Texas 2023 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB3504 House Committee Report / Bill

Filed 04/11/2023

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                    88R20512 MPF-F
 By: Leach H.B. No. 3504
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 3504:
 By:  Schofield C.S.H.B. No. 3504


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to an application for emergency detention and procedures
 regarding court-ordered mental health services.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 573.012(h), Health and Safety Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (h)  A judge or magistrate shall [may] permit an applicant
 who is a physician to present an application by:
 (1)  e-mail with the application attached as a secure
 document in a portable document format (PDF); or
 (2)  secure electronic means, including:
 (A)  satellite transmission;
 (B)  closed-circuit television transmission; or
 (C)  any other method of two-way electronic
 communication that:
 (i)  is secure;
 (ii)  is available to the judge or
 magistrate; and
 (iii)  provides for a simultaneous,
 compressed full-motion video and interactive communication of
 image and sound between the judge or magistrate and the applicant.
 SECTION 2.  Section 574.001, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsections (g) and
 (h) to read as follows:
 (b)  Except as provided by Subsection (f), the application
 must be filed with the county clerk in the county in which the
 proposed patient:
 (1)  resides;
 (2)  is located at the time the application is filed [is
 found]; [or]
 (3)  was apprehended under Chapter 573; or
 (4)  is receiving mental health services by court order
 or under Subchapter A, Chapter 573.
 (g)  A judge or magistrate shall accept an application filed
 at any time that the judge or magistrate is on duty, regardless of
 whether the application is filed after 5:00 p.m. on a weekday, on a
 Saturday or Sunday, or on a state or national holiday.
 (h)  A court shall allow an application to be filed under
 this section in the same manner as any other document filed with the
 court, including through the use of an electronic filing system
 established under Section 72.031, Government Code, if applicable.
 SECTION 3.  Section 574.003, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by adding Subsection (a-1) to read as follows:
 (a-1)  A judge may not decline to appoint an attorney to
 represent a proposed patient because the judge perceives or knows
 that the patient is not indigent.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter A, Chapter 574, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Section 574.0121 to read as follows:
 Sec. 574.0121.  CONFLICTING RECOMMENDATIONS REGARDING
 COMMITMENT. If the local mental health authority in the county in
 which an application is filed does not recommend that a proposed
 patient be committed, the authority, as part of the recommendation
 required under Section 574.012, must:
 (1)  include the information required by Sections
 574.011(a) and (b); and
 (2)  identify the criteria for commitment that the
 proposed patient does not satisfy and include the facts on which
 that determination is based.
 SECTION 5.  Section 574.021, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (d) and adding Subsections (d-1) and
 (f) to read as follows:
 (d)  The motion must be accompanied by a certificate of
 medical examination for mental illness prepared by a physician who
 has examined the proposed patient not earlier than the third day
 before the day the motion is filed. The motion is not required to
 include a recommendation from a local mental health authority.
 (d-1)  A court may not consider a recommendation from a local
 mental health authority if the authority's recommendation fails to
 comply with the requirements of Section 574.012 and, to the extent
 applicable, Section 574.0121.
 (f)  A court shall allow the motion to be filed under this
 section in the same manner as any other document filed with the
 court, including through the use of an electronic filing system
 established under Section 72.031, Government Code, if applicable.
 SECTION 6.  Section 574.022, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsections (a) and (d) and adding Subsection
 (f) to read as follows:
 (a)  The judge or designated magistrate shall [may] issue a
 protective custody order if the judge or magistrate determines:
 (1)  that a physician has stated the physician's
 opinion and the detailed reasons for the physician's opinion that
 the proposed patient is a person with mental illness; and
 (2)  the proposed patient presents a substantial risk
 of serious harm to the proposed patient or others if not immediately
 restrained pending the hearing.
 (d)  The judge or magistrate shall set a hearing date and
 [may] take additional evidence if a fair determination of the
 matter cannot be made from consideration of the application and
 certificate only.
 (f)  The judge or magistrate may not deny a motion for a
 protective custody order solely on the basis that the proposed
 patient was not emergency detained under Chapter 573 at the time
 that an application for court-ordered mental health services under
 this chapter was filed.
 SECTION 7.  Section 574.023, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (a-1) to
 read as follows:
 (a)  A protective custody order shall direct a person
 authorized to transport patients under Section 574.045 to take the
 proposed patient into protective custody and transport the person
 immediately to a mental health facility deemed suitable by:
 (1)  the local mental health authority for the area; or
 (2)  a physician who completed a certificate of medical
 examination under Section 574.009.
 (a-1)  On request of the local mental health authority, the
 judge may order that the proposed patient be detained in an
 inpatient mental health facility operated by the department.
 SECTION 8.  Section 574.025(d), Health and Safety Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (d)  The applicant, the proposed patient, and the proposed
 patient's attorney shall have an opportunity at the hearing to
 appear and present evidence on [to challenge] the allegation that
 the proposed patient presents a substantial risk of serious harm to
 the proposed patient [himself] or others.
 SECTION 9.  Section 574.028, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsections (a) and (c) and adding Subsection
 (d) to read as follows:
 (a)  [The magistrate or associate judge shall order the
 release of a person under a protective custody order if] If the
 magistrate or associate judge determines after the hearing under
 Section 574.025 that no probable cause exists to believe that the
 proposed patient presents a substantial risk of serious harm to the
 proposed patient [himself] or others, the magistrate or associate
 judge shall order the release of a person under a protective custody
 order. The order must include written findings of fact that no
 probable cause exists.
 (c)  A facility administrator shall discharge a person held
 under a protective custody order if:
 (1)  the facility administrator receives an order
 described by Subsection (a) from which no appeal has been filed
 [does not receive notice that the person's continued detention is
 authorized after a probable cause hearing held within 72 hours
 after the detention began, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, legal
 holidays, and the period prescribed by Section 574.025(b) for
 extreme emergencies];
 (2)  a final order for court-ordered mental health
 services has not been entered within the time prescribed by Section
 574.005; or
 (3)  the facility administrator or the administrator's
 designee determines that the person no longer meets the criteria
 for protective custody prescribed by Section 574.022.
 (d)  An order entered under Subsection (a) is immediately
 appealable under Section 574.070.
 SECTION 10.  Section 574.031, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by adding Subsection (d-3) to read as follows:
 (d-3)  Notwithstanding Subchapter I, the court shall allow
 the competent medical or psychiatric testimony under Subsection
 (d-1) to be provided by closed-circuit video teleconferencing if:
 (1)  closed-circuit video teleconferencing is
 available to the court for that purpose;
 (2)  the court has good cause to not conduct in-person
 testimony, including that conducting the testimony through
 closed-circuit video teleconferencing would minimize the
 disruption of care to the testifying person's other patients; and
 (3)  the closed-circuit video teleconferencing system
 provides for a simultaneous, compressed full-motion video and
 interactive communication of image and sound between all persons
 involved in the proceedings.
 SECTION 11.  Section 574.033, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (a-1) to
 read as follows:
 (a)  The court shall enter an order denying an application
 for court-ordered temporary or extended mental health services if
 after a hearing the court or jury fails to find, from clear and
 convincing evidence, that the proposed patient is a person with
 mental illness and meets the applicable criteria for court-ordered
 mental health services. The order must include written findings of
 fact on which the court's order is based.
 (a-1)  An order entered under Subsection (a) is immediately
 appealable under Section 574.070.
 SECTION 12.  Sections 574.070(a) and (d), Health and Safety
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  An appeal from an order requiring or denying
 court-ordered mental health services, or from a renewal or
 modification of an order, must be filed in the court of appeals for
 the county in which the order is entered.
 (d)  Pending the appeal and after entering findings of fact
 based on evidence presented at the hearing, the trial judge in whose
 court the cause is pending may:
 (1)  stay the order and release the patient from
 custody before the appeal if the judge is satisfied that the patient
 does not meet the criteria for protective custody under Section
 574.022; and
 (2)  if the proposed patient is at liberty, require an
 appearance bond in an amount set by the court.
 SECTION 13.  The change in law made by this Act to Section
 573.012, Health and Safety Code, applies to an emergency detention
 that begins on or after the effective date of this Act. An emergency
 detention that begins before the effective date of this Act is
 governed by the law as it existed immediately before that date, and
 that law is continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 14.  The change in law made by this Act to Section
 574.001, Health and Safety Code, applies only to an application for
 court-ordered mental health services submitted on or after the
 effective date of this Act.
 SECTION 15.  The changes in law made by this Act to Chapter
 574, Health and Safety Code, apply only to a proceeding for
 court-ordered mental health services that occurs on or after the
 effective date of this Act, regardless of when an offense with which
 the defendant is charged was committed.
 SECTION 16.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.