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THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
In the Matter of the Necessity for the )
Hospitalization of ) Supreme Court No. S-16834
)
PAIGE M. ) Superior Court No. 1SI-16-00074 PR
)
) OPINION
)
) No. 7324 – December 21, 2018
Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First
Judicial District, Sitka, Leonard Devaney, Judge pro tem.
Appearances: Michael Jude Pate and Rachel E. Cella,
Assistant Public Defenders, and Quinlan Steiner, Public
Defender, Anchorage, for Paige M. Anna Jay, Assistant
Attorney General, Anchorage, and Jahna Lindemuth,
Attorney General, Juneau, for State of Alaska and
Department of Health and Social Services.
Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, Maassen,
and Carney, Justices.
BOLGER, Chief Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
A psychologist at a mental health clinic petitioned to have a patient
involuntarily hospitalized. The superior court held a hearing on the petition at which
only the psychologist gave substantive testimony. The court granted the petition, and the
patient was hospitalized. The patient now appeals the court’s denial of her motion to
vacate the involuntary hospitalization order. Because the superior court failed to conduct
a screening investigation that met statutory requirements, and because this failure was
not harmless error, we reverse the superior court’s denial of the patient’s motion to
vacate.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In November 2016 a psychologist at Neurobehavioral Consultants, LLC
filed a “Petition for Order Authorizing Hospitalization” of Paige M.,1 an individual the
clinic had been treating for approximately one year.2 The psychologist indicated on the
petition form that she had interviewed Paige one week prior. The psychologist also
indicated that she believed Paige was mentally ill and “gravely disabled or likely to cause
serious harm to []herself or others” as a result of her mental illness.3 The psychologist
explained that “[t]he risk(s) of self-neglect and self-harm are discussed in detail” in clinic
notes she had attached to the petition and alleged that “[m]ost recently, [Paige] admitted
needing ‘safety checks’ by S[itka] P[olice] D[epartment], due to medical and suicidal
concerns, then hung a note on her door, refusing to answer the door for [the police].”
The Sitka superior court held a hearing on the petition that evening. The
only people in attendance were the psychologist and a representative of Sitka Counseling
and Prevention Services (SCPS), which arranges for transportation and coordination with
1
We use a pseudonym to protect Paige’s privacy.
2
Alaska Statute 47.30.700 provides that “any adult” may file a petition for
a person’s involuntary hospitalization and articulates procedures to be followed after
such a petition is filed.
3
See AS 47.30.700(b) (“The petition . . . must allege that the respondent is
reasonably believed to present a likelihood of serious harm to self or others or is gravely
disabled as a result of mental illness and must specify the factual information on which
that belief is based.”).
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hospitals after a hospitalization petition is granted. The court confirmed that the SCPS
representative had no additional information related to the petition and conducted a voir
dire examination of the psychologist, who testified to Paige’s behavior over the last
month. The court observed that although it was “clear that [Paige] has many mental
health diagnoses,” the court “wasn’t getting the information [it] felt like [it] needed” to
make a finding necessary to grant the petition.4 The court accordingly requested “a little
bit more information about whether . . . in [the psychologist’s] opinion [Paige was] likely
to cause serious harm to herself right now.”
The psychologist replied that there were multiple reasons for believing
Paige was likely to cause serious harm to herself; one was Paige’s “very recent lack of
compliance in her own treatment plan and self-care,” which the psychologist stated was
particularly significant in light of Paige’s ailments, including her propensity to suddenly
lose consciousness. The psychologist added that Paige’s conduct four days prior, when
she arrived at the clinic and then abruptly left, was especially concerning “knowing that
she’s been suicidal, that she’s been actively entertaining the thought of suicide, [and] that
she has a history of doing this with several different means available to her.” The court
questioned the psychologist whether Paige would have persisted in this “state of mind”
if the psychologist had seen her over the weekend, but the psychologist was unable to
answer the question. The court also asked if Paige had a legal guardian who could check
in on her, but the psychologist said that she did not and that she was also “estranged from
her nuclear family” and “[v]ery isolated.” Ultimately the court asked the psychologist:
“Based on your education, training, and experience, . . . [and] given all these warning
4
Cf. AS 47.30.700(a) (stating that if certain conditions are met, “a judge may
issue an ex parte order orally or in writing, stating that there is probable cause to believe
the respondent is mentally ill and that condition causes the respondent to be gravely
disabled or to present a likelihood of serious harm to self or others”).
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signs and the decompensation that you’re seeing, do you believe that [Paige is] likely to
cause serious harm to herself?” When the psychologist replied in the affirmative, the
court stated that it would grant the order.
That evening the court issued an order authorizing Paige’s hospitalization
under AS 47.30.700. The court found that there was probable cause to believe that Paige
was mentally ill, that she was likely to cause serious harm to herself, and that she was
gravely disabled.5 The court also indicated that Paige had been interviewed by the
psychologist “in regard to the petition” one week earlier. The same evening Sitka police
removed Paige from her home and placed her in a jail cell overnight. The following day
she was transported from Sitka to the Alaska Psychiatric Institute in Anchorage, where
she was hospitalized from November 2 to November 7.6
On November 30 Paige filed a motion to vacate the order authorizing her
hospitalization. She argued that the superior court had violated AS 47.30.700 by failing
to interview her after the petition was filed, that her due process rights had been violated,
and that the evidence presented to the court could not support the findings needed to
order involuntary hospitalization. After two hearings in April and June 2017, the court
issued an order denying Paige’s motion to vacate in July 2017. In rejecting Paige’s
arguments, the court acknowledged AS 47.30.700’s screening investigation requirement
but asserted that petitions filed by mental health professionals “are usually complete and
5
See AS 47.30.700(a).
6
It is not clear why Paige was hospitalized for longer than 72 hours without
a second commitment hearing. See AS 47.30.715 (“When a facility receives a proper
order for evaluation, it shall accept the order and the respondent for an evaluation period
not to exceed 72 hours. . . . The court shall set a date, time, and place for a 30-day
commitment hearing, to be held if needed within 72 hours after the respondent’s
arrival.”); AS 47.30.725 (describing respondents’ rights and respondent-notification
requirements for involuntary detention under, among other statutes, AS 47.30.700).
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contain the essence of the screening investigation.” The court concluded that neither
AS 47.30.700 nor due process principles had been violated, and that testimony from the
psychologist provided sufficient evidence to support the court’s probable cause finding.
Paige moved for reconsideration and for an opportunity to supplement the record; this
motion was also denied. Paige appeals the denial of both her motion to vacate and her
motion to supplement the record.
III. DISCUSSION
Paige’s central arguments for reversal on appeal are: (1) that the superior
court violated AS 47.30.700 and (2) that the court erred by concluding there was
probable cause to order temporary hospitalization.7 In the alternative Paige argues that
the case should be remanded with instructions that the trial court permit her to
supplement the record. We reverse the superior court’s denial of Paige’s motion to
vacate and thus do not address Paige’s alternative argument. And because we reverse
on statutory grounds, we also do not address her probable cause arguments.
Paige argues that the trial court violated AS 47.30.700 by not ensuring that
a full screening investigation was conducted before it issued the order for her involuntary
hospitalization. We agree. Alaska law provides two avenues for initiating involuntary
hospitalization for a mental health evaluation — one for emergency situations and one
for non-emergency circumstances. The emergency detention statute, AS 47.30.705,
7
In her reply brief and at oral argument, Paige argued that the procedures
followed in her case violated her right to due process. Because our decision rests on
statutory grounds, it is not necessary to consider either the merits of this argument or
whether it was waived for insufficient briefing. See In re Hospitalization of Heather R.,
366 P.3d 530, 533 n.17 (Alaska 2016) (vacating an evaluation order on statutory basis
and therefore declining to address appellant’s due process argument). We also note that
although we have stated that “[a]ppeals from evaluation orders are moot after the
commitment period has expired,” the parties did not raise the issue in their briefs, and
thus we do not address it here. Id. at 532.
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authorizes a peace officer or a mental health professional granted authority by the statute
to “cause [a respondent] to be taken into custody” without first petitioning a court. But
the person who initiates this emergency procedure must have “probable cause to believe
that [the respondent] is gravely disabled or is suffering from mental illness and is likely
to cause serious harm to self or others of such immediate nature that considerations of
safety do not allow initiation of involuntary commitment procedures.”8 In this case Paige
was not in custody when the petition for her involuntary hospitalization was filed, so the
emergency detention statute did not apply.
Alaska Statute 47.30.700 provides the second, non-emergency, avenue to
initiate involuntary hospitalization for a mental health evaluation. It allows any adult to
petition for involuntary hospitalization:
Upon petition of any adult, a judge shall immediately conduct
a screening investigation or direct a local mental health
professional . . . to conduct a screening investigation of the
person alleged to be mentally ill and, as a result of that
condition, alleged to be gravely disabled or to present a
likelihood of serious harm to self or others. Within 48 hours
after the completion of the screening investigation, a judge
may issue an ex parte order orally or in writing, stating that
there is probable cause to believe the respondent is mentally
ill and that condition causes the respondent to be gravely
disabled or to present a likelihood of serious harm to self or
others.[9]
The statute identifies three key events that must occur before an individual may be
involuntarily hospitalized. First an adult must petition a superior court for the
respondent’s involuntary hospitalization. Second a judge or mental health professional
must conduct a screening investigation to evaluate the allegations in the petition. Third
8
AS 47.30.705.
9
AS 47.30.700(a).
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the court must find probable cause that the respondent is mentally ill and that this mental
illness causes the respondent to be gravely disabled or to present a likelihood of serious
harm to self or others. Only then may a judge issue an ex parte order for the
respondent’s involuntary hospitalization.
Applying AS 47.30.700, the non-emergency statute, to this case, the court
conducted an inadequate screening investigation in violation of that statute when, absent
a finding that a post-petition interview was not reasonably possible, it did not require
Paige to be interviewed as part of the investigation. Because this was not harmless error,
we reverse.
A. The Screening Investigation Statute Required A Post-Petition
Interview With Paige If Reasonably Possible.
We first interpreted the “screening investigation” language of AS 47.30.700
in In re Hospitalization of Heather R.10 In that case a patient appealed her hospitalization
order, arguing that the court had violated AS 47.30.700 by failing to conduct a complete
screening investigation before issuing the order.11 The court’s screening investigation
had included neither an interview with the patient nor any attempt to ensure an interview
was conducted.12 Relying on the language of AS 47.30.700 and AS 47.30.915, we held
that “a screening investigation should omit an interview with the respondent only if such
an interview would not be reasonably possible” and vacated the order authorizing the
hospitalization.13 In re Heather R. confirms that a screening investigation should, if
reasonably possible, include an interview with the respondent.
10
366 P.3d 530 (Alaska 2016).
11
Id. at 533.
12
Id.
13
Id.
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Paige contends that the superior court’s hearing did not comply with the
screening investigation requirement of AS 47.30.700 because it included neither an
interview with her nor a finding that such an interview was not reasonably possible. The
State contends that the superior court satisfied the statutory requirements by relying on
the psychologist’s petition, which it argues contained the equivalent of a screening
investigation conducted by a mental health professional, including a respondent
interview — the psychologist’s earlier conversation with Paige. The State further argues
that the superior court was not required to conduct or direct a second investigation after
establishing that the psychologist’s petition constituted the functional equivalent of a
screening investigation.
Ultimately at issue is whether, absent a finding that a post-petition
respondent interview is not reasonably possible, AS 47.30.700’s screening investigation
requirement can be satisfied with a pre-petition respondent interview. This is a question
of statutory construction — a question of law to which “[t]his court applies its
independent judgment.”14 “When reviewing questions of law, this court adopts ‘the rule
of law most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy.’ ”15
“Interpretation of a statute begins with its text,”16 and the plain text of the
two implicated statutes — AS 47.30.700 and AS 47.30.915(19) — indicates that a
screening investigation must include, if possible, a post-petition interview with the
respondent. The most natural reading of the phrase “[u]pon the petition” in
14
Id. at 531-32 (citing Alaska Conservation Found. v. Pebble Ltd. P’ship, 350
P.3d 273, 279 (Alaska 2015)).
15
Id. at 532 (quoting Nunamta Aulukestai v. State, Dep’t of Nat. Res., 351
P.3d 1041, 1052 (Alaska 2015)).
16
City of Valdez v. State, 372 P.3d 240, 249 (Alaska 2016) (citing City of
Kenai v. Friends of the Recreation Ctr., Inc., 129 P.3d 452, 458-59 (Alaska 2006)).
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AS 47.30.700 suggests that the filing of a petition triggers the judge’s initiation of the
screening investigation; thus the filing of a petition necessarily precedes an
investigation.17 Furthermore AS 47.30.915 defines a “screening investigation” as “the
investigation and review of facts that have been alleged to warrant emergency
examination or treatment.”18 This wording further indicates that the screening
investigation should occur after the petition has been filed.
Alaska Statute 47.30.915 lists the components of a screening investigation,
one of which is an “interview[] with . . . , if possible, the respondent.”19 This language
indicates that a screening investigation should include an interview in all instances in
which it is possible to conduct one.20
Taken together the two statutes indicate that: (1) the required screening
investigation should take place after a petition has been filed, and (2) the screening
investigation should, if possible, include an interview with the respondent. Accordingly
the statutory language supports Paige’s assertion that a court violates AS 47.30.700 when
it neither ensures that a post-petition interview with the respondent is conducted nor
attempts to determine whether conducting such an interview would be reasonably
possible.
17
See Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co. v. Graham-Gonzalez, 107 P.3d 279, 284 (Alaska
2005) (“In assessing statutory language, ‘unless words have acquired a peculiar meaning,
by virtue of statutory definition or judicial construction, they are to be construed in
accordance with their common usage.’ ” (quoting Muller v. BP Expl. (Alaska) Inc., 923
P.2d 783, 788 (Alaska 1996))).
18
AS 47.30.915(19) (emphasis added).
19
Id.
20
See In re Heather R., 366 P.3d at 533.
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The State characterizes Paige’s textual interpretation as “overly formalistic
and . . . not necessary to ensure fidelity to the statute’s purpose.” It is true that when
interpreting statutes, we seek “to give effect to the legislature’s intent, with due regard
for the meaning the statutory language conveys to others.”21 We have “rejected a
mechanical application of the plain meaning rule in matters of statutory interpretation,”22
instead “ ‘adopt[ing] a sliding scale approach,’ under which ‘[t]he plainer the statutory
language is, the more convincing the evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent
must be.’ ”23 But the statutory language is clear in this case, and we see no indication of
legislative purpose or intent compelling enough to depart from it.
The overall statutory scheme supports our reading.24 It provides two
avenues to initiate involuntary hospitalization for a mental health evaluation. In
AS 47.30.705, the emergency detention avenue, the legislature provided a method for
circumventing the screening investigation when necessary. This supports strict
adherence to the screening investigation requirement set forth in AS 47.30.700, the non
emergency detention avenue; we need not read emergency procedures into the text of
AS 47.30.700 when the legislature has already accounted for them elsewhere.
21
Graham-Gonzalez, 107 P.3d at 284 (quoting Muller, 923 P.2d at 787).
22
Id. (quoting Muller, 923 P.3d at 787).
23
City of Kenai v. Friends of the Recreation Ctr., Inc., 129 P.3d 452, 459
(Alaska 2006) (second alteration in original) (quoting Graham-Gonzalez, 107 P.3d at
284).
24
We sometimes consider the overall statutory scheme when interpreting
specific language. See City of Valdez v. State, 372 P.3d 240, 249-51, 252-53 (Alaska
2016).
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Policy considerations also do not counsel a more permissive reading of
AS 47.30.700.25 The State argues that requiring post-petition interviews where
reasonably possible “place[s] unwarranted demands on judicial resources.” But we are
not convinced. The cost associated with post-petition interviews is minimal — in this
case the court could have conducted a satisfactory interview simply by inviting Paige to
attend and testify at the hearing.26 And the efforts a court must make to conduct an
interview are not so extensive as to place a serious demand on judicial resources.27
Moreover requiring post-petition interviews can reduce needless waste when the
interview reveals that involuntary hospitalization is not necessary. And while it may
seem wasteful or unnecessary to conduct a post-petition interview in some instances (for
example where a pre-petition interview takes place the same day that a petition is filed),
this downside is outweighed by the benefits of a bright-line rule requiring a post-petition
interview where reasonably possible. Such a bright-line rule eliminates uncertainty
about how recent a satisfactory interview must be, provides a check to ensure that the
information from the interview is recent enough to be relevant, and preserves the
screening investigation as a tool for evaluating the allegations of a petition at the time of
its filing.
Accordingly we hold that after a court is petitioned to involuntarily
25
We have also looked to policy considerations to assist our interpretation of
statutory language. See id. at 252-53.
26
See In re Hospitalization of Heather R., 366 P.3d 530, 533 n.20 (Alaska
2016) (“In this case, the master could have satisfied the statute by providing notice of the
hearing to Heather and allowing her to appear and testify.”).
27
We observed in In re Heather R. for example, that it may not be reasonably
possible to obtain an interview if the respondent is incapacitated or unwilling to be
interviewed — situations where the burden on the court to obtain an interview could
indeed prove significant. See id. at 533.
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hospitalize a respondent under AS 47.30.700, the court must either itself conduct a
screening investigation or appoint a local mental health professional to do so. This
screening investigation must include post-petition interviews with the person(s) making
the allegations, any other significant witnesses, and if reasonably possible, the
respondent.28 In Paige’s case the court did not appoint a mental health professional to
conduct an investigation. And no one from the court tried to contact Paige to conduct
a post-petition respondent interview. Without a finding that such an interview was not
reasonably possible, Paige’s brief contact with the clinic several days before her
involuntary hospitalization was not adequate to satisfy the screening investigation
requirement.
B. The Failure To Conduct An Adequate Screening Investigation Was
Not Harmless Error.
If a trial court errs, we then determine whether the error was harmless.29
When there is minimal evidence for a ruling and the court’s error involves exclusion of
pertinent evidence, we have held that the error was likely prejudicial and not harmless.30
28
AS 47.30.915(19); In re Heather R., 366 P.3d at 533.
29
Alaska R. Civ. P. 61 (“[N]o error or defect in any ruling or order or in
anything done or omitted by the court . . . is ground for granting a new trial or for setting
aside a verdict or for vacating, modifying or otherwise disturbing a judgment or order,
unless refusal to take such action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial
justice.”); see also, e.g., Solomon v. Solomon, 420 P.3d 1234, 1242-43 (Alaska 2018)
(conducting harmless error analysis before vacating the superior court’s domestic
violence determination for failure to make adequate findings).
30
See, e.g., In re Heather R., 366 P.3d at 533-34; Klawock Heenya Corp. v.
Dawson Constr./Hank’s Excavation, 778 P.2d 219, 220-21 (Alaska 1989) (holding that
superior court’s exclusion of evidence was not harmless error because the other evidence
was “flimsy at best”).
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In this case the evidence supporting the court’s findings was weak; the court’s failure to
require a current interview of Paige therefore was not harmless error.
First there was little support for the superior court’s finding that Paige was
“gravely disabled.” Alaska Statute 47.30.915(9) defines a gravely disabled person as a
person who is either (a) “in danger of physical harm arising from such complete neglect
of . . . personal safety as to render serious accident, illness, or death highly probable”31
or (b) in danger of “severe and abnormal mental, emotional, or physical distress.”32 But
the court made no factual finding that Paige’s noncompliance with her treatment plan
made it highly probable that serious harm would result from her alleged “history of
passing out” — the only condition with which she was diagnosed that could plausibly
support a conclusion she was in danger of “physical harm.” Moreover Paige in no way
exhibited the level of “distress” we have associated with the definition of “gravely
disabled” in AS 47.30.915(9)(B)33 — Paige previously had stated that she avoided
treatment because of a toothache and she had made affirmative efforts to address her
personal safety, scheduling medical and dental appointments for the week following the
petition. At the November 1 hearing, the court acknowledged that Paige might be fine,
expressing “concern [that] she’s at home, she has a toothache, she just doesn’t want to
answer the door, but she’s feeling great.” Had Paige been interviewed after the petition
was filed, this concern could have been addressed.
31
AS 47.30.915(9)(A).
32
AS 47.30.915(9)(B).
33
See Wetherhorn v. Alaska Psychiatric Inst., 156 P.3d 371, 378 (Alaska
2007) (construing “distress” as “a level of incapacity that prevents the person in question
from being able to live safely outside of a controlled environment”).
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There was also little support for the superior court’s finding that Paige was
likely to cause serious harm to herself within the statutory definition.34 There was no
evidence indicating that she had recently “caused” or “attempted” such harm, and the
evidence the State relies on to show that she had “threatened” such harm is ambiguous.
The State contends that Paige’s alleged “chronic and recent” suicidal ideation in the
preceding days leading up to November 1, along with her self-acknowledged tendency
to isolate herself when experiencing mental health crises, meant that her withdrawal from
treatment on November 1 “signaled an increased threat of suicidal behavior.” While this
evidence may support a finding that Paige experienced suicidal ideation, it does not
clearly establish that she threatened self-harm, as the statute required.
The marginal evidence supporting the superior court’s probable cause
findings thus establishes that the failure to conduct a post-petition interview with Paige
“had a prejudicial effect on the outcome of the hearing.”35
IV. CONCLUSION
We therefore REVERSE the superior court’s decision denying Paige’s
motion to vacate her hospitalization order.
34
See AS 47.30.915(12)(A) (defining one who is “likely to cause serious
harm” as a person who “poses a substantial risk of bodily harm to that person’s self, as
manifested by recent behavior causing, attempting, or threatening that harm”).
35
In re Heather R., 366 P.3d at 534.
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