Chapter 163
2018 -- H 7719 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted 07/02/2018

A N   A C T
RELATING TO BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE, DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES AND HOSPITALS

Introduced By: Representatives Craven, and Amore
Date Introduced: February 28, 2018

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. Section 40.1-5-8 of the General Laws in Chapter 40.1-5 entitled "Mental
Health Law" is hereby amended to read as follows:
     40.1-5-8. Civil court certification.
     (a) Petitions. A verified petition may be filed in the district court, or family court in the
case of a person who has not reached his or her eighteenth (18th) birthday, for the certification to
a facility of any person who is alleged to be in need of care and treatment in a facility, and whose
continued unsupervised presence in the community would create a likelihood of serious harm by
reason of mental disability. The petition may be filed by any person with whom the subject of the
petition may reside; or at whose house he or she may be; or the father or mother, husband or wife,
brother or sister, or the adult child of any such person; the nearest relative if none of the above are
available; or his or her guardian; or the attorney general; or a local director of public welfare; or
the director of the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals;
the director of the department of human services; or the director of the department of corrections;
the director of the department of health; the warden of the adult correctional institutions; the
superintendent of the boys training school for youth, or his or her designated agent; or the director
of any facility, or his or her designated agent, whether or not the person shall have been admitted
and is a patient at the time of the petition. A petition under this section shall be filed only after the
petitioner has investigated what alternatives to certification are available and determined why the
alternatives are not deemed suitable.
     (b) Contents of petition. The petition shall state that it is based upon a personal
observation of the person concerned by the petitioner within a ten-day (10) period prior to filing.
It shall include a description of the behavior that constitutes the basis for the petitioner's judgment
that the person concerned is in need of care and treatment and that a likelihood of serious harm by
reason of mental disability exists. In addition, the petitioner shall indicate what alternatives to
certification are available; what alternatives have been investigated; and why the investigated
alternatives are not deemed suitable.
     (c) Certificates and contents thereof. A petition hereunder shall be accompanied by the
certificates of two (2) physicians unless the petitioner is unable to afford, or is otherwise unable
to obtain, the services of a physician or physicians qualified to make the certifications. The
certificates shall be rendered pursuant to the provisions of § 40.1-5-5, except when the patient is a
resident in a facility, the attending physician and one other physician from the facility may sign
the certificates, and shall set forth that the prospective patient is in need of care and treatment in a
facility and would likely benefit therefrom, and is one whose continued unsupervised presence in
the community would create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental disability together
with the reasons therefor. The petitions and accompanying certificates shall be executed under
penalty of perjury, but shall not require the signature of a notary public thereon.
     (d) Preliminary hearing.
     (1) Upon a determination that the petition sets forth facts constituting reasonable grounds
to support certification, the court shall summon the person to appear before the court at a
preliminary hearing, scheduled no later than five (5) business days from the date of filing. This
hearing shall be treated as a priority on the court calendar and may be continued only for good
cause shown. In default of an appearance, the court may issue a warrant directing a police officer
to bring the person before the court.
     (2) At the preliminary hearing, the court shall serve a copy of the petition upon the person
and advise him or her of the nature of the proceedings and of his or her right to counsel. If the
person is unable to afford counsel, the court forthwith shall appoint the mental health advocate for
him or her. If the court finds that there is no probable cause to support certification, the petition
shall be dismissed, and the person shall be discharged unless the person applies for voluntary
admission. However, if the court is satisfied by the testimony that there is probable cause to
support certification, a final hearing shall be held not less than seven (7) days, nor more than
twenty-one (21) days, after the preliminary hearing, unless continued at the request of counsel for
the person, and notice of the date set down for the hearing shall be served on the person. Copies
of the petition and notice of the date set down for the hearing shall also be served immediately
upon the person's nearest relatives or legal guardian, if known, and to any other person designated
by the patient, in writing, to receive copies of notices. The preliminary hearing can be waived by
a motion of the patient to the court if the patient is a resident of a facility.
     (e) Petition for examination.
     (1) Upon motion of either the petitioner or the person, or upon its own motion, the court
may order that the person be examined by a psychiatrist appointed by the court. The examination
may be conducted on an outpatient basis and the person shall have the right to the presence of
counsel while it is being conducted. A report of the examination shall be furnished to the court,
the petitioner, and the person and his or her counsel at least forty-eight (48) hours prior to the
hearing.
     (2) If the petition is submitted without two (2) physicians' certificates as required under
subsection (c), the petition shall be accompanied by a motion for a psychiatric examination to be
ordered by the court. The motion shall be heard on the date of the preliminary hearing set by the
court pursuant to subsection (d), or as soon thereafter as counsel for the subject person is
engaged, appointed, and ready to proceed. The motion shall be verified or accompanied by
affidavits and shall set forth facts demonstrating the efforts made to secure examination and
certification by a physician or physicians and shall indicate the reasons why the efforts failed.
     (3) After considering the motion and such testimony as may be offered on the date of
hearing the motion, the court may deny the application and dismiss the petition, or upon finding:
(i) That there is a good cause for the failure to obtain one or more physician's certificates in
accordance with subsection (c); and (ii) That there is probable cause to substantiate the
allegations of the petition, the court shall order an immediate examination by two (2) qualified
psychiatrists, pursuant to subsection (e)(1).
     (f) Professional assistance. A person with respect to whom a court hearing has been
ordered under this section shall have, and be informed of, a right to employ a mental health
professional of his or her choice to assist him or her in connection with the hearing and to testify
on his or her behalf. If the person cannot afford to engage such a professional, the court shall, on
application, allow a reasonable fee for the purpose.
     (g) Procedure. Upon receipt of the required certificates and/or psychiatric reports as
applicable hereunder, the court shall schedule the petition for final hearing unless, upon review of
the reports and certificates, the court concludes that the certificates and reports do not indicate,
with supporting reasons, that the person who is the subject of the petition is in need of care and
treatment; that his or her unsupervised presence in the community would create a likelihood of
serious harm by reason of mental disability; and that all alternatives to certification have been
investigated and are unsuitable, in which event the court may dismiss the petition.
     (h) Venue. An application for certification under this section shall be made to, and all
proceedings pursuant thereto shall be conducted in, the district court, or family court in the case
of a person who has not yet reached his or her eighteenth (18th) birthday, of the division or
county in which the subject of an application may reside or may be, or when the person is already
a patient in a facility, in the district court or family court of the division or county in which the
facility is located, subject, however, to application by any interested party for change of venue
because of inconvenience of the parties or witnesses or the condition of the subject of the petition
or other valid judicial reason for the change of venue.
     (i) Hearing. A hearing scheduled under this section shall be conducted pursuant to the
following requirements:
     (1) All evidence shall be presented according to the usual rules of evidence that apply in
civil, non-jury cases. The subject of the proceedings shall have the right to present evidence in his
or her own behalf and to cross examine all witnesses against him or her, including any physician
who has completed a certificate or filed a report as provided hereunder. The subject of the
proceedings shall have the further right to subpoena witnesses and documents, the cost of such to
be borne by the court where the court finds, upon an application of the subject that the person
cannot afford to pay for the cost of subpoenaing witnesses and documents.
     (2) A verbatim transcript or electronic recording shall be made of the hearing that shall be
impounded and obtained or examined only with the consent of the subject thereof (or in the case
of a person who has not yet attained his or her eighteenth (18th) birthday, his or her parent,
guardian, or next of kin) or by order of the court.
     (3) The hearing may be held at a location other than a court, including any facility where
the subject may currently be a patient, where it appears to the court that holding the hearing at
another location would be in the best interests of the subject thereof.
     (4) The burden of proceeding and the burden of proof in a hearing held pursuant to this
section shall be upon the petitioner. The petitioner has the burden of demonstrating that the
subject of the hearing is in need of care and treatment in a facility, is one whose continued
unsupervised presence in the community would create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of
mental disability, and what alternatives to certification are available, what alternatives to
certification were investigated, and why these alternatives were not deemed suitable.
     (5) The court shall render a decision within forty-eight (48) hours after the hearing is
concluded.
     (j) Order. If the court at a final hearing finds by clear and convincing evidence that the
subject of the hearing is in need of care and treatment in a facility, and is one whose continued
unsupervised presence in the community would, by reason of mental disability, create a
likelihood of serious harm, and that all alternatives to certification have been investigated and
deemed unsuitable, it shall issue an order committing the person to the custody of the director for
care and treatment or to an appropriate facility. In either event, and to the extent practicable, the
person shall be cared for in a facility that imposes the least restraint upon the liberty of the person
consistent with affording him or her the care and treatment necessary and appropriate to his or her
condition. No certification shall be made under this section unless and until full consideration has
been given by the certifying court to the alternatives to in-patient care, including, but not limited
to, a determination of the person's relationship to the community and to his or her family, of his
or her employment possibilities, and of all available community resources, alternate available
living arrangements, foster care, community residential facilities, nursing homes, and other
convalescent facilities. A certificate ordered pursuant to this section shall be valid for a period of
six (6) months from the date of the order. At the end of that period the patient shall be discharged,
unless he or she is discharged prior to that time, in which case the certification shall expire on the
date of the discharge.
     (k) Appeals.
     (1) A person certified under this section shall have a right to appeal from a final hearing
to the supreme court of the state within thirty (30) days of the entry of an order of certification.
The person shall have the right to be represented on appeal by counsel of his or her choice or by
the mental health advocate if the supreme court finds that he or she cannot afford to retain
counsel. Upon a showing of indigency, the supreme court shall permit an appeal to proceed
without payment of costs, and a copy of the transcript of the proceedings below shall be furnished
to the subject of the proceedings, or to his or her attorney, at the expense of the state. The
certifying court shall advise the person of all his or her rights pursuant to this section immediately
upon the entry of an order of certification.
     (2) Appeals under this section shall be given precedence, insofar as practicable, on the
supreme court dockets. The district and family courts shall promulgate rules with the approval of
the supreme court to insure the expeditious transmission of the record and transcript in all appeals
pursuant to this chapter.
     (l) Submission to NICS database.
     (1) The district court shall submit the name, date of birth, gender, race or ethnicity, and
date of civil commitment to the NICS database of all persons subject to a civil court certification
order pursuant to this section within forty-eight (48) hours of certification.
     (2) Any person affected by the provisions of this section, after the lapse of a period of
three (3) years from the date such civil certification is terminated, shall have the right to appear
before the relief from disqualifiers board.
     (3) Upon notice of a successful appeal pursuant to § 40.1-5-8(k) subsection (k), the
district court shall, as soon as practicable, cause the appellant's record to be updated, corrected,
modified, or removed from any database maintained and made available to the National Instant
Criminal Background Check System (NICS) and reflect that the appellant is no longer subject to
a firearms prohibition as it relates to 18 U.S.C. § 922(d)(4) and 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4).
     (m) Equitable authority. In addition to the powers heretofore exercised, the district and
family courts are hereby empowered, in furtherance of their jurisdiction under this chapter, to
grant petitions for instructions for the provision or withholding of treatment as justice and equity
may require.
     SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC004853/SUB A
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