Opinion
The trial court, on its own motion, granted the reestablishment of Charles Moore, Jr.’s conservatorship. On appeal, Moore contends a conservatorship cannot constitutionally be reestablished without a formal hearing and that Welfare and Institutions Code 1 section 5362 cannot be authority for any lesser process. We find Moore’s due process challenges lack merit and affirm the ex parte reestablishment order. However, we recognize Moore may be entitled to relief on writ of habeas corpus and accordingly decide this case without prejudice to Moore’s claim to extraordinary relief.
Factual and Procedural Background
On February 22, 1984, a county mental health counselor petitioned the superior court to appoint a conservator for Moore under the conservatorship provisions of the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act. (§ 5350 et seq.) An evidentiary hearing was held with Moore present and represented by appointed counsel. The trial court found Moore, due to a mental disorder, to be gravely disabled and consequently appointed a public conservator to oversee, among other things, his treatment and placement. Additionally, the trial court determined Moore was capable of registering to vote and refusing consent for medical treatment unrelated to his mental disability. However, the court determined he could not have a driver’s license, enter into contracts, or refuse treatment directly bearing on his grave disability. In accord with section 5361, Moore’s conservatorship was set for a one-year term.
On January 25, 1985, the clerk of the superior court, under section 5362, notified Moore, his appointed attorney, Malvina Abbott, his conservator and the supervisor of the Carmelita Board and Care Home where Moore was residing that Moore’s conservatorship would expire on March 12, 1985. In the language of section 5362, the notice also stated the conservator had to *724 petition the court to reestablish the conservatorship and “ [s]ubject to request for a court hearing by jury trial the court may, on its own motion, accept or reject the conservator’s petition.” The notice continued: “If the conservator petitions to reestablish conservatorship the conservatee, the professional person in charge of the facility in which the conservatee resides, [and] the conservatee’s attorney,. . . shall be notified. If any of them request it, there shall be a court hearing or a jury trial, whichever is requested, on the issue of whether the conservatee is still gravely disabled and in need of conservatorship. ...”
Subsequently the public conservator did petition to reestablish Moore’s conservatorship. Filed with the petition was the medical report of Drs. J. Bickford and E. Culbertson diagnosing Moore as a chronic paranoid schizophrenic, finding him still gravely disabled and recommending Moore’s conservatorship be reestablished. Under the authority of Probate Code section 1824 and San Diego Superior Court rule 5.90, a copy of the petition and the notice of the filing of the petition were mailed to Moore, Abbott and the director of the Carmelita Board and Care Home. The notice of filing again informed the recipients any of them could request a hearing or jury trial regarding the reestablishment.
After receiving the reestablishment petition and following San Diego County Superior Court rule 5.91, Abbott filed in the court a sworn declaration stating: “On 3/8/85, I ascertained that [Moore] does not oppose the reestablishment of the Conservatorship of his Person. [H] No request for a hearing is made at this time; ...” After receiving this declaration and reviewing the petition and submitted evidence, the trial court, on its own motion, reappointed Moore’s conservator. In contrast to his previous conservatorship term, Moore was permitted to possess a driver’s license and to enter into contracts. He was still, however, prohibited from refusing treatment intended to prevent or ameliorate his disability.
The Ex Parte Procedures Employed to Reestablish Moore’s Conservatorship Comport With the Constitutional Dictates of Procedural Due Process
Moore challenges the reestablishment of his conservatorship on procedural due process grounds; first arguing his notice of the proceedings was constitutionally inadequate and second asserting the reestablishment procedures were constitutionally insufficient. Preliminarily, we note during the pendency of this appeal the public conservator again petitioned to reestablish Moore’s conservatorship. After Moore apparently received a citation for conservatorship, a notice of the filing of the petition to reestablish the conservatorship, the petition to reestablish the conservatorship, and a notice
*725
of the conservatorship hearing and was subsequently given a formal hearing, the public conservator was reappointed and the conservatorship was extended for another term. Since Moore does not also challenge the constitutionality of the latest proceedings and since we find no facial invalidity in the reappointment, the present appeal is arguably moot.
(Consol. etc. Corp.
v.
United A. etc. Workers
(1946)
Moore first contends the service of notice here did not ensure he would be actually informed of the pending reestablishment and did not fully or adequately inform him of the legal disabilities attending a reestablishment conservatorship. We find both contentions meritless. If, as is often said, the opportunity to be heard is the fundamental requisite of constitutional due process (see, e.g.,
Grannis
v.
Ordean
(1914)
Section 5362 provides the conservatee as well as his attorney and the professional in charge of the facility in which the conservatee resides shall be notified, in person or by first class mail, of the impending expiration of the conservatorship at least 60 days before that date. The statutory notice of termination also informs the recipients they will be notified if the conservator decides to proceed with reappointment and that they may request a court hearing or jury trial to contest the continuing need for a conservatorship. Section 5350 provides, with some exceptions, procedures for establishing, administering and terminating conservatorships should comport with division 4 of the Probate Code. Probate Code section 1824 further provides a citation and a copy of the conservatorship petition shall be served on the proposed conservatee at least 15 days before a scheduled hearing. Service, under this section, “. . . shall be made in the manner provided in Section 415.10 [personal delivery] or 415.30 [service by mail with two copies of the notice and acknowledgment] or in such manner as may be authorized by the court. . . .’’To effect these statutory procedures in the reappointment context, the San Diego County Superior Court adopted local rules 5.89 and 5.90. Rule 5.89 requires a copy of the reappointment petition be “transmitted” to the facility where the conservatee resides at least 30 days before the conservatorship expires. Rule 5.90 provides: “Notice of the petition to reappoint the conservator shall be served by the conservator on the conservatee, the conservatee’s attorney and counselor in mental health, at least 15 days prior to the date of the hearing thereon. Said notice shall be served personally or by first class mail, postage prepaid.” Since Moore challenges the adequacy of the notice he received and since there was no reestablishment hearing, we need review the statutory scheme no further. However, we note that under the San Diego County Superior Court rules and the Welfare and Institutions and Probate Codes, a conservatee proceeding to hearing would receive notice 15 days before the hearing (rule 5.94) and would be required to attend except in three limited circumstances, the foremost being medical disability. (§ 5350; Prob. Code, § 1825.)
It requires little review to see these procedures have been designed to ensure that a proposed conservatee would be reasonably likely to be actually informed of a pending reestablishment proceeding. Moore nevertheless argues actual notice is not guaranteed under this scheme. However, as previously discussed, due process of law does not require such a guarantee. Here, the plan for alternative service by personal delivery or by mail, the requirement notice be provided at a number of different procedural steps, and the service of notice at each of these steps on others intimately involved *727 with both the conservatee and the conservatorship process are calculated to inform Moore and to preserve his opportunity to be heard. Indeed, Moore presents no evidence, and we find none, he was not actually informed of the proposed reestablishment here. In sum, we do not find the service of notice was, in any way, constitutionally infirm.
Moore next faults the content of the required notices. Specifically, he asserts the notices did not sufficiently outline the rights attaching to a conservatorship proceeding and thereby impaired his due process and statutory right to oppose the conservator’s reappointment. Again, this contention is without substance. “The purpose of notice under the Due Process Clause is to apprise the affected individual of, and permit adequate preparation for, an impending ‘hearing.’”
(Memphis Light, Gas & Water Div.
v.
Craft
(1978)
Moore counters the substance of the notices still falls short of the statutorily required contents of a citation for conservatorship. Under Probate Code section 1823, the clerk of the court is directed to issue a citation to a proposed conservatee setting forth the time and place of hearing as well as the legal standards by which the need for conservatorship is to be adjudged and rights, such as voting and contracting, which the conservatorship may curtail. Here, however, a formal hearing was not scheduled, and, as revealed in the medical recommendations and petition, the only restrictions sought on reestablishment were prohibitions on Moore’s choosing a residence and refusing to consent to medical treatment specifically related to his grave disability. Of these potential legal disabilities, Moore was fully informed by the reestablishment petition and accompanying documents. Thus, the information needed by Moore to prepare for and adequately oppose the impending conservatorship was given to him. That he did not specifically receive a citation of conservatorship under these circumstances is of no consequence to his constitutional right to due process. Parenthetically, we note the petition in this case appears to be a standard form and consequently may not, as it does here, parallel the necessary contents of the conservatorship citation in all cases. To avoid potential due process problems and assure a proposed conservatee is adequately informed, information in the *728 conservatorship citation bearing on the rights of and consequences to a proposed conservatee should be incorporated in the petition to reestablish a conservatorship or related documents even when the petition will be processed without a formal hearing or jury trial. (See Prob. Code, § 1828.)
The department of social services argues we need not undertake any of the above analysis since the adequacy of notice is a jurisdictional question and Moore, appearing generally through the affidavit of his attorney, in effect consented to personal jurisdiction and cannot now launch a due process challenge.
(Brown
v.
Douglas Aircraft Co.
(1958)
Moore next avers a conservatorship cannot constitutionally be reestablished with any less process than a hearing; the ex parte proceeding here thus being procedurally flawed. We cannot discern whether Moore grounds his challenge on state or federal constitutional standards and consequently review the procedures as applied here under both to ascertain their constitutional validity.
Procedural due process is a watchword, not the unwavering equivalent of a formal hearing. The question of whether due process has obtained can only be answered by scrutinizing the circumstances in which the deprivatory action arose.
(Greenholtz
v.
Nebraska Penal Inmates
(1979)
While the reestablishment of Moore’s conservatorship unquestionably intruded upon his liberty interests (see
Conservatorship of
Roulet (1979)
Here, then, the conservatorship statutes and local rules worked to directly inform the trial court Moore did not oppose the reestablishment of the conservatorship of his person and would not seek a hearing to contest it. The court, in turn, acted on its own motion. However, even assuming the court would have acted erroneously, Moore’s loss of liberty would have arguably been de minimis. Under the conservatorship scheme, an ex parte reestablishment can
be directly and immediately
challenged under section 5362 and similarly challenged thereafter under section 5364 or anytime by writ of habeas corpus.
(Henreid
v.
Superior Court
(1976)
Moore propounds several ancillary arguments to dissuade us from our conclusion. He first argues section 5365, which provides “[a] hearing shall be held on all petitions under this chapter within 30 days of the date of the petition,” manifests a legislative intent that hearings must be held in all reestablishment proceedings. However, it is a fundamental principle of statutory construction that in interpreting an interrelated statutory scheme, a specific provision controls a more general one.
(In re James M.
(1973)
Second, Moore argues language, “the trial judge may, on his or her own motion, accept or reject the conservator’s petition,” in section 5362, sub
*732
division (b), can only be construed under the Constitution to mean the trial court can permit or preclude the actual petitions to be lodged in the court. As previously stated, a construction of this section, as applied here, which empowers the trial court to grant or deny petitions is not violative of either the federal or state Constitution. Moreover, we find no reason in logic or legislative history to accept Moore’s interpretation. Third, Moore asserts
Conservatorship of Chambers
(1977)
Finally, Moore contends conservatees being gravely disabled, that is being in “[a] condition in which a person, as a result of a mental disorder, is unable to provide for his basic personal needs for food, clothing, or shelter” (§ 5008, subd. (h)(1)), cannot be said to be able to knowingly and intelligently “waive” a reestablishment hearing. The amici curiae
5
amplify this point and argue nothing less than an express written waiver should be considered sufficient and that, in any event, appointed counsel cannot waive the substantial rights of proposed conservatees. (See
Blanton
v.
Womancare, Inc.
(1985)
While we will affirm the reestablishment order, we do not decide the fact questions lurking in the waiver and authorization issues. Moore is free to pursue extraordinary relief, if warranted, to decide these questions and to right wrongs he may have suffered. We further recognize such a course may not be particularly fruitful in light of Moore’s most current and uncontested order to conservatorship.
Disposition
Affirmed without prejudice to Moore’s right to seek extraordinary relief.
Butler, J., and Lewis, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied December 30, 1986.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless otherwise specified.
As we point out infra, whether Moore actually waived or authorized counsel to waive his hearing right are issues of fact which we do not reach on this record.
Superior court rule 5.91 provides: “If the conservatee’s attorney determines that the *730 conservatee is not opposed to the reappointment of the conservator, and that there is no beneficial reason to attend or schedule a court hearing, then the attorney shall file a declaration consenting to the reappointment of conservator, stating the reasons for same and waiving hearing.
“The declaration, which may be made by way of the court form or by individualized statement, must be signed under penalty of perjury, and must be filed with the mental health clerk within 15 days of the date of mailing of the notice of petition for reappointment as evidenced by the proof of service by mail filed and served therewith.”
San Diego Superior Court rule 5.92 provides: “If the conservatee disagrees with the reappointment of the conservator or the conditions and disabilities imposed, the attorney shall request a hearing date thereon (if not already scheduled by the conservator) by filing a request for hearing with the mental health clerk within 15 days of the date of mailing of the notice of the petition for reappointment as evidenced by the proof of service by mail filed and served therewith."
Amicus curiae American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Southern California asks that we take judicial notice of the content of 30 similar ex parte reestablishment petitions. However, we refrain from doing so (Evid. Code, §§ 459, 452) and similarly do not address arguments related to the petition. We do, however, take notice the ex parte procedure has been used to reestablish at least 30 other conservatorships.
