K.E.W. v. State
K.E.W. v. the State of Texas.
Attorneys
Richard H. Branson, League City, TX, for Appellant., Donald S. Glywasky, Galveston County Legal Department, Robert V. Shattuck, Jr., Roger L. Ezell, Criminal District Attorney, Galveston, TX, for Appellee.
Procedural Posture
Appeal from the Probate Court, Galveston County, Gladys B. Burwell, J. Page 687
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION
In these two accelerated appeals, appellant, K.E.W., challenges the legal and factual sufficiency
Background
On April 17, 2008, K.E.W., a patient of Gulf Coast Center Mental Health and Mental Retardation (“MHMR”) who had previously been diagnosed as schizophrenic, went in for an appointment that he had made. Although a regular patient, he had not been seen by the staff since the prior October. While at the Gulf Coast Center, K.E.W. informed the staff that he had a plan to impregnate multiple women and asked repeatedly for a particular female staff member whom he stated that he wanted to impregnate.
At the hospital, K.E.W. explained to doctors that aliens put a computer chip in his abdomen and right ring finger and that he was chosen to help populate a new and better race of humans. His goal was to search and find as many women as he could to procreate quickly, and he had a firm belief that there was a flock or group of women whom he needed to find and impregnate, one of whom was his adult step-daughter. He believed that some of the women for whom he was searching had been at or near the hospital when he was brought into the emergency room and that the hospital staff had known that and discussed it but had withheld information from him about it, and he was very angry at the staff for not giving him the information he needed. He became very agitated and insisted that he needed to leave in order to complete his mission and asked the treatment team to help him contact the women. He was diagnosed as having schi-zoaffective disorder, specifically being paranoid schizo-chronic.
The State filed an application for court-ordered temporary mental health services and an application for an order to administer psychoactive medication. At the hearing on the State’s application for temporary commitment, in addition to limited testimony from two members of the Gulf Coast Center’s staff about the events which led to KE.W.’s hospitalization, and appellant’s medical records,
Stone
Stone admitted that he had not verified the existence of any of the women whom K.E.W. claimed that he wished to impregnate and, as far as he knew, K.E.W. had taken no concrete steps to find them, though K.E.W. had a plan to carry out the creation of a new society and carried papers about the plan with him. He admitted also that K.E.W. said that he was not planning on impregnating the women against their will, but was concerned whether K.E.W. would understand what a woman would consider to be against her will. He agreed that the only group that K.E.W. was a danger to was these women, and women in general in society, because K.E.W., in his confused belief, might believe mistakenly that a woman was one who was promised to him and wanted to be impregnated.
Dr. Ortiz testified that, while in the hospital, K.E.W. became agitated regarding the women he was seeking. She detailed an incident where K.E.W. believed that some of the women he was seeking had been in the emergency room and that he had just missed them. K.E.W. believed that the hospital staff, including Ortiz, knew this and had information where the women were, but were withholding it from him. He thought that he heard Ortiz and the nurses laughing about how he had just missed the women, thought it was a conspiracy against him, and was very upset. He was convinced that Ortiz was able to access special agents who would have the key that would take him to the portal where the women were located. He also told Ortiz that he had the ability to hear thoughts through special frequencies and told her that he may have heard or perceived that she was probably lying to him.
Ortiz was concerned about two behaviors of K.E.W. as a potential danger. The first was the potential for non-consensual sexual interaction with the specific women he sought, if he were to find them. She explained that K.E.W. was very intrusive, had invaded her space on several occasions, and she did not know if he would understand that “no” meant “no,” given his state of mind at the time. However, she admitted that K.E.W. did not state that he intended to impregnate anyone against her will and did not make sexual advances toward anyone on the staff. The second concern was related to K.E.W’s misperception that he received information from brain waves or special abilities. Ortiz feared that K.E.W. could get very angry and agitated if he perceived or misper-ceived certain information. Ortiz felt that the unit was organized and safe but, if K.E.W. was in another situation, with another stimulus, “perhaps something would happen.”
K.E.W. put on no testimony or evidence.
The trial court found that K.E.W. was suffering from mental illness and, as a result of that mental illness, was likely to cause serious harm to others. The court also found that K.E.W. was suffering from severe and abnormal mental, emotional, and physical distress, and ordered him committed to the Austin State Hospital for inpatient care not to exceed 90 days. In its written order, the trial court stated that it found, by clear and convincing evi
The court then held a hearing on the administration of psychoactive medication. The State called Dr. Stone, who testified that K.E.W. was taking some medications ordered for him and refusing others, and that, in Stone’s opinion, K.E.W. was not capable of understanding the need for medication because of his mental illness. Stone explained that K.E.W. did not really believe that he needed medication, and only agreed to take one medication, which Stone was not sure was working. Stone stated that there was no other alternative treatment and that antipsychotics, anxio-lytics, sedatives, hypnotic mood stabilizers, and antidepressants would be in KE.W.’s best interest.
K.E.W. then testified that he thought that doctors were trying to keep him away from the real medicine he needed — his “displaced family and friends that [he] had come from far away to see and a large group of those individuals that they’re referring to.” That was the “real medication that [would] heal [his] heart, mind, body and soul.” He stated that it was wrong for someone to tell him that his belief system was not correct and that he was tired of coming to court “over a period of time from dimension to dimension,” having his feelings put on trial, being sent to a hospital, and being forced to take medications to try to make him forget his feelings. He spoke of medicines that he had taken before that he felt helped him, and stated that the antipsychotics did not change his point of view, which was what “this is about” and which was “not right.” He explained that he had had these feelings for decades having gone through “multidimensional realities after being over it.” He told the court that he did not have schizophrenia, but did have major depression and posttraumatic stress disorder, and wanted to take two particular medicines. He insisted that he did not have delusions.
The trial court granted the order to administer psychoactive medication.
Order for Temporary Commitment
A. Burden of Proof
Before a trial court may render an order for temporary, involuntary commitment, it must find, from clear and convincing evidence, that
(1) the proposed patient is mentally ill; and
(2) as a result of that mental illness, the proposed patient
(A) is likely to cause serious harm to himself;
(B) is likely to cause serious harm to others; or
(C) is:
*693 (i) suffering severe and abnormal mental, emotional, or physical distress;
(ii) experiencing substantial deterioration of the proposed patient’s ability to function independently, which is exhibited by the proposed patient’s inability, except for reasons of indigence, to provide for the proposed patient’s basic needs, including food, clothing, health, or safety; and
(in) is unable to make a rational and informed decision as to whether or not to submit to treatment.
Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 574.034(a) (Vernon 2003). The trial court must specify which criteria listed in subsection (a)(2) foi’m the basis for its decision per Texas Health and Safety Code section 574.034(c), and appellate review is limited to the criteria specified by the court. See Johnstone v. State, 961 S.W.2d 385, 388 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 1997, no pet.).
In order to be clear and convincing for the purposes of subsection (a), the evidence must include expert testimony and, unless waived, there must be evidence of either “a recent overt act” or “a continuing pattern of behavior” that tends to confirm:
(1) the likelihood of serious harm to the proposed patient or others; or
(2) the proposed patient’s distress and the deterioration of the proposed patient’s ability to function.
Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 574.034(d) (Vernon 2003). The “recent overt act or continuing pattern of behavior proven by the State must relate to the criterion on which the judgment is based.” J.M. v. State, 178 S.W.3d 185, 193 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, no pet.).
While expert testimony is required by the statute, an expert’s diagnosis alone is not sufficient to confine a patient for compulsory treatment.
Nor is the State’s burden met by testimony of “possible” or “potential” harm to the proposed patient or others. See J.M., 178 S.W.3d at 196; State ex. rel L.C.F., 96 S.W.3d 651, 657 (Tex.App.-El Paso 2003, no pet.); C.O., 65 S.W.3d at 181-82; Broussard, 827 S.W.2d at 622. Rather, when the State alleges that a proposed patient may harm himself or others, it must provide proof, by clear and convincing evidence, that the proposed patient is likely to do so. See C.O., 65 S.W.3d at
B. Legal Sufficiency to Support the Temporary Commitment Order
In reviewing a “no evidence,” or legal insufficiency, claim in the case of a temporary involuntary commitment, because of the heightened clear-and-convincing burden of proof in the trial court, we apply an elevated appellate standard of review. J.M., 178 S.W.3d at 190-92. We must “look at all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the finding to determine whether a reasonable trier of fact could have formed a firm belief or conviction that its finding was true.” In re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d 256, 266 (Tex.2002). In doing so, we must give appropriate deference to the fact finder’s conclusions, and we must “assume that the factfinder resolved disputed facts in favor of its finding if a reasonable factfinder could do so.” Id. Therefore, we “should disregard all evidence that a reasonable factfinder could have disbelieved or found to have been incredible,” though we do not disregard undisputed facts that do not support the finding. Id. In support of its order for temporary involuntary commitment, the trial court stated that it found, by clear and convincing evidence, that K.E.W. was mentally ill, and made positive findings under subsections (a)(2)(B) and (C)(i), (ii), (hi).
KE.W. asserts that there is no evidence, or insufficient evidence, to support either the finding that he is mentally ill or the findings under subsections (a)(2)(B) and (C)(i), (Ü), (iii). He specifically argues that the two testifying doctors disagreed on his diagnosis of mental illness
The State responds that the evidence is uncontroverted that K.E.W. is suffering from schizophrenia, is living “in a delusional state under the belief he has been abducted by aliens who have tasked him with creating new superior races by impregnating a select group of females,” which included “one of the women working at the very Gulf Coast Center he was treated at,” and that “when he came looking for her he was prevented by physical intervention of the staff of law enforcement.” The State further argues that the evidence established that the “acute distress of KE.W.’s condition was that he had deteriorated to the point he was unable to comprehend the reality of his illness or treatment; his ability to care for himself was evidenced by his disheveled dress and the socks he had
We consider first the trial court’s finding under section 574.034(a)(1) that K.E.W. was mentally ill. Reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s findings, we hold that a reasonable trier of fact could have formed a firm belief that its finding that K.E.W. was mentally ill was true. We therefore hold that the evidence was legally sufficient to support that finding.
We next consider the legal sufficiency of the evidence under section 574.034(a)(2) to demonstrate either that K.E.W was likely to cause serious harm to others,
Review of the record indicates that very little evidence was presented on the issue of an overt act or continuing pattern of behavior confirming K.E.W.’s distress and the deterioration of his ability to function. The State cites as evidentiary support the fact that K.E.W. was disheveled and was wearing the same socks for weeks as proof of a diminished ability to clothe himself properly. But these facts were not cited as support by either Dr. Stone or Dr. Ortiz,
On the record before us, there was no evidence of an overt act or continuing pattern of behavior that confirmed KE.W.’s deterioration of his ability to function independently as exhibited by his inability to provide for his basic needs. Accordingly, we hold that, on the evidence in this record, a reasonable trier of fact could not have formed a firm belief or conviction that such finding was true, and we hold that the evidence was legally insufficient to support the trial court’s finding under section 574.034(a)(2)(C).
Lastly, we turn to the trial court’s finding under section 574.034(a)(2)(B), that K.E.W. was likely to cause serious harm to others. K.E.W. argues that there is no evidence, or insufficient evidence, of a recent overt act or continuing pattern of behavior to support the likelihood of him causing serious harm to others, noting that he denied having any intent to impregnate women against their will, and citing a lack of evidence that he had made any sexual advances toward women at the hospital. The State responds that he went looking for one of the women he was interested in impregnating and was prevented from contacting her only through physical intervention.
We first note that the evidence of KE.W.’s ongoing psychotic behavior itself does not support the statutory requirement of a recent overt act or continuing pattern of behavior that tends to confirm that K.E.W. is likely to seriously harm others. “Texas courts universally hold that the State must show more than delusions, angry or psychotic behavior, or other facts that merely confirm mental illness” in order to “establish the requisite [recent] overt act or continuing pattern of behavior” required by section 574.034(d). C.O., 65 S.W.3d at 182 (holding that evidence of “continuing delusional behavior, hostile behavior, and provocative statements to others” merely reflected that an individual was mentally ill and in need of hospitalization, but did not provide the continuing pattern of behavior necessary to support involuntary commitment); see also C.C., III, 253 S.W.3d at 893; F.M., 183 S.W.3d at 494; J.M., 178 S.W.3d at 193; G.H., 96 S.W.3d at 634; K.D.C., 78 S.W.3d at 548-51; K.T., 68 S.W.3d at 892; Johnstone, 961 S.W.2d at 388-90; Broussard, 827 S.W.2d at 622; P.W., 801 S.W.2d at 3.
Nor does the testimony from Dr. Ortiz and Dr. Stone provide sufficient factual bases to meet the statutory requirement.
In discussing his opinion that K.E.W. could be a danger to others, Stone expressed a concern that K.E.W. would act on his delusions, try to impregnate a woman if he found one whom he thought was promised to him, and would not appreciate whether a particular women wished to be impregnated. To support his opinion, Stone cited the beliefs expressed by K.E.W. and his adherence to them, and the fact that Dr. Pugh thought KE.W. so threatening that he should be immediately admitted to the hospital. Stone admitted that K.E.W. said that he was not planning on impregnating anyone against her will, and as far as Stone knew, K.E.W. took no concrete steps to find the women.
Neither doctor was present at the Gulf Coast Medical Center at the time KE.W. was taken into custody and neither pointed to any specific actions taken by K.E.W. at the center as a basis for rendering an opinion.
While KE.W’s beliefs and mental illness certainly give rise to the potential of harm to others, in order to support commitment, the threat of harm must be substantial and based on actual dangerous
Remaining as a possible overt act confirming the likelihood that K.E.W. would cause serious harm to others — and the one most relied on by the State — is KE.W’s conduct at the Gulf Coast Center MHMR. Review of the record indicates significant gaps in the evidence related to this incident. The record suggests that K.E.W. made a statement of a sexual nature to the woman at the center but the record does not contain the statement and the question itself was struck from the record. Likewise, the record does not contain a complete description of the actual sequence of events at the center and, in particular, does not contain a description of the specific actions taken by K.E.W. that caused the staff to take the actions that they did. Although one witness was asked why it was necessary to protect the female staff member from K.E.W., the response was struck from the record. There is, accordingly, no evidence in the record on appeal of the particular actions on the part of K.E.W. that caused the staff to feel that K.E.W. was a threat. What remains in the record is that K.E.W. went to Gulf Coast Center MHMR; was agitated and pacing; was vehemently insistent on contacting a female worker whom he identified, at some unspecified point, as one of the women he believed he should impregnate as part of his mission to create a superior race; was uncooperative and attempted to interfere with female staff even though directed otherwise; exhibited paranoid behavior; and the staff was fearful enough to seclude the object of his interest and felt that appellant was a sufficient threat to call the police to escort him away.
The record before us establishes that appellant was mentally ill and suffered from serious delusions that might potentially result in serious harm to others if carried out. It establishes that K.E.W. attempted to contact one of the women regarding whom he had a delusion and that the women’s co-workers felt that K.E.W. was a threat. But the record does not establish specific overt acts or a continuing pattern of behavior by appellant that would tend to confirm that appellant was likely to sexually assault the female staff member or cause any kind of serious harm to others.
The evidentiary standards for involuntary commitment are high, E.E., 224 S.W.3d at 794, because involuntary commitment is a drastic measure. C.O., 65 S.W.3d at 182. To justify depriving an individual of his liberty, more than “potential” harm is necessary. C.O., 65 S.W.3d at 182. That a person may be a potential danger is insufficient to support commitment under the statute. J.M., 178 S.W.3d
Order to Administer Psychoactive Medication
K.E.W. also contends that if the commitment order is reversed, the order to administer psychoactive medication cannot stand because an order authorizing the administration of psychoactive medication may be entered only if the patient is under a valid order for temporary or extended services. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 574.106(a)(1) (Vernon Supp.2008). This is correct; without a valid order for temporary or extended mental health services, the order authorizing the administration of psychoactive medications is not authorized by statute. Id.; C.C., III, 253 S.W.3d at 895; Breeden, 4 S.W.3d at 790. Because we reverse the trial court’s order of temporary commitment, we also reverse the order to administer psychoactive medications to K.E.W. and sustain K.E.W.’s first issue to the extent that it challenges the medication order. We therefore do not consider K.E.W.’s factual sufficiency challenge to this order. M.S., 137 S.W.3d at 137.
Conclusion
We reverse the judgment of the trial court ordering temporary impatient mental health services and the order to administer psychoactive medications and render judgment denying the State’s applications to commit K.E.W. for court-ordered temporary mental health services and to administer psyehoactive medications to K.E.W.
Justice KEYES, dissenting.
. Although appellant has listed a separate issue complaining that there is "no evidence” to support the trial court’s orders, we observe that a "no evidence” argument is a legal insufficiency argument. See Sw. Bell Tel. Co. v. Garza, 164 S.W.3d 607, 620 (Tex.2004) (discussing "no evidence” and "insufficient" evidence standards of review and noting that “no evidence is sometimes referred to as being legally insufficient, the issue being one of law, while evidence so against the preponderance of other evidence that the judgment it supports is clearly wrong is sometimes referred to as being factually insufficient”). We therefore consider appellant’s "no evidence” complaint in our resolution of his legal sufficiency challenge.
. Trial court cause number 3318; appellate court cause number 01-08-00371-CV.
. Trial court cause number 3318A; appellate court cause number 01-08-00372-CV.
. Although the specified terms of both orders was a period of 90 days, which has expired, the doctrine of mootness does not apply to appeals from involuntary commitments for temporary hospitalization, State v. Lodge, 608 S.W.2d 910, 912 (Tex.1980), or an order to administer psychoactive medication. J.M. v. State, 178 S.W.3d 185, 189-90 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, no pet.).
. The physician's certificate of medical examination of April 17, 2008, signed by Dr. Wales-ka Ortiz, indicates that K.E.W. had been "searching for his daughter.” Pugh's notions in K.E.W.’s medical records regarding the visit to the Gulf Coast Center on April 17th indicate that K.E.W had been vehement about contacting his step-daughter. This information suggests that the female staff member that K.E.W. was attempting to contact at the Gulf Coast Center was his step-daughter.
. This information was relayed to the trial court via medical records; Dr. Pugh did not testify in court.
. It is unclear from the record what documentary exhibits were actually admitted. At the beginning of the hearing, there was a stipulation to "the medical records ... except to the extent they contain hearsay,” and the records were admitted subject to that stipulation, but no marked exhibit was identified with that stipulation. Later in the hearing, State's Exhibit 1 is mentioned, as is "the patient’s chart that has been removed from the unit,” which was described as State’s Exhibit 2 and which was stipulated to by the parties and was admitted. However, State’s Exhibit 2 was withdrawn and does not appear in the record.
. The parties stipulated to Stone's qualifications as an expert.
. According to Stone, K.E.W. also told him that he needed to marry his step-daughter.
. Stone did not further describe how K.E.W. had been "very threatening.”
. After the court did so, K.E.W. told the judge that there was a factual basis to the incident that Ortiz had mentioned about the people that he was supposed to meet having been in the emergency room, stated that he would like to make contact with them, and said that he heard, and had evidence, that some of them might be "in a very precarious situation” and that the court "would like their situation helped.”
. The requirement of subsection (d) of section 574.034 that there be evidence of a confirming recent overt act or continuing pattern of behavior does not conflict with the provision in subsection (f) in that same section that provides that a court may make its findings solely from medical certificates if the proposed patient and his attorney file waivers of the right to cross-examine witnesses. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. §§ 574.034(d), (f) (Vernon 2003). Subsection (d) deals with the substance of the evidence that must be provided to the court in order to make the evidence clear and convincing, while subsection (f) deals with a particular manner in which such evidence may be presented to the court. The State is required, regardless of the manner in which it presents its evidence, to present the evidence required under subsection (d) in order to make the evidence supporting commitment clear and convincing. See In re Bree-den, 4 S.W.3d 782, 788 (Tex.App.-San Antonio 1999, no pet.) (reversing order of commitment when State presented testimony from three doctors who all expressed opinion that appellant would continue to suffer distress and deterioration of ability to function independently, but record lacked sufficient evidence of recent act or continuing pattern of behavior to confirm these assertions); see also State ex. rel. Mayberry, 685 S.W.2d 121, 124— 25 (Tex.App.-Amarillo 1985, no writ) (holding, under prior version of statute, that medical certificates were insufficient to sustain order of commitment where certificates failed to provide sufficiently detailed factual basis for physicians’ conclusions); accord State ex. rel. C.R.W., No. 06-08-00028-CV, 2008 WL 1839031 at *3, *7, *8 (Tex.App.-Texarkana April 25, 2008, no pet.) (memo op.) (noting that "doctors' certificates alone could constitute sufficient evidence” to support trial court's findings, but holding that they did not when certificates did not provide evidence of recent overt act or continuing pattern of behavior that confirmed that appellant was likely to harm herself) (emphasis in original).
. This “further showing” may be provided by expert testimony or by other evidence. In re F.M., 183 S.W.3d 489, 499 (Tex. App.-Houston [14th Dist.] 2005, no pet.).
. See also Breeden, 4 S.W.3d at 788 (noting that "what is lacking from the record ... is sufficient evidence of a recent act or continuing pattern of behavior that tends to confirm [the expert’s] assertions.”) (emphasis in original); Broussard v. State, 827 S.W.2d 619, 622 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 1992, no writ) (holding evidence insufficient to support confinement where record lacked “any evidence of an overt act or continuing pattern of behavior”); see also State ex. rel. P.W., 801 S.W.2d 1, 3 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 1990, writ denied) (holding evidence insufficient when record contained expert testimony, but "no real evidence" that proposed patient ever tried to hurt herself or others, or that her condition was deteriorating to point where she might do so).
. Dr. Stone testified that K.E.W. was schizophrenic while Dr. Ortiz testified that he suffered from schizoaffective disorder.
. Tex. Health and Safety Code Ann. § 574.034(a)(2)(A) (Vernon 2003).
. Tex. Health and Safety Code Ann. § 574.034(a)(2)(C) (Vernon 2003).
. These facts appear in Ortiz’s progress notes of April 18, 2008, as part of her mental status exam where she notes that K.E.W. was ”[d]ressed appropriately but unshaven and initially he had been wearing the same socks over a period of a couple of weeks," and Dr. Gonzalez’s progress notes of April 20, 21, and 22, 2008, which noted K.E.W.’s appearance as "disheveled.” However, Dr. Pastusek's notes on the date of K.E.W's admission to the hospital simply describe K.E.W.’s appearance as "casually attired.”
. Stone was later recalled to the stand, was asked if he had had an opportunity to review the patient's record, and was requested to read from the record. Stone stated that there were no notes or writings that indicated that K.E.W. was groping any women, but K.E.W. told Dr. Pugh of a plan to impregnate multiple women. When asked if Pugh had written why he thought it necessary to put K.E.W. in the hospital, Stone read aloud, "He is also very vehement about contacting his stepdaughter who per Rebecca Sealy Hospital notes he has a history of verbally raping. He is clearly delusional ... and refusing medications. He has very little insight and continues to attempt to interfere with female staff although he has been directed otherwise. Because of his behavior, I feel that he may be a danger to others."
Ortiz was also given medical records to review and asked if she recalled the specific behaviors by K.E.W. that had been the impetus for his admission to the hospital. She stated that K.E.W. had had an MHMR appointment with Pugh, had exhibited behavior that Pugh considered paranoid, and that there “was a certain tension and agitation in addition to the bizarre dilution [sic] delusions.” When asked if K.E.W. was touching or groping women, Ortiz responded, “I don't know,” and when asked if she had "seen that in the chart," Ortiz stated that the chart said, "Patient wants the female,” but she could not make out any more of the handwriting on the nurse's chart.
Pugh did not testify at the commitment hearing.
. This case may well be "another one of those cases where the necessary elements for commitment seem ‘to lurk just beyond the proof presented.' " See In re. B.M., No. 04-99-00433-CV, 2000 WL 35874, at *3 (Tex.App.-San Antonio, January 19, 2000, no pet.) (not designated for publication) (citation omitted). In this case, perhaps there were such facts, possibly in the testimony that was struck from the record or in the testimony that might have been elicited from Pugh, had he been called to testify, but these circumstances are not in the record before us. We concur in the sentiments of our sister court expressed in In re J.J.K., that "we are reluctant to deny court-ordered treatment for anyone who is ill. However, within Lthe record] before us, we do not find the State proved its case by clear and convincing evidence as it is required to do.” Nos. 14-03-00379-CV, 14-03-00380-CV, 2003 WL 22996950, at *5 (Tex.App.-Houston [14th Dist.] 2003, no pet.) (not designated for publication) (holding that evidence that appellant suffered severe delusions, became so agitated at the hospital that she had to be physically restrained, knocked door off hinges in hospital, and engaged in verbal altercations with others was insufficient to support commitment; determining that there was no evidence of overt acts that would tend to confirm that appellant would cause serious harm to self or others).