IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA19-333
Filed: 7 January 2020
Pitt County, No. 18 CVD 2742
IN THE MATTER OF: S.C.
Appeal by Respondent from order entered 10 October 2018 by Judge Brian
DeSoto in Pitt County District Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 15 October 2019.
The Graham.Nuckolls.Conner. Law Firm, PLLC, by Timothy E. Heinle, for the
Petitioner-Appellee, Pitt County Department of Social Services.
Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender David W.
Andrews, for the Respondent-Appellant.
BROOK, Judge.
Stanley Corbitt (“Respondent”) appeals from the trial court’s order authorizing
Pitt County Department of Social Services (“the Department”) to provide or consent
to the provision of protective services. The trial court concluded that Respondent was
a disabled adult who lacked capacity to consent to the provision of protective services.
Respondent’s appointed Guardian ad Litem counsel appeals. We affirm the order of
the trial court.
I. Background
Respondent resides in Pitt County and presents a history of medical issues the
treatment of which and his inability to follow recommended medical orders led to the
involvement of the Department in his care. After receiving a report concerning
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
Respondent’s inability to care for himself and make decisions about his medical
treatment in August 2018, the Department filed a petition on 3 October 2018 for an
order authorizing the provision of protective services, alleging that Respondent
lacked capacity to consent to the provision of protective services and was without a
willing, able, and responsible person to perform or obtain these services.
At the 10 October 2018 hearing, District Court Judge Brian DeSoto heard
testimony from Respondent and his brother, who had been his caretaker prior to the
hearing, and a social worker employed by the Department. The social worker
testified that Respondent suffered from numerous bacterial and fungal infections
from wounds on his leg, arm, and skull, and was experiencing significant mental
health issues. The social worker went on to testify that these issues had escalated
while Respondent was hospitalized to the point where Respondent had taken
“scissors and cut off tissue to the bone and the tendon [was] exposed.” Respondent’s
brother testified that he believed Respondent could “pretty much take care of
himself,” explaining that he visited him at least once a week prior to his
hospitalization. At the conclusion of the hearing the trial court found that
Respondent was a disabled adult in need of protective services due to mental
incapacity. The court entered an order to that effect the same day. Respondent’s
-2-
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
appointed Guardian ad Litem counsel entered timely written notice of appeal from
that order.1
II. Analysis
Respondent raises two arguments on appeal, which we address in turn.
A. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Respondent first argues that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction
to authorize the Department to provide or consent to provide protective services.
Specifically, Respondent contends that the absence of allegations in the petition about
other individuals able, responsible, and willing to provide or assist him to obtain
protective services rendered the petition fatally defective, depriving the trial court of
subject matter jurisdiction. We disagree.
1 Respondent argues that this appeal is not moot regardless of whether the conditions leading
to entry of the 10 October 2018 order subsequently changed before this appeal could be heard by our
Court because the appeal presents questions capable of repetition yet evading review. The
Department does not argue that this appeal is moot and we agree that the questions presented by this
appeal are capable of repetition yet evading review. “[C]ases which are ‘capable of repetition[] yet
evading review may present an exception to the mootness doctrine.’” 130 of Chatham, LLC v.
Rutherford Elec. Membership Corp., 241 N.C. App. 1, 8, 771 S.E.2d 920, 926 (2015) (quoting Boney
Publishers, Inc. v. Burlington City Council, 151 N.C. App. 651, 654, 566 S.E.2d 701, 703 (2002)). Cases
in this category must meet two requirements: “(1) the challenged action is in its duration too short to
be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration, and (2) there is a reasonable expectation that the
same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again.” Id. (internal marks and citation
omitted). The 60-day order in this case meets these requirements. Appeals from 60-day orders
authorizing protective services are in their “duration too short to be fully litigated prior to [their]
cessation or expiration”; they also present “a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party
would be subjected to the same action again.” Id. Holding otherwise would render them unreviewable
because of the standard timetable on which review by our Court is possible. This appeal, for example,
was not heard until a year and five days after the trial court entered the order being appealed – 310
days after the expiration of Judge DeSoto’s 10 October 2018 order.
-3-
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
“Chapter 108A, Article 6, of the North Carolina General Statutes, entitled the
‘Protection of the Abused, Neglected, or Exploited Disabled Adult Act,’ sets out the
circumstances and manner in which the director of a county department of social
services may petition the district court for an order relating to provision of protective
services to a disabled adult.” In re Lowery, 65 N.C. App. 320, 324, 309 S.E.2d 469,
472 (1983). In October 2018, the time the petition at issue was filed, the Act defined
“disabled adult” as follows:
The words “disabled adult” shall mean any person 18 years
of age or over or any lawfully emancipated minor who is
present in the State of North Carolina and who is
physically or mentally incapacitated due to mental
retardation, cerebral palsy, epilepsy or autism; organic
brain damage caused by advanced age or other physical
degeneration in connection therewith; or due to conditions
incurred at any age which are the result of accident,
organic brain damage, mental or physical illness, or
continued consumption or absorption of substances.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-101(d) (2017).2 Upon reasonable determination “that a
disabled adult is being [] neglected . . . and lacks capacity to consent to protective
2This definition was amended in 2019 by Session Law 76 and went into effect on 1 October
2019. See S.L. 2019-76, § 14. The amended statute defines “disabled adult” as follows:
The words “disabled adult” shall mean any person 18 years of age or
over or any lawfully emancipated minor who is present in the State of
North Carolina and who is physically or mentally incapacitated due to
an intellectual disability, cerebral palsy, epilepsy or autism; organic
brain damage caused by advanced age or other physical degeneration
in connection therewith; or due to conditions incurred at any age which
are the result of accident, organic brain damage, mental or physical
illness, or continued consumption or absorption of substances.
-4-
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
services,” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-105(a) authorizes the Department to “petition the
district court for an order authorizing the provision of protective services.” N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 108A-105(a) (2017). Subsection (a) goes on to require, “[t]he petition must
allege specific facts sufficient to show that the disabled adult is in need of protective
services and lacks capacity to consent to them.” Id. (emphasis added). Subsection (a)
does not elaborate on what “specific facts” must be alleged in the petition. See id.
Subsection (c) then provides:
If, at the hearing, the judge finds by clear, cogent, and
convincing evidence that the disabled adult is in need of
protective services and lacks capacity to consent to
protective services, he may issue an order authorizing the
provision of protective services. This order may include the
designation of an individual or organization to be
responsible for the performing or obtaining of essential
services on behalf of the disabled adult or otherwise
consenting to protective services in his behalf. Within 60
days from the appointment of such an individual or
organization, the court will conduct a review to determine
if a petition should be initiated in accordance with Chapter
35A; for good cause shown, the court may extend the 60 day
period for an additional 60 days, at the end of which it shall
conduct a review to determine if a petition should be
initiated in accordance with Chapter 35A. No disabled
adult may be committed to a mental health facility under
this Article.
Id. § 108A-105(c).
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-101(d) (2019) (emphasis added). Neither party suggests that the amendment
to the definition of “disabled adult,” which replaced the phrase “mental retardation,” with “an
intellectual disability,” see S.L. 2019-76, § 14, is relevant to the disposition of this appeal.
-5-
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
“When the trial court sits without a jury, the standard of review for this Court
is whether there was competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact
and whether its conclusions of law were proper in light of such facts.” State v. Dunn,
200 N.C. App. 606, 608, 685 S.E.2d 526, 528 (2009) (citation omitted).
Respondent suggests that the definition of “disabled adult . . . in need of
protective services” in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-101(e) offers guidance on the specific
facts that must be alleged under § 108A-105(a) for a court to enter an order
authorizing the provision of protective services under § 108A-105(c). Section 108A-
101(e) provides:
A “disabled adult” shall be “in need of protective services”
if that person, due to his physical or mental incapacity, is
unable to perform or obtain for himself essential services
and if that person is without able, responsible, and willing
persons to perform or obtain for his essential services.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-101(e) (2017). Respondent argues that the petition § 108A-
105(a) authorizes the Department to file must contain “specific facts” indicating that
he was “without able, responsible, and willing persons to perform or obtain for his
essential services,” quoting the language of § 108A-101(e).
Respondent goes further than arguing that read together, N.C. Gen. Stat.
§§ 108A-105(a) and 108A-101(e) create a pleading requirement for petitions for
authorization of the provision of protective services, however. Not only does § 108A-
101(e) supply the standard against which the “specific facts” required to be alleged
-6-
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
by § 108A-105(a) must be measured, according to Respondent; the statutes read
together establish a standard that is a jurisdictional prerequisite to a trial court’s
disposition of a petition for protective services. Respondent thus contends that the
definition in § 108A-101(e) of “disabled adult . . . in need of protective services”
combined with the authorization in § 108A-105(a) of the Department to petition for
authorization to provide protective services creates a jurisdictional prerequisite
similar to the verification requirement of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-1104, applicable to
petitions for termination of parental rights under the Juvenile Code. See, e.g., In re
C.M.H., 187 N.C. App. 807, 809, 653 S.E.2d 929, 930 (2007) (holding that trial court
lacked subject matter jurisdiction where petition for termination of parental rights
failed to comply with verification requirement of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-1104).
Respondent posits that the absence of sufficient details in the petition about
individuals “able, responsible, and willing [] to perform or obtain . . . essential
services” for a disabled adult deprives the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction to
find “that the disabled adult is in need of protective services and lacks capacity to
consent to protective services,” and enter “an order authorizing the provision of
protective services.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-105(c) (2017). We disagree.
“Determined to protect the increasing number of disabled adults in North
Carolina who are abused, neglected, or exploited, the General Assembly enact[ed] []
[the Protection of Abused, Neglected, or Exploited Disabled Adult Act (the “Act”)] to
-7-
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
provide protective services for such persons.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-100 (2017).
Notably, the language of subsection (a) of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-105, the provision
of the Act requiring “specific facts” to be alleged in a petition for protective services
before a court may “issue an order authorizing the provision of protective services,”
id. § 108A-105(c), does not contain a requirement that these allegations be verified,
unlike a petition for termination of parental rights under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-1104.
See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-1104 (2017) (“The petition . . . shall be verified by the
petitioner[.]”). Instead, under § 108A-105(a), the petition need only contain
allegations “sufficient to show that the disabled adult is in need of protective services
and lacks capacity to consent to them.” Id. § 108A-105(a). Endorsing the rule
advocated by Respondent would thus create a requirement unsupported by the text
of § 108A-105.
Imposing such a requirement would also introduce practical challenges that
undermine the Act’s purpose. Grafting the definition provided by § 108A-101(e) onto
the requirement of § 108A-105(a) to “allege specific facts” would impose a potentially
more difficult to manage burden on the Department when petitioning for protective
services under § 108A-105 than the Department bears when petitioning for
termination of a parent’s rights to a minor child under § 7B-1104. Rule 11(b) of the
North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, the legal standard applicable to whether the
verification requirement of § 7B-1104 has been met, In re Triscari, 109 N.C. App. 285,
-8-
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
287, 426 S.E.2d 435, 436-37 (1993), requires that the verification “state in substance
that the contents of the pleading verified are true to the knowledge of the person
making the verification, except as to those matters stated on information and belief,
and as to those matters he believes them to be true.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A–1, Rule
11(b) (2017). Determining whether the standard articulated in the definition of
“disabled adult . . . in need of protective services” had been met would be much less
straightforward than comparing the verification of a petition for termination of
parental rights to the language of Rule 11(b) to confirm compliance with § 7B-1104.
A comparison of § 108A-101(e) to a petition for protective services would not
quickly resolve the question of whether there had been compliance with the rule
advocated by Respondent because of the language used in § 108A-101(e), which
contains certain indefinite terms. See id. § 108A-101(e) (referring to an indefinite
number of “persons to perform or obtain . . . essential services” in defining “disabled
adult . . . in need of protective services”) (emphasis added). Compliance with such a
rule would presumably require an undefined number of people to be identified and
details about these people to be set out in allegations in a petition for protective
services as a prerequisite to the disposition of the petition by the trial court. It is
unclear how compliance with such a rule could be confirmed by a court disposing of a
petition for protective services or a court reviewing such a disposition. What is more,
compliance with this jurisdictional pleading requirement would be dependent upon
-9-
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
the sufficiency of allegations to meet an indefinite standard, rendering the rule
difficult to administer. Adopting such an interpretation of the rule is not only
unsupported by the text of the relevant statute, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-105, but also
would undermine the purpose of the Act.
For a trial court to enter “an order authorizing the provision of protective
services,” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-105(c), a petition for protective services need not
specify facts about individuals “able, responsible, and willing [] to perform or obtain
. . . essential services,” id. § 108A-101(e). A fair reading of the provisions of Article 6
of Chapter 108A of the General Statutes do not support grafting the definition of
“disabled adult . . . in need of protective services,” id., onto the requirement to “allege
specific facts” in a petition for protective services, id. § 108A-105(a), or holding that
such a requirement is jurisdictional. Accordingly, we overrule this argument.
B. Sufficiency of Findings
Respondent next argues that the trial court failed to make sufficient findings
of fact to support its conclusions that he was a disabled adult in need of protective
services. Specifically, Respondent contends that use of the February 2012 version of
form AOC-CV-773, developed by the North Carolina Administrative Office of the
Courts, failed to satisfy the specificity required of factual findings for an order
authorizing protective services where the order contained only one handwritten
- 10 -
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
factual finding by the trial judge and the rest of the findings were type-written. We
disagree.
As noted previously, § 108A-105(a) provides that
[i]f the director [of the Department] reasonably determines
that a disabled adult is being abused, neglected, or
exploited and lacks capacity to consent to protective
services, then the director may petition the district court
for an order authorizing the provision of protective
services. The petition must allege specific facts sufficient
to show that the disabled adult is in need of protective
services and lacks capacity to consent to them.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 108A-105(a) (2017) (emphasis added). The court may enter an order
authorizing the provision of protective services “[i]f . . . the judge finds by clear,
cogent, and convincing evidence that the disabled adult is in need of protective
services and lacks capacity to consent to protective services[.]” Id. § 108A-105(c). A
trial court’s order, however, need only include “specific findings of the ultimate facts,”
not the subsidiary or evidentiary facts whose proof may be required to establish the
ultimate facts. Kelly v. Kelly, 228 N.C. App. 600, 606-07, 747 S.E.2d 268, 276 (2013)
(citation omitted).
We hold that the trial court’s order in this case contained specific findings of
the ultimate facts to show that Respondent was a disabled adult in need of protective
services who lacked capacity to consent to protective services. The trial court’s order
reads as follows:
This matter comes on for hearing on the Petition for Order
- 11 -
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
Authorizing Protective Services filed under the statutory
authority of the director of the county department of social
services. Based on the record, testimony and other
evidence presented to the Court, the Court makes the
following findings of fact by clear, cogent and convincing
evidence:
1. The respondent is
A resident of this county or can be found in this county.
A disabled adult 61 years of age . . . present in the State of
North Carolina and is physically or mentally incapacitated
as defined in G.S. 108A-101(d).
2. The petition was filed on [] 10/3/2018 and
respondent was served pursuant to G.S. 1A-1, Rule 4(j) on
[] 10/5/2018.
3. The respondent is in need of protective services due
to physical or mental incapacity and unable to obtain
essential services without a willing, able and responsible
person to perform or obtain essential services. The
respondent is in need of protective services in that: the
Respondent lacks capacity and is unable to make a safe
discharge plan.
4. The respondent lacks the capacity to consent to the
provision of protective services.
Based on the findings of fact, the Court concludes that:
1. This matter is properly before the Court and the
District Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and
over the respondent.
2. Respondent is a disabled adult in need of protective
services and lacks the capacity to consent to such services
as required by G.S. 108A-105.
- 12 -
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
3. It is in the best interest of the respondent that this
order be entered.
It is ORDERED:
1. That Pitt County Department of Social Services is
authorized to provide or consent to, without further orders
of the Court, the essential services set out in G.S. 108A-
1010(i).
2. That this order shall remain in effect for 60 days
unless:
a. Protective services are no longer needed;
b. The respondent regains capacity to consent to the
provision of protective services;
c. A guardian of the person or general guardian has
qualified; or
d. For good cause shown the Court extends the order
for up to 60 additional days at the end of which time the
order expires.
3. This Matter shall be reviewed, unless previously
dismissed, without further notice to the parties on []
12/4/2018 at [] 2:00 pm in Courtroom DC04 to determine
whether a petition should be filed for guardianship
pursuant to G.S. Chapter 35A.
While it is true, as Respondent contends, that the trial court used form AOC-CV-773
developed by the North Carolina Administrative Office of the Courts in authorizing
the Department to provide protective services, and only one of the factual findings of
the trial court on this form was handwritten, we hold that the order contained
ultimate findings of sufficient specificity to authorize the Department to provide
protective services. This argument is overruled.
III. Conclusion
- 13 -
IN RE S.C.
Opinion of the Court
We hold that the trial court had subject matter jurisdiction to authorize the
provision of protective services and that the trial court’s order authorizing the
provision of protective services contained ultimate factual findings of sufficient
specificity to support its conclusions of law, which in turn justified the relief awarded
by the court in the decretal portion of its order. We affirm the order of the trial court
authorizing the provision of protective services.
AFFIRMED.
Judges BRYANT and TYSON concur.
- 14 -