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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. In the Matter of the Necessity for the Hospitalization of Dominic N. (4/26/2024) sp-7696

In the Matter of the Necessity for the Hospitalization of Dominic N. (4/26/2024) sp-7696

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

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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-18282  

                                                             )     

  DOMINIC N.                                                 )    Superior Court No. 3AN-21-02585 PR  

                                                             )     

                                                             )    O P I N I O N  

                                                             )     

                                                             )   No. 7696 – April 26, 2024  

                                                             )  

                     

                   Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third  

                   Judicial District, Anchorage, Gregory Miller, Judge.  

  

                   Appearances:  Claire De Witte, Assistant Public Defender,  

                   and  Samantha  Cherot,  Public  Defender,  Anchorage,  for  

                   Dominic N.  Laura Fox, Senior Assistant Attorney General,  

                   Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau,  

                   for State of Alaska.   

                     

                   Before:  Maassen, Chief Justice, and Carney, Borghesan, and  

                   Henderson, Justices. [Pate, Justice, not participating.]  

                     

                   CARNEY, Justice.  

  



          INTRODUCTION  



                   A  man  appeals  his  involuntary  civil  commitment  for  mental  health  



treatment.  He argues that the State failed to prove that he was mentally ill as defined  



by  statute  and  that  his  diagnoses  were  the  type  of  intellectual  and  developmental  



disabilities  excluded  from  the  definition.    Because  there  was  clear  and  convincing  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

evidence that he suffered from mental illness that is more than his excluded disabilities,  



we affirm the superior court’s order.  



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.       Facts  



                                1 

                 Dominic N.  has been repeatedly charged with  sexual abuse  of a minor.   



He has been sent to the Alaska Psychiatric Institute (API) “numerous times” to attempt  



to regain competency to stand trial in the criminal cases, but each time has been deemed  



incompetent to stand trial.  Dominic was also previously committed to API following a  



civil proceeding in 2015.   



                 Dominic has been diagnosed with numerous mental health and behavioral  



conditions as a child and as an adult.  These include childhood diagnoses of oppositional  



defiant  disorder  and  attention-deficit/hyperactivity  disorder,  and  adult  diagnoses  of  



major  depressive  disorder,  selective  mutism,  other  specified  neurodevelopmental  



disorder associated with prenatal alcohol disorder, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, and  



borderline intellectual functioning.   



                 In 2020 Dominic was charged with sexual abuse of a minor.  Following a  



                                                         2 

2021 court-ordered competency examination,  a forensic examiner determined he was  



not competent to stand trial.  The superior court held a competency hearing and found  



him  mentally  incompetent.    The  court  ordered  his  commitment  to  API  for  further  



                                                   3 

evaluation and restoration in July 2021 .     While at API for  competency restoration,  



Dominic was diagnosed with an additional intellectual disability, alcohol and cannabis  



                                                                                                              

        1        We use a pseudonym to protect the appellant’s privacy.   



        2        See AS 12.47.100(b) (authorizing court to “have the defendant examined  

by  at  least  one  qualified  psychiatrist  or  psychologist,  who  shall  report  to  the  court  

concerning the competency of the defendant”).  

        3        See AS  12.47.110(a) (providing that upon finding defendant incompetent  

to stand trial, court “shall commit a defendant charged with a felony  . . .  for further  

evaluation and treatment until the defendant is mentally competent to stand trial”).  



                                                    -2-                                                 7696  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

use disorders, and antisocial personality disorder, and provisionally diagnosed with an  



                                       4 

unspecified paraphilic disorder.    



        B.       Proceedings  



                 In November 2021 the State petitioned for an order authorizing Dominic’s  



evaluation to determine whether he was mentally ill and as a result was likely to cause  



                   5 

harm to others.   The superior court granted the petition.  In addition to the allegations  



in the petition, the court  relied on testimony from  the petitioner,  findings related to  



                                                                                                      6 

competency in Dominic’s criminal case, and the presumption per AS  12.47.110(e)  that  



Dominic presented a likelihood of serious harm to self or others.   



                                                                                                           7 

                 API  staff  filed a petition for 30-day civil commitment a few days later.    



A superior court master conducted a hearing at which two witnesses testified on behalf  



of API:  a psychologist and Dominic’s treating psychiatrist.  Each was qualified as an  



expert in their respective fields.   



                                                                                                              

        4        Paraphilic disorders are a category of mental disorders involving sexual  

behaviors that “make []  the  person a serious threat to the psychological and physical  

well-being  of  other  individuals.”    Paraphilic  Disorders,  AMERICAN  PSYCHIATRIC  

ASSOCIATION           (2013),       https://www.psychiatry.org/File%20Library/Psychiatrists/  

Practice/DSM/APA_DSM-5-Paraphilic-Disorders.pdf.  

        5        See AS 47.30.700(a)-(b) (outlining process for petitioning superior court  

for  order  authorizing  hospitalization  of  individual  for  full  evaluation  of  whether  

individual  meets  civil  commitment  criteria  and  addressing  petition’s  requirements);  

AS 47.30.710 (requiring mental health professional to perform emergency examination  

within 24 hours of respondent’s detention under AS 47.30.705 and to apply for ex parte  

order authorizing hospitalization for evaluation under AS 47.30.700 if one has not yet  

been obtained).  

        6        AS 12.47.110(e) (“A defendant charged with a felony and found to be  

incompetent to proceed under this section is rebuttably presumed to be mentally ill and  

to  present  a  likelihood  of  serious  harm  to  self  or  others  in  proceedings  under  

AS 47.30.700 – 47.30.915.”).  

        7        AS   47.30.730   (setting   out   procedure   for   health   care   professionals  

conducting  mental  health  evaluation under AS 47.30.710  to  file petition for  30-day  

commitment for treatment).   



                                                    -3-                                                 7696  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

               The  psychologist  testified  that  she  conducted  forensic  evaluations  of  



Dominic in September and November 2021.  She testified that she had also considered  



the  records  from  Dominic’s  previous  competency  evaluations  and  his  previous  and  



ongoing admissions to API.  The psychologist diagnosed Dominic with other specified  



neurodevelopmental disorder potentially due to prenatal alcohol exposure, borderline  



intellectual  functioning,  and  alcohol  use  disorder.    She  testified  that  Dominic  was  



incompetent to stand trial because he “rationally didn’t seem to understand” the judicial  



process or appreciate the severity of his charges.   



               Dominic’s psychiatrist testified that he probably had more opportunity to  



observe and interact with Dominic than the psychologist.  The psychiatrist agreed with  



the  psychologist’s  diagnoses  and  testified  that  he  would  add  diagnoses  of  “impulse  



control  disorder  separate  from  developmental  delay”  and  pedophilic  disorder.    On  



cross-examination the psychiatrist testified that Dominic’s impulse control disorder was  



not a developmental disability.   



               The master recommended that Dominic be committed to API for 30 days.   



The master found  that Dominic’s diagnoses included both developmental disabilities  



and mental illnesses,  and that the doctors’ testimony  showed that Dominic “certainly  



does have some mental illness.”   The  master  also found that the State  had presented  



clear and convincing evidence that Dominic continued to pose a serious risk of harm to  



others, and that there was a nexus between his mental illnesses —  specifically “some  



intellectual impairments and impulse control” —  and the risk of harm  that he posed.   



And  the  master  found  that  the  State  had  met  its  burden  of  demonstrating  that  



commitment to API was the least restrictive option available.   



               Dominic  objected  to  the  master’s  findings,  arguing  that  he  was  not  



“mentally ill” as defined by statute and that the State had failed to prove by clear and  



convincing evidence that he was likely to cause harm to others.  After the State replied,  



the  superior  court  reviewed both  sides’  arguments  and  the recording  of  the hearing  



before  the  master.    The  superior  court  adopted  the  master’s  recommendations  and  



                                              -4-                                          7696  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

ordered Dominic committed to API for 30 days.  It found that Dominic was mentally  



ill and was  likely to cause harm to others.    The superior court  based  its finding that  



Dominic  was  mentally  ill  on  both  doctors’  testimony,  specifically  referring  to  the  



psychiatrist’s additional diagnoses of impulse control disorder and pedophilic disorder.   



                 The  superior  court  order  noted  “a  nexus  between  [Dominic’s]  mental  



illnesses (including intellectual impairments) and risk of harm to others.”  It concluded  



that he continued to pose a risk of harm “because he is impulsive and lacks insight” into  



“the severity of his conduct towards young girls.”  The court also listed Dominic’s “poor  



problem solving, antisocial behavior, deviant sexual propensities,  social skill deficits  



and lack of remorse” as factors that heightened the risk of harm that Dominic presented,  



and pointed to statements Dominic had made during evaluations and to staff at API as  



further  indication of  the  risk.   The  court  noted  that  Dominic  required  treatment  for  



impulse control  and  that he  was unlikely to take medication on his own.    The court  



agreed with the master’s findings and ordered Dominic’s commitment.   



                 Dominic appeals.  He argues that the State did not prove that his symptoms  



were the result of mental illness rather than an intellectual or developmental disability.   



         STANDARD OF REVIEW   



                 “We   review       the   superior     court’s    factual    findings     in   involuntary  



                                                                      8 

commitment or medication proceedings for clear error.”   We will disturb those findings  



                                                                                                      9 

only where there is a “definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.”   We  

will not reweigh evidence if the record supports the trial court’s finding.10  “[W]hether  



                                                                                                               

        8        In re Hospitalization of Naomi B. , 435 P.3d 918, 923 (Alaska 2019).   



        9        Id . (quoting In re Hospitalization of Jacob S. , 384 P.3d 758, 764 (Alaska  

2016)).  

         10      In re Jacob S. , 384 P.3d at 766.  



                                                     -5-                                                 7696  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

those   findings   meet   the   statutory   requirements   for   involuntary   commitment   or  

medication is a question of law to which we apply our independent judgment.”11   



        DISCUSSION  



        A.       There  Was  Clear  And  Convincing  Evidence  That  Dominic  Was  

                 Mentally Ill.  



                 1.      Statutory background  



                 A court may commit a respondent to a treatment facility for up to 30 days  



“if it finds, by clear and convincing evidence, that the respondent is mentally ill and as  

a result is likely to cause harm to the respondent or others.”12   Evidence is clear and  



convincing if it produces “a firm belief or conviction about the existence of a fact to be  

proved.”13    We  have  characterized  this  standard  as  “evidence  that  is  greater  than  a  



preponderance, but less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”14    



                 Alaska  law  also  establishes  a  rebuttable  presumption  under  which  a  



criminal  defendant  charged  with  a  felony  and  found  incompetent  to  stand  trial  is  

presumed to be mentally ill and pose a risk of harm to self or others.15  The defendant  



may rebut the presumption by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant is “not  



presently suffering from any mental illness that causes [them] to be dangerous to the  

public.”16    



                                                                                                             

        11      In re Naomi B., 435 P.3d at 923-24.  



        12       AS 47.30.735(c).  



        13      In  re  Hospitalization  of  Luciano  G. ,  450  P.3d  1258,  1262-63  (Alaska  

2019).  

        14      Id. at 1263.  



        15       AS  12.47.110(e).  



        16       AS 12.47.090(c);  see Palmer v. State , 379 P.3d 981, 988 (Alaska App.  

2016).  



                                                    -6-                                                7696  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

                 2.      Clear and convincing evidence of mental illness  



                 After the superior court determined that Dominic was incompetent, the  



State initiated the involuntary commitment process by filing a petition for evaluation,  



which was granted based upon the statutory presumption.  Following its evaluation of  



Dominic, API filed a petition for civil commitment.  After a hearing on the petition, the  



superior  court  concluded  that  the  expert  testimony  provided  clear  and  convincing  

evidence that Dominic was mentally ill.17  Dominic was committed and now appeals.   



Because we agree there was clear and convincing evidence that Dominic suffered from  



mental illness, we need not reach the question of whether Dominic successfully rebutted  

the statutory presumption.18  



                 Dominic argues that the State failed to prove that he was mentally ill as  

defined by former AS 47.30.915(14).19  That statute defines mental illness as:    



         an organic, mental, or emotional impairment that has substantial adverse  

         effects  on  an  individual’s  ability  to  exercise  conscious  control  of  the  

        individual’s   actions   or   ability   to   perceive   reality   or   to   reason   or  

        understand;  intellectual  disability,  developmental  disability,  or  both,  

         epilepsy, drug addiction, and alcoholism do not per se constitute mental  

        illness,  although  persons  suffering  from  these  conditions  may  also  be  

         suffering from mental illness[.]  

          

Dominic asserts that all of his diagnoses are intellectual or developmental disabilities,  



which do not per se constitute mental illness.   



                                                                                                               

         17      The superior court did not refer to or rely on the statutory presumption in  

making this finding.   

         18      Dominic  also raised  a cursory substantive due process argument  against  

applying the statutory presumption of mental illness  in a footnote in his reply brief.   

This argument was waived for inadequate briefing.  See Hagen v. Strobel, 353 P.3d 799,  

805 (Alaska 2015) (“Where a point is given only a cursory statement in the argument  

portion  of  a  brief,  the  point  will  not  be  considered  on  appeal.”  (internal  brackets  

omitted)).  

         19      The definition of mental illness (which has not changed) is now provided  

in AS 47.30.915(17).    



                                                     -7-                                                 7696  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

                 Dominic questioned both experts about their diagnoses.   In response the  



psychiatrist  testified  that  at  least  one  of  the  diagnoses,  impulse  control,  was  not  a  



developmental disability, that “it can be a separate thing,”  but that it was “probably  



related in some  sense” to one or more of his  developmental disabilities.    The court  



concluded that although Dominic “does have some developmental disabilities that may  



or may not qualify per se as mental illnesses . . . there are some other mental illnesses,  



particularly  the  impulse  control  disorder  among  some  others  . . .  that  are  mental  



illnesses that could be treated.”   



                 Dominic argues that the evidence was not sufficient to prove by clear and  



convincing evidence that he was mentally ill.   The State responds by pointing to the  



expert testimony that Dominic is mentally ill and suffers from a number of intellectual  



and developmental disabilities.   



                 Mental  illness  in  involuntary  commitment  proceedings  is  generally  



established by expert testimony from the mental health professional who  treated and  

often   diagnosed   the   respondent   or   confirmed   the   diagnosis.20                   The   treating  



professional’s  testimony,  especially  when  based  on  personal  interactions  with  the  

respondent, is critical.21  



                                                                                                                

         20      See,  e.g.,  In  re  Hospitalization  of  Joan  K .,  273  P.3d  594, 599 (Alaska  

2012);  In  re  Hospitalization  of  Jacob  S .,  384  P.3d  758,  762  (Alaska  2016);  In  re  

Hospitalization of Tracy C. , 249 P.3d 1085, 1087 (Alaska 2011); In re Hospitalization  

of Naomi B., 435 P.3d 918, 921-22  (Alaska 2019); In re Hospitalization of Jonas H. ,  

513 P.3d 1019, 1021 (Alaska 2022).  

         21      Compare In re Naomi B. , 435 P.3d at 932 (upholding 30-day commitment  

order because treating physician’s uncontroverted testimony was sufficient to support  

a finding of grave disability), and In re Hospitalization of Marvin S., 2019 WL 2880963  

at *6 n.20 (Alaska July 3, 2019) (rejecting respondent’s argument that order for civil  

commitment was “improperly speculative” where court relied on testimony of doctor  

who had treated respondent directly), with In re Hospitalization of Stephen O. , 314 P.3d  

1185, 1195 (Alaska 2013) (reversing 30-day commitment order because the court relied  

  



                                                     -8-                                                  7696  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

                 At    Dominic’s       30-day      commitment        hearing,     two     mental     health  



professionals  testified  about  Dominic’s  diagnoses.    Both  of  them  had  observed  and  



interacted with him on multiple recent occasions.  Their diagnoses were based on these  



interactions  and  Dominic’s  API  records.    They  also  took  into  account  his  recent  



behavior, including reports of Dominic’s threats and inappropriate behavior with other  



patients and API staff treating him during his current stay.   



                 Dominic  suffers  from  a  number  of  conditions  that  do  not  meet  the  



statutory  criteria  for  mental  illness.    But  the  psychiatrist  diagnosed  him  with  two  



additional  conditions  —  impulse  control  disorder  and  pedophilic  disorder.    The  



psychiatrist  clearly identified Dominic’s impulse control disorder as distinct from his  



intellectual and developmental disabilities.  When questioned by Dominic’s attorney he  



testified that the impulse control disorder was “separate from developmental delay” and  



clarified that an underlying cognitive or developmental delay was not required to have  

an impulse control disorder.22  He also testified that not all people with developmental  



delays   have   impulse   control   disorders.     And   he   stated   that  unlike  underlying  



developmental or cognitive delays, which are generally untreatable, impulse control can  



be treated separately.   



                 Dominic argues that whether a condition can be treated does not determine  



whether it falls outside the exceptions to the statutory definition of mental illness.  The  



statute does not include factors to guide such a determination.   But  the fact that one  



disorder can be treated while another cannot helps to distinguish them from one another  



and demonstrates the separation between the two.    



                                                                                                               



on “partial and unclear” testimony based on uncorroborated hearsay accounts, which  

failed  to  support  finding  respondent  gravely  disabled  by  clear  and  convincing  

evidence).   

        22       He was not cross-examined about Dominic’s pedophilic disorder.  



                                                     -9-                                                 7696  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

                 Dominic also argues that the psychiatrist was “equivocal” about whether  



his impulse control disorder was distinct from a developmental disability.  He focuses  



on the psychiatrist’s reluctance to agree that the diagnoses were “entirely separate” and  



suggests  that  the  State  failed  to  demonstrate  that  impulse  control  disorder  was  a  



condition  “apart  from,  and  more  than,”  an  intellectual  or  developmental  disability,  

quoting our language in E.P. v. Alaska Psychiatric Institute .23  But we did not require  



that addiction or intellectual disability be entirely separate from mental illness in E.P.24   



There we upheld a 30-day commitment order after observing that the respondent’s brain  

damage  was  a  condition  “apart  from,  and  more  than,”  his  drug  addiction.25    We  



explained that although E.P.’s brain damage was caused by his addiction to huffing gas,  



it was the brain damage itself that led to greatly impaired ability to exercise judgment,  



loss of perception of reality, and impaired ability to communicate, thus  satisfying the  

definition of mental illness.26   



                 In addition  Dominic’s argument  would  expand the statutory exclusions  



beyond the language of the statute.  The statute is clear that its listed conditions “do not  

per se constitute mental illness.”27  As the State correctly observes, the expert testimony  



before the court demonstrated that Dominic is mentally ill and suffers from a number  



of intellectual and developmental disabilities.   

                 “Per se” is a Latin term meaning “[o]f, in, or by itself; standing alone.”28   



Replacing it with  its  English translation in the statute makes clear that  the excluded  



conditions do not by  themselves, standing  alone constitute mental illness.  Dominic’s  



                                                                                                                  

         23      205 P.3d 1101, 1109 (Alaska 2009).  



         24      See id.  



         25      Id.  



         26      Id.  



         27      Former AS 47.30.915(14) (2021).  



         28                                                          th 

                 Per se, BLACK ’S LAW DICTIONARY (11   ed. 2019).  



                                                      -10-                                                  7696  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

treating   psychiatrist   testified   that   Dominic’s   underlying   conditions   did   not   in  



themselves account for his impulse control or pedophilic disorder.    



               The  psychiatrist  testified  that  Dominic’s  impulse  control  disorder  and  



developmental disabilities were “probably related in some sense.”  But, as in E.P., the  



relationship between his impulse control disorder and developmental disabilities does  



not mean they were the same.   It suggests only that the presence of a developmental  



disorder could have contributed to the development of impulse control disorder.  Taken  



as a whole, the psychiatrist’s testimony supports finding Dominic’s impulse control  



disorder was more than his developmental and intellectual disabilities, satisfying the  



statutory definition of mental illness.   



               The  psychiatrist’s  expert  testimony  that,  although  they  were  related,  



Dominic’s impulse control was not part of or the same as his other conditions satisfies  



the statutory command that his excluded underlying conditions per se not be the basis  



for a finding that he has a  mental illness.  The superior court did not clearly err by  



finding that Dominic suffered from a mental illness and, as a result, was likely to cause  



harm to others.  



        CONCLUSION  



               We AFFIRM the superior court’s order.   



                                               -11-                                           7696  

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