A committee appointed by the state Supreme Court has recommended rule
changes for New Mexico courts that would allow the public into
previously closed hearings involving people placed under legal
guardianship or conservatorship because of their mental or physical
condition.
Access to confidential court records involving such
cases will remain under wraps for the most part, under another proposed
rule.
The first two rules proposed by the committee are open for public
comment until Monday before the Supreme Court decides whether to
implement them. The law goes into effect July 1.
Family members
still won’t be entitled to automatically view copies of the annual
reports on the welfare and finances of an incapacitated person under
court protection – but will have better ability to seek access.
Those
reports are required of guardians and conservators at least annually
with the court. But under the proposed rules, state district court
judges who hear such cases will have the discretion to permit access by
family members or other interested parties.
The rules committee of
mostly lawyers and judges has been reviewing ways for courts to
implement the 59-page guardianship reform law passed overwhelmingly by
the Legislature in February.
“The big picture is changing a little
bit,” said state Sen. James White, R-Albuquerque, the original sponsor
of the guardianship legislation. “People are watching, and judges are
trying to make changes to improve things.”
The proposed rule for
opening hearings is based on the provision of the new law that states
the court, for good cause, can decide to close a hearing.
To close a hearing, the proposed rule states, a judge would have to hold a hearing on any proposed courtroom closure.
The rule proposes that open hearings apply to all cases pending or filed on or after July 1.
The other proposed rule up for public comment affects access to records.
While
still allowing only the court docket sheet, which shows the actions in
the case, to be public, there would be a list of people who could review
the petition for guardianship or conservator before a judge rules on
the matter. The judge’s order would also be available for review to
those persons.
They would include an alleged incapacitated
person’s spouse, adult children or stepchildren; persons responsible for
their care; their attorneys, trustees and powers of attorneys; and
people known to have assisted the person in the prior six months.
Once
the judge’s order granting the guardianship or conservator is issued,
the list of those able to review the court records, including medical or
financial filings or reports, would be limited to the incapacitated
person, their appointed guardian or conservator, and “any other person
the court determines.”
Advocates of reforming guardianship laws have hailed the increased
transparency to the current closed system, under which hundreds of
people, many elderly with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, are placed
under the control of the appointed guardians or conservators.
One
national expert who has been studying the guardianship issue for 30
years told the Journal last fall that New Mexico’s closed system was
unusual.
“What struck me when I first looked at New Mexico, I was
very surprised as a general matter that guardianship proceedings were
not open to the public. That’s not consistent with how most other states
address the issue,” David English, a professor at University of
Missouri at Kansas City, told a now-disbanded commission appointed by
the Supreme Court last year to recommend reforms.
The rules
committee is expected to continue proposing rules involving guardianship
reform until further notice of the Supreme Court.
The proposed rules can be found and comments lodged at the court’s website, under the “open for comment” rules at https://supremecourt.nmcourts.gov.
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Guardianship panel recommends changes to closed system
Families must have access to records!
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