INTRODUCTION
Wayne Saville appeals the order of the Burt County Mental Health Board (Board), as affirmed by the district court, finding Saville to be a mentally ill dangerous person, pursuant to Nеb. Rev. Stat. § 83-1009 (Reissue 1999), and committing him to the Lincoln Regional Center. For the reasons recited below, we affirm.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
On December 15,1999, the Burt County Attorney filed a petition before the Board alleging that Saville, who was incarcerated at the Department of Correctional Services, was a mentally ill dangerous person within the meaning of § 83-1009, who prеsented a substantial risk of harm to other persons and therefore must be committed to the custody of the State.
Pursuant to the petition, a hearing before the Board оf the Sixth Judicial District was held on December 27 and 28, 1999, and evidence was adduced. Following the hearing, on December 28, the Board issued an order adjudicating Saville as a mentally ill dangerous person who presented a substantial risk of serious harm to other persons within the near future and was in need of Board-ordered treatment. The Board furthеr ordered that Saville be retained in custody until such time as the Board determined the best available treatment alternative and that Saville undergo a psychological examination. Saville did not appeal this determination.
On February 3, 2000, a disposition hearing was held by the Board to consider the least restrictive treatment optiоns for Saville. At this hearing, a psychiatrist testified that he evaluated Saville on January 4 and that as a result of this evaluation, he recommended that Saville be confined in а restrictive treatment setting.
That same day, the Board issued an order of final disposition finding that there was clear and convincing evidence that Saville was a mentally ill dаngerous person and that neither voluntary hospitalization nor other treatment alternatives less restrictive of Saville’s liberty than a Board-ordered treatment disposition would suffice
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
Saville’s sole assigned error is that the district court erred in finding that there was clear and convincing evidencе to support the Board’s finding that Saville was a mentally ill dangerous person.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In reviewing a final order made by the district court in mental health commitment proceedings, an appellate court must affirm the order of the district court unless, as a matter of law, the order is not supported by clear and convincing evidence.
In re Interest of Tweedy,
ANALYSIS
Before we begin our analysis of the issue appealed, we note that Saville has appealed from the district court’s order affirming the Board’s order of final disposition datеd February 3, 2000. Although Saville appeals from the district court’s order affirming the dispositional order, Saville’s assigned error and argument relates exclusively to the Decembеr 28, 1999, order adjudicating Saville to be a mentally ill dangerous person. Therefore, we must decide whether or not the December 28 order adjudicating Saville as a mentаlly ill dangerous person was a final, appealable order.
Although it has long been held in juvenile cases that an adjudication order is a final, appealable order, see
In re Interest of Aufenkamp,
There are three types of final orders which may be reviewed on appeal. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1902 (Reissue 1995);
Jarrett
v.
Eichler,
Commitmеnt proceedings are judicial in nature, and the district courts must review the decisions of the mental health boards de novo on the record. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 83-1043 (Reissue 1999);
Lux
v.
Mental Health Board of Polk
County,
The December 28, 1999, order entered by the Board was not an order which determined the action and prevented a judgment, nor was it an order affecting a substantial right made upon summary application in an action after judgment had been rendered. Consequently, we must determine whether the Board’s order was an order affecting a substantial right made in a special proceeding.
A special proceeding entails civil statutory remedies not encompassed in
The order by the Board determining Saville to be а mentally ill dangerous person is not a statutory remedy encompassed within chapter 25 and, thus, involves an order made during a special proceeding. However, this dоes not end our inquiry. To be final and appealable, the order must affect a substantial right. “A substantial right is an essential legal right, not a mere technical right.”
Jarrett
v.
Eichler,
Although our research has not revealed any case law analyzing whether the substantial rights of an individual are affected by an order adjudicating him as a mentally ill dangerous person, the Nebraska Supreme Court has conducted an analysis of when the substantial rights of a party have been affected by an order finding a person not competent to stand trial. In
State v. Guatney,
We, therefore, find little reason or sense in suggesting that one may be deprived of his liberty under a court order finding him incompetent. . . and have no recourse from that order. The court, by virtue of its order, has . . . denied the appellant his liberty for an undetermined time. It is difficult, if not impossible, to see how that order, therefore, does not affect a substantial right or is not an оrder from which the appellant should be entitled to appeal pursuant to the provisions of § 25-1911.
In the instant case, the Board adjudicated Saville, for the first time on December 28, 1999, as a mentally ill dangerous person and ordered him to be retained in custody for an indeterminate amount of time pending the entry of an order of final disposition. Like State v. Guatney, supra, we now hold that an order adjudicating an individual to be a mentally ill dangerous person and ordering him retained for an indeterminate amount of time deprives a рerson of his liberty and that this denial clearly affects a substantial right. Because the order dated December 28,1999, adjudicating Saville as a mentally ill dangerous person рursuant to § 83-1009 was an order affecting a substantial right in a special proceeding, the December 28 order was a final order from which an appeal may be taken pursuant to § 83-1043.
Saville’s assigned error clearly relates to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the Board’s order adjudicating Saville as a mentally ill dangerous person. As stated above, the adjudication order filed on December 28, 1999, was a final and appeal-able order which had to be appealed within 30 days. See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1912 (Supp. 1999). Since no appeal was taken from the order adjudicating Saville to be a mentally ill dangerous person, he may not now question the sufficiency of the evidence upon which the Board relied in its adjudication order issued December 28. Compare,
In re Interest of C.D.C.,
Furthermore, Saville makes no assignments of errors, nor does he make any
Affirmed.
