Sec. 17a-523. (Formerly Sec. 17-200). Commission to inquire whether person is wrongly confined.
Sec. 17a-523. (Formerly Sec. 17-200). Commission to inquire whether person
is wrongly confined. Any judge of the Superior Court, on information to him that any
person is unjustly deprived of his liberty by being detained or confined in any hospital
for psychiatric disabilities, or in any place for the detention or confinement of persons
with psychiatric disabilities, or in custody and control of any individual under an order
of a court of probate, may appoint a commission of not fewer than two persons, who,
at a time and place appointed by them, shall hear any evidence offered touching the
case. Such commission need not summon the party claimed to be unjustly confined
before it, but shall have one or more private interviews with him and shall also make
inquiries of the physicians and other persons having charge of such place of detention
or confinement, and within a reasonable time thereafter report to such judge the facts
and its opinion thereon. If, in its opinion, such person is not legally detained or confined
in such place, or is cured, or his confinement is no longer beneficial or advisable, such
judge shall order his discharge; but no commission shall be appointed with reference
to the same person more often than once in six months. The judge before whom any of
the proceedings provided for in this section are had may tax reasonable costs at his
discretion.
(1949 Rev., S. 2682; P.A. 86-371, S. 15, 45; P.A. 90-271, S. 12, 24; P.A. 95-257, S. 48, 58.)
History: P.A. 86-371 deleted reference to detention or confinement in "any inebriate hospital in this state"; P.A. 90-271 made a technical change; Sec. 17-200 transferred to Sec. 17a-523 in 1991; P.A. 95-257 replaced variants of "mental
illness" and "mentally ill" with variants of "psychiatric disabilities", effective July 1, 1995.
See Sec. 17a-510 re procedure for release or transfer of patient in hospital for the mentally ill.
See Sec. 46b-1 re wrongful confinement considered as family relations matter.
Annotations to former section 17-200:
Cited. 173 C. 473.
Inquest procedure violates due process. 30 CS 320.