NANCY BETH
CRUZAN, by co-guardians, LESTER L.
CRUZAN, JR.
& JOYCE
CRUZAN, Respondents, v. ROBERT HARMON, et al., Appellants, v. THAD McCANSE,
Appellant-Guardian Ad Litem
No. 70813
Supreme Court of Missouri
760 S.W.2d 408;
1988 Mo. LEXIS 102
November 16, 1988, Filed
SUBSEQUENT HISTORY:
[**1]
Motion History: Rehearing Overruled December 13, 1988.
PRIOR HISTORY:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF JASPER COUNTY, MISSOURI, PROBATE DIVISION, Honorable
Charles E. Teel, Jr., Judge
COUNSEL: Hon. William L. Webster, Attorney General, Robert Presson, Ass't. Attorney
General, Jefferson City, Missouri, Robert Northcutt, General Counsel, Missouri
Department of Health, Jefferson City, Missouri, Thad C. McCanse, David B.
Mouton, Carthage, Missouri, for Appellants.
William H. Colby, Kansas City, Missouri, Walter E. Williams, Joplin, Missouri,
for Respondents.
Carter G. Phillips (Counsel of Record), Mark E. Haddad, Washington, District of
Columbia, Mark A. Thornhill, Kansas City, Missouri, Kirk B. Johnson, Edward B.
Hirshfeld, Chicago, Illinois, Amicus Curiae: (American Medical Assn.).
David E. Everson, Jr., Kansas City, Missouri, Amicus Curiae: (American Academy
of Neurology).
Stanley S. Herr, University of Maryland School of Law, Baltimore, Maryland,
Blake Wolf,
Joplin, Missouri, James Bopp, Jr., Thomas J. Marzen, Mary M. Nimz, Daniel
Avila, Teresa Kealy, Joel M. Barkow, The National Legal Center for the
Medically Dependent and Disabled, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana, Amicus Curiae:
(Assn. for Retarded
[**2] Citizens of the U.S. and the Ethics and Advocacy Task Force of the Nursing
Home Action Group).
Giles R. Scofield, III, New York, New York, Richard D. Watters, St. Louis,
Missouri, Amicus Curiae: (Concern For Dying).
Jane Adams Nangle, St. Louis, Missouri, Fenella Rouse, M. Rose Gasner, Elena N.
Cohen, New York, New York, Richard Wasserman, New York, New York, Amicus
Curiae: (Society for the Right to Die).
James S. Cole, St. Louis, Missouri, Amicus Curiae: (Missouri Citizens for Life).
Kathleen M. Boozang, St. Louis, Missouri, (SSM Health Care System and the
Center for Health Care Ethics, St. Louis University Medical Center.
JUDGES: En Banc. Edward D. Robertson, Jr., Judge, Billings, C.J., Rendlen, J., and
Reinhard, Sp.J., concur. Blackmar, J., dissents in separate opinion filed,
Higgins, J., dissents in separate opinion filed. Welliver, J., dissents in
separate opinion filed and concurs in dissenting opinions of Blackmar and
Higgins, JJ.
OPINIONBY: ROBERTSON
OPINION:
[*410] Nancy
Cruzan lies in a
persistent vegetative state in the Mount Vernon State Hospital. Lester L.
Cruzan, Jr., and Joyce
Cruzan, her parents and
co-guardians, requested that employees of the hospital terminate
[**3]
artificial
hydration and
nutrition for Nancy. The hospital's employees refused to carry out this request without
authority from a court. The
Cruzans filed a declaratory judgment action seeking a judicial sanction of their
wishes. Following a hearing, the trial court entered its order directing the
employees of the State of Missouri to
"cause the request of the
co-guardians to withdraw
nutrition or
hydration to be carried out." The trial court held that to the extent that Sections 459.010(3) and 459.055,
RSMo 1986, set forth a public policy of the General Assembly prohibiting the
withholding and
withdrawal of
nutrition and
hydration under all circumstances, such statutes violate Nancy
Cruzan's
right to liberty, due process of law and equal protection under the state and
federal constitutions. Both the state and the
guardian
ad litem appealed. n1 A single issue is presented: May a
guardian order that all
nutrition and
hydration be withheld from an
incompetent
ward who is in a
persistent vegetative state, who is neither dead within the meaning of Section 194.005, RSMo 1986, nor
terminally ill? We have jurisdiction. Mo. Const. art. V,
§ 3. Because we find that the trial court erroneously
[**4] declared the law, we reverse.
n1 The
guardian
ad litem finds himself in the predicament of believing that it is in Nancy's
"best interest to have the
tube
feeding discontinued," but
"feeling that an appeal should be made because our responsibility to her as
attorneys and
guardians
ad litem was to pursue this matter to the highest court in the state in view of the
fact that this is a case of first impression in the
State of Missouri."
We review this case under
Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. banc 1976). The judgment of the trial court
"will be sustained . . . unless there is no substantial evidence to support it,
unless it is against the weight of the evidence, unless it erroneously declares
the law, or unless it erroneously applies the law."
At 12:54 a.m., January 11, 1983, the Missouri Highway Patrol dispatched Trooper
Dale Penn to the scene of a single car
[*411] accident in Jasper County, Missouri. Penn arrived six minutes later to find
Nancy Beth
Cruzan lying face down in a
[**5] ditch, approximately thirty-five feet from her overturned vehicle. The trooper
examined Nancy and found her without detectable respiratory or cardiac function.
At 1:09 a.m., Paramedics Robert Williams and Rick Maynard arrived at the
accident scene; they immediately initiated efforts to revive Nancy. By 1:12
a.m., cardiac function and spontaneous respiration had recommenced. The
ambulance crew transported Nancy to the Freeman Hospital where exploratory
surgery revealed a laceration of the liver. A CAT scan showed no significant
abnormalities of her
brain. The attending physician diagnosed a probable cerebral contusion compounded by
significant anoxia (deprivation of oxygen) of unknown duration. The trial judge
found that a deprivation of oxygen to the
brain approaching six minutes would result in permanent
brain damage; the best estimate of the period of Nancy's anoxia was twelve to
fourteen minutes.
Nancy remained in a coma for approximately three weeks following the accident.
Thereafter, she seemed to improve somewhat and was able to take
nutrition orally. Rehabilitative efforts began. In order to assist her recovery and to
ease the
feeding process, a gastronomy
feeding tube was
[**6] surgically implanted on February 7, 1983, with the consent of her (then)
husband.
Over a substantial period of time, valiant efforts to rehabilitate Nancy took
place, without success. She now lies in the Mount Vernon State Hospital. n2 She
receives the totality of her
nutrition and
hydration through the gastronomy
tube.
The trial court found that (1) her respiration and circulation are not
artificially maintained and are within the normal limits of a thirty-year-old
female; (2) she is
"oblivious to her environment except for reflexive responses to sound and
perhaps painful stimuli"; (3) she suffered anoxia of the
brain resulting in a
"massive enlargement of the ventricles filling with cerebrospinal fluid in the
area where the
brain has degenerated" and that
"cerebral
cortical atrophy is
irreversible, permanent, progressive and ongoing"; (4)
"her highest cognitive
brain function is exhibited by her grimacing perhaps in
[**7] recognition of ordinarily painful stimuli, indicating the experience of pain
and apparent response to sound"; (5) she is a spastic quadriplegic; (6) her four extremities are contracted
with
irreversible muscular and tendon damage to all extremities; (7)
"she has no cognitive or reflexive ability to swallow
food or
water to maintain her daily essential needs" and that
"she will never recover her ability to swallow sufficient [sic] to satisfy her
needs." In sum, Nancy is diagnosed as in a
persistent vegetative state. She is not dead. n3 She is not terminally ill. Medical experts testified that
she could live another thirty years.
For all legal purposes, the occurrence of human death shall be determined in
accordance with the usual and
customary standards of medical practice, provided that death shall not be
determined to have occurred unless the following minimal conditions have been
met:
(1) When respiration and circulation are not artificially maintained, there is
an
irreversible cessation of spontaneous respiration and circulation; or
(2) When respiration and circulation are artificially maintained, and there is
total and
irreversible cessation of all
brain function, including the
brain stem and that such determination is made by a licensed physician.
The trial court found that Nancy expressed, in
"somewhat serious conversation" that if sick or injured she would not want to continue her life unless she
could live
"halfway normally." Based on this conversation, the trial court concluded that
"she would not wish to continue with
nutrition and
hydration."
The court concluded that no state interest outweighed Nancy's
"right to liberty" and that to deny Nancy's
co-guardians authority to act under these circumstances would deprive Nancy of equal
protection of the law. The court ordered
state employees to
"cause the request of the
co-guardians
[*412] to withdraw
nutrition or
hydration to be carried out."
II.
As we said, this case presents a single issue for resolution: May a
guardian order that
food and
water be withheld from an
incompetent
ward who is in a
persistent vegetative state but who is otherwise alive within the meaning of Section 194.005, RSMo 1986,
and not terminally ill? As the parties carefully pointed out in their
thoughtful briefs, this issue is a broad one, invoking consideration of the
authority of
guardians of
incompetent
wards, the public policy of Missouri with regard to the
termination of
life-sustaining
[**9] treatment and the amorphous mass of constitutional rights generally described
as the
"right to liberty",
"the right to privacy", equal protection and due process.
This is also a case in which euphemisms readily find their way to the fore,
perhaps to soften the reality of what is really at stake. But this is not a
case
in which we are asked to let someone
die. Nancy is not dead. Nor is she terminally ill. This is a case in which we are
asked to allow the medical profession to make Nancy
die by starvation and dehydration. The debate here is thus not between life and
death; it is between
quality of life and death. We are asked to hold that the cost of maintaining Nancy's present
life is too great when weighed against the benefit that life conveys both to
Nancy and her loved ones and that she must
die.
To be sure, no one carries a malevolent motive to this litigation. Only the
coldest heart could fail to feel the anguish of these parents who have suffered
terribly these many years. They have exhausted any wellspring of hope which
might have earlier accompanied their now interminable bedside vigil. And we
understand, for these loving parents have seen only defeat through the memories
[**10] they hold of a vibrant woman for whom the future held but promise.
Finally, we are asked to
decide this case as a court of law. Neither this, nor any court lays proper
claim to omniscience. We share the limits borne by all as human beings, only
too aware of our earthbound perspective and frustrated by what we cannot now
know. Our role is a limited one to which we remain true only if our decision is
firmly founded on legal principles and reasoned analysis. And we must remember
that we decide this case not only for Nancy, but for many, many others who may
not be surrounded by the loving family with which she is blessed.
A.
While this is a case of first impression in Missouri, the courts of some of our
sister states have grappled with similar issues. n4
[*413] Nearly unanimously, those courts have found a way to allow persons wishing to
die, or those who seek the death of a
ward, to meet the end sought. n5
n4 The following is a list of state court
cases since 1976 addressing the initiation or removal of
life-sustaining treatment: ARIZONA:
Rasmussen v. Fleming, 154 Ariz. 207, 741 P.2d 674 (1987); CALIFORNIA:
Barber v. Super. Ct. of State of Cal., 147 Cal.App.3d 1006, 195 Cal. Rptr. 484 (1983),
Dority v. Super. Ct. of San Bernadino County, 145 Cal.App. 3d 273, 193 Cal. Rptr. 288 (1983),
Bartling v. Glendale Adventist Medical Center, 184 Cal.App.3d 961, 229 Cal. Rptr. 360 (1986),
Bouvia v. Super Ct. of Los Angeles, 179 Cal.App.3d 1127, 225 Cal. Rptr. 297 (1986),
In re Drabick III, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 245 Cal. Rptr. 840 (1988); COLORADO:
Trujillo v. Dist. Ct. in & for Tenth Judicial Dist., 198 Colo. 419, 601 P.2d 1072 (1979); CONNECTICUT:
Foody v. Manchester Memorial Hospital, 40 Conn. Supp. 127, 482 A.2d 713 (1984); DELAWARE:
Severns v. Wilmington Medical Center, 425 A.2d 156 (Del. Ch. 1980); FLORIDA:
Satz v. Perlmutter, 362 So.2d 160 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1978);
In re Guardianship of Barry, 445 So.2d 365 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1984);
John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital v. Bludworth, 452 So. 2d 921 (Fla. 1984),
Corbett v. D'Alessantro, 487 So. 2d 368 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1986),
Wons v. Public Health Trust of Dade County, 500 So. 2d 679 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1987); GEORGIA:
In re L.H.R., 253 Ga. 439, 321 S.E.2d 716 (1984); IOWA:
Morgan v. Olds, 417 N.W.2d 232 (Iowa App. 1987); LOUISIANA:
In re PVW, 424 So.2d 1015 (La. 1982); MAINE:
In re Joseph v. Gardner, 534 A.2d 947 (Me. 1987); MASSACHUSETTS:
Superintendent of Belchertown State School v. Saikewicz, 373 Mass. 728, 370 N.E.2d 417 (1977),
In re Dinnerstein, 6 Mass. App. Ct. 466, 380 N.E.2d 134 (1978),
In re Spring, 380 Mass. 629, 405 N.E.2d 115 (1980),
Custody of a Minor, 385 Mass. 697, 434 N.E.2d 601 (1982),
In the matter of
Hier, 18 Mass. App. Ct. 200, 464 N.E.2d 959 (1984),
Brophy v. New England Sinai Hosp., 398 Mass. 417, 497 N.E.2d 626 (1986); MINNESOTA:
In the matter of
Torres, 357 N.W.2d 332 (Minn. 1986); NEW JERSEY:
In the matter of
Quinlan, 70 N.J. 10, 355 A.2d 647 (1976),
In the
Matter of Conroy, 98 N.J. 321, 486 A.2d 1209 (1985),
Iafelice v. Luchs, 206 N.J. Super. 103, 501 A.2d 1040 (1985),
In the
Matter of Clark, 210 N.J. Super. 548, 510 A.2d 136 (Ch. Div. 1986),
In the
Matter of Requena, 213 N.J. Super. 475, 517 A.2d 886 (Ch. Div. 1986),
In the
Matter of Visbeck, 210 N.J. Super. 527, 510 A.2d 125 (Ch. Div. 1986),
In the
Matter of Farrell, 108 N.J. 335, 529 A.2d 404 (1987),
In the
Matter of Jobes, 108 N.J. 394, 529 A.2d 434 (1987),
In the
Matter of Peter, 108 N.J. 365, 529 A.2d 419 (1987); NEW YORK:
In the
Matter of Eichner, 102 Misc.2d 184, 423 N.Y.S.2d 580 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1979),
In the
Matter of Storar, 52 N.Y.2d 363, 420 N.E.2d 64, 438 N.Y.S.2d 266 (1981),
In the
Matter of Lydia E. Hall Hospital v. Cinque, 116 Misc.2d 477, 455 N.Y.S.2d 706 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1982),
A.B. v. C., 124 Misc.2d 672, 477 N.Y.S.2d 281 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1984),
Crouse Irving Memorial Hospital v. Paddock, 127 Misc. 2d 101, 485 N.Y. S. 2d 443 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1985),
In the
Matter of Saunders, 129 Misc.2d 45, 492 N.Y.S.2d 510 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1985),
In the
Matter of Delio, 134 Misc.2d 206, 510 N.Y.S.2d 415 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1986),
In re Harvey
"U",
116 A.D.2d 351, 501 N.Y.S.2d 920 (N.Y. App. Div. 1986),
In the
Matter of O'Brien, 135 Misc.2d 1076, 517 N.Y.S.2d 346 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1986),
Vogel v. Forman, 134 Misc.2d 395, 512 N.Y.S.2d 622 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1986),
In the
Matter of Fink, 135 Misc.2d 270, 514 N.Y.S.2d 893 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1987),
In the
Matter of Weinstein, 136 Misc. 2d 931, 519 N.Y.S.2d 511 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1987); OHIO:
Leach v. Akron General Medical Center, 68 Ohio Misc. 1, 426 N.E.2d 809 (1980),
In re Milton, 29 Ohio St. 3d 20, 505 N.E.2d 255 (1987); PENNSYLVANIA:
In re Estate of Dorone, 349 Pa. Super. 59, 502 A.2d 1271 (1985); WASHINGTON:
In the
Matter of Colyer, 99 Wash.2d 114, 660 P.2d 738 (1983),
Dinino v. State of Washington, 102 Wash. 2d 327, 684 P. 2d 1297 (1984),
In the
Matter of Hamlin, 102 Wash. 2d 810, 689 P. 2d 1372 (1984),
In the
Matter of Ingram, 102 Wash.2d 827, 689 P.2d 1363 (1984),
In re Guardianship of Grant, 109 Wash. 2d 545, 747 P. 2d 445 (1987).
[**11]
n5 The dissenters adopt a
"me too" posture without burdening themselves with any analysis of the legal reasoning
upon which
Quinlan and cases following it rely. The dissenters work backwards, choosing a result
then creating reasons to
"support" it. It is our duty in a case of first impression in this state not only to
consider precedents from other states, but also to determine their strength. We
have found them wanting and refuse to eat
"on the insane root which takes the reason prisoner."
Shakespeare, MacBeth, I, iii.
The seminal case is
In re Quinlan, 70 N.J. 10, 355 A.2d 647 (1976),
cert. denied,
429 U.S. 922, 97 S. Ct. 319, 50 L. Ed. 2d 289 (1976). Karen Quinlan suffered severe
brain damage as a result of anoxia. Medical experts diagnosed her as terminally ill
and in a
persistent vegetative state. A respirator assisted her breathing; a
feeding tube provided her nourishment. The experts believed that she could not survive
without the respirator. The trial court found that there was no reasonable
possibility that she would return to a cognitive or sapient life.
Karen's father
[**12] sought judicial permission to disconnect the respirator, believing that death
would follow quickly; n6 the expert medical testimony so advised him. n7 The
New Jersey Supreme Court
found a
right of privacy in Karen to terminate her life under this
"non-cognitive, vegetative existence". In striking a balance between Karen's
right of privacy and the state's interest in life, the court said:
We think that the State's interest
contra weakens and the individual's right to privacy grows as the degree of bodily
invasion increases and the prognosis dims. Ultimately there comes a point at
which the individual's rights overcome the State interest.
355 A.2d at 664. In light of Karen's inability to exercise the right herself the court wrote:
The only practical way to prevent destruction of the right is to permit the
guardian and family of Karen to render their best judgment as to whether she would
exercise it in these circumstances. We determine that Karen's
right of privacy may be asserted in her behalf, in this respect, by her
guardian and family under the particular circumstances presented by this record.
n6 Karen Quinlan lived nine years after the respirator was disconnected.
[**13]
n7 When asked if he wanted Karen's nasogastric
feeding tube removed, Mr. Quinlan replied,
"Oh no, that is her nourishment." Ramsey,
"Prolonged Dying: Not Medically Indicated," 6 Hastings Cent. Rep. 14 (1976).
Superintendent of Belchertown State School v. Saikewicz, 373 Mass. 728, 370
[*414] N.E.2d 417 (1977), involved a mentally retarded resident of a state school suffering from acute
myeloblastic monocytic leukemia, in need of chemotherapy, but incapable of
giving informed consent for the treatment. The court recognized a general
right to refuse
medical treatment in appropriate circumstances and held that such a right extends to
incompetents. Given Saikewicz' lifetime incompetency, the court adopted a
substituted judgment standard
for determining whether Saikewicz, if competent, would have elected to undergo
chemotherapy. While recognizing that most persons in a similar situation would
choose to lengthen their life through the treatments available, the court found
that Saikewicz' inability to cooperate with the treatment and inability to
understand the disruption in his routine, particularly
[**14] the severe side effects produced by the drugs, rendered it likely that if
Saikewicz could, he would decide against the treatment.
The court found a constitutional basis for the refusal-of-treatment decision,
but eschewed the cognitive, sapient,
quality of life considerations found in
Quinlan.
"To the extent that [quality of life even if treatment can bring about remission] equates the value of life with
any measure of the
quality of life, we firmly reject it."
370 N.E.2d at 432. Instead, the Massachusetts court found the extraordinary nature of the
treatment presented a sufficiently massive invasion of a person's privacy to
warrant a decision against undergoing treatment.
In 1981, the New York Court of Appeals advanced a different theoretical
approach to refusal-of-treatment decisions. In
In re Storar and In re Eichner, 52 N.Y.2d 363, 420 N.E.2d 64, 438 N.Y.S.2d 266 (1981), the court found the
common law right to
refuse treatment sufficient to warrant
termination of treatment (Eichner) and rejected the
substituted judgment analysis in matters relating to persons who experienced lifetime
incompetency (Storar). The court found a discussion of constitutional rights
[**15] unnecessary to its decisions.
In
Eichner, Brother Joseph Fox, a member of the Society of Mary, suffered cardiac arrest
during an operation. Oxygen depletion resulted in severe
brain damage; Fox lost the ability to breathe without a respirator.
In
"formal" discussions consistent with his role as a teacher in a Catholic high school
and a mission of promulgating Catholic moral principles, Fox discussed the
Karen Quinlan care and stated that he wanted nothing extraordinary done to keep
him alive. The court found his
common law right to
refuse treatment controlling under the circumstances, given the solemn and
"formal" nature of Fox' expressed desire to forego extraordinary
medical treatment.
John Storar was a profoundly retarded 52-year-old suffering from metastatic
cancer. His life expectancy was three to six months. He continually lost blood,
requiring blood transfusions of two units every eight to fifteen days. Without
the transfusions, medical experts believed Storar would bleed to death. His
mother asked that the transfusions be stopped. Testimony at trial characterized
the transfusions as
"analogous to
food -- they would not cure the cancer,
but would eliminate the risk of
[**16] death from another treatable cause."
420 N.E.2d at 73.
The court recognized that Storar never possessed sufficient mental competency
to render a decision as to extraordinary life sustaining procedures. Departing
from the analysis in
Saikewicz, the New York Court of Appeals found it
"unrealistic to attempt to determine whether he would want to continue
potentially life prolonging treatment if he were competent."
420 N.E.2d at 72. Instead, the court reasoned that Storar's condition was no different from that
of any infant. A court would not allow a parent to deny a child all treatment
for a condition which threatens his life; a parent's refusal to allow blood
transfusions in the face of an infant bleeding to death presents a
"classic" example of the court's power to order treatment in the face of parental
refusal. Storar's blood transfusions could not be terminated.
Quinlan, Saikewicz, and
Eichner/Storar provide the legal basis for all
[*415] of the cases which followed. These three cases limit themselves to
circumstances in which the
patient is terminally ill. Cases which follow, however, recognize no such restraint,
but extend the principles upon which the
Quinlan-Saikewicz-Eichner/Storar
[**17] trilogy rely, to persons who are not terminally ill.
In re Conroy, 98 N.J. 321, 486 A.2d 1209 (1985), attempted to determine the circumstances under which
"life-sustaining treatment may be withheld or withdrawn from
incompetent, institutionalized, elderly
patients with severe and permanent mental and physical impairments and a limited life
expectancy." n8
486 A.2d at 1216. Specifically, 84-year-old Claire Conroy's
guardian sought to remove a nasogastric
feeding tube by which she received her
nutrition.
The court formulated three tests to assist in making a determination as to the
withdrawal of
life-sustaining procedures. These tests are arguably the only ones adopted by a court which
adequately consider the state's interest in life in the context of
life-sustaining treatment. First, when clear and convincing evidence exists that an
incompetent
patient would
[**18]
refuse treatment under the circumstances were he able to do so, the
guardian may exercise a
substituted judgment to achieve that end. This is denominated the subjective test.
A second test, designated the limited objective test, is applied in the absence
of clear and convincing evidence of the
patient's wishes, but where there is a measure of trustworthy evidence that the
patient would have refused the treatment. Noting that
"it is naive to pretend that the right to self-determination serves as the basis for
substituted decision making. . . ."
486 A.2d at 1231, the court went on to permit the
termination of
life support
"if it is manifest that such action would further the
patient's best interests. . . ."
Id. Thus, where it is clear that the burden of the
patient's unavoidable pain and suffering outweighs the benefits of continued life,
termination could follow.
A third test, characterized as the pure objective test, is operable where there
is no evidence of the
patient's desires as to life sustaining treatment. Where the
"effect of administering
life-sustaining treatment would be inhumane" due to severe, recurring and unavoidable pain, treatment may be terminated.
486 A.2d
[**19] at 1232.
Ms. Conroy never expressed an opinion as to
life-sustaining treatments, nor did the medical evidence show that
feeding by the nasogastric
tube was particularly painful. Since Ms. Conroy did not meet any of the three
tests, the court would have refused to permit the
withdrawal of the
feeding tube. n9
Brophy v. New England Sinai Hospital, Inc., 398 Mass. 417, 497 N.E.2d 626 (1986), went beyond
Conroy on facts similar to Nancy's case. Paul Brophy suffered a ruptured aneurysm and
due to oxygen deprivation to the
brain, entered a
persistent vegetative state. The trial court found that Brophy was neither dead, terminally ill, nor in
danger of imminent death. His heart functioned without mechanical assistance as
did his respiratory system. A gastronomy
tube provided
food and
water.
The court found that if Brophy were able to do so, he would decide to
discontinue the
feeding tube. While recognizing that the state's interest in life must be
[**20] considered, the court reasoned that the state's interest could not overcome
Brophy's right to discontinue treatment. The court allowed
Brophy's
guardian to exercise his
substituted judgment to terminate
feeding.
At about the time the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts considered
Brophy, the California Court of Appeals decided
Bouvia v. Superior Court, 179 Cal. App. 3d 1127, 225 Cal.Rptr. 297 (1986). There a 28-year-old, quadriplegic woman afflicted with severe cerebral palsy
sought removal of the nasogastric
tube by which she was fed. The court characterized her
[*416] as
"intelligent, very mentally competent."
225 Cal.Rptr. at 300. Finding it
"immaterial that the removal of the nasogastric
tube will hasten or cause Bouvia's eventual death,"
225 Cal.Rptr. at 305, the court held that Bouvia's right to live her life in dignity and peace
outweighed the state's interest in
preserving life and preventing suicide.
In re Jobes, 108 N.J. 394, 529 A.2d 434 (1987), presents facts similar to this case. Nancy Jobes was pregnant and in excellent
health. Following an automobile accident and during surgery to remove the child
killed in her womb in the accident, she lost oxygen
[**21] flow to her
brain.
Irreversible
brain damage followed; she needed assistance breathing and received nourishment
through a
tube inserted into the jejunum of her small intestine. Her husband sought
permission to remove her
feeding tube.
The tests established by this same court in
Conroy were not applicable. The court found that Mrs. Jobes' previous statements
about refusing
life support under conditions like Karen Quinlan's were
remote, general, spontaneous, and made in casual circumstances. Indeed, they
closely track the examples of evidence that we have explicitly characterized as
unreliable.
See
Conroy . . . 486 A.2d at 1238 (negating probative value of 'an offhand remark about
not wanting to live under certain circumstances made by a person when young and
in the peak of health'). . . .
529 A.2d at 443.
Instead of relying on
Conroy, the court determined that cases involving persistently vegetative
patients required a return to
Quinlan. Assuming again that a persistently vegetative
patient would choose to have all
life support terminated if able, the court determined that Ms. Jobes' family could make the
determination to remove her
life support.
[**22] Given the court's reasoning, one must assume that the family's right to make
that decision is unbridled given the
patient's inability to voice objection. n10 Again, the court was able to discount
entirely the state's interest in the preservation of life, finding it
"difficult to conceive of a case in which the State could have an interest
strong enough to subordinate a
patient's right to choose not to be sustained in a
persistent
vegetative state"
529 A.2d at 444,
quoting
In re Peter, 108 N.J. 365, 529 A.2d 419, 427 (1987) (emphasis added).
n10 This conclusion is troublesome, given the court's rejection of the
patient's statements regarding
life support as inherently unreliable. One wonders if contrary statements would be
similarly unreliable and leave the decision entirely in the hands of a
guardian.
Against this background, we turn to consider the arguments of the parties in
the case at hand.
III.
On the dispositive point, the State argues that the trial court erred in
"holding that a refusal to
[**23] allow
withdrawal of
nutrition and
hydration under the facts of this case would deny Nancy
Cruzan's 'right to liberty' and that to deny the
co-guardians the authority to act on her behalf would deprive her of equal protection of
the laws." Respondents support the trial court's order by urging that
Nancy has both a common law and constitutional right to be free from
"invasive, unwanted and non-beneficial"
medical treatment, and that her
right to refuse such treatment survives incompetency and may be exercised by her
guardians as
substituted decisionmakers.
A. The Right to
Refuse Treatment
The common law recognizes the right of individual autonomy over decisions
relating to one's health and welfare. n11 From this
[*417] root of autonomy, the common law developed the principle that a battery occurs
when a physician performs a medical procedure without valid consent.
Hershley v. Brown, 655 S.W.2d 671, 676 (Mo. App. 1983). The doctrine of informed consent arose in recognition of the value society
places on a person's autonomy and as the primary vehicle by which a person can
protect the integrity of his body. If one can consent to treatment, one can
also refuse it. Thus,
[**24] as a
necessary corollary to informed consent, the
right to refuse treatment arose.
"The
patient's ability to control his bodily integrity . . . is significant only when one
recognizes that this right also encompasses a right to informed refusal."
Conroy, 486 A.2d at 1222.
n11
"The right of self-determination and individual autonomy has its roots deep in
our history."
Brophy, 497 N.E.2d at 633. At this point, courts regularly turn to J.S. Mill for inspiration.
"The only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of
a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own
good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant. He cannot
rightfully be compelled to do or to forebear because it will be better for him
to do so, because it will make him happier, because, in the opinion of others,
to do so would be wise, or even right." Mill,
On Liberty, in 43 Great Books of the
Western World 271 (R. Hutchins ed. 1952). Aside from citing Mill for the
proposition announced, courts seldom indulge the temptation to determine
whether one person's autonomy and self-determination can be exercised by
another, though the very terms seem to indicate that these rights are not
alienable, unless so determined by the person for whom they are exercised.
A decision as to
medical treatment must be informed.
There are three basic prerequisites for informed consent: the
patient must have the capacity to reason and make judgments, the decision must be made
voluntarily and without coercion, and the
patient must have a clear understanding of the risks and benefits of the proposed
treatment alternatives or nontreatment, along with a full understanding of the
nature of the disease and the prognosis.
Wanzer, Adelstein, Cranford, Federman, Hook, Moertel, Safar, Stone, Taussig
& Van Eys,
"The Physician's Responsibility Toward Hopelessly Ill
Patients,"
310 New Eng. J. Med., 955, 957 (1984). In the absence of these three elements, neither consent nor refusal can be
informed. Thus, it is definitionally impossible for a person to make an
informed decision -- either to consent or to refuse -- under hypothetical
circumstances; under such circumstances, neither the benefits nor the risks of
treatment can be properly weighed or fully appreciated.
B. The Right to Privacy
Quinlan, and cases which follow it, announce that a
patient's
right to refuse
medical treatment also arises from a constitutional
right of privacy. Although some
[**26] courts find that right embedded in their state constitutions, n12 the privacy
argument is most often founded on decisions of the United States Supreme Court,
primarily
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 35 L. Ed. 2d 147, 93 S. Ct. 705 (1973). Unfortunately, the bare statement that the
right of privacy extends to treatment decisions is seldom accompanied by any reasoned analysis
as to the scope of that right or its application to the refusal of
life-sustaining treatment.
n12 At least five state courts which authorized the refusal of
life-sustaining treatment found a
right of privacy expressly provided in their state constitutions.
See, e.g.,
Bouvia v. Superior Court, 179 Cal. App.3d 1127, 225 Cal. Rptr. 297 (1986);
In re Guardianship of Barry, 445 So. 2d 365 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1984) (noting state constitution was amended after
Satz v. Perlmutter, 362 So.2d 160 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1978) to recognize a right to privacy in
medical treatment decisions);
Matter of Quinlan, 70 N.J. 10, 355 A.2d 647 (1976);
Matter of Welfare of Colyer, 99 Wash.2d 114, 660 P.2d 738 (1983);
Rasmussen by Mitchell v. Fleming, 154 Ariz. 207, 741 P.2d 674 (1987).
Neither the federal nor the Missouri constitutions expressly provide a
right of privacy. In
State v. Walsh, 713 S.W. 2d 508, 513 (Mo. banc 1986), this Court was asked to recognize an unfettered
right of privacy. We declined to do so. n13 This is consistent with our view that Missouri's
constitution must be interpreted according to its plain language and in a
manner consistent with the understanding of the people who adopted it.
State ex rel. Danforth v. Cason, 507 S.W.2d 405, 408-09 (Mo. banc 1973). We thus find no unfettered
right of privacy under our constitution that would support the right of a person to refuse
medical treatment in
every circumstance.
n13 In
Barber v. Time, Inc., 348 Mo. 1199, 1205-06, 159 S.W.2d 291, 294 (1942), this Court stated that a
right of privacy may grow out of a constitutional right. The
Barber decision provides protection against the publication of private facts and
springs from the well-known tort of invasion of privacy. We find its discussion
inapplicable in cases involving decisions of personal autonomy.
[*418] If Nancy possesses such a right, it must be found to derive from the federal
constitutional right to privacy announced by the United States Supreme Court.
That Court
"has recognized that a right of personal privacy, or a guarantee of certain
areas or zones of privacy, does exist under the [United States] Constitution."
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. at 152. The Supreme Court has not, however, extended the
right of privacy to permit a
patient or her
guardian to direct the
withdrawal of
food and
water. We are left to determine for ourselves whether the penumbral
right of privacy encompasses a
right to refuse
life-sustaining
medical treatment.
Quinlan is the first case to apply a
right of privacy to decisions regarding the
termination of
life-sustaining treatment. In deciding the applicability of the right to such determinations,
Quinlan first cites
Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 14 L. Ed. 2d 510, 85 S. Ct. 1678 (1965), for the proposition that the
right of privacy exists and, without further analysis states:
"Presumably this right is broad enough to encompass a
patient's decision to decline
medical treatment under certain circumstances, in much the same
[**29] way as it is broad enough to encompass a woman's decision to terminate a
pregnancy under certain
conditions."
355 A.2d at 663,
citing Roe v. Wade. The presumption invoked by the New Jersey Supreme Court provides the
precedent for the extension of this
right of privacy by other courts whose decisions permitting the
termination of life sustaining treatment is founded on privacy.
Yet
Roe itself counsels against such a broad reading.
The privacy right involved, therefore, cannot be said to be absolute. In fact,
it is not clear to us that the claim asserted by some amici that one has an
unlimited right to do with one's body as one pleases bears a close relationship
to the
right of privacy previously articulated in the Court's decisions. The Court has refused to
recognize an unlimited right of this kind in the past.
Roe, 410 U.S. at 154.
The language in
Roe is not an aberration. The Supreme Court's most recent privacy decision
resisted expansion of the privacy right. In
Bowers v. Hardwick, 478 U.S. 186, 92 L. Ed. 2d 140, 106 S. Ct. 2841 (1986), the Supreme Court considered whether the right to privacy extended to the
conduct of homosexuals. Noting that
[**30] the prior right to privacy cases focused on a common theme of procreation and
relationships within the bonds of marriage, the court refused to extend the
right of privacy beyond those bounds, arguing that such an extension amounted to the discovery
of a new right.
Nor are we inclined to take a more expansive view of our authority to discover
new fundamental rights imbedded in the Due Process Clause. The Court is most
vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made
constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or
design of the Constitution. . . . There should be, therefore, great resistance
to expand the substantive reach of those clauses,
particularly if it requires redefining the category of rights deemed to be
fundamental.
Otherwise, the Judiciary necessarily takes to itself further authority to
govern the country without express constitutional authority.
Bowers, 478 U.S. at 194-95 (emphasis added).
Based on our analysis of the right to privacy decisions of the Supreme Court,
we carry grave doubts as to the applicability of privacy rights to decisions to
terminate the provision of
food and
water to an
[**31]
incompetent
patient. n14 As will be seen, however, even if we recognize such a broadly sweeping
right of privacy, a decision by Nancy's
co-guardians to withdraw
food and
water under these circumstances cannot be sustained.
n14 This is not a matter of forfeiture of a constitutional right because that
term implies some state action which deliberately removes or limits a
constitutional right.
Neither the
right to refuse treatment nor the right to privacy are absolute; each must be balanced against
the State's
interests to the contrary. Four state interests have been identified:
preservation of life, prevention of homicide and suicide, the protection of
interests of innocent third parties and the maintenance of the ethical
integrity of the medical profession.
See Section 459.055(1), RSMo 1986;
Brophy, 497 N.E.2d at 634. In this case, only the state's interest in the preservation of life is
implicated.
The state's interest in life embraces two separate concerns:
[**32] an interest in the prolongation of the life of the individual
patient and an interest in the sanctity of life itself. As to the former,
The concern for preservation of the life of the
patient normally involves an
interest in the prolongation of life. Thus, the State's interest in
preserving life is very high when
"human life [can] be saved where the affliction is curable."
Saikewicz, . . . 370 N.E.2d at 425-426. That interest wanes when the underlying affliction is incurable and
"would soon cause death regardless of any
medical
treatment."
Commissioner of Corrections v. Myers, 379 Mass. 255, 399 N.E. 2d 452, 456 (Mass. 1979).
Saikewicz, supra. The calculus shifts when the issue is not
"whether, but when, for how long, and at what cost to the individual that life
may be
briefly extended."
Id. at 426.
Brophy, 497 N.E.2d at 635 (emphasis added).
The state's interest in prolonging life is particularly valid in Nancy's case.
Nancy is not terminally ill. Her death is imminent only if she is denied
food and
water. Medical evidence shows Nancy will continue a life of relatively normal
duration if allowed basic sustenance.
The state's concern with
[**33] the sanctity of life rests on the principle that life is precious and worthy
of preservation without regard to its quality. This latter concern is
especially important when considering a person who has lost the ability to
direct her
medical treatment. In such
a circumstance, we must tread carefully, with due regard for those
incompetent persons whose wishes are unknowable but who would, if able, choose to continue
life-sustaining treatment. Any substantive principle of law which we adopt must also provide
shelter for those who would choose to live -- if able to choose -- despite the
inconvenience that choice might cause others.
At the beginning of life, Missouri adopts a strong predisposition in favor of
preserving life. Section 188.010, RSMo 1986, announces the
"intention of the General Assembly of Missouri to grant the right to life to all
humans, born and unborn. . . ." Section 188.015(7), RSMo 1986, determines that a fetus is viable
"when the life of the unborn child may be continued indefinitely outside the
womb by natural or
artificial life-support systems" (emphasis added). Section 188.130, RSMo 1986, denies a cause of action for
wrongful life and wrongful
birth.
At the
[**34] end of life, this State maintains its policy strongly favoring life. In
response to the dilemmas which attend the increasing ability of medical science
to maintain life where death would have come quickly in former days,
legislatures across the country adopted so-called
"Living Will" statutes. These permit a competent person to decree in a formal document that
she would refuse death prolonging
medical treatment in the event of terminal illness and an accompanying inability to refuse such
treatment as a result of incompetency.
The Uniform Rights of the Terminally Ill Act (URITA) provided the basis for
many of these acts. Missouri's statute, Sections 459.010,
et seq., RSMo 1986, is modeled after URITA, but with substantial modifications which
reflect this State's strong interest in life.
URITA defines
"life-sustaining treatment" as
"any medical procedure or intervention that, when administered to a qualified
patient, will serve only to prolong the dying process." URITA
§ 1(4). Missouri
[*420] chose to call such treatment a
"death-prolonging procedure" which is defined as
any medical procedure or intervention which, when applied to a
patient, would serve only to prolong
[**35] artificially the dying process and where, in the judgment of the attending
physician pursuant to usual and customary medical standards, death will occur
within a short time whether or not such procedure is utilized.
Death-prolonging procedure shall not include the administration of medication or the performance of medical procedure
deemed necessary to provide comfort care or to alleviate pain nor
the performance of any procedure to provide
nutrition or
hydration.
Section 459.010(3), RSMo 1986 (emphasis added).
URITA defines a
"terminal condition" as
"an incurable or
irreversible condition that, without the administration of
life-sustaining treatment, will, in the opinion of the attending physician, result
in death within a relatively short time." URITA,
§ 1(9). Section 459.010(6) defines a
"terminal condition" as
"an incurable or
irreversible condition which . . . is such that a death will occur within a short time
regardless of the application of medical procedures."
Section 2 of URITA sets out the recommended form of the declaration as to the
termination of
life-sustaining treatment. n15 Our General Assembly adds,
inter alia, the following statement to the
[**36] recommended form:
"It is not my intent to authorize affirmative or deliberate acts or omissions to
shorten my life rather only to permit the natural process of dying." Section 459.015.3, RSMo 1986. In a manner consistent with this provision,
Section 459.055(5), RSMo 1986, plainly states:
"Sections 459.010 to 459.055 do not condone, authorize or approve mercy killing
or euthanasia nor permit any affirmative or
deliberate act or omission to shorten or end life."
A declaration may, but need not, be in the following form:
DECLARATION
If I should have an incurable or
irreversible condition that will cause my death within a relatively short time, and I am no
longer able to make decisions regarding my
medical treatment, I direct my attending physicians, pursuant to the Uniform Rights of the
Terminally Ill Act of this State, to withhold or withdraw treatment that only
prolongs the process of dying and is not necessary to my comfort or to
alleviate pain.
None of the parties
[**37] argue that Missouri's Living Will statute applies in this case. First, the law
did not take effect until after Nancy's accident. Second, even if the law had
been effective, Nancy had not executed a
living will. The statute's import here is as an expression of the policy of
this State with regard to the sanctity of life. We intend no judgment here as
to whether the
common law right to refuse
medical treatment is broader than the Living Will statute. Beyond the broad policy statement it
makes, that statute is not at issue in this case. The trial court erred in
finding its provisions unconstitutional.
2.
It is tempting to equate the state's interest in the preservation of life with
some measure of
quality of life. As the discussion which follows shows, some courts find
quality of life a convenient focus when justifying the
termination of treatment. But the state's interest is not in
quality of life. The broad policy statements of the legislature make no such distinction; nor
shall we. Were
quality of life at issue, persons with all manner of handicaps might find the state seeking to
terminate their lives. Instead, the state's interest is in life; that interest
is unqualified.
D.
[**38]
Balancing the
Patient's Rights and the State's Interest
1.
In casting the balance between the
patient's
common law right to
refuse treatment/constitutional right to privacy and the state's interest in life, we
acknowledge that the great majority of courts allow the
termination of
life-sustaining treatment. In doing so, these courts invariably find that the
patient's
right to refuse treatment outweighs the state's interest in
preserving life. In some cases, that result is the product
[*421] of a hopeless medical prognosis; in others, the court allows concerns with
quality of life to discount the state's interest in life.
Quinlan, of course, is the source in each instance. Although
Quinlan dealt with a terminally-ill person, it did so in language sufficiently broad
that courts cite it for much different purposes.
On the one hand,
Quinlan based its decision on Karen Quinlan's constitutional right to privacy. While
recognizing that privacy rights must be balanced against the state's interest
in life, the court found that Karen's treatment was so extra-ordinary and so
invasive that the state's interest paled in comparison. Though unstated, one
can properly assume from
[**39]
Quinlan that the state's interest might prevail were the
patient undergoing ordinary
medical treatment. This focus on the extraordinary/ordinary dichotomy provided a ready standard
by which the
patient's interest could be assessed in a constitutional sense against the state's
interest in life.
Since
Quinlan, the medical profession moved to abandon any distinction between extraordinary
and ordinary treatment in considering the propriety of withdrawing
life-sustaining treatment. n16
Conroy, decided by the same court six years later, found distinctions focusing on the
type of treatment unpersuasive.
"While the analysis may be useful in weighing the implications of the specific
treatment for the
patient, essentially it merely restates the question: whether the burdens of treatment
so clearly outweigh its benefit to the
patient that continued treatment would be inhumane."
486 A.2d at 1235.
n16 The testimony in this case tends to confirm this trend. Dr. Ronald Cranford
indicated that
hydration and
nutrition, however administered is
medical treatment; for Cranford, the controlling factors are the
patient's desires and those of her family. In cases like Nancy's
"if you decided in terms of what the
patient wanted or in terms of what the family wanted or the relationship between the
two, to discontinue
artificial
feeding through the
gastrostomy
tube and then attempt to feed her through a syringe or spoon
feeding would make no sense whatsoever in terms of the overall moral standard of
decision making."
This change of focus by the medical community led courts away from
constitutional foundations for decisions in this area.
"The
erosion of distinctions based on treatment complicated constitutional analysis
since there was no other readily apparent standard which courts could use to
calibrate the burden of an individual's privacy right inflicted by particular
kinds of treatment." Tribe, American Constitutional Law, 1365 (2d ed. 1988).
Perhaps realizing the difficulty of applying a constitutional standard which
relied too heavily on medical technology, several courts, led by
Eichner, abandoned right to privacy reasoning, focusing instead on the
common law right to
refuse treatment.
The
common law right to
refuse treatment is not absolute. It too must be balanced against the state's interest in life.
From its early application in
Quinlan and
Eichner, both of which involved terminally-ill
patients, courts have read the right in an everbroadening manner.
Brophy led the way. There the court found that an
incompetent
patient's imputed desire to terminate
treatment outweighed the state's interest despite the fact that the
patient had a fairly long life expectancy if
feeding
[**41] continued.
Bouvia and
In re Farrell, 108 N.J. 335, 529 A.2d 404 (1987), took the next step; they found that the state's interest in
preserving life is not compelling when a competent
patient wishes to have
life-sustaining treatment withdrawn.
No longer relying on the nature of the treatment to provide a standard, courts
began to focus on the
patient's medical prognosis and the individual
patient's assessment of the quality of her life in the face of that prognosis. And in
the face of a prognosis which promised no reasonable hope of recovery and which
the
patient found undesirable, the
patient's choice prevailed over the state's interest.
Commentators do not find this analysis persuasive. Taken to its logical end,
this standard ultimately makes prognosis irrelevant.
"This situation is conducive to
a rhetorical justification of the cases -- authorizing the
patient's choice is merely allowing an inexorable dying process to continue.
[*422] While this distinction is rhetorically convenient, it is not easily
justifiable by principle: where the
patient's
right to refuse
medical treatment is constant, the
patient's condition and prognosis would no longer seem to be relevant."
[**42] Tribe, American Constitutional Law at 1366. Once prognosis becomes irrelevant,
and the
patient's choice always more important than the state's interest, this standard leads to
the judicial approval of suicide. Tribe,
supra at 1367.
This result can be obtained only if the state's interest in the preservation of
life is substantially discounted. Yet courts manage to find the states'
interests wanting and allow surrogates to choose the death of
patients by invoking a nearly unbridled
right to refuse treatment. For an explanation, we revert to
Quinlan.
Prior to
Quinlan, the common law preferred to err on the
side of life. Choices for
incompetents were made to preserve life, not hasten death. n17
Quinlan changed the calculus. Moving from the common law's prejudice in favor of life,
Quinlin subtly recast the state's interest in life as an interest in the
quality of life (cognitive and sapient), struck a balance between
quality of life and Karen Quinlan's right to privacy and permitted the
termination of a life sustaining procedure. By the rhetorical device of replacing a
concern for life with
quality of life, the court managed
"to avoid affronting previously accepted
[**43] norms" in reaching its decision. Alexander,
"Death by Directive",
28 Santa Clara L.Rev 67, 82 (1988).
n17 Missouri courts have ordered blood transfusions for infants and children
over the religious objection of parents in order to preserve the
child's life and health.
Morrison v. State, 252 S.W. 2d 97 (Mo. App. 1952).
See also
Jehovah's Witnesses v. King County Hosp. 278 F. Supp. 488 (W.D. Wash. 1967),
aff'd,
390 U.S. 598, 20 L. Ed. 2d 158, 88 S. Ct. 1260 (1968);
In re Ivey, 319 So.2d 53 (Fla. App. 1975);
People v. Labrenz, 411 Ill. 618, 104 N.E. 2d 769 (1952);
State v. Perricone, 37 N.J. 463, 181 A. 2d 751,
cert. denied,
371 U.S. 890, 9 L. Ed. 2d 124, 83 S. Ct. 189 (1962);
In re Clark, 21 Ohio Op. 2d 86, 185 N.E. 2d 128 (Ohio Comm. Pleas 1962);
Mitchell v. Davis, 205 S.W.2d 812 (Tex. Civ. App. 1947).
As we previously stated, however, the state's interest is not in
quality of life. The state's interest is an unqualified interest in life. The state's interest
is an unqualified
[**44] interest in life. In striking the balance between a
patient's
right to refuse treatment or her right to privacy and the state's interest in life, we may not
arbitrarily discount either side of the equation to reach a result which we
find desirable.
2.
a.
We turn now to the facts of this case. Nancy's
guardians invoke her
common law right to
refuse treatment and her constitutional
right of privacy as bases for their decision to stop
feeding Nancy. They claim that her prognosis is hopeless, that her treatment is
invasive and that were she able, she would refuse the continuation of tubal
feeding. We will consider each of these separately.
First, the
evidence is clear and convincing that Nancy will never interact meaningfully
with her environment again. She will remain in a
persistent vegetative state until her death. She is totally dependent on others for her care. Respondents
contend that the
patient's interest must prevail when
medical treatment
"serves only to prolong a life inflicted with an incurable condition."
In re Colyer, 99 Wash.2d 114, 660 P.2d 738, 743 (1983).
As we have said, a focus on prognosis as a basis for permitting the
right-to-refuse treatment choice is
[**45] problematic. Where the
patient is not terminally ill, as here, the profoundly diminished capacity of the
patient and the near certainty that that condition will not change leads inevitably to
quality of life considerations. The argument made here, that Nancy will not recover, is but a
thinly veiled statement that her life in its present form is not
worth living. Yet a diminished
quality of life does not support a decision to cause death.
Second, Nancy's counsel argues that her treatment is invasive. The invasion
took place when the gastronomy
tube was inserted with consent at a time when hope remained for recovery.
Presently, the
tube merely provides a conduit for the introduction
[*423] of
food and
water. The
continuation of
feeding through the
tube is not heroically invasive.
This second argument requires us to assume that
artificial
hydration and
nutrition are
medical treatments. There is substantial disagreement on this point among physicians and
ethicists. n18 Dr. Cranford so testified at trial. Arguments on each side are
compelling. n19 The temptation here is to allow medical terminology to dictate
legal principle.
"Using medical explanations . . . has utility for
[**46] the courts. It removes the responsibility for decisions that seem harsh when
explained in plainer language." Alexander,
"Death by
Directive",
28 Santa Clara L.Rev 67, 83 (1988). If the testimony at trial that Nancy would experience no pain even if she were
allowed to
die by starvation and dehydration is to be believed, it is difficult to argue with
any conviction that
feeding by a
tube already in place constitutes a painful invasion for her. And common sense
tells us that
food and
water do not treat an illness, they maintain a life.
n18 AMA guidelines would permit
withdrawal. Opinion 2.18 of the Current Opinions of the Council on Ethical and Judicial
Affairs of the American Medical Association adopted in 1986 reads in pertinent
part:
Even if death is not imminent but a
patient's coma is beyond doubt
irreversible and there are adequate safeguards to confirm the accuracy of the diagnosis and
with the concurrence of those who have responsibility for the care of the
patient, it is not unethical to discontinue all means of life-prolonging
medical
treatment.
Life-prolonging
medical treatment includes medication and artificially or technologically supplied respiration,
nutrition or
hydration. In treating a terminally ill or
irreversible comatose
patient, the physician should determine whether the benefits of treatment outweigh its
burdens. At all times, the dignity of the
patient should be maintained.
In its amicus brief, the American Medical Association states that it is not
unethical in certain circumstances for a physician to comply with the request
of a
patient or surrogate to withdraw life-prolonging
medical treatment.
[**47]
n19 The other amicus curiae briefs filed in this case illustrate the split in
thinking.
The American Academy of Neurology in its amicus brief states that Nancy is a
"prisoner of medical technology" and that she and her family should be set free.
Concern for Dying urges that
"decisions to apply, withhold or withdraw medical care and technology are a
matter of personal, not medical, judgment, and that such
decisions should be made in accordance with a
patient's wishes, values and beliefs."
The Society for the Right to
Die, Inc., avers that there is a
"fundamental
right to refuse
life-sustaining treatment" and that
"that right can be exercised on behalf of a permanently unconscious individual."
The Brief of the SSM Health Care System and the Center for Health Care Ethics,
St. Louis University Medical Center states that
"within the Christian foundation, the withholding and withdrawing of
medical treatment, including
artificial
nutrition and
hydration, is acceptable."
The brief of the Association for Retarded Citizens of the United States and the
Ethics and Advocacy Task Force of the Nursing Home Action Group, however,
assert that a course such as that set out by the trial court would
"threaten the affirmation and fundamental right to and interest in life of
people with disabilities. It would subject them to radical and insidious
discrimination based on their disabilities."
The brief of the Missouri Citizens for
Life argues that neither the state nor federal constitution allows a competent
person to starve or
die of thirst and certainly no
guardian can make that decision for an
incompetent.
The medical argument, if carried to its natural conclusion, takes us into a
dangerous realm; it seems to say that treatment which does not cure can be
withdrawn. But
"when we permit ourselves to think that care is useless if it preserves the life
of the embodied human being without restoring cognitive capacity, we fall
victim to the old delusion that we have failed if we cannot
cure and that there is, then, little point to continue
care." Green,
"Setting Boundaries for
Artificial
Feeding", The Hastings Center Report, December, 1984, 12, 13 (emphasis in original).
The issue is not whether the continued
feeding and
hydration of Nancy is
medical treatment; it is whether
feeding and providing liquid to Nancy is a burden
to her. Conroy. We refuse to succumb to the semantic dilemma
created by medical determinations of what is treatment; those distinctions
often prove legally irrelevant. For the reasons stated, we do not believe the
care provided by
artificial
hydration
[*424] and
nutrition is oppressively burdensome
to Nancy in this case.
Third, the
co-guardians argue that
"Nancy's statements alone are enough to stop 'this
artificial treatment." These statements
[**49] are best summarized in the testimony of Nancy's roommate that she
"would not want to continue her present existence without hope as it is." But
"informally expressed reactions to other people's medical condition and
treatment do not constitute clear proof of a
patient's intent.
Jobes, 529 A. 2d at 443,
citing
Conroy, 486 A.2d at 1209.
Our earlier discussion about informed consent noted the requirements for
consent or refusal to be truly informed. A decision to
refuse treatment, when that decision will bring about death, should be as informed as
a decision to accept treatment. If offered to show informed refusal, the
evidence offered here
"would be woefully inadequate. It is all the more inadequate to support a
refusal that will result in certain death."
In re Gardner, 534 A.2d 947, 957 (Clifford, J., dissenting.) As the court said in
Jobes,
"All of the statements about life-support that were attributed to Mrs. Jobes
were remote, general, spontaneous, and made in casual circumstances. Indeed
they closely track the examples of evidence that we have explicitly
characterized as unreliable."
Jobes, 529 A.2d at 443. Likewise, statements attributable to Nancy in this
[**50] case are similarly unreliable for the purpose of determining her intent.
b.
The state's relevant interest is in life, both its preservation and its
sanctity. Nancy is not dead. Her life expectancy is thirty years.
Nancy's care requirements, while total, are not burdensome to Nancy. The
evidence at
trial showed that the care provided did not cause Nancy pain. Nor is that care
particularly burdensome for her, given that she does not respond to it.
Finally, there is no evidence that Nancy is terminally ill. The quality of her
life is severely diminished to be sure. Yet if
food and
water are supplied, she will not
die.
Given the fact that Nancy is alive and that the burdens of her treatment are
not excessive for her, we do not believe her
right to refuse treatment, whether that right proceeds from a constitutional
right of privacy or a
common law right to
refuse treatment, outweighs the immense, clear fact of life in which the state maintains a
vital interest.
E. Guardianship Issues
Nancy is
incompetent; she cannot make informed choices concerning her
medical treatment. We therefore do not decide any issue in this case relating to the authority
of competent persons to suspend
[**51]
life-sustaining treatment in the face of terminal illness or otherwise. Our
focus here is expressly limited to those instances in which the person
receiving the
life-sustaining treatment is unable to render a decision by reason of incompetency.
Section 475.120.3, RSMo 1986, provides that the
guardian of an incapacitated
ward shall provide for the
ward's
"care, treatment, habilitation, education, support and maintenance" and has the power to:
(2) Assure that the
ward receives medical care and other services that are needed;
(3) Promote and protect the care, comfort, safety, health, and welfare of the
ward;
(4) Provide required consents on behalf of the
ward; . . . .
The statute makes no provision for the
termination of
medical treatment; to the contrary, it places an express, affirmative duty on
guardians to assure that the
ward receives medical care and provides the
guardian with the power to give consent for that purpose. We thus find no statutory
basis for the argument that the
guardian possesses authority, as a
guardian, to order the
termination of
medical
treatment.
Assuming,
arguendo, the
guardian possesses such power, it must be derivative of the rights which
[**52] the
incompetent maintains as a person. Having found that such
[*425] rights do exist,
Quinlan held, broadly and without precedential support, that the
right of privacy and the
right to refuse
medical treatment may be exercised by surrogates in the event of incompetency. In this manner a
rationale was born to reach the end sought. n20 Recall the language of
Quinlan:
"The only practical way to prevent destruction of the right is to permit the
guardian and family of Karen to render their best judgment, subject to the
qualifications n21 hereinafter stated, as to whether she would exercise it in
these circumstances."
355 A.2d at 664.
n20
Saikewicz adopts
substituted judgment to a remarkable end.
Substituted judgment in that case permits the decisionmaker to assume that he is an
incompetent who becomes competent but continues to weigh the decision as though
incompetent.
n21
"The 'qualification' that the [court]
alluded to was the notion of
preserving a 'cognitive, sapient life.' In other words, the reduced prospects of what the
court called a cognitive' and 'sapient' life would be taken as
prima facie grounds for the inference that the
patient would not wish to preserve her life." Arkes,
"'Autonomy' and the 'Quality of Life': The Dismantling of Moral Terms," Issues in Law
& Medicine, Vol. 2, No. 6, 421, 428 (1987).
As we said, these rights have been explained as rooted in personal autonomy and
self-determination. Autonomy means self law -- the ability to decide an issue
without reference to or responsibility to any other. It is logically
inconsistent to claim that rights which are found lurking in the shadow of the
Bill of Rights and which spring from concerns for personal autonomy can be
exercised by another absent the most rigid of formalities.
Given the fact that these
patients are irreversibly comatose or in a chronic vegetative
state, attributing
"rights" to these
patients at all is somewhat problematic. . . . To be sure, these
patients are not
"dead" in most of the increasingly multiple senses of the term, but the task of
giving content to the notion that they have rights, in the face of the
recognition that they could make no decisions about how to exercise any such
rights, remains a difficult one.
Tribe, American Constitutional Law, at 1368, n. 25. In discussing the
constitutional
right of privacy, the United States Supreme Court wrote that the
right of privacy, when exercised in an abortion context, is one that cannot be vetoed by any
third party.
The State does
[**54] not have the constitutional authority to give a third party an absolute, and
possibly arbitrary, veto over the decision of the physician and his
patient. . . . Any independent interest the parent may have in the
termination of the minor daughter's pregnancy is no more weighty than the
right of privacy of the competent minor mature enough to have become
pregnant.
Planned Parenthood of Central Missouri v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52, 74, 75, 49 L. Ed. 2d 788, 96 S. Ct. 2831 (1975).
Assuming,
arguendo, that the
right of privacy may be exercised by a third party in the absence of strict formalities
assigning that right, the risk of arbitrary decisionmaking and grave
consequences attaches all the more when the third party seeks to cause the
death of an
incompetent. Just as the State may not delegate to any person the right to veto another's
right to privacy choices, no person can assume that choice for an
incompetent in the absence of the formalities required under Missouri's Living Will
statutes or the clear and convincing, inherently reliable evidence absent here.
Nor do we believe that the
common law right to
refuse treatment -- founded in personal autonomy -- is exercisable
[**55] by a third party
absent formalities. A
guardian's power to exercise third party choice arises from the state's authority, not
the constitutional rights of the
ward. The
guardian is the delegatee of the state's
parens patriae power.
In re Link, 713 S.W. 2d 487, 493 (Mo. banc 1986).
Cases which relied on the doctrine of
substituted judgment to permit
guardians to choose
termination of
life support simply failed to consider the source of the
guardian's authority to decide. Instead those decisions assumed, without benefit of legal
[*426] precedent, that the
guardian's power to decide is derivative of the
incompetent's right to decide, if competent.
See
Quinlan, 355 A.2d at 664. That the doctrine has an historical antecedent,
Saikewicz, 370 N.E.2d at 431, does not change its
raison d'etre or the scope of its reach. To fail to appreciate the legal foundation is to
risk permitting the application of the doctrine in an unprincipled manner.
As applied in right-to-terminate-treatment decisions, the doctrine of
substituted judgment is applied in abrogation of the state's
parens patriae power, not in furtherance of it. In cases like this one, the doctrine
authorizes
[**56] a
guardian to cause the death of a
ward unilaterally, without interference by the state, and contrary to the state's
vital interests in
preserving life and in assuring the safekeeping of those who cannot care for themselves.
As one commentary warns:
Third party consent allows the truly involuntary to be declared voluntary, thus
bypassing constitutional, ethical and moral questions, arid avoiding the
violation of taboos. Third party consent is a miraculous creation of the law --
adroit, flexible, and useful in covering the unseemly reality of conflict with
the patina of cooperation.
Price and Burt,
"Sterilization, State Action, and the Concept of Consent," Law and Psychology Review, p. 58 (Spring 1975).
IV.
In
sum, we hold that the
co-guardians do not have authority to order the
withdrawal of
hydration and
nutrition to Nancy. We further hold that the evidence offered at trial as to Nancy's
wishes is inherently unreliable and thus insufficient to support the
co-guardians claim to exercise
substituted judgment on Nancy's behalf. The burden of continuing the provision of
food and
water, while emotionally substantial for Nancy's loved ones, is not substantial for
Nancy.
[**57] The State's interest is in the preservation of life, not only Nancy's life,
but also the lives of persons similarly situated yet without the support of a
loving family. This interest outweighs any rights invoked on Nancy's behalf to
terminate treatment in the face of the uncertainty of Nancy's wishes and her
own right to life.
This State has expressed a strong policy favoring life. We believe that policy
dictates that we err on the side of
preserving life. If there is to be a change in that policy, it
must come from the people through their elected representatives. Broad policy
questions bearing on life and death issues are more properly addressed by
representative assemblies. These have vast fact and opinion gathering and
synthesizing powers unavailable to courts; the exercise of these powers is
particularly appropriate where issues invoke the concerns of medicine, ethics,
morality, philosophy, theology and law. Assuming change is appropriate, this
issue demands a comprehensive resolution which courts cannot provide.
The efforts of courts to establish guidelines have been less than satisfactory.
In
Quinlan, the New Jersey Supreme Court attempted to establish guidelines for decisions
[**58] concerning the
termination of
life support apparatus. More than ten years later, that same court wrote,
"We recognize, . . . that given the fundamental societal questions that must be
resolved, the Legislature is the proper branch of government to set guidelines
in this area. . . .
In re Farrell, 529 A.2d at 407.
Quinlan had failed to provide sufficient guidelines to meet the broad diversity of
cases presenting
termination of life-support issues.
To the extent that courts continue to invent guidelines on an
ad hoc, piecemeal basis, legislatures, which have the ability to address the issue
comprehensively, will feel no compulsion to act and will avoid making the
potentially unpopular choices which issues of this magnitude present.
There is another compelling reason to leave changes in policy in this area to
the legislature. Representative bodies generally move much more deliberately
than do courts; they are a bit slow and ponderous. Courts, on the other hand,
are facile and eager to find and impose a solution. But
the medico-legal challenge in this debate is not, as is so often said, to
overcome
[*427] the failure of the law to keep pace with medical technology.
[**59] The challenge is to prevent the dilemmas of medical decision-making from
forcing upon us undesirable changes
in the law.
Koop and Grant,
"The 'Small Beginnings' of Euthanasia: Examining the Erosion in Legal
Prohibitions Against Mercy-Killing," 2 Journal of Law, Ethics
& public policy 585, 616 (1986). When facing issues of life and death, society
is best served when decisions are surefooted, not swift and ultimately
uncertain.
V.
We find no principled legal basis which permits the
Co-guardians in this case to choose the death of their
ward. In the absence of such a legal basis for that decision and in the face of
this State's strongly stated policy in favor of life, we choose to err on the
side of life, respecting the rights of
incompetent persons who may wish to live despite a severely diminished
quality of life.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed.
DISSENTBY: BLACKMAR; HIGGINS; WELLIVER
HIGGINS
WELLIVER
DISSENT: WELLIVER, Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the Order denying Rehearing and concur in the
dissent filed today by Higgins, J. The appellant-guardian ad litem and the
respondents have raised on rehearing the fact that the Court has overlooked
[**60] Rule 84.15 and
§ 477.020, RSMo 1986, which provide:
Rule 84.15. Decision of Majority of Judges Shall Be Decision of Court.The decision of the majority of the judges of this Court sitting en banc or of
any district of the Court of Appeals sitting en banc shall be the decision of
the court,
but if in any case the judges shall be equally divided in opinion then an additional judge shall be temporarily transferred to the court or
district pursuant to Section 6, Article V, of the Constitution and
the case shall be reheard. The decision of the majority of the judges of a division of this Court shall
be the decision of the court unless the case is transferred to the court en
banc. Unless pursuant to its
own rules a district of the Court of Appeals determines to hear a case en banc,
the decision of a majority of a division of that district shall be the decision
of the district. (Emphasis ours)Section 477.020. Majority decision-special judge appointed, when and by whom. -- The decision of the majority of the judges of the supreme court or of any
district of the court of appeals shall be the decision of the court, but if in
any case the judges
[**61] shall be equally divided in opinion, the parties to the cause may agree upon
some person learned in the law, who shall act as special judge in the cause,
and who shall sit therein with the court, and give decision in the same manner
and with the same effect as one of the judges; and such agreement shall be in
writing, signed by the parties or their
[*445] attorneys of record, and filed with the papers and form a part of the record
in the cause. If the parties cannot agree upon a special
judge, the court shall appoint, by an order of record, some person possessing
the qualifications aforesaid, to act as such special judge.
Section 477.020, RSMo 1986.
It was not known until the vote was taken in this case that the regular judges
of the Court were evenly divided. The Rule and statute mandate in the clearest
possible language that the cause be reheard.
I would order a rehearing before seven regular judges during the January Term,
1989.
DISSENTING OPINION Charles B. Blackmar, Judge
I substantially agree with the law as expressed by Judge Higgins, except that I
believe that the decision of the trial court is supported by established
principles of common law and equity,
[**62] and so find it unnecessary to discuss constitutional issues which would be of
primary importance only if the case were governed by legislation. I believe
that the judgment of the circuit court is correct, and would affirm.
The principal opinion states:
We
must remember that we decide this case not only for Nancy, but for many, many
others who may not be surrounded by the loving family with which she is blessed.
Because of some of the expansive language in the principal opinion, I am
constrained to observe that this case involves very special facts. The
feeding tube was surgically implanted at a time when Nancy's prognosis was not so definite
and certain as it now is, to the end that life be maintained so long as any
chance remained for improvement in her condition. The case would not be
authoritative if the question were whether the state could require that a
tube be similarly implanted, when those near and dear to the
patient do not believe that the implant should proceed. Another distinction is that
the state is apparently willing to maintain Nancy for so long as she lives,
without expense to her parents or others concerned with her condition. n1 The
opinion, finally, is
[**63] not authority for requiring any procedure other than the continued utilization
of a
feeding
tube which is already in place. n2 Thus the decision is of limited applicability,
and its automatic application to different situations should not be assumed.
Distinguishable cases involve mechanical respirators, radical surgery, blood
transfusions, dialysis, chemotherapy, treatment of infection, or, as has been
said, surgical implantation of
feeding tubes after all hope of amelioration has vanished.
n1 This circumstance makes unnecessary discussion of whether the
patient's resources must be directed to costs of care such as Nancy requires, even
though these resources might be needed by the persons liable for the
patient's care, who might have no other means of support, or by others, such as the
patient's dependents. It appears that Nancy was married at the time she was injured but
that her husband was allowed to obtain a dissolution. This circumstance alone
indicates a relativity of values.
n2 I simply fail to understand the statement in the principal opinion that this
procedure is not heroically
"invasive."
The opinion frankly concedes that other courts,
"Nearly unanimously . . . have found a way to allow persons wishing to
[*428]
die, or those who seek the death of a
ward, to meet the end sought." We of course are not bound by the decisions of other courts of coordinate
authority, and may adopt unique rules, differing from all others, but we should
certainly pause before departing from the overwhelming course of authority.
Many other judges have struggled with problems similar to the ones before us.
Their opinions demonstrate this struggle. It is often difficult to find the
proper words to express a conclusion, and it is easy to criticize the struggles
of others. Our task, however, is to decide cases rather than to philosophize.
The conclusion of the judges who have wrestled with the issues is entitled to gr
HIGGINS, Judge, dissenting.
Rule 84.17 provides for a rehearing when the Court's decision has overlooked or
misinterpreted
[*443] material matters of law or fact as shown by its opinion.
The decision
in this case is by a 4 to 3 majority opinion, and when subjected to rehearing
scrutiny it matters not what the dissenters may have said. The test is whether
the decisional
[**65] opinion shows that it has overlooked or misinterpreted material matters of law
or fact as called to the attention of the Court in the motion for rehearing.
The first ground in Ms.
Cruzan's Motion for Rehearing is stated persuasively and, in my opinion, qualifies this
case for rehearing under Rule 84.17:
I. THIS COURT OVERLOOKED OR MISINTERPRETED THE FACTUAL BASIS FOR THE FINDINGS
OF THE TRIAL COURT AS TO THE INTENT OF NANCY
CRUZAN
This Court recognized in
Cruzan v. Harmon, No. 70813 (Mo. banc, November 16, 1988) (hereinafter
"Slip op."), that
incompetent people have certain rights. The Court expressly found that an
incompetent person retains her Constitutional
"right to life." Slip op. at 426. The Court also found that an
incompetent
person can determine her own
medical treatment if sufficient evidence of that intent is present. Slip op. at 415-416 (the
Court cited with approval the tests set out in
In re Conroy, 98 N.J. 321, 486 A.2d 1209 (1985), as
"arguably the only [tests] adopted by a court which adequately consider the
state's interest in life in the context of
life-sustaining treatment ...");
see also slip op. at 423, 424 and 425 ("no person can assume
[**66] [the right to privacy] choice for an
incompetent in the absence of ... clear and convincing, inherently reliable evidence
absent here...").After approving such a test, however, this Court inexplicably failed to apply
the test to the express factual findings of Nancy's intent made by the trial
court. Instead, the Court made its own
"factual findings" of Nancy's intent, and it limited that
finding to review of essentially one conversation that Nancy had with her
friend, Athena Comer.
See slip op. at 411 (Court believes that
"based on
this conversation, the trial court concluded that 'she would not wish to continue
with
nutrition and
hydration ...'
") (emphasis added); slip op. at 424 (Nancy's
" 'informally expressed reactions to other people's medical condition and
treatment do not constitute' clear proof of her intent ..."); slip op. at 424 (Court holds that
"statements attributable to Nancy in this case are similarly unreliable for the
purpose of determining her intent ...");
see also slip op. at 425, 426.The Court thereby made a material mistake of fact in its interpretation of the
factual basis for the trial judge's decision. The trial court in
[**67] no way limited its finding on Nancy's intentions to the single conversation
Nancy had with her friend Athena Comer. Athena Comer's testimony took only a
half hour of a three day trial. The court below heard much, much more evidence
relevant to Nancy's intent. It heard evidence of other important conversations
Nancy had about
medical treatment. And it heard witness after witness testify about the kind of person Nancy
was, how she felt, and what she believed, told as only those who loved her and
whom she loved could know. Tr.Ct.Op. 4 (L.F. 254). An important part of this
evidence was the testimony from several different witnesses that Nancy would
absolutely not want to subject her family to the torture they now endure.
See, e.g., (TR 544) (Nancy's sister, Christy, testified about Nancy's wis eat weight, and
is significant in spite of difficulties of expression.
I believe that decisions about Nancy's future should be made by those near and
dear to her, and that no state policy requires the state to intervene in these
decisions. The principal
opinion fails to convince me that the other judges who have dealt with this
problem are wrong.
My disagreement with the principal opinion
[**68] lies fundamentally in its emphasis on the interest of and the role of the
state, represented by the Attorney General. Decisions about prolongation of
life are of recent origin. For most of the world's history, and presently in
most parts of the world, such decisions would never arise because the
technology would not be available. Decisions about
medical treatment have customarily been made by the
patient, or by those closest to the
patient if the
patient, because of youth or infirmity, is unable to make the decisions. This is
nothing new in
substituted decisionmaking. [he state is seldom called upon to be the decisionmaker.
I would not accept the assumption, inherent in the principal opinion, that,
with our advanced technology, the state must necessarily become involved in a
decision about using extraordinary measures to prolong life. Decisions of this
kind are made daily by the
patient or relatives, on the basis of medical advice and their conclusion as to what
is best. Very few cases reach court, and I doubt whether this case would be
before us but for the fact that Nancy lies in a state hospital. I do not place
primary emphasis on the
patient's expressions, except possibly in
[**69] the very unusual case, of which I find no example in the books, in which the
patient expresses a view that all available
life supports should be made use of. Those closest to the
patient are best positioned to make judgments about the
patient's best interest.
In footnote 16 the principal opinion cites several cases in which courts have
ordered procedures such as blood transfusions, over the religious objections of
the parents. The state's goal there is to provide the medical procedures
necessary to give the child a meaningful life. A decision to deny such
treatment in the face of medical advice may be
considered irrational and abusive. Or it may be said that the state balances
the child's interest against the parents' religious views, which are considered
outside the mainstream. I am sure that courts which have ordered transfusions
or other procedures all have relied or acted on the basis of very strong
medical opinion. The
Cruzans' decision is of a very different nature, and I cannot conclude that it is
irrational or abusive.
Nor would I accept the thought that decisions of relatives as
guardians about life sustaining measures necessarily require judicial confirmation. I
agree with
[**70] those courts which hold that relatives may ordinarily make important decisions
of this kind without going to court, unless there is a challenge. n3 Formal
appointment as
guardian may be requested, but should not always be necessary. When a person is
without close relatives, it may be desirable to appoint a
guardian of the person to consider decisions about
medical treatment.
I do not find the arguments about the state's inthes when viewed against the
effect of her plight on her parents:
"that's an even stronger reason because she loved them so much. She loved her
family. Family was very important to Nancy. If she could talk to them, she
would say, 'Hey, just a minute, take care of each other ...'
").After three full days of evidence, the trial judge concluded that Nancy would
choose to forego the ongoing intrusion of the
gastrostomy
[**71]
tube. The trial judge based this conclusion not only on the conversation with
Athena, but on
"other statements to family and friends" and
[*444] the overwhelming evidence of
"[her] lifestyle." Tr.Ct.Op. 4, 6 (L.F. 254,
256). Similarly, the independent
guardian ad litem, appointed by the trial court to protect Nancy's interest, concluded
that the trial court had received clear and convincing evidence that Nancy
would want the
gastrostomy
tube removed. GAL Post-Trial Brief at 32 (L.F. 234, 236).This Court, sitting in appellate review, is bound under its rules to follow the
facts as found by the trial court unless it finds that the decision of the
trial court has
"no substantial evidence to support it" or that the ruling
"is against the weight of the evidence."
Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. banc 1976). This Court made absolutely no such ruling here. It reversed
the decision of the trial judge on the basis
"that the trial court
erroneously declared the law." Slip op. at 410 (emphasis added). But the law as found by the trial court and
the Supreme Court is exactly the
same -- "life-sustaining treatment may be withheld or withdrawn from an
incompetent
[**72]
patient when it is clear that the particular
patient would have refused the treatment under the circumstances involved."
In re Conroy, 486 A.2d at 1229;
see also slip op. at 415, 424, 425, 426.Nancy
Cruzan is not required to retry the facts of her case at the appellate level. The
trial court, after a full and fair hearing, found clear evidence of Nancy's
intent in the testimony of many different witnesses. The State put on no
evidence to the contrary. This testimony is exactly the type of evidence that
the court in
In re Conroy found appropriate to examine
"in determining what course of treatment the
patient would have wished to pursue."
486 A.2d at 1230. This Court misinterpreted the factual finding of the trial court -- evidence of Nancy's intent was not limited to one conversation with Athena
Comer. This
material mistake of fact led the Court to commit a material mistake of law in
reversing the trial court decision without determination that it was not
supported by substantial evidence. Nancy
Cruzan is entitled to a rehearing on this point.
I agree and would grant a rehearing. I dissent, respectfully, from the order
denying a rehearing.
ON MOTION
[**73] FOR REHEARINGerest in
"preserving life," and the citation of various statutory provisions in support, particularly
helpful. The very existence of capital punishment demonstrates a relativity of
values by establishing the
[*429] proposition that some lives are not worth
preserving. Furthermore, the
"Living Will" statute, which the majority finds to be
"an expression of the policy of this state with regard to sanctity of life," in fact allows and encourages the pre-planned
termination of life.
The absolutist provision is also infirm because the state does not stand
prepared to finance the preservation of life, without regard to the
cost, in very many cases. n4 In this particular case the state has Nancy in its
possession, and is litigating its right to keep her. Yet, several years ago, a
respected judge needed extraordinary treatment which the hospital in which he
was a
patient was not willing to furnish without a huge advance deposit, and the state
apparently had no desire to help out. Many people
die because of the unavailability of heroic
medical treatment. It simply cannot be said that the state's interest in
preserving and prolonging life is absolute.
n4 An absolutist would undoubtedly be offended by an inquiry as to whether the
slate, by prolonging Nancy's life at its own expense, is disabling itself from
pending needed treatment to others who do not have such dire prognosis.
It is unrealistic to say that the preservation of life is an absolute, without
regard to the
quality of life. I make this statement only in the context of a
case in which the trial judge has found that there is no chance for
amelioration of Nancy's condition. The principal opinion accepts this
conclusion. It is appropriate to consider the
quality of life in making decisions about the extraordinary
medical treatment. Those who have made decisions about such matters without resort to the courts
certainly consider the
quality of life, and balance this against the unpleasant consequences to the
patient. There is evidence that Nancy may react to pain stimuli. If she has any
awareness of her surroundings, her life must be a living hell. She is unable to
express herself or to do anything at all to alter her situation. Her parents,
who are her closest relatives, are best able to feel for her and to decide what
is best for her. The state should not substitute its decisions for theirs. Nor
am I impressed with the crypto-philosophers cited in the principal opinion, who
declaim about the sanctity of any life without regard to its quality. They
dwell in ivory towers.
Likewise unimpressive is
[**75] the suggestion that the conclusions of the trial
court, and of the overwhelming majority of courts which have considered the
problem, open the door to wholesale euthanasia of persons considered to be
defective, but not in a condition approaching Nancy's. A holding is precedent
only for the facts of the particular case. The courts are open to protect
incompetents against abuse.
Least of all can I accept the proposition that a judgment as the
Cruzans seek is precluded by some amorphous legislative policy
"favoring life," so that the courts may only deny this kind of relief until the legislature
decrees otherwise. Under Mo. Const. Art. 1, Sec. 14, the courts are open to
those who seek relief in proper cases involving actual controversies. The
courts have the duty of deciding cases on the basis of what they consider right
and just. We cannot shift our burden to the legislature. Nor would I depreciate
the capacity of our courts.
"he common law would be poor indeed if such jurists as Sir Edward
Coke and Lord Mansfield had been unwilling to reach their own conclusions about
novel issues.
I would grant that my approach to this case is realistic rather than absolute,
because it is not possible
[**76] to express absolutes in situations such as these. I am not persuaded that the
state is a better decisionmaker than Nancy's parents. We should respect their
decision even though, if similarly situated, we might elect to continue the
feeding of a loved one. There should be great deference to the trial judge. The
appellants have the normal burden of demonstrating error, which these
defendants have not done.
The
Cruzan family appropriately came before the court seeking relief. The circuit judge
properly found the facts and applied the law. His factual findings are
supported by the record and his legal conclusions by overwhelming weight of
authority.
[*430] The principal opinion attempts to establish absolutes, but does so at the
expense of human factors. In so doing it unnecessarily subjects Nancy and those
close to her to continuous
torture which no family should be forced to endure. I am grasping for words
which elude me, and so will not say more.
I would affirm the judgment.
DISSENTING OPINION Andrew Jackson Higgins, Judge
In my opinion, the decision in this important case of first impression in
Missouri rests on an unsound opinion by a tenuous majority of judges sitting
[**77] in the case. Accordingly, and with due respect, I dissent.
The trial court ruled that Ms.
Cruzan had the right to be free from unwanted intrusion of her body by medical agents
of the State and ordered the defendant doctors to honor the expressed wishes of
Ms.
Cruzan and the consent and authority given by her
guardians for removal of a surgically implanted
life support device. The majority cites more than 50 appellate decisions from 16
jurisdictions that support and validate the trial court's findings of fact,
conclusions of
law and the judgment in this case; yet, ironically, it reverses the judgment in
favor of Ms.
Cruzan by finding
"that the trial court erroneously declared the law." Because the majority acts in my view, contrary to the facts and the law, and
because of the importance of the case and its effect on the rights of the
citizens of Missouri, I register my formal dissent. It begins with the judgment
entered by the trial court:
On Tuesday, January 11, 1983 at approximately 12:50 a.m., Nancy Beth Davis nee
Cruzan, our
ward, was driving a 1963 Rambler Classic Sedan, alone, East on Elm Road (a/k/a
Krummel Nursery Road), 2.1 miles East of Alternate U.S. Highway 71, Southeast
[**78] of Carthage, Missouri, Jasper County. Elm Road is a two lane east-west
asphaltic pavement, 18 feet wide on an easterly uphill grade
in an open area. The weather was clear and the pavement dry on a cool January
night. The driver's condition is unknown prior to the accident. An accident was
reported and Trooper Dale Penn, Missouri State Highway Patrol was summoned to
the scene at 12:54 a.m., arriving at 1:00 a.m. where he found Nancy lying face
down in a ditch some 35 feet across a private driveway south and east from her
--- overturned-vehicle which was resting in a ditch on the west side of the
private driveway with all four wheels skyward. Nancy was lifeless and not
breathing when Trooper Penn examined her without moving her. She had apparently
expired. She was apparently eastbound at a speed too fast for the conditions
when her car ran off the left (north) side of the pavement and struck some
small trees, a mailbox and then swerved back across and off the pavement on the
right (south) side and ran
through a fence and overturned several times coming to rest on its top some 210
feet from the mailbox on the north side of Elm Road in the ditch of the private
driveway.
The Carthage
[**79] Fire Department was notified. Squad 107 was dispatched at 1:05 a.m.;
Lieutenant Ed Nuse in command, Firefighter Bob Smith driving, and Firefighter
Mike Lee on the back step. They arrived at 1:12 a.m. Lee commenced a search of
the area for a baby reportedly thrown from the vehicle while Lt. Nuse and Smith
went to the assistance of the paramedics with Firefighter Smith administering
CPR when Nancy resumed breathing.
At approximately 1:02 a.m. the Carthage Ambulance service at McCune-Brooks
Hospital was notified and paramedics Robert Williams and Rick Maynard were
dispatched in an ambulance. On arrival at 1:09 a.m., they found Nancy lying
face down in the ditch
"code
blue," i.e. in total respiratory and cardiac arrest. She had some facial lacerations,
lacerations within her mouth, cuts and massive swelling of the face. The only
evidence of the cause of death was her position, lying face down in the ditch
in a position in which she could not breathe. No evidence of severe head injury
or other explanation of
"code blue" was observed. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was commenced. She was
unconscious. Advance
life support procedures were instituted at 1:11 a.m. per orders of the emergency
[**80] room doctor at the
[*431] hospital. A
tube was placed down her windpipe to gain complete control of her respiratory
system and at 1:12 a.m. an I.V. was introduced, administering medication and
sodium bicarbonate because she had been
"down a while." Results were achieved at about 1:12 a.m. with a BP 60/0. It couldn't be heard
by stethoscope but could be felt by fingertips. At 1:13 a.m., the heart monitor
disclosed a pulse rate around 92 per minute and BP 80/0. She started
spontaneous respiration 12 per minute, a rate normal for some adults. Suction
was returning
"a lot of blood and mucous. At 1:56 a.m., after being prepared, she was
transported to McCune Brooks Hospital Emergency Room with vital signs of BP
110/80, pulse 92, and respiration 14 and spontaneous. Arrival was at 2:03 a.m.
She was examined and it was determined that she should be taken to Freeman
Hospital, Joplin, a distance of about 21 miles. After further efforts to
maintain a stable condition, she was transported.
Upon arrival at Freeman Hospital Emergency Room she was still unconscious, now
requiring manual respiratory assistance, unresponsive to painful stimuli and
wearing mass trousers. Her vital signs were
[**81] stabilized and she was taken to surgery.
An exploratory laparotomy disclosed a laceration to her liver which was
repaired. Multiple facial fractures were repaired by an oral surgeon. It was
noted she did not require much sedation or anesthetic.
Dr. H. S. Majzoub, a neurosurgeon, examined Nancy in the ICU following
surgery, reviewing a CAT scan of her head showing no significant abnormalities.
He found the upper hemispheric ventricles of the
brain essentially normal in size with no evidence of intracranial mass lesion or any
edema. All her basal systems appeared normal. The diagnosis was probable
cerebral contusions compounded by significant anoxia with the prognosis hinging
on the duration of her anoxia which was unknown to him.
Estimates of the duration of Nancy's anoxia range from 6 to 20 minutes with
the most probable duration 12 to 14 minutes. Less than 6 minutes is perhaps the
maximum period for the
brain to be without oxygen without causing some permanent
brain damage. The longer the duration, the more the permanent
damage.
Nancy's recovery from surgery was apparently uneventful. She remained in a
coma for about three more weeks when she appeared to have progressed to
[**82] an unconscious state. She has never recovered or improved from this state. On
February 1, 1983, with the consent of her then husband, a #20
gastrostomy
feeding T-tube was surgically inserted. This
tube has been her only source of
nutrition and
hydration since her admission to the Mt. Vernon State Hospital. She was discharged from
Freeman Hospital as improved on February 21, 1983 to St. John's Regional
Medical Center, Brady Rehabilitation Facility, Joplin, where rehabilitative
measures were attempted for six weeks when she was discharged essentially
unimproved and unresponsive to rehabilitation. She could not be fed orally,
being unable to swallow a significant amount of
food or
water.
Her husband took her to his grandmother's home where she was served by round
the clock professional nursing care. After two or three weeks, she
developed pneumonia, probably from
food aspiration as a result of oral
feeding efforts and was rehospitalized for a short time and then returned to the
grandmother's home.
A short time later, she was admitted to a local nursing home where after about
six days, she was admitted to Jane Chinn Hospital, Webb City, with a fever of
107 from some kind of an infection.
[**83] She was discharged to be admitted to the Mt. Vernon State Hospital on October
19, 1983 where she remains a
patient.
Her parents, the Petitioners, were appointed
guardians and conservators after hearing on January 25, 1984 and Letters duly issued.
Her husband did not attend or inquire of any of the proceedings. A dissolution
of marriage was subsequently decreed.
Continuous observations by primary care givers, her family and attending
physicians and a recent neurological examination
[*432] by Dr. George Wong report that Nancy remains unconscious, is unresponsive to
her environment with
atrophy and contractures of her four extremities. Her fingernails now sometimes
cut into her wrists. She is a spastic quadriplegic. Her vital signs, BP 130/80,
pulse 78 and regular, and respiration spontaneous at 16 to 18 per minute, all
essentially normal for a 30 year old female. At no time has her
electroencephalogram registered isoelectric or flat. Her condition is
considered permanent. A recent CAT scan of her head reveals abnormalities
suggesting severe
irreversible upper hemispheric
brain damage with massive enlargement of ventricles from filling with cerebrospinal
fluid because the
brain
[**84] is degenerating. The degeneration is called cerebral cortical atrophy which is
progressive from her initial condition reflected on CAT scan. The fluid is
replacing the area where there is no more
brain tissue. This permanent and
irreversible condition is the apparent result of time duration of anoxia which was
initially feared by the examining and consulting neurosurgeon. Her normal
weight of 115
pounds has now risen to about 140 pounds.
Prior to the accident, Nancy resided with her husband of about a year, Paul,
further east on Elm Road from the accident scene. She was employed on either
the 3 to 11 or the graveyard shift at Schreiber
Foods. She is described as a vivacious, active, outgoing, independent person who
preferred to do for herself.
About a year prior to her accident in discussions with her then housemate,
friend and co-worker, she expressed the feeling that she would not wish to
continue living if she couldn't be at least halfway normal. Her lifestyle and
other statements to family and friends suggest that she would not wish to
continue her present existence without hope as it is.
After examination and treatment by a number of physicians, including three
neurologists,
[**85] a neurosurgeon, and a, specialist in rehabilitative medicine and considering
the observations of the primary nursing care providers, her family and
co-guardians, the Court
by clear and convincing evidence finds the current medical condition of our
ward to be as follows:
1. That her respiration and circulation are not artificially maintained and
within essentially normal limits for a 30 year old female with vital signs
recently reported as Bp 130/80; pulse 78 and regular; respiration spontaneous
at 16 to 18 per minute.
2. That she is oblivious to her environment except for reflexive responses to
sound and perhaps to painful stimuli.
3. That she has suffered anoxia of the
brain resulting in massive enlargement of the ventricles filling with cerebrospinal
fluid in the area where the
brain has degenerated. This cerebral cortical atrophy is
irreversible, permanent, progressive and ongoing.
4. That her highest cognitive
brain function is exhibited by her grimacing perhaps in recognition of ordinarily
painful stimuli, indicating the experience of pain and her apparent response to
sound.
5. That she is spastic quadriplegic.
6. That she has
contractures of her four extremities
[**86] which are slowly progressive with
irreversible muscular and tendon damage to all extremities.
7. That she has no cognitive or reflexive ability to swallow
food or
water to maintain her daily essential needs. That she will never recover her ability
to swallow sufficient to satisfy her needs.
The petitioners, her mother and father, and duly appointed
co-guardians, seek this Court's approval of their request to the Respondent Lampkins,
Superintendent of the Mt. Vernon State Hospital, to discontinue further
nutrition and
hydration by
gastrostomy
tube and if refused by Respondents after this Court's approval then to direct
Respondents to carry out their request.
The only economic considerations in this case rest with Respondent's employer,
the State of Missouri, which is bearing the entire cost of care. Our
ward is an adult without financial resources other than Social Security whose not
inconsiderable medical insurance has been exhausted since January 1986.
[*433] The Court has been well and ably advised
in the premises by counsel for the Petitioners, William Colby, Esq., Kansas
City and Walter Williams, Esq., Joplin; for the Respondents, The Honorable
William L. Webster,
[**87] Attorney General of Missouri, Robert Presson, Esq., Assistant Attorney
General, and Robert R. Northcutt, Esq., General Counsel Missouri Department of
Health, all of Jefferson City; and the Court appointed
Guardians Ad Litem and attorneys for our
Ward, Thai C. McCanse, Esq., and David Mouton, Esq., both of the law firm of
Flanigan, McCanse and Lasley, Carthage, and Amici Curiae Briefs from Society
For The Right to
Die, the Ethics and Advocacy Task Force of the Nursing Home Action Group filed by
the National Legal Center for the Medically Dependent and Disabled and the
Missouri Citizens For Life.
Now being fully advised in the premises, the Court enters its conclusions and
judgment, accordingly.
The due process clause of the Constitution of the United States and the
statutes of the State of Missouri n1 require clear and convincing evidence of a
physical or mental condition before a person may be declared incapacitated and
a
guardian appointed. It follows that no less a standard must be met before the Court may
authorize the
Guardians to request Respondents to withdraw
nutrition and
hydration from their
Ward with the inevitable attendant consequences of carrying out such an act.
We believe the Petitioners,
Co-guardians, her parents, have met this heavy burden as the Court has found her present
medical condition to be by clear and convincing evidence.
The maintenance of
nutrition and
hydration to our
Ward, unresponsive to her environment and
without hope of further recovery becomes
medical treatment when it can only be provided by
gastrostomy
tube. While the
feeding itself may be more nutritional than medical, a surgical procedure personally
invasive to the body is required to implant the
tube in the stomach and if repair or replacement of the
tube should become necessary further surgical procedure would be required.
Nutrition or
hydration under these circumstances is
medical treatment because it can only be and has for the past five years been maintained by the
surgically implanted
gastrostomy
tube.
Nancy's present unresponsive and hopeless existence is not the will of the
Supreme Ruler but of man's will to forcefully feed her when she herself cannot
swallow thus fueling respiratory and circulatory pumps to no cognitive purpose
for her except sound and perhaps pain.
Her expressed thoughts at age twenty-five in somewhat serious conversation
with a housemate
[**89] friend that if sick or
injured she would not wish to continue her life unless she could live at least
halfway normally suggests that given her present condition she would not wish
to continue on with her
nutrition and
hydration.
The Law of this State n2 and legislatively enunciated public policy prohibits
withholding or
withdrawal of
nutrition or
hydration as a death-prolonging procedure and euthanasia or mercy killing by act or
omission. Death-prolonging procedures may only be withheld if no innocent third
parties require the protection of the state, no homicide or suicide occurs and
good ethical standards in the medical profession are maintained. Our law does
recognize an individual's primary
right to refuse
medical treatment and to direct physicians attending to withhold or withdraw further treatment.
In this case there are no innocent third parties
requiring state protection, neither homicide nor suicide will be committed and
the consensus
[**90] of the medical witnesses indicated concerns personal to themselves or the
legal consequences of such actions rather than any objections that good ethical
standards of the professions would be breached if the
nutrition and
hydration were withdrawn the same as any other
[*434]
artificial death prolonging procedures the statute specifically authorizes. Euthanasia is
not statutorily defined and there are differing definitions in both lay and
professional terms.
There is a fundamental natural right expressed in our Constitution as the
"right to liberty", n3 which permits an individual to refuse or direct the withholding or
withdrawal of
artificial death prolonging procedures when the person has no more cognitive
brain function than our
Ward and all the physicians agree there is no hope of further recovery while the
deterioration of the
brain continues with further overall worsening physical contractures. To the extent
that the statute or public policy prohibits withholding or
withdrawal of
nutrition and
hydration or euthanasia or
mercy killing, if such be the definition, under all circumstances, arbitrarily
and with no exceptions, it is in violation of our
ward's constitutional rights
[**91] by depriving her of liberty without due process of law. To decide otherwise
that
medical treatment once undertaken must be continued irrespective of its lack of success or
benefit to the
patient in effect gives one's body to medical science without their consent. We could
then sing, less fervently of the land of the free, but as medical science
advances to new horizons, much more fervently of the land of the brave. If we
are the victim we might not be cognizant of our bravery.
To deny the
Co-guardians the authority to act in this instance is to deprive the
Ward of the equal protection of tee law which is constitutionally guaranteed. n4
In this case the Court acts only to authorize the
Co-guardians to exercise our
Ward's constitutionally guaranteed liberty to request the Respondents to withhold
nutrition and
hydration.
The
Co-guardians are required only to exercise their legal authority to act in the best
interests of their
Ward as they discharge their duty and are free to act or not with this authority as
they may determine.
The Respondents, employees of the State of Missouri, are directed to cause the
request of the
Co-guardians to withdraw
nutrition or
hydration to be carried out. Such a request having Court approval, shall be taken the
same as a request for discontinuance of any other form of
artificial
life support systems. Under those circumstances, further
feeding could raise the spectre of civil liability and recovery of damages from the
provider. The care and compassion the Respondents and their
associates have already shown our
Ward and her
guardians, incomparable by any standards, are in keeping with the overwhelming tragedy
that has been visited upon us all.
IT IS SO ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED this 27th day of July, 1988.
The mandate of this Court for its review of this case is that the judgment
[**93] of the trial court
"will be sustained . . . unless there is no substantial evidence to support it,
unless it is against the weight of the evidence, unless it erroneously declares
the law, or unless it erroneously applies the law."
Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. banc 1976).
"Due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to have judged
the credibility of witnesses." Rule 73.01(c)(2). I submit under this mandate, and for the reasons that
follow, the judgment should be affirmed.
Appellants Harmon and Lamkins contend the court erred in concluding that the
living will statute does not prohibit
withdrawal of the
artificial
life support in this
case; in holding that refusal of the
withdrawal would deny Nancy
Cruzan's
"Right To Liberty" and to deny the
guardians to act on her behalf would deprive her of equal protection of the law; in
failing to decide whether
withdrawal of the support was appropriate, in failure to have clear and convincing
evidence to support its findings, and in identifying the factors that authorize
the
withdrawal.
[*435] Appellant
guardian ad litem advises this court:
we informed the [trial] court that we felt it was in
[**94] Nancy
Cruzan's best interests to have the
tube
feeding discontinued. We now find ourselves in the position of appealing from a
judgment we basically agree with. We felt then that an appeal should be made
because our responsibility to her as attorneys and
guardians ad litem was to pursue this matter to the highest court in the state in view
of the fact that this is a case of first impression in Missouri.
Appellant
guardian ad litem contends similarly to the contentions of appellants Harmon and
Lamkins. He contends additionally that the court
erred in authorizing the
guardian ad litem to exercise Nancy
Cruzan's
right to refuse life sustaining
medical treatment because to do so conflicts with a
guardian's statutory duty and the
right to refuse
life support here is personal to Nancy
Cruzan.
Respondents
co-guardians Lester L.
Cruzan, Jr., and Joyce
Cruzan contend for the judgment of the trial court asserting that the trial court was
correct in ruling that their daughter, Nancy
Cruzan, has a right to be free from invasive, unwanted and non-beneficial treatments
because such rights are granted to all persons by the right to liberty found in
the natural law, the
common law right to
[**95] self-autonomy and the constitutional rights to liberty and privacy; that she
did not forfeit the right to be free of intrusive treatment because of her
incompetency when her
guardians consented according to her rights; that no state interest is present that
outweighs her right to be free from the state's intrusive medical care; that
all the credible
evidence, medical and otherwise, supports the
withdrawal of the
artificial life system implanted in Nancy
Cruzan; that the living will statute does not stand to exclude
withdrawal of the surgically implanted support system; and that the appellant doctors'
hospital cannot disregard the request of the
guardians to withdraw the unwanted
life support.
Amicus curiae briefs in support of appellants were filed by The Missouri
Citizens For Life and The Association For Retarded Citizens of the United
States and The Ethics and Advocacy Task Force of the Nursing Home Action Group.
Amicus curiae briefs in support of respondents-guardians and the judgment in
their favor were filed by The American Medical Association; Society For The
Right To
Die; Concern For Dying; SSM Health Care System and The Center For Health Care
Ethics, St. Louis University Medical
[**96] Center; and The American Academy of Neurology.
Contrary to the
diversionary question posed by the majority, the parties as aforesaid present
the question answered by the trial court in favor of Nancy
Cruzan: Whether, under the evidence and applicable law, Nancy
Cruzan, an adult
incompetent, has the right to be free from an unwanted
artificial
life support device surgically implanted in her body, requested and authorized to be
removed by her
guardians. Yet no matter how the question is posed, the judgment for review under
Murphy is supported by the law and the facts and should be upheld.
The Facts
Although appellants emphasize selected testimony for purposes of their
arguments, none of appellants' contentions dispute the facts as found by the
trial court. Accordingly, the facts stand as found and recited in the judgment.
Murphy; Rule 73.01.
Nevertheless, the majority refinds facts to support its result, an inexcusable
exercise for this Court. For example, the majority states,
"the continuation of
feeding through the
tube is not heroically invasive." Yet the trial court found:
a surgical procedure personally invasive to the body is required to implant the
tube
[**97] in the stomach and if repair or replacement of the
tube should become necessary further surgical procedure would be required.
Nutrition or
hydration under these circumstances is
medical treatment because it can only be and has for the past five years been maintained
[*436] by the surgically implanted
gastrostomy
tube.
The majority's statement that subject
medical treatment is not invasive is contrary to both the facts of this case and the cases that
describe the use of a
gastrostomy
tube as
"intrusive as a matter of law."
McConnell et al. v. Beverly Enterprises, et al., No. 0293888, slip op. at 25 (Conn. Super. Ct. July 8, 1988);
Brophy v. New England Sinai Hosp., 398 Mass. 417, 435, 497 N.E.2d 626, 636 (1986).
For further example, the majority says,
"the statements [in regard to whether Nancy would want to receive this
medical treatment] attributable to Nancy in this case are similarly unreliable for the purpose
of determining her intent." The trial court, however, found, by clear and convincing evidence,
"given [Nancy's] present condition she would not want to continue on with her
nutrition and
hydration." The record is replete with evidence to support this
[**98] finding and the majority should not say otherwise.
Murphy; Rule 73.01.
Finally, the majority says,
"We further hold that the evidence offered at trial as to Nancy's wishes is
inherently unreliable." This substitution of judgment for that of the trial court constitutes an
incredible denial of the deference due the trial court's exclusive power to
judge the credibility of witnesses. Rule 73.01(c)(2).
The Law
All parties agree this is a case of first impression. Accordingly, it is proper
to look to the law of other
jurisdictions that have ruled on the question in this case. Although the
majority cites more than 50 cases from 16 states that support the judgment in
this case, it rejects all and fails to point to a single case in support of its
analysis and ultimate conclusion to reverse the judgment. Again, the irony in
the majority view is its reversal on the ground of
"erroneous declaration of law." Without exception, the cases cited in the majority's footnote 4 uphold a
right to refuse life sustaining
medical treatment, either personally or through a
guardian.
Specifically in point and persuasive for resolution of this case are:
Bouvia v. Superior Court, 179 Cal.App.3d
[**99] 1127, 225 Cal.Rptr. 297 (1986) (discussed by the majority): The court allowed a competent
patient to have a nasogastric
tube removed from her body based on a constitutional right to privacy and
a
common law right to
refuse treatment.
In Re Drabick, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 245 Cal.Rptr. 840 (1988): The court allowed a conservator to exercise the right on behalf of an
incompetent
patient in a
persistent vegetative state even without prior court approval if the decision is made in good faith.
Rasmussen v. Fleming, 154 Ariz. 207, 741 P.2d 674 (1987): A public fiduciary was allowed to remove a nasogastric
feeding tube from a nursing home
patient in a chronic vegetative state. The court balanced the constitutional right to
privacy and the
common law right to refuse
medical treatment against the state's interests. In light of the minimal benefit of continued
medical treatment, the court found that the
patient's rights, exercised through his
guardian,
outweighed the state's interest in
preserving life.
Brophy v. New England Sinai Hospital, Inc., 398 Mass. 417, 497 N.E.2d 626 (1986): The court engaged in the balancing test espoused by the majority. It held that
the
common law right
[**100] to
refuse treatment, and the constitutional
right of privacy are not absolute, but held a gastronomy
tube to be
"intrusive" as a matter of law and found that the
patient's rights outweighed the state's interests, notwithstanding that Brophy's
condition was not terminal.
Foody v. Manchester Memorial Hospital, 40 Conn. Supp. 127, 482 A.2d 713 (1984): The
patient was in a semicomatose state, kept alive by
life support systems. The
patient was
incompetent, and had never expressed her view on whether she would want to be kept alive
under her circumstances. The court recognized that there were both
constitutional and
common
law rights to be freed from unwanted
medical treatment. The court applied a balancing test and concluded
"that no state interest [including the preservation of life] exists to the
degree necessary to outweigh the right of Sandra Foody to exercise her
right to refuse further
[*437]
life-sustaining treatment."
Foody, at 720. The court
"recognized the right of a
guardian of the person to vicariously assert the right of an
incompetent or unconscious
ward to accept or deny medical care. To deny the exercise because the
patient is unconscious is to deny the
[**101] right. It is incumbent upon the state to afford an
incompetent the same panoply of choices it recognizes in competent persons."
Foody at 718.
Corbett v. D'Alesandro, 487 So.2d 368 (Fla. App. 1986): The court upheld the constitutional right of a person in a
persistent vegetative state to forgo the use of
artificial
life support (a nasogastric
feeding tube), and allowed the
patient's husband to exercise the right on her behalf. Florida has a living will statute
similar to Missouri's,
see Fla. Stat.
§ 765.03(3)(b) (Supp. 1984).
Estate of Prange, 166 Ill. App. 3d 1091, 117 Ill.Dec. 595, 520 N.E.2d 946 (1988): The
patient had made her wishes known while she was competent. The court upheld the
guardian's decision that the
patient would have wished to terminate
nutrition and
hydration and allowed the
guardian to carry out that wish based on a
common law right to be free from non-consensual bodily invasions and a constitutional
right of privacy.
In Re Gardner, 534 A.2d 947 (Me. 1987): The court permitted the
patient's
feeding tube to be removed based on a
common law right to refuse
medical treatment. The court affirmed the trial court's finding that it was the
patient's
[**102] clear and
convincing intent not to be maintained on
artificial
life support in a vegetative state. It based this finding on statements he had made to his
friends and family before the automobile accident which resulted in his
incapacitation. The Supreme Court held
"that when an individual has clearly and convincingly in advance of treatment
expressed his decision not to be maintained by
life-sustaining procedures in a
persistent vegetative state, health care professionals must respect that decision."
534 A.2d at 953. In addressing the emotional distinction between
nutrition and
hydration and other medical procedures, the court stated:
The symbolism is lost in the
artificial introduction of
food and
water into the body of someone in Gardner's unfortunate condition. There is no
symbolic virtue in imposing that procedure upon the body of a person who
previously declared that he would not want to receive such treatment but who
now is no longer
able personally to prevent what is being done to his body.
Id. at 955.
McConnell et al. v. Beverly Enterprises et al., No. 0293888 (Conn. Super. Ct. July 8, 1988): The
patient was diagnosed as being in a
persistent vegetative
[**103] state as a result of traumatic
brain injuries sustained in an automobile accident. Her family requested the court
to order the removal of the gastronomy
tube which was providing her
nutrition and
hydration and to allow her to
die. This was a case of first impression in Connecticut where a statute allowed
the
withdrawal of a respirator, but excluded the
withdrawal of
nutrition and
hydration. Despite the statute, the court held there was a constitutional
right to refuse
medical treatment, and a
common law right of self determination to accept or reject
medical treatment. The
patient, while competent, had indicated she would not want to be kept alive by life-prolonging equipment. The court further held:
other cases that have been decided . . . found no distinction between the
discontinuation of a respirator and any of the variety of
artificial
nutrition and
hydration methods. . . . While there is more difficulty in coming to terms with the
discontinuation of
nutrition and
hydration, no appellate court that has addressed this precise issue has found such a
distinction.
McConnell, slip op. at 22. The court held that a
guardian could exercise a
patient's rights and stated,
[**104]
"when a family is unanimous . . . the court must place great weight on their
decision to enforce the desires of their loved one."
McConnell, slip op. at 26.
See also,
Delio v. Westchester County Medical Center, 129 A.D.2d 1, 516 N.Y.S.2d 677 (1987);
Leach v. Akron General Medical Center, 68 Ohio Misc. 1, 426 N.E.2d 809 (Comm.Pl. 1980);
Matter of Welfare of Colyer, 99 Wash.2d 114, 660 P.2d 738 (1983).
[*438] Because New Jersey broke the first ground in this area, its cases deserve
particular attention. The majority cites
Matter of Jobes, 108 N.J. 394, 529 A.2d 434 (1987), contending it is factually similar to Nancy's case. In
Jobes, however, the court found the evidence was not clear and convincing that Mrs.
Jobes would want to
die if faced with life in a
persistent vegetative state. Nonetheless, the court allowed her family's wishes to be carried out under
the
"substituted judgment" test.
New Jersey has perhaps the longest line of cases on this subject. In the
Jobes opinion, the court briefly restated its rationale by tracing the relevant case
law:
In summary, we state again that the fateful decision to withdraw
life-supporting treatment is
extremely
[**105] personal. Accordingly a competent
patient's right to make that decision will outweigh any countervailing state interests.
[
In re Farrell, 108 N.J. 335, 354, 529 A.2d 404, 414.] An
incompetent
patient does not lose her
right to refuse
life-sustaining treatment. Where such a
patient has clearly expressed her intentions about
medical treatment, they will be respected.
[In re]
Peter, 108 N.J. at 378, 529 A.2d at 425.
108 N.J. 394, 529 A.2d 434, 451.
The court only then turned to the problem of a
patient whose wishes are not clear, and restated the
"substituted judgment" doctrine as developed in
In re Quinlan, 70 N.J. 10, 355 A.2d 647 (1976). Significantly, the problem in
Quinlan and
Jobes is not before this Court because the trial court found
by clear and convincing evidence that Nancy
Cruzan would have chosen to have the
feeding tube withdrawn had she been competent to choose. Judgment,
supra.
Notwithstanding this distinction, the majority engages in criticism of the New
Jersey Supreme Court:
"In
Quinlan, the New Jersey Supreme Court attempted to establish guidelines for decisions
concerning the
termination of
life support apparatus. More than
[**106] ten years later, that same court wrote, 'We recognize, . . . that given the
fundamental societal questions that must be resolved, the legislature is the
proper branch of government to set guidelines in this area. . . .'
In re Farrell, 529 A.2d at 407.
Quinlan had failed to provide sufficient guidelines to meet the broad diversity of
cases presenting
termination of life-support issues." The majority projects the impression that in
In re Farrell the New Jersey Supreme Court found some inherent fault in their
Quinlan decision. The
New Jersey Supreme Court, however, recognized the legislature was the proper
branch to set guidelines in this area, yet went on to hold
"nevertheless,
patients and their families and physicians are increasingly being faced with these
difficult and complex decisions without legislative guidelines and . . . until
the Legislature acts, it is to the courts that the public must look for the
guidelines and procedures under which
life-sustaining
medical treatment may be withdrawn or withheld."
In re Farrell at 408. The true lesson of the New Jersey cases is that more than ten years
had elapsed since the
Quinlan decision, yet an unresponsive
[**107] legislature had failed to establish procedures and guidelines for the
withholding or withdrawing of life sustaining
medical treatment.
The only case cited by the majority in which a court did not allow the removal
of
life-sustaining
medical treatment is
Matter of Conroy, 98 N.J. 321, 486 A.2d 1209 (1985). It is distinguishable because the
guardian
ad litem opposed
withdrawal of the
feeding tube, and there was no evidence from which the court could draw an inference as to
the
patient's intent, or general beliefs on the subject of life prolonging procedures.
Not mentioned by the majority is
Gray v. Romeo, 697 F. Supp. 580 (D.R.I. Oct. 17, 1988). It is the most recent case on removal of a
feeding tube and deals with all the issues presented in Nancy's case. In
Gray, as in Nancy's case, the family was appointed
guardian and a
guardian
ad litem was appointed. In
Gray, as in Nancy's case, the effect of removal of the
feeding tube would bring about death. Marcia Gray, like Nancy, was in a
persistent vegetative state. Marcia Gray, like Nancy had, while
[*439] competent, voiced her wish not to have her life sustained by
life support systems when there is no
hope
[**108] of recovery. Marcia Gray's
guardians, like Nancy's
guardians, felt it was in her best interest and that she would not want to have life
sustained in a
persistent vegetative state with no hope of recovery. Also, the health care personnel caring for Marcia
Gray were adamant in their opposition to the proposal to remove
nutrition and
hydration.
The distinction between Marcia Gray's case and the majority's treatment of
Nancy's appeal is that the court in
Gray, based on the above facts, followed the law and granted the request of the
guardians to remove the
feeding tube and thus allowed Marcia Gray to exercise her rights. The court stated the
issue,
"whether or not the state can insist that a person in a vegetative state
incapable of intelligent sensation, whose condition is
irreversible, may be required to submit to medical care under circumstances in which the
patient prefers not to do so."
Gray at 584.
The logic and legal analysis of the
Gray court follow:
First, the court resolved the issue whether there is a
right to refuse
life-sustaining
medical treatment. The court discussed the United States Supreme Court decisions relating to the
issue and held,
"although
[**109] the Supreme Court has never directly addressed the issue of a person's federal
constitutional
right to refuse
life-sustaining
medical treatment, the Court's decisions have repeatedly affirmed the principle of individual
self-determination. A person has the right, subject to important state
interests, to control fundamental medical decisions that affect his or her own
body. This right, whether described as the principle of personal autonomy, the
right of self-determination, or the
right of privacy, is properly grounded in the liberties protected by the Fourteenth Amendment's
due process clause. This right is also grounded in the notion of an
individual's dignity and interest in bodily integrity."
Gray at 584.
The majority in dealing with the Supreme
Court decisions on this subject cites
Bowers v. Hardwick, 478 U.S. 186, 194, 92 L. Ed. 2d 140, 106 S. Ct. 2841,
reh'g. denied
478 U.S. 1039, 92 L. Ed. 2d 779, 107 S. Ct. 29 (1986) for the proposition that the right to privacy does not go beyond the bounds of
the right to procreate within the bonds of marriage. The
Gray court held,
"decisions concerning
medical treatment bear little connection to the claimed constitutional
[**110] right to engage in homosexual acts, rejected in
Bowers. Instead, the right to control fundamental medical decisions is an aspect of
the right of self-determination and personal autonomy that is 'deeply rooted in
this Nation's history and tradition.'"
Gray at 584.
Second, the court resolved the issue
"whether
nutrition and
hydration supplied through a
gastrostomy
tube are a
form of
medical treatment that Marcia Gray may properly refuse."
Gray at 586. Unlike the majority's avoidance of this issue n1 the
Gray court looked to other case law
"addressing this issue and concluded that analytically no difference exists
between
artificial
feeding and other
life support measures."
Gray at 586.
Although an emotional symbolism attaches itself to
artificial
feeding, there is no legal difference between a mechanical device that allows a person
to breathe artificially and a mechanical device that artificially allows a
person nourishment. If a person has the right to decline life on a respirator,
then a person has the equal right to decline a
gastrostomy
tube. Accordingly, Marcia Gray's
right to refuse
medical treatment includes the right to have the [gastrostomy
tube]
[**111] removed.
Gray at 18 (citation omitted).
Third, the court resolved the issue whether Marcia Gray, an
incompetent like Nancy,
"still retains her right to decide whether the [gastrostomy
tube] remains implanted or removed."
Gray at 586. Unlike
[*440] the majority, the court in
Gray followed the prior case law and held
"the
right to refuse
medical treatment 'must extend to the case of an
incompetent
patient because the value of human dignity extends to both. Any other view would
permit obliteration of an
incompetent's panoply of rights merely because the
patient could no longer sense the violation of those rights.'"
Gray at 583 (citations omitted).
The majority states,
"A
guardian's power to exercise third party choice arises from the state's authority, not
the constitutional rights of the
ward." The majority further states
"we . . . find no statutory basis for the argument that the
guardian
[**112] possesses authority, as a
guardian, to order the
termination of
medical treatment." To the contrary,
§ 475.123.1, provides,
"No medical or surgical procedure shall be performed on any
ward unless consent is obtained from the
guardian of his person. . . ." RSMo 475.123.1 (1986). As the court in
Gray held:
The [gastrostomy
tube] was initially inserted with the consent of Marcia Gray's husband. No
analytical difference exists between withholding and withdrawing
medical treatment, however. A
patient's
right to refuse
medical treatment obviously includes both the right to refrain from beginning the treatment and
the right to order it's cessation. 'Moreover, from a policy standpoint, it
might well be unwise to forbid persons from discontinuing a treatment under
circumstances in which the treatment could permissibly be withheld. Such a rule
could discourage families and doctors from even attempting certain types of
care and could thereby force them into hasty and premature decisions to allow a
patient to
die.'
Gray at 589.
Last, the
Gray court,
following cited authority, balanced an
incompetent's right to self determination against the state's interest in
preserving
[**113] life for all and held the
incompetent's rights prevailed. In contrast, the majority balanced these same interests in
Nancy's case yet declared, without authority, that the state's interest
prevailed. The majority has failed to recognize
[a] state's interest in preservation of life is highest when the state seeks to
protect an individual who may potentially be the subject of abuse because he or
she cannot protect his or her own interests. That clearly is not the situation
here; rather, a number of persons are attempting to ensure that [an
incompetent's] wishes are respected. In this situation [the
incompetent's] right to self-determination must prevail over the state's interest in
preserving life for all.
Gray at 586.
At the outset the majority asserts:
"Because we find that the trial court erroneously declared the law, we reverse." A reader of the ensuing opinion
searches and waits in vain for citation of a single authority to support the
majority's bold assertion and its drastic action. Yet the majority itself
recognizes that courts in at least 16 states have found a way to allow persons
in the plight of Nancy
Cruzan wishing to
die to meet that end. As demonstrated
[**114] in this dissenting opinion, the cases recognized in the majority's footnote 4
uphold a
right to refuse life sustaining
medical treatment, either personally or through a
guardian. Comparison of the majority's opinion and this dissenting opinion reveals no
disagreement on the
"White Horse" case law available and applicable to resolution of the issues in this case.
These authorities provide all the support necessary for the trial court's
declarations and applications of law under the facts of this case. Should not a
reader ask the majority why it projects the irony of recognizing yet
rejecting this abundance of dispositive case law in favor of its non-supported
assertion of
"erroneous declaration of law?" Is it because of its
"public policy" bootstrapped from a statute that all parties in this case, the trial judge and
the majority agree has no application in this case; or is it because the
majority would have this Court abdicate its responsibilities to Nancy
Cruzan under the Constitution and the common law and deny her rights in deference to
some yet unspecified and unconsidered legislation; n2
[*441] or is it because of the majority's unarticulated
"concerns of medicine, ethics,
[**115] morality, philosophy, theology and law"; or is it simply because the majority elects to ignore the facts and law of
this case and
"choose(s) to err" on the side of life of
incompetent persons who may wish to live, a case not before the Court at this time? n3
n2 Preference for legislative treatment cannot shackle the courts when legally
protected interests are at stake. As people seek to vindicate their
constitutional rights, the courts have
no alternative but to respond. Legislative inaction cannot serve to close the
doors of the courtrooms of this state to its citizens who assert cognizable
constitutional rights."
Satz v. Perlmutter, 379 So.2d 359, 360 (Fla. 1980).
n3
"I suggest the trial court and this Court fulfill their constitutional and
lawful duties when the law is followed and upheld -- rather than conjuring up
reversible error where none exists."
State v. Goree, No. 70112 (Mo. banc Nov. 15, 1988) (Billings, C.J., concurring).
In summation, respondents' counsel observed:
"The family came
[**116] to the trial court after long and careful deliberation either way this Court
decides, the
Cruzan family does not win. The trial court found it was Nancy's wish, clear wish, to
be free from this unwanted
medical treatment and we would request that this Court affirm that."
In my opinion, the trial
judge made a courageous voyage in an area not previously charted by Missouri
courts, and the resulting judgment is supported unquestionably by both the
evidence and the law. Nancy
Cruzan and those Missourians who may be in her situation deserve the common law and
constitutional rights that the trial court has accorded them. This Court should
do no less and affirm that judgment.
DISSENTING OPINION Warren D. Welliver, Judge
I respectfully dissent and concur in the dissenting opinions of both Higgins,
J. and Blackmar, J.
This case is not before us to establish groundwork for future right-to-life
litigation. It is here to examine and determine Nancy
Cruzan's right to
die under the federal and state constitutions, under our existing case law which
requires us to defer to the facts as found below, and under the large body of
precedent established by the courts of our sister states.
The principal
[**117] opinion, states that
"none of the
parties argue that Missouri's Living Will statute applies in this case."
Cruzan v. Harmon v. McCanse, 760 S.W.2d 408, (Mo. banc 1988). In this respect the parties are eminently correct. The
opinion unnecessarily and by dictum seeks to place a mantle of
constitutionality on the Missouri Living Will Statute, which statute in my
opinion has been a fraud on the people of Missouri from the beginning and which
statute, if directly attacked, must, in my opinion, be held to be
unconstitutional. n1
n1
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 35 L. Ed. 2d 147, 93 S. Ct. 705 (1973) (affirmed the principle that a person has the right, as found in the
Fourteenth Amendment's due process clause, to control fundamental decisions
involving his or her own body);
Schmerber v. California, 384 U.S. 757, 772, 16 L. Ed. 2d 908, 86 S. Ct. 1826 (1966) ("the integrity of an individual's person is a cherished value of our society");
Rochin v. California, 342 U.S. 165, 174, 96 L. Ed. 183, 72 S. Ct. 205 (1952) (forced stomach pumping
"offensive to human dignity");
Union Pac. Ry. Co. v. Botsford, 141 U.S. 250, 251, 35 L. Ed. 734, 11 S. Ct. 1000 (1891) ("no right is held more sacred, or is more carefully guarded, by the common law,
than the right of every individual to the possession and control of his own
person, free from all restraint or interference of others, unless by clear and
unquestionable authority of law.").
As pointed out in the principal opinion,
Cruzan v. Harmon v. McCanse, 760
S.W.2d at
(Mo. banc 1988), the Missouri Living Will Statute is modeled after the Uniform
Rights of the Terminally Ill Act (URITA), which provides,
§ 2 Declaration Relating to Use of
Life-Sustaining Treatment
(a) An individual of sound mind and [18] or more years of age may execute at
any time a declaration governing the withholding or
withdrawal of
life-sustaining treatment.
URITA
§ 2(a).
§ 1 Definitions As used in this [Act] unless the context otherwise requires:
(f)
"Life-Sustaining treatment" means any medical procedure or intervention
[*442] that, when administered to a qualified
patient, will serve only to prolong the process of dying.
URITA
§ 1(4).
The Missouri Statute, like the Uniform Act does provide in
§ 459.015, RSMo 1986, that
"any competent person may execute a declaration directing the withholding or
withdrawal of death-prolonging procedures." But, Missouri then defines
"death-prolonging procedures" in
§ 459.010(3), RSMo 1986, as follows:
"Death-Prolonging procedure", any medical procedure or intervention
[**119] which, when applied to a
patient, would serve only to prolong artificially the dying process and where, in the
judgment of the attending physician pursuant to usual and customary medical
standards, death will occur within a short time whether or not such procedure
is utilized.
Death-prolonging procedure shall not include the administration of medication or the performance of medical procedure
deemed necessary to provide comfort care or to alleviate pain nor
the performance of any procedure to provide
nutrition or
hydration.
Section 459.010(3), RSMo 1986 (Emphasis added).
Yes, we Missourians can sign an instrument directing the withholding or
withdrawal of death-prolonging procedures, but, after the Missouri amendments,
"death-prolonging procedure" does not
include: (1)
"the administration of medication," (2)
"the performance of medical procedure deemed necessary to provide comfort, care
or to alleviate pain" (3)
"the performance of any procedure to provide
nutrition," or (4)
"the performance of any procedure to provide . . .
hydration." If we cannot authorize withdrawing or withholding
"medication,"
"nutrition" or
"hydration," then what can we authorize to be withheld
[**120] in Missouri? The Missouri Living Will Act is a fraud on Missourians who
believe we have been given a right to execute a living will, and to
die naturally, respectably, and in peace.
It has always been my belief that as a matter of court policy cases of great
magnitude, cases that directly affect all of the people of the State, should
never be heard or decided by other than the duly appointed regular members of
the Supreme Court. n2 Following the special setting of this case and several
days prior to the special hearing, I raised this issue with the Court,
obviously without success. The
result that I feared and pointed out to the Court has now come to pass. It is
deeply regrettable to me that an issue of this magnitude and importance to
every citizen of the State is decided by the single vote of any special judge
while the
sitting members of the regular Court are evenly divided on this issue.
n2 In a case where there is a tie vote of the regular members of the court the
result below should be affirmed.
Durant v. Essex Co., 74 U.S. 107, 19 L. Ed. 154 (1868) (a reversal could not be had if the judges were divided, therefore, the
judgment of the court below stood in full force);
In re Albany Bridge Case, 69 U.S. 403, 17 L. Ed. 876 (1864) (the court being equally divided, the decree was affirmed by necessity);
Etting v. Bank of U.S., 24 U.S. 59, 6 L. Ed. 419 (1826) (the judgment was affirmed where the Court was evenly divided).
The great body of legal precedent, applied to the facts as properly found
below, mandates that this case be affirmed. In the alternative, the Court
should recognize what I believe to be the right of the people to have this case
decided by the regular members of the Supreme Court. The submission should be
set aside and the case reset for hearing before the regular and duly
constituted members of the Court. n3
n3 While it might be argued that nothing about Nancy's condition requires
expediting the case, only a court without compassion could ignore the
continuing agonizing pain and suffering of Nancy's family. Barring death or
sudden illness, there is no reason why we should not have a full regular court
for the balance of the year and our docket is not so heavy as to preclude the
rehearing of one specially set case.