The Terri Schiavo tragedy unfolds in many layers of controversy. They
range from the bitter dispute between her husband, Michael, and her
father and mother, Robert and Mary Schindler, all the way to the
involvement by the Governor, the Congress, the federal courts and many
religious, disability rights and medical organizations.
If the focus is kept on the most just outcome for Terri Schiavo and her
family, three issues predominate. Is her condition so beyond any
reasonable recovery that she cannot make her own life or death decision?
As of now, the answer is yes. As disability rights lawyer, Harriet
McBryde Johnson, herself severely physically disabled, wrote: "If we
assume she is unaware and unconscious, we can't justify her death as her
preference. She has no preference."
Second, who then should make the decision for her life or death by
returning her feeding tube (including water) or withdrawing it? Florida
law gives that surrogate right to the spouse, in this case, her husband
who is her legal guardian, and not to her biological parents and family.
Third, Michael Schiavo's decision to withdraw the feeding tube from his
living wife is based on allegations by his relatives and friends that
years ago, his wife, reacting to funerals or the illness of others said
she did not want to be kept alive artificially. The judge, George Greer,
took these hearsay recollections - essentially partisan - as meeting the
state Supreme Court standard of "clear and convincing evidence."
All the legal appeals eventually come down to these points and the
disputes around them over time and changes of circumstances.
The judges have been regularly deciding in favor of Michael Schiavo and
against legal challenges by the parents and Terri's siblings, who want
to assume the full responsibility of caring for her for the duration.
This is where the little-noticed dissenting opinion by Judge Wilson of
the federal circuit court of appeals last week needs to be noticed.
Judge Wilson was making the argument, among others, that if Terri
Schiavo's feeding tube is not reinserted while her case was moving
through the federal courts, "we virtually guarantee that the merits of
Plaintiffs' [essentially her parents on behalf of Terri] will never be
litigated in federal court. . . . The merits of Plaintiffs' substantial
claims warrant a more complete review."
Judge Wilson was making a broader plea for the application of equitable
principles. He wrote: "In considering this extraordinary case, I am
mindful that 'the essence of equity jurisdiction has been the power of
the Chancellor to do equity and to mould each decree to the necessities
of the particular case. Flexibility rather than rigidity has
distinguished it. The qualities of mercy and practicality have made
equity the instrument for nice adjustment and reconciliation between the
public interest and private needs as well as between competing private
claims.'" (citing Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. Of Educ. 402 U.S.
1,15 (1971).
Outvoted 2 to 1 in his court and disregarded by the U.S. Supreme Court,
Judge Wilson's approach was cast aside in favor of legal rigidities
oblivious to equitable claims that could resolve this dispute away from
court-ordered death.
The parents, the brother and sister of Terri Schiavo have demonstrated
their intense desire to care for Terri. They are now prohibited from
even applying a moist sponge to Terri's lips. She has already survived
15 years - longer than most people do in her condition. They know that
Terri is not terminally ill, is not dependent on life support
ventilators, and that her lungs, kidneys, heart and digestive systems
are working. But at 41, her life expectancy is not expected to be in the
decades.
Her biological family loves her as she is, but they do hold out the
small hope that medical science some day may be able to bring her back
to a higher level of consciousness. Does a week go by without
government, university or corporate scientific researchers, spending
tens of billions of taxpayer dollars, hold out such hopes for many
dramatic medical cures?
On the other hand, Michael Schiavo has decided, somewhat after the
medical malpractice case settled, that Terri would not want to live
under such conditions. So he has made the decision to let her expire and
the circuit court and appellate courts have approved. He has been for
nearly ten years in a common law marriage with a woman who has given
birth to their two children. He wants to get on with his life, after
years of pressure and anguish.
So why then does he not rise above the acrimony and request from the
court to give up his guardian status to Terri's family? Why does Terri
need to die? What interest, given the family's desire to care for her,
does the government have in ordering a fatal procedure?
For those concerned about cost, it is not a matter of taxpayer's money.
Besides her family, many people around the country would contribute to a
trust fund for her care. That is one result the mass media's attention
can assure.
The local court could fashion a remedy in equity. The judge could, on
petition by the family, decide that Michael Schiavo is conflicted by his
relationship with his other partner and shift the guardian status to her
parents who then would keep her alive.
The family has made such a request earlier, which he denied. But judges
can change their minds when they move to a court of equity.
Terri is dehydrating. Time is running out.
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