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Note:
PAGE 1
No. 71-2519
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
491 F.2d 141; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635
March 15, 1974
PRIOR HISTORY:
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Louisiana.
JUDGES:
OPINION BY:
OPINION:
[*142] TUTTLE, Circuit Judge:
On March 24, 1969, appellant Rawls instigated this suit against (1) De Paul
Hospital, (2) Dr. Bolding, a psychiatrist, and their respective insurers,
contending that they falsely imprisoned her while a patient at De Paul Hospital
from January 9, 1969 to March 4, 1969. Appellant Rawls also sued (3) Dr. Odom,
the Coroner, (4) Dr. Arneson, his assistant, and their respective insurers,
claiming they not only falsely imprisoned her, but also acting under color of
state law deprived her of her civil rights.
The district court denied Rawls' motion for summary judgment against De Paul
Hospital. Appellant Rawls did not make a motion for directed verdict against
any of the parties. After a seven day trial, the jury returned a verdict for
all defendants and the district court refused to grant appellant Rawls' motion
for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The assignment of errors by the
appellant are the district court's: (1) denial of the post-trial motion of
judgment notwithstanding the [**2] verdict; (2) failure to grant summary
judgment against De Paul Hospital; (3) exclusion of testimony of Dr. Szasz; (4)
failure to instruct jury charges # 3-12 submitted by appellant; and (5)
inclusion of jury instruction that the January 22 court order was valid on its
face and was a defense interposed by all defendants.
PAGE 2
491 F.2d 141, *142; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **2
I. LOUISIANA MENTAL HEALTH LAW
The touchstone for initially analyzing this controversy is the Louisiana
Mental Health Law, LSA-R.S. @@ 28:1 et seq., in particular the provisions
regarding procedures for commitment to a mental institution and rights of
patients therein. At the time of the commitment in this case, the Louisiana
Mental Health Law provided four methods for the purely civil commitment of the
mentally ill: voluntary admission, coroner's commitment, judicial commitment and
emergency commitment. The following three are involved in this case:
@ 51. Voluntary admission
"Any mentally ill, inebriate, or epileptic person who desires to submit himself
for treatment may apply to the superintendent for admission to the appropriate
institution named in Part II of this Chapter, or to any private mental hospital
or institution, provided [**3] he is first fully informed of the provisions
of this Chapter, fully understands them, and agrees, to obey the rules of the
institution.
"A. The superintendent of any state mental institution may so receive and
detain the applicant, provided he believes him mentally competent to make the
application and to be in need of care. Should the patient become incompetent or
otherwise unable to demand his discharge, the superintendent shall request
commitment by the court in whose district the hospital or institution is
located. . . . ." (Emphasis supplied).
@ 52. Coroner's commitment
"Any near relative, or in the absence of relatives, a near friend, curator,
or other responsible person shall apply to the coroner to have a patient
committed to an institution.
[*143] "The application shall be in writing on the form prescribed by the
department and shall give the name, sex, and residence of the patient, the
reason why institutional care is needed, and any other information the
department deems necessary. It shall be accompanied by a certificate of the
coroner and one other qualified physician, stating that they have examined the
patient within three days [**4] of the application and that he is in need of
observation or care in an institution. The certificate shall state the facts
and sources of information and personal observations upon which opinion is
based. . . . . After complying with the above provisions the application for
commitment shall be presented to the judge of the judicial district court or the
civil district court for the parish from which the patient is to be committed,
for his approval or disapproval. The application for commitment can be acted
upon by the judge in open court or in chambers, in term time or in vacation,
without the necessity of formally docketing and allotting said application.
"The superintendent may admit the patient to the institution within fourteen
days of the examination by the coroner and the physician.
"After fourteen days the certificate of examination of the coroner and the
physician is invalid. . . . ." (Emphasis supplied).
@ 53. Judicial commitment
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491 F.2d 141, *143; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **4
"A. Upon application by any responsible person, accompanied by a certificate as
provided in R.S. 28:52, the judge of the civil district court may commit to an
institution any patient within his jurisdiction when, in his opinion, [**5]
commitment is in the best interest of the patient and the community. The court
shall fix a date for a hearing to be held not less than five days from receipt
of examiner's report. . . . ." (Emphasis supplied). n1
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 Sections 52 and 53 are stated as they existed at the time of the conduct
in controversy. The 1972 amendments to these sections specified with greater
detail the procedures to be followed in committing patients and incorporated
grants of immunity to certain persons assisting in the commitment procedure.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Two additional provisions of the Louisiana Mental Health Law bear upon the
plaintiff's rights in this case:
@ 98.1. Right to release on application of voluntary patients
"A voluntary patient who requests his release or whose release is requested,
in writing, by his legal tutor, parent, spouse, or adult next of kin shall be
released forthwith . . . ."
@ 171. Enumeration of rights guaranteed
"Every mental patient is guaranteed the following rights: (1) To communicate
[**6] in private with counsel or with the director or an agent of the
department. . . . ." n2
Familiarity with these prerequisites for, and rights appurtenant to, commitment
to a mental institution in Louisiana enables us to understand the significance
of certain events in the course of the plaintiff's confinement.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n2 @ 98 was repealed in its entirety in 1972, after the conduct giving rise
to this lawsuit occurred. Section 171 was amended in 1972, but still contained
a provision stating: "Every patient shall have the right. . . . . (7) To be
visited in private by his attorney at all times . . . ."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
II. Facts
The following is a chronological outline of events giving rise to this
lawsuit.
January 9, 1969
PAGE 4
491 F.2d 141, *143; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **6
Mr. Rawls, plaintiff's husband and Mr. Kane, plaintiff's brother, initiated
an application for the commitment of Dorothy K. Rawls in the Coroner's Office.
Mr. Bergeron of the Coroner's Office began filling in a form entitled "In Re
Application for Commitment." He explained that as a prerequisite [**7] to
commitment under Louisiana law, i.e. Coroner's Commitment Section 28:52, either
[*144] (1) Mrs. Rawls must be examined by a doctor who then recommends the
commitment, or, (2) the only other procedure was to issue a warrant which would
authorize the police to arrest Mrs. Rawls for examination. Mr. Rawls stated his
wife would not go to a doctor; Mr. Rawls and Mr. Kane objected to the warrant
procedure. Mr. Bergeron testified he wrote "Warrant issued for her to be picked
up and held for examination" on the commitment application at this point,
because Mr. Rawls said he was going to apply for a warrant in the future. Mr.
Bergeron's testimony was that he only wrote this statement there for his
information, considered the application withdrawn and placed it in his desk
drawer. A warrant was never issued for Mrs. Rawls, but the language, "Warrant
issued for her to be picked up and held for examination," remained on the
partially completed commitment application.
Later that morning, Mr. Kane telephoned Dr. Bolding, a private psychiatrist,
authorized to admit patients to De Paul Hospital. Dr. Bolding arranged to have
plaintiff admitted and notified the hospital to expect Mrs. [**8] Rawls.
Mr. Rawls called an ambulance from a private concern which came to Mrs.
Rawls' home around 2:45 p. m. A second ambulance from the Coroner's Office
arrived at the scene because it was aiding the private ambulance in locating the
address. When the private ambulance arrived, neighbors stated the lady inside
will probably give you trouble. So the private ambulance attendants called the
police for assistance and a patrol car with two officers came immediately. Mr.
and Mrs. Rawls were arguing at her home. Ambulance attendant Brewer testified
that Mrs. Rawls requested an attorney and that at first she did not want to go.
Her husband tried to persuade her, but she still refused. Police officer Danos
discovered that the ambulance attendants did not have any commitment papers or a
warrant, and he told Mrs. Rawls that she was not obliged to leave with the
ambulance attendants. The plaintiff stated, according to Danos, that she would
accompany the ambulance attendants to De Paul to prove to her husband that she
was not mentally ill. She eventually went without resisting physically.
Attendant Macera testified that Mrs. Rawls spoke of obtaining an attorney all
the way to the hospital. [**9]
Upon arrival at the hospital, Mr. Rawls signed the "Admission Agreement," the
"Statement of Financial Responsibility," and the "Application for Commitment."
Since the Coroner's application was not completed at this juncture and since a
judicial commitment had not been instigated yet, this initial admission must be
sustained as a voluntary admission under section 28:51 in order to be lawful.
Mrs. Rawls did not sign any documents upon entering the hospital and was not
apprised of her rights, as required in section 28:51. Dr. Head, the medical
director, admitted his inability to locate any admission papers signed by Mrs.
Rawls. There was no contrary evidence on these two points. Nevertheless, the
hospital accepted the husband's application and admitted Mrs. Rawls.
Prior to plaintiff's admission, Dr. Bolding had issued written orders on the
hospital chart to the nursing personnel that she was not to be allowed to make
telephone calls. However, Mrs. Rawls was not prohibited from corresponding by
mail throughout her confinement at De Paul Hospital. After arriving at the
hospital Mrs. Rawls repeatedly requested permission to call her lawyer, which
PAGE 5
491 F.2d 141, *144; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **10
was denied. Her protests were [**10] noted on the hospital chart, as follows:
"No phone calls." (Jan. 9)
"patient has been VERY angry all p.m. over 'fact of being committed
'--continuously asking to use phone to get in contact with lawyers, etc., to get
a lawsuit against her husband 'before he leaves the country with my sons,'
states she thought the State appointed the doctor--did not ask for Dr. Bolding,
etc." (1/9/69)
[*145] "Evening supervisor spoke with pt. re: not using the phone as ordered
by Dr. Bolding (who was notified of the situation and stated absolutely NO PHONE
CALLS)" (Jan. 9)
"Pt. has appeared hostile throughout the day toward hospitalization--her doctor
--husband. Said she was snatched up in the middle of the day from her home . .
. ." (January 10)
". . . . Harps on injustice of her being locked up like this for no reason."
(1/10/69).
"Was of the feeling that she needed not to be here." (1/13/69).
"Still insists she does not belong here . . . ." (1/14/69).
"Still very angry about being locked up here." (1/15/69).
"Remarks to the patients that she was 'supposed to be crazy '--seems to think
that locking anyone up in De Paul makes them sick--even if they [**11] are not
when they arrive." (1/20/69).
"Expressed to the group her feeling that she was railroaded into this place."
(1/21/69).
"The nurse's line supervisor received a phone call from a former female patient
who left here Saturday, saying patient was being held here against her will."
(1/27/69).
"Request to call her lawyer. Dr. Bolding telephoned. Dr. Bolding returned call.
Patient told of Doctor's call. Appeared angered, saying she'd get a lawyer
somehow." (1/27/69).
"Dr. Head telephoned about hospital policy toward committing pts. and their
legal rights." (1/30/69).
"Pt. allowed to call her lawyer, as hospital policy is that pt. can at any time
they want." (1/30).
Mrs. Rawls testified that she specifically requested to use the telephone on
numerous occasions, and that she was told if she did not refrain from asking,
she would be placed in tighter security and strapped down. On the other hand,
the nurses indicated that they understood Mrs. Rawls was requesting to call a
lawyer not for the protection of her own rights, but only to sue her husband.
The nurses' testimony was that Mrs. Rawls never stated that she was being held
against her will and never [**12] specifically demanded release from the
PAGE 6
491 F.2d 141, *145; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **12
hospital.
January 20, 1969
The Coroner's Office received a call from a male, either Mr. Rawls or Mr.
Kane, and Mr. Bergeron reactivated the prior partially completed application for
commitment of Mrs. Rawls. First, Mr. Bergeron called De Paul to affirm that
Mrs. Rawls was still a patient, and then sent Dr. Arneson to examine Mrs. Rawls
on January 21, 1969. Drs. Bolding and Arneson signed the commitment application
certifying that Mrs. Rawls was suffering from "Acute Paranoid Reaction," as two
doctors' signatures were necessary for commitment. Next to their signature,
they wrote the date "1/21/69." The Coroner's Office sent this commitment
application on the 20th of January, but the date January 9, 1969, remained on
it. One line of the application stated: "Date of application 1/9/69, Date
Examined 1-21-69." Furthermore, a few lines above this provision the commitment
application was prefaced, as follows:
"NOTE: L.S.A.R.S. 28:52 of the Legislature of Louisiana specifies that this
patient must be examined within (3) three days of date of application and must
be admitted to the hospital not longer than (14) fourteen days [**13] from the
date of examination of the patient by the coroner and physician."
Therefore, the commitment application date was January 9, 1969, and the medical
examination by Dr. Arneson was on January 21, 1969, which was not within the
three day mandate from date of application, as required by section 28:52.
January 22, 1969
A Louisiana judge issued an ex parte commitment order based on the aforesaid
commitment application. This judicial [*146] commitment proceeding was held
without the minimum five day notice between date of examination and final
hearing and the hearing itself as commanded in section 28:53.
January 30, 1969
Mrs. Rawls continued her demands for access to a telephone and an attorney.
Dr. Bolding explained that until January 30, 1969, he interpreted Mrs. Rawls'
requests to call an attorney as being only for the purpose of suing her husband
and not to gain her own release. He denied the telephone privilege because he
did not think it was therapeutic. Finally, a nurse called Dr. Head, the medical
director of the hospital, who gave orders that Mrs. Rawls be permitted to call
an attorney immediately, since it was a hospital policy that patients [**14] be
allowed to call an attorney. Mrs. Rawls telephoned a legal aid attorney, Mr.
Gibson, made an appointment, and was given permission to leave, accompanied by a
hospital attendant, to see him. Mr. Gibson told Mrs. Rawls that she was not
obliged to return to the hospital, but could leave his office and go where she
wished. Mrs. Rawls felt that nevertheless De Paul would find and detain her
again, so she returned to the hospital.
March 4, 1969
Later Mrs. Rawls engaged her present attorney who filed a habeas corpus
proceeding on March 4, 1969. At the habeas corpus hearing De Paul Hospital made
no opposition, but simply brought the patient into court and produced the order
of commitment rendered on January 22, 1969. The court ruled that the January
PAGE 7
491 F.2d 141, *146; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **14
22 court order was illegal, on its face. The judge stated:
"The fundamental reason for discharging this patient is however, the legal
reason, namely, failure to give the five day minimum notice between the date of
examination and final hearing."
The court ordered Mrs. Rawls released from De Paul Hospital.
Summary
In short, the De Paul Hospital contends it held Mrs. Rawls (1) from January
9, 1969 to January 22, 1969, as [**15] a voluntary patient as defined in
section 28:51, and (2) from January 22, 1969 to March 4, 1969, as an
involuntary patient under the authority of an ostensibly valid court order of
commitment procured under either the Coroner's or Judicial Commitment
provisions, sections 28:52 and 28:53. n3 Contrariwise, Mrs. Rawls asserts she
only submitted to the apparent authority of the ambulance drivers, and police
officers, entered the hospital involuntarily and remained at the hospital
against her will thereafter.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n3 It was never completely clear whether the court order was committing the
plaintiff under section 28:52, Coroner's Commitment, or section 28:53, Judicial
Commitment. Under both sections the commitment application must be submitted
for approval to a judge. The plaintiff argued at the habeas corpus hearing that
section 28:53 was the relevant provision. The state judge agreed and granted
plaintiff's writ because she had not been accorded a hearing within five days of
the committing judge's receipt of the coroner's report.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[**16]
III. MOTION FOR J.N.O.V.
A. False Imprisonment Claims
We first consider the plaintiff's cause of action for false imprisonment
against all the defendants. The Louisiana decisions clearly dealing with false
imprisonment claims have held that for false imprisonment to take place there
must be a total and unlawful restraint of a person's freedom of locomotion.
Crossett v. Campbell, 122 La. 659, 48 So. 141 (1909); Sweeten v. Friedman, 9 La.
App. 44, 118 So. 787 (1928). Thus, the two essentials of a false imprisonment
cause of action are (1) the detention or total restraint of the person, and (2)
the unlawfulness of such detention. In order to determine if there was a
detention or total restraint, consideration is necessary whether the confinement
in the case was voluntary or involuntary.
[*147] Possibly, the undisputed evidence may have overwhelmingly supported
the unlawfulness and involuntariness of her original confinement so that she
might have been entitled to a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on
these elements. However, the impediment to granting this relief is that the
record contains no indication that the plaintiff [**17] filed a motion for a
PAGE 8
491 F.2d 141, *147; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **17
directed verdict at the close of the evidence. Moreover, none of the
plaintiff's requests for instructions to the jury fairly can be read as
amounting to a request for a directed verdict. Therefore, this Court cannot
consider plaintiff's contention that the district court erred in refusing to
enter a judgment notwithstanding the verdict because a motion for a directed
verdict is a prerequisite for relief on a motion for a j.n.o.v. under Fed. R.
Civ. P. 50(b). Holmes v. Wack, 464 F.2d 86, 89-90 (10th Cir. 1972); Hernandez
v. Employers Mutual Liability Insur. Co., 346 F.2d 154, 155 (5th Cir. 1965);
Indamer Corp. v. Crandon, 217 F.2d 391, 393 (5th Cir. 1954).
Consequently, no issue regarding the sufficiency of the evidence to support
the jury verdict is properly before us, since federal appellate courts do not
directly review jury verdicts. The obvious reason for this principle is that a
reviewing court will not consider for the first time a party's contention that
the verdict is not supported by the evidence. The issue must be first submitted
to the trial court. See Holmes v. Wack, supra, 464 F.2d at 90. [**18] The
failure to move for a direct verdict thus precludes our consideration whether
the district court properly denied the judgment notwithstanding the verdict on
the false imprisonment claim against all defendants.
B. Deprivation of Constitutional Rights
The plaintiff also alleged that Dr. Odom, the Coroner, and Dr. Arneson, his
assistant, acting under color of state law violated her constitutional rights,
thus affording her a cause of action under section 1983. The factual inquiries
concerning whether these two public officials complied with the state commitment
law and whether plaintiff was deprived of her liberty, that is whether she was
being held voluntarily or involuntarily, were submitted to the jury. Again,
although the evidence may have overwhelmingly supported the involuntariness of
certain stages of her confinement and the noncompliance with the state law by
the public officials, the insurmountable obstacle is again that the plaintiff
made no motion for directed verdict on these issues. Since a motion for a
directed verdict is a prerequisite for relief on a motion for j.n.o.v. under
Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b), this Court cannot review the sufficiency of the evidence
[**19] to support the jury verdict on this claim.
IV. SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTION AGAINST DE PAUL HOSPITAL
On October 8, 1969, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c), the plaintiff made a
motion for a summary judgment against one defendant, De Paul Hospital, which
presents the possibility of partial review of the evidence on the false
imprisonment claim. In order to grant a summary judgment, a court must be
satisfied not only that there is no issue as to any material fact, but also that
the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. The court's
function is to determine whether a genuine issue of material fact exists and not
to resolve any existing factual issues. Applied to this defendant, the issue on
the motion for summary judgment was whether as a matter of law the plaintiff
was falsely imprisoned from January 9, 1969 to March 4, 1969 by De Paul
Hospital.
In support of her motion for summary judgment against De Paul Hospital, the
plaintiff submitted the following: (1) affidavits of the plaintiff and Mr. and
Mrs. Kane; (2) copies of the habeas corpus writ and of the transcript of the
habeas corpus hearing; (3) her entire hospital record; (4) answers to
interrogatories by the [**20] hospital; (5) a copy [*148] of the court
PAGE 9
491 F.2d 141, *148; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **20
proceedings committing the plaintiff, which included the order committing her
and the supporting application for commitment proffered by the Coroner's Office.
In opposition, the defendants introduced the following: (1) depositions of the
plaintiff, Mrs. Kane and Dr. Arneson; (2) affidavits from nurses at De Paul, Dr.
Head, the medical director, and Sister Taylor, the administrator.
The primary argument made by the appellant at the summary judgment stage was
that under the principles of res judicata and collateral estoppel the
confinement during the entire period was illegal as a matter of law because at
the habeas corpus hearing the judge held the confinement illegal. True, the
habeas hearing did decide that the January 22, 1969, court order was
improvidently granted. However, the commitment order being illegal does not
establish as a matter of law that the hospital falsely imprisoned the plaintiff.
The appellant's strenuous assertion at trial and on appeal that the ruling on
the habeas corpus petition precludes relitigation of the unlawfulness of the
confinement is without merit. Plaintiff proposes a so-called "offensive use" of
[**21] preclusion-by-judgment principles, which is generally frowned upon by
the courts. Moreover, the criteria set forth in the leading Supreme Court
opinion in the area, Blonder-Tongue Laboratories v. Univ. of Illinois
Foundation, 402 U.S. 313, 91 S. Ct. 1434, 28 L. Ed. 2d 788 (1971), are not
satisfied. For example, at the habeas corpus hearing De Paul Hospital had far
less incentive to contest the unlawfulness of the plaintiff's detention than at
present.
In the alternative to the res judicata plea, the plaintiff urged that the
confinement was illegal as a matter of law due to the noncompliance with the
statutory mandates of section 28:52, Coroner's Commitment, and section 28:53,
Judicial Commitment. The plaintiff's summary judgment argument was that the
coroner had used a stale application, in violation of the three day maximum
between date of application and date of examination as required in section 28:52
and that the court had failed to grant the plaintiff a hearing as commanded in
section 28:53. In order to establish false imprisonment as a matter of law, the
plaintiff had to show that there was no material issue of fact presented not
only as to the unlawfulness [**22] but also as to the involuntariness of her
confinement. It is helpful to break down the analysis of the evidence at the
summary judgment stage in terms of two distinct periods of confinement: (1) the
initial admission to January 22, 1969; and (2) January 22, 1969, to March 4,
1969.
Initial Admission to January 22, 1969: The initial entry into the hospital
could have been justified only under section 28:51 as a voluntary admission,
since the procedures for either Coroner's or Judicial Commitment had not been
completed at this stage. Although possibly, if not probably, the plaintiff
could have shown as a matter of law that her initial admission did not comply
with the requirements of section 28:51, since she did not sign the admission
papers and was not informed of her rights, nonetheless, the plaintiff failed to
argue in the motion for summary judgment that the confinement was illegal
because the prerequisites under section 28:51 had not been met. Instead, the
plaintiff only asserted that section 28:52 and section 28:53 had not been
satisfied. Thus, the unlawfulness of her confinement during this period was not
established as a matter of law at this stage in the proceedings.
In [**23] addition, the question of law regarding the voluntariness of the
plaintiff's initial entry depended substantially upon an inquiry into the
surrounding facts and circumstances. Although numerous affidavits, depositions,
PAGE 10
491 F.2d 141, *148; 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 9635, **23
court orders and hospital records were submitted at the summary judgment stage,
the district court could have refused to grant the motion for summary judgment
against De Paul until the facts and circumstances were more sufficiently
developed. [*149] For example, the testimony of the ambulance drivers and the
police officers was necessary to establish the entire picture regarding the
voluntariness of Mrs. Rawls' entry in the hospital. Although after this entire
evidence was introduced at trial the court could have found it overwhelmingly
established the involuntariness of Mrs. Rawls' confinement from January 9, 1969
to January 22, 1969, at the summary judgment stage the court correctly
determined that there was a material issue of fact regarding the voluntariness
of the initial entry, precluding a grant of summary judgment.
January 22, 1969 to March 4, 1969: The injection of the January 22, 1969
court order raised the material issue of fact whether the hospital [**24]
validly relied on this court order. Plaintiff asserted that the order was
invalid on its face, making the hospital liable as a matter of law. However, the
asserted facial defect, the twelve day time lapse between the date of
application and the date of examination of the plaintiff, was not in the order
itself, but in the papers accompanying. A material issue of fact regarding
whether the hospital correctly relied on the order was created, precluding a
grant of summary judgment at this stage.
In addition, the injection of the visit to the legal aid attorney on January
30, 1969, further casts doubt upon whether the plaintiff established as a matter
of law the involuntariness of her confinement during this later period. The
legal aid attorney told her that she need not return to the hospital, but she
did anyway feeling that the hospital would locate her and detain her again.
This fact, accompanied by the discontinuance of notations in the hospital charts
regarding plaintiff's admonitions to the nurses that she was being "railroaded"
supported the voluntariness of her confinement, thus reducing the
overwhelmingness of the evidence on involuntariness shown during the earlier
part of [**25] her confinement, and raising a material issue of fact for the
jury.
Therefore, neither the unlawfulness nor the involuntariness elements of her
false imprisonment claims regarding the post January 22, 1969, confinement were
established as a matter of law at the summary judgment stage.
V. OTHER ALLEGED ERRORS
We have carefully considered the claim of appellant that the district court
unduly restricted the expert testimony of Dr. Szasz, and conclude that no
prejudicial error occurred in such limitations as were placed on the witness's
otherwise extensive testimony.
So, too, we conclude that, after examining the charges tendered by the
plaintiff and the fifty pages of jury instructions given, the charges proffered
by the plaintiff but not given were either an incorrect statement of the law, or
were already covered by another charge, or, in any event, their omission did not
constitute prejudicial error.
There was no error in the court's instruction respecting the state court's
order of commitment.
The judgment is affirmed.
Thomas S. Szasz Cybercenter
for Liberty and Responsibility:
[**1]
Tuttle, Godbold and Morgan, Circuit Judges.
TUTTLE
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