Wisconsin Lawyer Magazine
Vol. 78, No. 6, June
2005
The Schiavo Case in Wisconsin
While the Schiavo case arose in Florida, it raises profound ethical
questions and important legal issues nationwide. This article outlines
the facts and legal issues of the Schiavo case and examines how such a
case might have been decided in Wisconsin.
Sidebars:
by Robyn S. Shapiro
he public spectacle encircling the tragic
case of Theresa Marie (Terri) Schiavo leaves in its wake not only
profound ethical questions for all of us but important legal issues for
Wisconsin attorneys. This article outlines the facts and legal issues of
the Schiavo case and examines how such a case might have been decided in
Wisconsin.
Factual Background and Legal History of the Schiavo
Case
Forty-one-year-old Terri Schiavo died on March 31, 2005, 13 days
after her feeding tube was removed and 15 years after she fell into a
persistent vegetative state. That condition resulted from a heart attack
that, in turn, probably arose from a potassium imbalance related to an
eating disorder. A persistent vegetative state is the complete and
irreversible loss of all functions of the cerebral cortex. It results in
a complete, chronic, and irreversible cessation of all cognitive
functioning and consciousness and a complete lack of behavioral
responses that indicate cognitive functioning, even though autonomic
functions continue. Due to Terri Schiavo's severe brain injury, which
prevented her from ingesting and swallowing food and water, she required
nourishment and hydration artificially administered through tubes.
Robyn S. Shapiro, Harvard
1977, practices health law focusing on bioethics issues, health
information privacy, regulatory and licensing matters, research
compliance, and medical staff and patient care issues in the Milwaukee
office of Gardner Carton & Douglas LLP.
Michael Schiavo, Terri Schiavo's husband and court-appointed
guardian, authorized both traditional and experimental therapies for
Terri Schiavo over a three-year period before accepting her
neurologists' diagnosis of irreversible persistent vegetative state. At
that point, he concluded that his wife would not wish to be kept alive
indefinitely in her confirmed permanent vegetative condition, given her
prior statements such as "I don't want to be kept alive on a
machine."
Based on his conclusion, Michael Schiavo petitioned a Florida state
court for an order authorizing removal of his wife's feeding tube. In
evaluating the petition, the court considered a Florida statute that
requires "clear and convincing evidence that the [treatment termination]
decision would have been the one the patient would have chosen had the
patient been competent or, if there is no indication of what the patient
would have chosen, that the decision is in the patient's best interest."
In 2001, the court granted Michael Schiavo's petition and authorized
removal of Terri Schiavo's feeding tube, finding that there was clear
and convincing evidence that she was in a persistent vegetative state
and that she would have chosen to discontinue life-prolonging procedures
under the circumstances. An appeals court affirmed this decision, and
the Florida Supreme Court declined to review it.
Terri Schiavo's parents subsequently filed several court challenges,
including an emergency motion for relief from the judgment. The parents
claimed that they had newly discovered evidence related to a new
treatment that they believed might restore cognitive function to Terri.
In affirming the trial court's ruling denying that emergency motion, the
court of appeals noted:
"Despite the irrefutable evidence that [Schiavo's] cerebral cortex
has sustained irreparable injuries, we understand why a parent who had
raised and nurtured a child from conception would hold out hope that
some level of cognitive function remained... But in the end, this
case is not about the aspirations that loving parents have for their
children. It is about Theresa Schiavo's right to make her own decision,
independent of her parents and independent of her
husband...."1
Terri Schiavo's parents also sought help from the state and federal
legislatures. In October 2003, the Florida Legislature passed a law that
gave Gov. Jeb Bush the authority to order that Terri Schiavo's feeding
tube be reinserted. However, in the fall of 2004, the Florida Supreme
Court ruled that this law was an unconstitutional violation of the
separation of powers because it permitted the executive branch to
"interfere with the final judicial determination in a case."2 The court also held that the law constituted an
unconstitutional delegation of legislative power to the governor, in
that it gave the governor "unbridled discretion" to make a decision
about a citizen's constitutional rights.3
Following emergency sessions, the U.S. Congress passed and President
Bush signed into law an "emergency measure" (S. 686) that provides that:
"[t]he U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida shall have
jurisdiction" to hear a suit "for the alleged violation of any right of
Theresa Marie Schiavo under the Constitution and laws of the United
States relating to the withholding or withdrawing of food, fluids, or
medical treatment necessary to sustain her life" and that granted Terri
Schiavo's parents standing to bring the lawsuit. In addition, the law
directed the court to "determine de novo any claim of a violation of any
right of Theresa Marie Schiavo ... notwithstanding any prior State
court determination."4
Despite the enactment of this "emergency measure," U.S. District
Court Judge James Whittemore denied Terri Schiavo's parents' request for
a temporary restraining order that would have required reinsertion of
the feeding tube (which had been removed on March 18, 2005, pursuant to
court order), finding that the parents had failed to demonstrate a
substantial likelihood of success on the merits.5 Specifically, the judge found that with respect to
the parents' due process claims, the case had been "exhaustively
litigated," and all parties had been "represented by able counsel." In
response to the allegation that Terri Schiavo's First Amendment rights
to practice her religion had been violated by the state, the court held
that there were no state actions involved because "neither Defendant
Michael Schiavo nor Defendant Hospice are state actors." The parents
lost their appeal of Judge Whittemore's ruling, as well as multiple
subsequent legal appeals, and Terri Schiavo died on March 31, 2005.
The Schiavo Case in Wisconsin
The Wisconsin Supreme Court decisions in Lenz v. L.E. Phillips
Career Development Center (In re Guardianship of L.W.)6 and Spahn v. Eisenberg (In re Guardianship
& Protective Placement of Edna M.F.)7 provide insight as to how the Wisconsin courts
would deal with a case similar to Terri Schiavo's case.
In L.W., the guardian of L.W., a 79-year-old man who had a
history of chronic schizophrenia and became permanently vegetative after
suffering a cardiac arrest, petitioned the court for a declaratory
judgment as to whether the guardian or the court had the authority to
consent to withdrawal of L.W.'s breathing support. The circuit court
held that a guardian has the authority to consent to withdrawal of all
life-sustaining treatment, including artificial nutrition and hydration,
without prior court order or approval, if withdrawal is determined by
the guardian to be in the ward's best interests. The Wisconsin Supreme
Court affirmed the circuit court's opinion.
First, the court held that individuals have a right to refuse
unwanted medical treatment and that this right extends to incompetent as
well as competent individuals. This right, the court explained, emanates
from the common law rights of self-determination and informed consent,
which are personal liberties protected by the 14th Amendment, and the
guarantee of liberty in the Wisconsin Constitution, and it is not lost
or relinquished by the individual merely because he or she becomes
incompetent. 8 This holding accords with the
New Jersey Supreme Court's 1976 Karen Quinlan ruling,9 the U.S. Supreme Court's 1990 Nancy Cruzan
ruling,10 and the Wisconsin advance
directive statutes.11
Second, the L.W. court held that the right to refuse
unwanted medical treatment includes the right to refuse artificial
nutrition and hydration. Again, this ruling followed the U.S. Supreme
Court's holding in Cruzan, in which six of the nine justices
explicitly found that no legal distinction could be made between
artificially delivered fluids and nutrition and other medical
interventions, such as ventilator support, and the other three justices
found no constitutionally relevant distinction. In Cruzan,
Justice O'Connor stated: "Whether or not the techniques used to pass
food and water into the patient's alimentary tract are termed `medical
treatment,' it is clear they all involve some degree of intrusion and
restraint.... Requiring a competent adult to endure such procedures
against her will burdens the patient's liberty, dignity and freedom to
determine the course of her own treatment. Accordingly, the liberty
guaranteed by the Due Process Clause must protect, if it protects
anything, an individual's deeply personal decision to reject medical
treatment, including the artificial delivery of food and water."12
Third, the L.W. court stated that "clear and convincing"
evidence of the individual's treatment wishes is not required for
treatment termination. Rather, the court explained, if the individual's
wishes for treatment to be stopped are "clear," it is in the best
interests of the patient to have those wishes followed, and if there is
no or little evidence of the patient's wishes (as was true with respect
to L.W.), the surrogate decisionmaker must determine what is in the
patient's best interests by reference to more objective, societally
shared criteria. Expanding on the notion of "best interests," the court
noted that in some circumstances, it may be in a ward's best interests
to have life-sustaining medical treatment withheld or withdrawn, because
a dignified and natural death may outweigh the interest of maintaining
physiological life as long as possible.
In response to arguments that treatment termination would be an
unconstitutional deprivation of life, the L.W. court explained
that when a ward is in a persistent vegetative state, the decision of
the guardian to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining medical care, in
furtherance of the ward's best interests, does not result in deprivation
of life without due process, because due process initially is accorded
through the guardianship appointment procedures. The withdrawal of life
support does not deprive the ward of life but rather allows the disease
to take its natural course.
Finally, the L.W. court held that while a guardian's
decision to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining medical treatment from
a ward who is in a persistent vegetative state does not require prior
court approval, court review is available when any interested party
objects to the guardian's decision. The guardian then has the burden to
show, to a high degree of medical certainty, the existence of a
persistent vegetative state and to show that the decision to withhold or
withdraw treatment is in the ward's best interests and was made in good
faith.
In Edna M.F., decided in 1997, Edna's guardian (her sister)
filed a petition seeking an order confirming her decision to have
artificial nutrition withheld from Edna, an incompetent 71-year-old
woman with late stage Alzheimer's dementia who suffered a condition that
approximated but did not meet the clinical definition of a persistent
vegetative state (because she exhibited some minimal response). The
guardian claimed that Edna would not want to live in the condition in
which she suffered, citing the following factors, among others: 1) the
fact that Edna had been a vibrant, gifted journalist; 2) a statement
Edna had made to the effect that "I would rather die of cancer than lose
my mind"; and 3) the consensus of her family and friends that she would
not want to be kept alive in her condition.
The circuit court denied the guardian's petition, and the Wisconsin
Supreme Court affirmed, holding that: 1) a guardian may direct the
withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment, including nutrition and
hydration, if the ward is in a persistent vegetative state and the
decision to withdraw is in the best interests of the ward; 2) if the
ward is not in a persistent vegetative state, it is not in his or her
best interests, as a matter of law, to withdraw life-sustaining
treatment unless the ward has clearly indicated his or her desires; and
3) Edna's statement that she would prefer to die of cancer rather than
lose her mind was not a sufficiently clear statement of intent to ground
her guardian's authorization of treatment withdrawal, because that
statement had been made more than 30 years previously and under
different circumstances.
L.W. and Edna suggest that if Terri Schiavo's case
had unfolded in Wisconsin, the following analysis would apply:
-
Given that Terri Schiavo was in a persistent vegetative state,
Michael Schiavo, Terri's legal guardian, would have had the authority,
pursuant to L.W. and Edna, to direct the termination
of her artificial nutrition and hydration, regardless of the weight of
evidence about Terri's previously expressed wishes to forego
life-sustaining procedures if she were to experience her current
circumstances.
-
While Michael Schiavo's decision to direct termination of Terri's
artificial nutrition and hydration would not have required prior court
approval, Terri Schiavo's parents would have been able to challenge
Michael's decision in court, pursuant to L.W. At that point,
Michael would have had the burden to show, to a high degree of medical
certainty, the existence of a persistent vegetative state and to show
that his decision to have Terri's artificial nutrition and hydration
withdrawn was in Terri's best interests and made in good faith.
-
In attempting to show that withdrawal of Terri Schiavo's artificial
nutritional support would further her best interests, Michael Schiavo
probably would have first proffered her statements suggesting that she
would not want to be maintained in her current condition. This evidence
of Terri's treatment wishes under the circumstances would not have been
subjected to the rigorous "clear and convincing" standard incorporated
in the Cruzan decision and in the Florida statute discussed
above. This is because the L.W. court explicitly rejected the
requirement of "clear and convincing" evidence of an individual's wishes
concerning life-sustaining care as a condition of treatment withdrawal,
observing that "relatively few individuals provide explicit written or
oral instructions concerning their treatment preferences should they
become incompetent.... This failure to act is not a decision to
accept all treatment, nor should society's increasing ability to prolong
the dying process make it one. To adopt the clear and convincing
standard would doom many individuals to a prolonged vegetative state
sustained in a life form by unwanted, perhaps detrimental, means that
are contrary to the person's best interest."13
Additional factors that Michael Schiavo could have used to support
his determination that withdrawal of Terri's artificial nutrition and
hydration would further her best interests include those suggested by
the L.W. court for assessing the value that continuation of
life would have had for Terri (as opposed to the value that others would
have found in the continuation of her life). Among these additional
factors are: the degree of humiliation, dependence, and loss of dignity
resulting from Terri's condition and treatment; her life expectancy and
prognosis for recovery with and without the treatment; and the opinion
of a bioethics committee.
Importantly, as noted by the L.W. court, best interest
arguments against treatment termination could not be based on the need
to protect Terri Schiavo from the potential pain and discomfort involved
in the withdrawal of artificial nutrition and hydration. As explained by
the L.W. court, this concern is inapplicable to individuals in
a persistent vegetative state, because they cannot experience pain or
discomfort.
Quoting the American Academy of Neurology, the L.W. court
observed: "Persistent vegetative state patients do not have the capacity
to experience pain or suffering. Pain and suffering are attributes of
consciousness requiring cerebral cortical functioning, and patients who
are permanently and completely unconscious cannot experience these
symptoms ... Independent bases for the neurologic conclusion that
persistent vegetative state patients do not experience pain or suffering
[include the following:] [1] direct clinical experience ... [that]
demonstrates that there is no behavioral indication of any awareness of
pain or suffering ... [2] in all persistent vegetative state
patients studied to date, post mortem examination reveals overwhelming
bilateral damage to the cerebral hemispheres to a degree incompatible
with consciousness or the capacity to experience pain or suffering
... [and] [3] recent data utilizing positron emission tomography
indicates that the metabolic rate for glucose in the cerebral cortex is
greatly reduced in persistent vegetative state patients to a degree
incompatible with consciousness."14
Michael Schiavo also could have cited court opinions from several
jurisdictions that have held that withdrawal of treatment from a
persistently vegetative patient would further his or her best interests.
For example, in Conservatorship of Drabick15 the California Court of Appeals authorized the
removal of a nasogastric feeding tube from a 44-year-old man who was in
a permanent vegetative state as a result of an auto accident, finding
that the conservator's decision to terminate treatment was made in good
faith and based on the patient's best interests. Similarly, in In re
Conservatorship of Torres16 the
Minnesota court authorized a conservator to order the removal of a
persistently vegetative individual's respirator, since removal was in
the individual's best interests.
Schiavo's Aftermath
The Schiavo case is likely to have several important implications for
doctors, patients and their loved ones, attorneys, and others in
Wisconsin and throughout the country.
Most importantly, the case highlights the importance of clearly
expressing one's medical treatment preferences in advance of incapacity.
Michael Schiavo's contention that Terri Schiavo previously expressed
preferences not to be maintained under her current circumstances met
with denials from her parents and skepticism from the courts and the
public. In both L.W. and Edna, the Wisconsin Supreme
Court stressed that if a patient's wishes are clear, "it is invariable
as a matter of law, both common and statutory, that it is in the best
interests of the patient to have those wishes honored."17 Honoring patients' clearly expressed wishes,
without involvement of the media, the courts, the state legislature, the
governor, the U.S. Congress, or the President, is respectful of
patients' rights and of the appropriate roles of political leaders and
institutions.
Endnotes
1In re Guardianship of
Schiavo, 851 So. 2d 182 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2003).
2Bush v. Schiavo, 885 So.
2d 321 (Fla. 2004).
3Specifically, the court said: "If
the legislature with the assent of the Governor can do what was
attempted here, the judicial branch would be subordinated to the final
directive of the other branches. Also subordinated would be the rights
of individuals, including the well established privacy right to self
determination.... Vested rights could be stripped away based on
popular clamor." Bush, 885 So. 2d at 337.
4The constitutionality of S. 686 is
debatable, although a full discussion of this issue is beyond the scope
of this article. In Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm Inc., 514 U.S.
211, 225-26 (1995), the U.S. Supreme Court clarified that Congress
cannot simply overrule court decisions that it dislikes although it can
prospectively amend federal statutes that have been judicially
interpreted to its displeasure. In Plaut, the Court (per
Justice Scalia, speaking for seven justices) invalidated a statute that
in effect constituted an effort by Congress to direct the courts to
reopen final judgments. Commitment to the rule of law requires that the
political branches of government formulate and execute general policy in
the form of legislation and implementing regulations, and that the
courts apply that law to cases before them.
5Schiavo ex rel. Schindler v.
Schiavo, slip op., No. 8: 05-CV-530-T-27TBM (M.D. Fla. Mar. 22,
2005).
6167 Wis. 2d 53, 482 N.W. 2d 60
(1992).
7210 Wis. 2d 557, 563 N.W. 2d 485
(1997).
8As noted by the court in
Rasmussen v. Fleming, 741 P. 2d 674, 686 (Ariz. 1987), "other
jurisdictions have unanimously concluded that the right to refuse
medical treatment is not lost merely because the individual has become
incompetent and has failed to preserve that right."
9In re Quinlan, 355 A.2d
647 (N.J.), cert. denied, 429 U.S. 922 (1976). In
Quinlan, the New Jersey Supreme Court allowed Karen Quinlan's
father, as guardian, the authority to disconnect the respirator keeping
his persistently vegetative daughter alive if he determined that Karen
would have chosen to do so under the circumstances.
10Cruzan v. Director,
Missouri Dep't of Health, 497 U.S. 261 (1990).
11Wis. Stat. chapter 154 allows
individuals to execute living wills that contain specific instructions
as to the withholding or withdrawal of life-sustaining procedures and
artificial nutrition and hydration in the event that they suffer a
terminal condition or persistent vegetative state. Chapter 155 allows
individuals to designate a health care agent to make health care
decisions on their behalf, including decisions to withhold or withdraw
life-sustaining medical treatment in the event that they lose
decision-making capacity.
12Cruzan, 497 U.S. at
288-89 (O'Connor, J., concurring).
13167 Wis. 2d at 75.
14Id. at 87 n.17
(quoting "Position of the American Academy of Neurology on Certain
Aspects of the Care and Management of Persistent Vegetative State
Patients," 39 Neurology 125 (1989)).
15200 Cal. App. 3d 185, 245 Cal.
Rptr. 840, cert. denied, 488 U.S. 958 (1988).
16357 N.W. 2d 332 (Minn.
1984).
17L.W., 167 Wis. 2d at
79; Edna, 2l0 Wis. 2d at 565.
Wisconsin Lawyer