment with her, including the proposed placement and disabilities. The stipulation stated Deidre had knowingly and willingly consented to renewal of the conservatorship, consented to the matter being handled by stipulation and without a formal court hearing, and consented to the proposed placement and disabilities without a formal hearing. 3
The stipulation was supported by a declaration entitled “Advisal to Proposed Conservatee” signed under penalty of perjury by Mclnemey setting forth the advisements she had given Deidre concerning the proposed reestablishment of the conservatorship. The advisements explained the nature and purpose of the proceedings, the consequences of reestablishment including the loss of certain rights, and the rights of the proposed conservatee to oppose the proceeding, to request a jury trial, and to be represented by counsel.
On February 3, 2009, the reestablishment petition was amended to request that Deidre be placed in a closed, locked facility. To support this, the county investigator submitted a declaration explaining that since November 23, 2008, Deidre had been in a locked facility rather than a board and care facility. Accordingly, the investigator stated that, with the concurrence of Mclnemey, this was the requested placement. However, on February 24, 2009 (the day of the reestablishment hearing), the petition was amended to again request placement in a board and care facility. In his declaration, the investigator explained that, again with the concurrence of Mclnemey, Deidre was ready to be discharged back to the board and care level because her condition had improved.
At the February 24, 2009 hearing on the reestablishment petition, Deputy Public Defender Stanley Jones appeared on behalf of Deidre (who was not present). Jones told the court that Mclnemey “was not convinced, based on discussions with [Deidre], that she was or was not contesting the reestablishment.” To resolve this uncertainty, Jones stated that he had spoken to Deidre that morning by telephone, and she indicated she did not want to contest the *1311 proceeding or come to court. 4 The trial court accepted the prior stipulation filed by Mclnemey, found that Deidre’s presence had been waived by her counsel, and entered a judgment ordering that the conservatorship be reestablished with the requested disabilities and that placement be in a board and care facility.
Thereafter, on March 11, 2009, Deidre filed a declaration with the trial court stating that she believed she was able to provide for her basic needs. In the declaration, she claimed that Mclnemey had contacted her one time in a five-minute phone conversation, but did not advise her of her due process rights, including her right to request and appear at a court hearing or jury trial, and did not advise her of the disabilities that would be imposed on her. She stated that her attorney merely informed her that the public conservator would be appointed as her conservator, and that she had not opposed the reestablishment because her attorney “told [her] nothing.” Further, she claimed the county investigator told her that if she waived her right to a hearing, he would move her to a board and care facility.
The record does not reflect the circumstances under which the declaration was generated. Apparently, Deidre’s trial counsel was unaware of the declaration; the conservator was not served with a copy of the declaration; the declaration was unaccompanied by any pleading requesting review by the trial court; and the trial court never considered or ruled upon the matters raised in the declaration.
On March 12, 2009, Deidre filed a notice of appeal to contest the court’s reestablishment judgment. 5
DISCUSSION
Deidre contends the trial court violated her due process rights when it accepted the stipulation from her attorney stating that she consented to the reestablishment and waived her right to a formal hearing. Deidre asserts the court should not have accepted the stipulation once Attorney Jones informed the court that Attorney Mclnemey was not certain Deidre was consenting to reestablishment of the conservatorship.
*1312
As Deidre recognizes, in prior cases we have evaluated procedures for reestablishing a conservatorship by a stipulated order and concluded they comport with due process.
(Conservatorship of Tian L.
(2007)
The reestablishment hearing is conducted according to the same rules that govern the initial establishment of a conservatorship. (§§ 5350, subd. (d), 5362, subds. (a), (b); rule 8.2.34;
Conservatorship of Kevin M.
(1996)
The conservatee must be present at the reestablishment hearing, advised about his or her due process rights and the nature and consequences of a conservatorship, and questioned about his or her opinion concerning the proposed conservatorship. (Prob. Code, §§ 1825, subd. (a), 1828, subds. (a),
*1313
(b);
Tian, supra,
In Moore, this court rejected the conservatee’s contention that a formal hearing was required to reestablish a conservatorship, noting that “the reestablishment procedures employed numerous checks against the risk of erroneous intrusion,” including notice of the reestablishment proceeding and advisement concerning the disabilities of conservatorship and the right to contest the reestablishment. (Moore, supra, 185 Cal.App.3d at pp. 728-730.) Moore concluded there was no due process violation arising from the procedures that permitted a conservatee to waive the right to a full hearing and waive the right to appear and be questioned at the hearing. (Id. at pp. 730-733.) Moore reasoned that the procedures encouraged the conservatee’s participation, ensured that the conservatee’s counsel would communicate with the court regarding a waiver by the conservatee, and permitted the conservatee to avoid a potentially uncomfortable and disruptive court appearance when he or she did not oppose reestablishment. (Ibid.) Moore underscored that a conservatee’s due process rights were further protected because if there were posthearing concerns about the conservatee’s consent, the conservatee could immediately request a full court or jury trial, and could *1314 also thereafter file a rehearing petition under section 5364 or a petition for writ of habeas corpus. (Moore, supra, at pp. 730, 732-733.) 10
Similarly, in
Tian,
we rejected the conservatee’s contention that the stipulation signed by the conservatee’s counsel was deficient because it did not include the conservatee’s signature.
(Tian, supra,
Here, Deidre explains that she “is not challenging the adequacy of the [stipulation] form or the contents of the stipulation.” Further, she is not arguing that “she should have been forced to come to court . . . .” Rather, Deidre contends that under the circumstances of this case the trial court should not have accepted the stipulation once Jones advised the court that Mclnemey was not convinced that Deidre was consenting to the reestablishment. She argues that when Jones informed the court about the uncertainty concerning her consent, the court did not adequately confirm that she had knowingly consented and thus the stipulation was rendered ineffective. We are not persuaded.
According to Jones, Mclnemey had discussions with Deidre that generated doubts about Deidre’s consent. The record does not reflect when these discussions occurred between Mclnemey and Deidre, but we presume they occurred
after
Mclnemey filed the stipulation on January 28 because otherwise Mclnemey, as Deidre’s presumably competent representative, would not have filed the stipulation.
(Conservatorship of Ivey, supra,
Deidre also asserts the court should not have accepted the stipulation because neither she nor Mclnemey were present at the hearing to be questioned. She contends that Jones’s statements at the hearing did not clarify whether she wished to contest the hearing even though she did not want to come to court. To the contrary, Jones informed the court that Deidre indicated “she did not wish to contest. . . .” This confirmed the sworn statement from Mclnemey in the stipulation that Deidre consented to reestablishment and wanted the matter handled by stipulation.
Deidre also asserts that Jones did not clarify whether she knew she could contest the proceeding without coming to court. It is not clear that this approach would have been permissible. (See Prob. Code, § 1825, subd. (a)(3) [conservatee must be present at hearing unless he or she does not wish to contest the conservatorship].) In any event, Mclnemey’s declaration states that she advised Deidre that she had the right to oppose the proceeding. Further, Jones called Deidre to ensure that she was still consenting to reestablishment. These communications show that Deidre was aware that she could tell counsel she wanted to protest reestablishment had this been her intent.
Deidre further asserts the trial court should not have accepted the stipulation based merely on a phone call from Mclnemey to her. She contends that it would be difficult for an attorney in a phone call to fully explain to an allegedly gravely disabled person the disabilities and rights concerning a conservatorship. Likewise, she asserts Jones should not have relied on a phone call to confirm her consent, but should have met with her personally. The claim that an attorney cannot effectively communicate with a conservatee by means of a telephone conversation is speculative. The telephone is a standard means of communication and is routinely relied upon to transmit information. Deidre has presented no authority supporting her proposition that decisions made as a result of information conveyed in a telephone *1316 conversation should be evaluated differently, or are any less reliable, than decisions made based on a face-to-face conversation. Absent a showing that Deidre is unable to understand telephone communications, the trial court was not required to reject the stipulation on this basis.
Deidre asserts the circumstances of this case are comparable to those in
Conservatorship of Christopher A., supra,
In contrast, here the court was provided with a sworn stipulation from Deidre’s counsel stating she had communicated with Deidre, and Deidre consented to reestablishment of the conservatorship by stipulation and to the proposed placement and disabilities without a formal hearing. Thus, unlike the situation in
Christopher A.,
the record showed express communication to Deidre during which Deidre provided consent to the stipulation. The submission of the sworn stipulation from her counsel, coupled with her right to request posthearing review before the superior court in the event of any miscommunications with her counsel, protected her due process interests.
(Tian, supra,
149 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1031-1032;
Moore, supra,
To support her challenge to the court’s acceptance of the stipulation, Deidre notes that Mclnemey failed to check a box on the stipulation form reflecting that the attorney had read the petition for reestablishment and the medical declaration. 12 She asserts that if her attorney did not read the petition and medical declaration “it would have been hard if not impossible to know of and to fully inform [her] of the proposed disabilities.” Mclnemey’s mere failure to check this particular box on the stipulation form does not show she was unaware of the proposed disabilities. Mclnemey checked the box stating that she had “discussed the proposed placement and disabilities with my client . . . .” As Deidre’s presumably competent representative, Mclnemey could not have discussed the proposed placement and disabilities unless she knew what they were. Mclnemey’s statement under penalty of perjury that she had discussed the proposed disabilities shows that she was aware of them and capable of explaining them to Deidre.
*1317 Deidre additionally asserts that when Jones advised the court about Mclnemey’s doubts about Deidre’s consent, the court should have confirmed that she had the capacity to consent. Jones’s statement that Mclnemey was not certain Deidre was consenting did not make any reference to Deidre’s lack of ability to consent. The court was entitled to assume that Mclnemey, as Deidre’s competent advocate, would not have submitted the stipulation attesting to Deidre’s consent unless she was satisfied Deidre understood what she was saying when she spoke with her on the phone.
In a related argument, Deidre asserts that it was incongmous for the court to find she was incapable of entering into contracts or refusing medical treatment as part of the imposed disabilities (see fn. 2,
ante),
but at the same time to accept the stipulation stating she had knowingly consented to reestablishment. The fact that Deidre may be unable to protect herself in contractual relationships or voluntarily recognize and comply with her need for medical treatment does not necessarily mean she could not understand her attorney’s explanation of the conservatorship proceedings and decide whether she wanted to contest them. Thus, the mere fact of her grave disability did not require the trial court to conclude she could not provide informed consent. (See
Moore, supra,
Finally, Deidre’s declaration claiming that she was not fully advised by her attorney and that she was misled by the investigator is not properly before us for consideration. The declaration was filed with the trial court, but apparently the matter was not pursued before the trial court so as to secure its consideration and mling on the matter. We decline to consider the factual allegations set forth in the declaration for the first time on appeal. (See
In re Zeth S.
(2003)
Given our conclusion that the trial court did not err in accepting the stipulation, we need not address Deidre’s assertion that absent the stipulation there was insufficient evidence to support the reestablishment judgment.
*1318 DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
McConnell, P. J., and Irion, J., concurred.
Notes
Subsequent statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code, unless otherwise specified.
The requested disabilities were loss of the rights to drive a vehicle, enter into contracts, refuse or consent to medical treatment and medication related to her mental disorder, and possess a firearm.
The stipulation states: “I have discussed reestablishment with my client who knowingly and willingly consents to its renewal, and further consents to the matter being handled by stipulation and without a formal court hearing.” “I have also discussed the proposed placement and disabilities with my client who . . . knowingly and willingly consents to their imposition without a formal [court] hearing . . . .”
Jones stated, “So [the county investigator] was good enough this morning to accommodate the whole process. And, actually, [Deidre] was not brought in, but we did speak to her by phone; I spoke to her. [][] She indicated that she did not wish to contest, she did not wish to attend court, and actually was not going to be transported down. She refused to attend.”
Deidre’s declaration, which was on a typed form with statements to answer “yes” or “no” and blanks to fill in, does not contain the name of any representative or person assisting Deidre. We note the notice of appeal was submitted by a private attorney rather than Deidre’s appointed trial counsel. It is possible the declaration was filed with the assistance of this private attorney.
Section 5350 requires, with some exceptions, that the procedures for LPS conservatorships comport with Probate Code provisions governing conservatorships.
All further rule references are to the San Diego County Superior Court Local Rules.
If the conservatee requests a court or jury trial before the initial hearing, the initial hearing is waived. (§ 5350, subd. (d).)
Section 5364 permits a conservatee to petition for a rehearing once every six months, stating: “At any time, the conservatee may petition the superior court for a rehearing as to his status as a conservatee. However, after the filing of the first petition for rehearing pursuant to this section, no further petition for rehearing shall be submitted for a period of six months.”
The rehearing statute (§ 5364) is typically used to challenge the merits of the grave disability finding, and at the rehearing the conservatee does not have the right to a jury trial and bears the burden to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he or she is no longer gravely disabled. (See
Conservatorship of Amanda B., supra,
A case involving a conservatorship judgment based on the unsworn statement from the conservatee’s counsel that the conservatee did not contest the conservatorship and waived his presence at the hearing (which was contrary to the county investigator’s statement that the conservatee wanted to contest the conservatorship) is currently on review before the California Supreme Court. (Conservatorship of John L. (Cal.App.), review granted Dec. 12, 2007, S157151.)
This portion of the stipulation form states: “I have read the Petition for Reestablishment and the Medical Declaration and I stipulate to the placement and disabilities as set forth therein and to the reestablishment of the Conservatorship.”
