Full opinion text
Opinion WERDEGAR, J. In this case we consider whether a conservator of the person may withhold artificial nutrition and hydration from a conscious conservatee who is not terminally ill, comatose, or in a persistent vegetative state, and who has not left formal instructions for health care or appointed an agent or surrogate for health care decisions. Interpreting Probate Code section 2355 in light of the relevant provisions of the California Constitution, we conclude a conservator may not withhold artificial nutrition and hydration from such a person absent clear and convincing evidence the conservator’s decision is in accordance with either the conservatee’s own wishes or best interest. The trial court in the case before us, applying the clear and convincing evidence standard, found the evidence on both points insufficient and, thus, denied the conservator’s request for authority to withhold artificial nutrition and hydration. The Court of Appeal, which believed the trial court was required to defer to the conservator’s good faith decision, reversed. We reverse the decision of the Court of Appeal. I. Facts and Procedural History On September 29, 1993, Robert Wendland rolled his truck at high speed in a solo accident while driving under the influence of alcohol. The accident injured Robert’s brain, leaving him conscious yet severely disabled, both mentally and physically, and dependent on artificial nutrition and hydration. Two years later Rose Wendland, Robert’s wife and conservator, proposed to direct his physician to remove his feeding tube and allow him to die. Florence Wendland and Rebekah Vinson (respectively Robert’s mother and sister) objected to the conservator’s decision. This proceeding arose under the provisions of the Probate Code authorizing courts to settle such disputes. (Prob. Code, §§ 2355, 2359.) Following the accident, Robert remained in a coma, totally unresponsive, for several months. During this period Rose visited him daily, often with their children, and authorized treatment as necessary to maintain his health. Robert eventually regained consciousness. His subsequent medical history is described in a comprehensive medical evaluation later submitted to the court. According to the report, Rose “first noticed signs of responsiveness sometime in late 1994 or early 1995 and alerted [Robert’s] physicians and nursing staff.” Intensive therapy followed. Robert’s “cognitive responsiveness was observed to improve over a period of several months such that by late spring of 1995 the family and most of his health care providers agreed that he was inconsistently interacting with his environment. A video recording[] of [Robert] in July 1995 demonstrated clear, though inconsistent, interaction with his environment in response to simple commands. At his highest level of function between February and July, 1995, Robert was able to do such things as throw and catch a ball, operate an electric wheelchair with assistance, turn pages, draw circles, draw an ‘R’ and perform two-step commands.” For example, “[h]e was able to respond appropriately to the command ‘close your eyes and open them when I say the number 3.’ . . .He could choose a requested color block out of four color blocks. He could set the right peg in a pegboard. Augmented communication[] was met with inconsistent success. He remained unable to vocalize. Eye blinking was successfully used as a communication mode for a while, however no consistent method of communication was developed.” Despite improvements made in therapy, Robert remained severely disabled, both mentally and physically. The same medical report summarized his continuing impairments as follows: “severe cognitive impairment that is not possible to fully appreciate due to the concurrent motor and communication impairments . . “maladaptive behavior characterized by agitation, aggressiveness and non-compliance”; “severe paralysis on the right and moderate paralysis on the left”; “severely impaired communication, without compensatory augmentative communication system”; “severe swallowing dysfunction, dependent upon non-oral enteric tube feeding for nutrition and hydration”; “incontinence of bowel and bladder”; “moderate spasticity”; “mild to moderate contractures”; “general dysphoria”; “recurrent medical illnesses, including pneumonia, bladder infections, sinusitis”; and “dental issues.” After Robert regained consciousness and while he was undergoing therapy, Rose authorized surgery three times to replace dislodged feeding tubes. When physicians sought her permission a fourth time, she declined. She discussed the decision with her daughters and with Robert’s brother Michael, all of whom believed that Robert would not have approved the procedure even if necessary to sustain his life. Rose also discussed the decision with Robert’s treating physician, Dr. Kass, other physicians, and the hospital’s ombudsman, all of whom apparently supported her decision. Dr. Kass, however, inserted a nasogastric feeding tube to keep Robert alive pending input from the hospital’s ethics committee. Eventually, the 20-member ethics committee unanimously approved Rose’s decision. In the course of their deliberations, however, the committee did not speak with Robert’s mother or sister. Florence learned, apparently through an anonymous telephone call, that Dr. Kass planned to remove Robert’s feeding tube. Florence and Rebekah applied for a temporary restraining order to bar him from so doing, and the court granted the motion ex parte. Rose immediately thereafter petitioned for appointment as Robert’s conservator. In the petition, she asked the court to determine that Robert lacked the capacity to give informed consent for medical treatment and to confirm her authority “to withdraw and/or withhold medical treatment and/or life-sustaining treatment, including, but not limited to, withholding nutrition and hydration.” Florence and Rebekah (hereafter sometimes objectors) opposed the petition. After a hearing, the court appointed Rose as conservator but reserved judgment on her request for authority to remove Robert’s feeding tube. The court ordered the conservator to continue the current plan of physical therapy for 60 days and then to report back to the court. The court also visited Robert in the hospital. After the 60-day period elapsed without significant improvement in Robert’s condition, the conservator renewed her request for authority to remove his feeding tube. The objectors asked the trial court to appoint independent counsel for the conservatee. The trial court declined, and the Court of Appeal summarily denied the objectors’ petition for writ of mandate. We granted review and transferred the case to the Court of Appeal, which then directed the trial court to appoint counsel. (Wendland v. Superior Court (1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 44 [56 Cal.Rptr.2d 595].) Appointed counsel, exercising his independent judgment (see generally Conservatorship of Drabick (1988) 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 212-214 [245 Cal.Rptr. 840] (Drabick)), decided to support the conservator’s decision. (Because the conservator’s and appointed counsel’s positions in this court are essentially identical, we will henceforth refer solely to the conservator for brevity’s sake.) The ensuing proceeding generated two decisions. In the first, the court set out the law to be applied at trial. The court found no “clear cut guidance” on how to evaluate a conservator’s proposal to end the life of a conscious conservatee who was neither terminally ill nor in a persistent vegetative state. Nevertheless, drawing what assistance it could from cases involving persistently vegetative patients (Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185; Barber v. Superior Court (1983) 147 Cal.App.3d 1006 [195 Cal.Rptr. 484, 47 A.L.R.4th 1] (Barber)), the court held the conservator would be allowed to withhold artificial nutrition and hydration only if that would be in the conservatee’s best interest, taking into account any pertinent wishes the conservatee may have expressed before becoming incompetent. The court also determined the conservator would have to prove the facts justifying her decision by clear and convincing evidence. A decision by a conservator to withhold life-sustaining treatment, the court reasoned, “should be premised on no lesser showing” than that required to justify involuntary medical treatment not likely to cause death. On this point, the court drew an analogy to Lillian F. v. Superior Court (1984) 160 Cal.App.3d 314 [206 Cal.Rptr. 603], which requires clear and convincing evidence of a conservatee’s inability to make treatment decisions as a prerequisite to involuntary electroconvulsive treatment. Finally, the court held the conservator would bear the burdens both of producing evidence and of persuasion. “[F]inding itself in uncharted territory” on this subject too, the court explained that “[w]hen a situation arises where it is proposed to terminate the life of a conscious but severely cognitively impaired person, it seems more rational ... to ask ‘why?’ of the party proposing the act rather than ‘why not?’ of the party challenging it.” The trial generated the evidence set out above. The testifying physicians agreed that Robert would not likely experience further cognitive recovery. Dr. Kass, Robert’s treating physician, testified that, to the highest degree of medical certainty, Robert would never be able to make medical treatment decisions, walk, talk, feed himself, eat, drink, or control his bowel and bladder functions. Robert was able, however, according to Dr. Kass, to express “certain desires .... Like if he’s getting tired in therapy or if he wants to quit therapy, he’s usually very adamant about that. He’ll either strike out or he’ll refuse to perform the task.” Dr. Kobrin, Robert’s neurologist, testified that Robert recognized certain caregivers and would allow only specific'Caregivers to bathe and help him. Both Dr. Kass and Dr. Kobrin had prescribed medication for Robert’s behavioral problems. Dr. Sundance, who was retained by appointed counsel to evaluate Robert, described him as being in a “minimally conscious state in that he does have some cognitive function” and the ability to “respond to his environment,” but not to “interact” with it “in a more proactive way.” On April 29, 1997, Dr. Kass asked Robert a series of questions using an augmented communications device, or “yes/no board.” (See ante, at p. 525, fn. 5.) After a series of questions about Robert’s physical state, such as “Are you sitting up?” and “Are you lying down?” that Robert appeared to answer correctly “most times,” Dr. Kass asked the following questions and received the following answers: “Do you have pain? Yes. “Do your legs hurt? No. “Does your buttocks hurt? No. “Do you want us to leave you alone? Yes. “Do you want more therapy? No. “Do you want to get into the chair? Yes. “Do you want to go back to bed? No. “Do you want to die? No answer. “Are you angry? Yes. “At somebody? No.” So far as Dr. Kass knew, no one had previously asked Robert the same questions. Dr. Kass acknowledged there was no way to verify whether Robert “really understood the questions or not,” but “[t]he reason I asked those questions,” Dr. Kass continued, “is because [Robert] was able to answer the previous questions mostly correctly. So I thought perhaps he could understand more questions.” Dr. Kass believed Robert probably understood some but not all of the questions. Robert’s speech pathologist, Lowana Brauer, testified generally that Robert used the augmented communications device primarily as therapy and not with enough consistency to justify leaving the device in his room for communication with other people. She did not, however, testify specifically about the interaction between Robert and Dr. Kass. Robert’s wife, brother and daughter recounted preaccident statements Robert had made about his attitude towards life-sustaining health care. Robert’s wife recounted specific statements on two occasions. The first occasion was Rose’s decision whether to turn off a respirator sustaining the life of her father, who was near death from gangrene. Rose recalls Robert saying: “I would never want to live like that, and I wouldn’t want my children to see me like that and look at the hurt you’re going through as an adult seeing your father like that.” On cross-examination, Rose acknowledged Robert said on this occasion that Rose’s father “wouldn’t want to live like a vegetable” and “wouldn’t want to live in a comatose state.” After his father-in-law’s death, Robert developed a serious drinking problem. After a particular incident, Rose asked Michael, Robert’s brother, to talk to him. When Robert arrived home the next day he was angry to see Michael there, interfering in what he considered a private family matter. Rose remembers Michael telling Robert: “I’m going to get a call from Rosie one day, and you’re going to be in a terrible accident.” Robert replied: “If that ever happened to me, you know what my feelings are. Don’t let that happen to me. Just let me go. Leave me alone.” Robert’s brother Michael testified about the same conversation. Michael told Robert: “[Y]ou’re drinking; you’re going to get drunk. . . . [Y]ou’re either going to go out and kill yourself or kill someone else, or you’re going to end up in the hospital like a vegetable—laying in bed just like a vegetable.” Michael remembers Robert saying in response, “Mike, whatever you do[,] don’t let that happen. Don’t let them do that to me.” Robert’s daughter Katie remembers him saying on this occasion that “if he could not be a provider for his family, if he could not do all the things that he enjoyed doing, just enjoying the outdoors, just basic things, feeding himself, talking, communicating, if he could not do those things, he would not want to live.” Based on all the evidence, the court issued a second decision setting out its findings of fact and conclusions of law. Specifically, the court found the conservator “ha[d] not met her duty and burden to show by clear and convincing evidence that conservatee Robert Wendland, who is not in a persistent vegetative state nor suffering from a terminal illness would, under the circumstances, want to die. Conservator has likewise not met her burden of establishing that the withdrawal of artificially delivered nutrition and hydration is commensurate with conservatee’s best interests, consistent with California Law as embodied in Barber[, supra, 147 Cal.App.3d 1006] and Drabick, supra[, 200 Cal.App.3d 185].” Based on these findings, the court granted the objectors’ motion for judgment (Code Civ. Proc., § 631.8), thus denying the conservator’s request for confirmation of her proposal to withdraw treatment. The court also found the conservator had acted in good faith and would be permitted to remain in that office. Nevertheless, the court limited her powers by ordering that she would “have no authority to direct . . . [any] health care provider to remove the conservatee’s life sustaining medical treatment in the form of withholding nutrition and hydration.” (See Prob. Code, § 2351.) The conservator appealed this decision. The Court of Appeal reversed. In the Court of Appeal’s view, “[t]he trial court properly placed the burden of producing evidence on [the conservator] and properly applied a clear and convincing evidence standard. However, the court erred in requiring [the conservator] to prove that [the conservatee], while competent, expressed a desire to die in the circumstances and in substituting its own judgment concerning [the conservatee’s] best interests . . . .” Instead, the trial court’s role was “merely to satisfy itself that the conservator had considered the conservatee’s best interests in good faith . . . .” This limited judicial role, the Court of Appeal concluded, was mandated by section 2355, as interpreted in Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185. While acknowledging the trial court had already found the conservator had acted in good faith, the Court of Appeal nevertheless declined to enter judgment for the conservator. Instead, the court remanded to permit the objectors to present any evidence rebutting the conservator’s case-in-chief. Finally, recognizing that an amended version of section 2355, effective on July 1, 2000, might “be a factor upon remand,” the court determined the new law did not affect the outcome. We granted review of this decision. II. Discussion A. The Relevant Legal Principles The ultimate focus of our analysis must be section 2355, the statute under which the conservator has claimed the authority to end the conservatee’s life and the only statute under which such authority might plausibly be found. Nevertheless, the statute speaks in the context of an array of constitutional, common law, and statutory principles. The Law Revision Commission, which drafted the statute’s current version, was aware of these principles and cited them to explain and justify the proposed legislation. Because these principles provide essential background, we set them out briefly here, followed by the history of the statute. 1. Constitutional and common law principles One relatively certain principle is that a competent adult has the right to refuse medical treatment, even treatment necessary to sustain life. The Legislature has cited this principle to justify legislation governing medical care decisions (§ 4650), and courts have invoked it as a starting point for analysis, even in cases examining the rights of incompetent persons and the duties of surrogate decision makers (e.g., Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 206; Barber, supra, 147 Cal.App.3d 1006, 1015). This case requires us to look beyond the rights of a competent person to the rights of incompetent conservatees and the duties of conservators, but the principle just mentioned is a logical place to begin. That a competent person has the right to refuse treatment is a statement both of common law and of state constitutional law. In its common law form, the principle is often traced to Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Botsford (1891) 141 U.S. 250, 251 [11 S.Ct. 1000, 1001, 35 L.Ed. 734], in which the United States Supreme Court wrote that “[n]o right is held more sacred, or is more carefully guarded, by .the common law, than the right of every individual to the possession and control of his own person, free from all restraint or interference of others, unless by clear and unquestionable authority of law.” Applying this principle, the high court held that the plaintiff in a personal injury case was not required to submit to a surgical examination intended to reveal the extent of her injuries. (Ibid.) Courts in subsequent cases relied on the same principle to award damages for operations performed without the patient’s consent. The landmark case is Schloendorff v. Society of New York Hospital (1914) 211 N.Y. 125 [105 N.E. 92, 93], in which Judge Cardozo wrote that “[e]very human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body; and a surgeon who performs an operation without his patient’s consent commits an assault, for which he is liable in damages.” We adopted this principle in Cobbs v. Grant (1972) 8 Cal.3d 229, 242 [104 Cal.Rptr. 505, 502 P.2d 1], adding that “the patient’s consent to treatment, to be effective, must be an informed consent.” Most recently, in Thor v. Superior Court (1993) 5 Cal.4th 725 [21 Cal.Rptr.2d 357, 855 P.2d 375], we held that the common law right of a competent adult to refuse life-sustaining treatment extends even to a state prisoner; we thus absolved prison officials and medical personnel of any duty to provide artificial hydration and nutrition against the will of a quadriplegic prisoner who needed such treatment to survive. The Courts of Appeal have found another source for the same right in the California Constitution’s privacy clause. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 1.) The court in Bartling v. Superior Court (1984) 163 Cal.App.3d 186 [209 Cal.Rptr. 220] held that a competent adult with serious, probably incurable illnesses was entitled to have life-support equipment disconnected over his physicians’ objection even though that would hasten his death. “The right of a competent adult patient to refuse medical treatment,” the court explained, “has its origins in the constitutional right of privacy. This right is specifically guaranteed by the California Constitution (art. I, § 1) . . . . The constitutional right of privacy guarantees to the individual the freedom to choose to reject, or refuse to consent to, intrusions of his bodily integrity.” (Id. at p. 195.) To the same effect is the decision in Bouvia v. Superior Court (1986) 179 Cal.App.3d 1127 [225 Cal.Rptr. 297], in which the court directed injunctive relief requiring a public hospital to comply with a competent, terminally ill patient’s direction to remove a nasogastric feeding tube. “The right to refuse medical treatment,” the court wrote, “is basic and fundamental. ... Its exercise requires no one’s approval. It is not merely one vote subject to being overridden by medical opinion.” (Id. at p. 1137; see also Rains v. Belshé (1995) 32 Cal.App.4th 157, 169 [38 Cal.Rptr.2d 185], Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 206, fn. 20, Keyhea v. Rushen (1986) 178 Cal.App.3d 526, 540 [223 Cal.Rptr. 746], Foy v. Greenblott (1983) 141 Cal.App.3d 1, 11 [190 Cal.Rptr. 84] [all describing, albeit perhaps in dictum, the competent person’s right to refuse medical treatment as protected by the state constitutional right to privacy].) In Thor v. Superior Court, supra, 5 Cal.4th 725, as mentioned, we based our conclusion that a prisoner had the right to refuse life-sustaining treatment solely on the common law without also considering whether the state Constitution provided similar protection. But Thor does not reject the state Constitution as a basis for the right. More importantly, we have since Thor determined that the privacy clause does protect the fundamental interest in personal autonomy. “Where the case involves an obvious invasion of an interest fundamental to personal autonomy, e.g., freedom from involuntary sterilization or the freedom to pursue consensual familial relationships, a ‘compelling interest’ must be present to overcome the vital privacy interest.” (Hill v. National Collegiate Athletic Assn. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 1, 34 [26 Cal.Rptr.2d 834, 865 P.2d 633]; see also American Academy of Pediatrics v. Lungren (1997) 16 Cal.4th 307, 340 [66 Cal.Rptr.2d 210, 940 P.2d 797] [reaffirming Hill and adding to its list of “ ‘obvious invasions] of . . . interests] fundamental to personal autonomy’ ” (italics omitted) a law interfering with the decision whether to bear a child].) In comparison with these examples, the competent adult’s decision to refuse life-sustaining medical treatment must also be seen as fundamental. Federal law has little to say about the competent person’s right to refuse treatment, but what it does say is not to the contrary. The United States Supreme Court spoke provisionally to the point in Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Dept. of Health (1990) 497 U.S. 261 [110 S.Ct. 2841, 111 L.Ed.2d 224] (Cruzan). At issue was the constitutionality of a Missouri law permitting a conservator to withhold artificial nutrition and hydration from a conservatee in a persistent vegetative state only upon clear and convincing evidence that the conservatee, while competent, had expressed the desire to refuse such treatment. The court concluded the law was constitutional. While the case thus did not present the issue, the court nevertheless acknowledged that “a competent person!’s] • • • constitutionally protected liberty interest in refusing unwanted medical treatment may be inferred” (id. at p. 278 [110 S.Ct. at p. 2851]) from prior decisions holding that state laws requiring persons to submit to involuntary medical procedures must be justified by countervailing state interests. The “logic” of such cases would, the court thought, implicate a competent person’s liberty interest in refusing artificially delivered food and water essential to life. (Id. at p. 279 [110 S.Ct. at pp. 2851-2852].) Whether any given state law infringed such a liberty interest, however, would have to be determined by balancing the liberty interest against the relevant state interests, in particular the state’s interest in preserving life. (Id. at p. 280 [110 S.Ct. at p. 2852].) In view of these authorities, the competent adult’s right to refuse medical treatment may be safely considered established, at least in California. The same right survives incapacity, in a practical sense, if exercised while competent pursuant to a law giving that act lasting validity. For some time, California law has given competent adults the power to leave formal directions for health care in the event they later become incompetent; over time, the Legislature has afforded ever greater scope to that power. The former Natural Death Act (Health & Saf. Code, former § 7185 et seq., added by Stats. 1976, ch. 1439, § 1, p. 6478, and repealed by Stats. 1991, ch. 895, § 1, p. 3973), as first enacted in 1976, authorized competent adults to direct health care providers to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining procedures under very narrow circumstances only: specifically, in the event of an incurable condition that would cause death regardless of such procedures and where such procedures would serve only to postpone the moment of death. In findings accompanying the law, the Legislature expressly found “that adult persons have the fundamental right to control the decisions relating to the rendering of their own medical care” (id., § 7186) and explained the law as giving lasting effect to that right: “In recognition of the dignity and privacy which, patients have a right to expect, the Legislature hereby declares that the laws of the State of California shall recognize the right of an adult person to make a written directive instructing his physician to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining procedures in the event of a terminal condition.” (Ibid.) In 1991, the Legislature amended the law to permit competent adults to refuse, in advance, life-sustaining procedures in the event of a “permanent unconscious condition,” defined as an “irreversible coma or persistent vegetative state.” (Health & Saf. Code, former §§ 7185.5, 7186, subd. (e), added by Stats. 1991, ch. 895, § 2, pp. 3974-3975, and repealed by Stats. 1999, ch. 658, § 7.) Intervening legislation also enabled a competent adult to execute a durable power of attorney authorizing an agent to “withhold^ or withdraw[] . . . health care . . . so as to permit the natural process of dying,” and to make other health care decisions, in the event of the principal’s incompetence. (Civ. Code, former § 2443, added by Stats. 1983, ch. 1204, § 10, p. 4622, and repealed by Stats. 1994, ch. 307, § 7, p. 1982.) Effective July 1, 2000, the Health Care Decisions Law (Stats. 1999, ch. 658) gives competent adults extremely broad power to direct all aspects of their health care in the event they become incompetent. The new law, which repeals the former Natural Death Act and amends the durable power of attorney law, draws heavily from the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act adopted in 1993 by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. (See 2000 Health Care Decisions Law and Revised Power of Attorney Law (Mar. 2000) 30 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. (2000) p. 49 [preprint copy].) Briefly, and as relevant here, the new law permits a competent person to execute an advance directive about “any aspect” of health care. (§4701.) Among other things, a person may direct that life-sustaining treatment be withheld or withdrawn under conditions specified by the person and not limited to terminal illness, permanent coma, or persistent vegetative state. A competent person may still use a power of attorney for health care to give an agent the power to make health care decisions (§ 4683), but a patient may also orally designate a surrogate to make such decisions by personally informing the patient’s supervising health care provider. (§ 4711.) Under the new law, agents and surrogates are required to make health care decisions “in accordance with the principal’s individual health care instructions, if any, and other wishes to the extent known to the agent.” (§ 4684; see also § 4711.) All of the laws just mentioned merely give effect to the decision of a competent person, in the form either of instructions for health care or the designation of an agent or surrogate for health care decisions. Such laws may accurately be described, as the Legislature has described them, as a means to respect personal autonomy by giving effect to competent decisions: “In recognition of the dignity and privacy a person has a right to expect, the law recognizes that an adult has the fundamental right to control the decisions relating to his or her own health care, including the decision to have life-sustaining treatment withheld or withdrawn.” (§ 4650, subd. (a) [legislative findings].) This court made essentially the same point in Thor v. Superior Court, supra, 5 Cal.4th 725, 740, where we described “the [former] Natural Death Act and other statutory provisions permitting an individual or designated surrogate to exercise conclusive control over the administration of life-sustaining treatment [as] evidencing] legislative recognition that fostering self-determination in such matters enhances rather than deprecates the value of life.” In contrast, decisions made by conservators typically derive their authority from a different basis—the parens patriae power of the state to protect incompetent persons. Unlike an agent or a surrogate for health care, who is voluntarily appointed by a competent person, a conservator is appointed by the court because the conservatee “has been adjudicated to lack the capacity to make health care decisions.” (§ 2355, subd. (a).) In 1988, the court in Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, confused these two distinct concepts— the voluntary act of a competent person and the state’s parens patriae power—and on that questionable basis took to a novel conclusion the idea that a person’s right to refuse treatment survives incompetence. Drabick figures prominently both in the legislative history of section 2355—the statute governing this case—and the parties’ arguments. It therefore deserves close attention. At issue in Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, was a conservator’s proposal to end the life of a conservatee by removing a nasogastric feeding tube. The formerly competent conservatee had been unconscious for five years in a persistent vegetative state; physicians opined he would never regain consciousness. While the conservatee had expressed informally his desire not to be kept alive by artificial life support systems, he had not left formal directions for his health care. Former section 2355, subdivision (a) (added by Stats. 1979, ch. 726, § 3, pp. 2379-2380, and repealed by Stats. 1990, ch. 79, § 13, p. 463) gave the conservator “exclusive authority to give consent for such medical treatment ... as the conservator in good faith based on medical advice determines to be necessary.” The court construed this language as also giving the conservator, “by necessary implication, . . . power to withhold or withdraw consent to medical treatment under appropriate circumstances.” (Drabick, supra, at p. 200.) Treatment to sustain the life of a permanently unconscious person was not “ ‘necessary’ ” within the meaning of former section 2355, the court reasoned, “if it offers no reasonable possibility of returning the conservatee to cognitive life and if it is not otherwise in the conservatee’s best interests, as determined by the conservator in good faith.” (Drabick, supra, at p. 218.) Counsel appointed to represent the conservatee in Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, argued that the state’s interest in preserving life justified the court in limiting the conservator’s powers. The court disagreed. Rather than presenting a conflict between the conservator’s decision to terminate life support and the state’s interest in preserving life, the Drabick court thought the case was more appropriately viewed as presenting a conflict between two rights belonging to the conservatee: “Both the fundamental right to Ufe—to continue receiving treatment—and the right to terminate unwanted treatment deserve consideration. Someone acting in [the conservatee’s] best interests can and must choose between them.” (Id. at p. 210.) Viewing the case in this way, the court was “convinced that [it would] deprive [the conservatee] of a fundamental right” were it to bar the conservator from withholding treatment. (Id. at p. 208.) The court candidly acknowledged that “to claim [a permanently unconscious conservatee’s] ‘right to choose’ survives incompetence is a legal fiction at best.” (Ibid.) Indeed, such a person’s “noncognitive state prevents him from choosing anything.” (Ibid.) Nevertheless, the court concluded, “incompetence does not cause the loss of a fundamental right from which the incompetent person can still benefit” through its vicarious exercise by a conservator. (Ibid.) As precedent for this analysis, the Drabick court relied on Conservatorship of Valerie N. (1985) 40 Cal.3d 143 [219 Cal.Rptr. 387, 707 P.2d 760], in which this court held unconstitutional a statute (§ 2356, subd. (d)) barring use of the conservator’s statutory powers to authorize sterilization of wards and conservatees. Just as this court in Valerie N. permitted conservators of developmentally disabled women to exercise vicariously their conservatees’ right to choose sterilization, the Drabick court explained, the conservator of a persistently vegetative conservatee may exercise vicariously the conservatee’s right to refuse medical treatment. (Drabick, supra, at pp. 207-208.) Having expressly recognized the “fiction[al]” aspect of its analysis (Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 208), and seeking perhaps to place its conclusion on firmer ground, the court in Drabick offered this alternative rationale: “In the years since the [Matter of] Quinlan [(1976) [70 N.J. 10 [355 A.2d 647, 79 A.L.R.3d 205]] decision,” the Drabick court wrote, “most courts have adopted the formula that a patient’s ‘right to choose’ or ‘right to refuse’ medical treatment survives incompetence. It would be more accurate to say that incompetent patients retain the right to have appropriate medical decisions made on their behalf. An appropriate medical decision is one that is made in the patient’s best interests, as opposed to the interests of the hospital, the physicians, the legal system, or someone else.” (Id. at p. 205.) We do not question the Drabick court’s conclusion that incompetent persons have a right, based in the California Constitution, to appropriate medical decisions that reflect their own interests and values. (Drabick, supra, at p. 205.) But the right to an appropriate decision by a court-appointed conservator does not necessarily equate with the conservatee’s right to refuse treatment, or obviously take precedence over the conservatee’s right to life or the state’s interest in preserving life. No published decision in this state has rejected the Drabick court’s conclusions. Seven months after Drabick, the court in Conservatorship of Morrison (1988) 206 Cal.App.3d 304, 308-309 [253 Cal.Rptr. 530] viewed Drabick as having settled the question whether former section 2355 empowered a conservator to end the life of a persistently vegetative conservatee by withholding artificial nutrition and hydration. But neither, until the decision presently on review, has the holding in Drabick been extended to cases involving conservatees other than those in persistent vegetative states. This, almost certainly, is because the Drabick court strictly limited its decision to such persons. The “opinion’s reasoning,” the court wrote, “is predicated upon its subject being a patient for whom there is no reasonable hope of a return to cognitive life. We have not considered any other case, and this opinion would not support a decision to forego treatment if this factual predicate could not be satisfied.” (Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 217, fn. 36.) Although the court did not explain how its reasoning was predicated on the conservatee’s permanently unconscious state, the decision’s self-imposed limitation avoids or mitigates a serious constitutional problem: A person whose permanent unconsciousness prevents him from perceiving that artificial hydration and nutrition are being withdrawn arguably has a more attenuated interest in avoiding that result than a person who may consciously perceive the effects of dehydration and starvation. 2. Section 2355 The ultimate focus of our analysis, as mentioned at the outset, must be section 2355, the statute under which the conservator claims the authority to end the conservatee’s life. The statute’s history indicates that the Law Revision Commission, which drafted the current version, was aware of and intended to incorporate some, but not all, of the Drabick (supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185) court’s construction of the former statute. As originally enacted in 1979, and at the time the lower courts ruled in this case, section 2355 provided: “If the conservatee has been adjudicated to lack the capacity to give informed consent for medical treatment, the conservator has the exclusive authority to give consent for such medical treatment to be performed on the conservatee as the conservator in good faith based on medical advice determines to be necessary and the conservator may require the conservatee to receive such medical treatment, whether or not the conservatee objects.” (Former § 2355, subd. (a), added by Stats. 1979, ch. 726, § 3, pp. 2379-2380, repealed and reenacted without change by Stats. 1990, ch. 79, § 14, p. 575 [enacting new Probate Code].) This language arguably was broad enough to cover the entire range of medical decisions a conservator might be called upon to make. Historical evidence is lacking, however, that the Legislature in 1979 actually contemplated that the statute would be understood as authorizing a conservator to deliberately end the life of a conservatee by withholding artificially delivered food and water. Such authority, if it indeed existed, would have been merely implicit, as a consequence of the statute’s broad language. The claim that section 2355 conferred that authority was first considered and accepted in 1988 by the court in Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185. (See ante, p. 535 et seq.) The Drabick court also read former section 2355 as severely restricting the role of courts in supervising conservators’ treatment decisions. “[W]e do not believe,” the court wrote, “that it is the [trial] court’s role to substitute its judgment for the conservator’s. Instead, when the conservator or another interested person has requested the court’s approval the court should confine its involvement to ensuring that the conservator has made the type of decision for which the Probate Code expressly calls: a ‘good faith’ decision ‘based on medical advice’ whether treatment is ‘necessary.’ ” (Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 200, quoting former § 2355.) The required decision, the court explained, is the conservator’s assessment of the conservatee’s best interests. While acknowledging that the conservator would be bound by the conservatee’s formal health care directions in a durable power of attorney or living will (Drabick, supra, at p. 211, fn. 28), the court rejected “the different idea . . . that [the conservatee’s] own prior informal statements compel either the continuation or cessation of treatment in a particular case.” (Id. at p. 210, first italics added.) Instead, “the conservatee’s prior statements [merely] inform the decision of the conservator, who must vicariously exercise the conservatee’s rights. Such statements do not in themselves amount to the exercise of a right. The statute gives the conseryator the exclusive authority to exercise the conservatee’s rights, and it is the conservator who must make the final treatment decision regardless of how much or how little information about the conservatee’s preferences is available. There is no necessity or authority,” the court concluded, “for adopting a rule to the effect that the conservatee’s desire to have medical treatment withdrawn must be proved by clear and convincing evidence or another standard. Acknowledging that the patient’s expressed preferences are relevant, it is enough for the conservator, who must act in the conservatee’s best interests, to consider them in good faith.” (Id. at pp. 211-212, fn. omitted.) In 1990, the Legislature repealed and reenacted former section 2355 without change while reorganizing the Probate Code. But in 1999, section 2355 changed significantly with the Legislature’s adoption of the Health Care Decisions Law (§ 4600 et seq., added by Stats. 1999, ch. 658). That law took effect on July 1, 2000, about four months after the Court of Appeal filed the opinion on review. Many of the new law’s provisions, as already noted, are the same as, or drawn from, the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act. (See 30 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep., supra, p. 49.) Section 2355, as a statute addressing medical treatment decisions, was revised to conform to the new law. The main purpose of the Health Care Decisions Law is to provide “procedures and standards” governing “health care decisions to be made for adults at a time when they are incapable of making decisions on their own and [to] provide[] mechanisms for directing their health care in anticipation of a time when they may become incapacitated.” (30 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep., supra, p. 6.) The core provision of the new law, which comes directly from the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act, sets out uniform standards for the making of health care decisions by third parties. The language embodying this core provision now appears in statutes governing decisions by conservators (§ 2355), agents (§ 4684), and surrogates (§ 4714). This language is set out below in italics, as it appears in the context of section 2355: “If the conservatee has been adjudicated to lack the capacity to make health care decisions, the conservator has the exclusive authority to make health care decisions for the conservatee that the conservator in good faith based on medical advice determines to be necessary. The conservator shall make health care decisions for the conservatee in accordance with the conservatee’s individual health care instructions, if any, and other wishes to the extent known to the conservator. Otherwise, the conservator shall make the decision in accordance with the conservator’s determination of the conservatee’s best interest. In determining the conservatee’s best interest, the conservator shall consider the conservatee’s personal values to the extent known to the conservator. The conservator may require the conservatee to receive the health care, whether or not the conservatee objects. In this case, the health care decision of the conservator alone is sufficient and no person is liable because the health care is administered to the conservatee without the conservatee’s consent. For the purposes of this subdivision, ‘health care’ and ‘health care decision’ have the meanings provided in Sections 4615 and 4617, respectively.” (§ 2355, subd. (a), as amended by Stats. 1999, ch. 658, §12, italics added.) The last sentence of section 2355, subdivision (a), set out above, incorporates definitional provisions of the Health Care Decisions Law. Of these, section 4615 defines “ ‘[hjealth care’ ” as “any care, treatment, service, or procedure to maintain, diagnose, or otherwise affect a patient’s physical or mental condition.” Section 4617 defines “ ‘[hjealth care decision’ ” as “a decision made by a patient or the patient’s agent, conservator, or surrogate, regarding the patient’s health care, including the following: fl[] (a) Selection and discharge of health care providers and institutions. [H] (b) Approval or disapproval of diagnostic tests, surgical procedures, and programs of medication. [H] (c) Directions to provide, withhold, or withdraw artificial nutrition and hydration and all other forms of health care, including cardiopulmonary resuscitation.” (Italics added.) These revisions to section 2355, like the remainder of the Health Care Decisions Law, were drafted by the Law Revision Commission. In its official comment to section 2355, the commission wrote that subdivision (a), as amended, “is consistent with . . . Drabick, [supra, 200] Cal.App.3d 185 . . . .” (30 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep., supra, com. to § 2355, p. 263.) In the comment, the commission also set out important passages from the Drabick opinion, presumably as indicative of the drafters’ intent. Indeed, the new law is consistent with Drabick in recognizing the power of conservators to refuse consent to health care, even health care necessary to sustain life, and in treating the decision to withhold artificial nutrition and hydration as a health care decision. In other respects, the current version of section 2355 departs from the decision in Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185. The Drabick court viewed the informally expressed wishes of the incompetent conservatee simply as a factor for the conservator to consider in determining the conservatee’s best interest. (Id. at pp. 211-212.) In contrast to Drabick, section 2355 assigns dispositive weight to the conservatee’s informally expressed wishes, when known. Under the statute, “[t]he conservator shall make health care decisions for the conservatee in accordance with the conservatee’s individual health care instructions, if any, and other wishes to the extent known to the conservator.” (§ 2355, subd. (a).) The best interest standard applies only when the conservatee’s wishes are not known, as a fallback standard embodied in the statute’s next sentence: “Otherwise, the conservator shall make the decision in accordance with the conservator’s determination of the conservatee’s best interest. In determining the conservatee’s best interest, the conservator shall consider the conservatee’s personal values to the extent known to the conservator.” (Ibid.) B. The Present Case This background illuminates the parties’ arguments, which reduce in essence to this: The conservator has claimed the power under section 2355, as she interprets it, to direct the conservatee’s health care providers to cease providing artificial nutrition and hydration. In opposition, the objectors have contended the statute violates the conservatee’s rights to privacy and life under the facts of this case if the conservator’s interpretation of the statute is correct. A few points of the conservator’s argument may be taken for granted. Certainly the “health care decisions” that section 2355 empowers a conservator to make include, under appropriate circumstances, the decision “to provide, withhold, or withdraw artificial nutrition and hydration and all other forms of health care . . . .”(§ 4617, subd. (c).) Section 4617, which defines “health care decisions” for purposes of section 2355, says precisely that. Furthermore, as the conservator also argues, the conditions under which such a decision might be appropriate must be determined by reference to the standards for decisionmaking set out in section 2355. The next step in the analysis is to apply the dual standard set out in section 2355 to the facts of the case. 1. The primary standard: a decision in accordance with the conservatee’s wishes ■ The conservator asserts she offered sufficient evidence at trial to satisfy the primary statutory standard, which contemplates a decision “in accordance with the conservatee’s . . . wishes . . . .” (§ 2355, subd. (a).) The trial court, however, determined the evidence on this point was insufficient. The conservator did “not [meet] her duty and burden,” the court expressly found, “to show by clear and convincing evidence that [the] conservatee . . . , who is not in a persistent vegetative state nor suffering from a terminal illness would, under the circumstances, want to die.” To be sure, the court made this finding under former section 2355 rather than the current version—and not because the former statute expressly called for such a finding but under the belief that case law required it. (See ante, at p. 526-527.) But the finding’s relevance under the new statute cannot easily be dismissed: The new statute expressly requires the conservator to follow the conservatee’s wishes, if known. (§ 2355, subd. (a).) The conservator argues the Legislature understood and intended that the low preponderance of the evidence standard would apply. Certainly this was the Law Revision Commission’s understanding. On this subject, the commission wrote: “[Section 2355] does not specify any special evidentiary standard for the determination of the conservatee’s wishes or best interest. Consequently, the general rule applies: the standard is by preponderance of the evidence. Proof is not required by clear and convincing evidence.” (30 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep., supra, p. 264.) We have said that “[explanatory comments by a law revision commission are persuasive evidence of the intent of the Legislature in subsequently enacting its recommendations into law.” (Brian W. v. Superior Court (1978) 20 Cal.3d 618, 623 [143 Cal.Rptr. 717, 574 P.2d 788].) Nevertheless, one may legitimately question whether the Legislature can fairly be assumed to have read and endorsed every statement in the commission’s 280-page report on the Health Care Decisions Law. (Cf. Van Arsdale v. Hollinger (1968) 68 Cal.2d 245, 250 [66 Cal.Rptr. 20, 437 P.2d 508] [describing the inference of legislative approval as strongest when the commission’s comment is brief].) The objectors, in opposition, argue that section 2355 would be unconstitutional if construed to permit a conservator to end the life of a conscious conservatee based on a finding by the low preponderance of the evidence standard that the latter would not want to live. We see no basis for holding the statute unconstitutional on its face. We do, however, find merit in the objectors’ argument. We therefore construe the statute to minimize the possibility of its unconstitutional application by requiring clear and convincing evidence of a conscious conservatee’s wish to refuse life-sustaining treatment when the conservator relies on that asserted wish to justify withholding life-sustaining treatment. This construction does not entail a deviation from the language of the statute and constitutes only a partial rejection of the Law Revision Commission’s understanding that the preponderance of the evidence standard would apply; we see no constitutional reason to apply the higher evidentiary standard to the majority of health care decisions made by conservators not contemplating a conscious conservatee’s death. Our reasons are as follows: At the time the Legislature was considering the present version of section 2355, no court had interpreted any prior version of the statute as permitting a conservator deliberately to end the life of a conscious conservatee. Even today, only the decision on review so holds. The court in Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, as we have seen, found sufficient authority in the statute to confirm a conservator’s decision that artificial hydration and nutrition was not in the best interest of a permanently unconscious, persistently vegetative conservatee. The Drabick court, however, expressly limited its decision to cases involving conservatees in the same medical condition and stated that its reasoning was, in some unexplained way, predicated on such facts. (Id. at p. 217, fn. 36.) While the conservator embraces Drabick in other respects, the authoring court, she writes, “was flat-out wrong to limit the applicability of [section] 2355, of its statutory analysis, and of its constitutional insights to permanently unconscious conservatees as these limitations ignore the plain language of the statute as well as logic.” To the contrary, by limiting its decision in this way the Drabick court thereby avoided the constitutional problem we confront here, namely, the propriety of a decision to withhold artificial nutrition and hydration from a conscious conservatee who, while incompetent, may nevertheless subjectively perceive the effects of dehydration and starvation. (See ante, at p. 537.) In amending section 2355 in 1999, neither the Legislature, nor the Law Revision Commission in its official report to the Legislature, alluded to the possibility that the statute might be invoked to justify withholding artificial nutrition and hydration from a conscious patient. The conservator sees evidence of specific legislative authority for such a decision in the findings that accompanied the Health Care Decisions Law, but we do not. These findings, which first entered California law as part of the former Natural Death Act (Health & Saf. Code, former § 7185.5; see ante, at p. 533), were revised and recodified in the new legislation as Probate Code section 4650. The Law Revision Commission in its report accurately explained the proposed change in the findings as follows: “The earlier legislative findings were limited to persons with a terminal condition or permanent unconscious condition. This restriction is not continued here in recognition of the broader scope of this division and the development of case law since enactment of the original Natural Death Act in 1976.” (30 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep., supra, p. 61.) From this history, the conservator deduces that the commission, and by inference the Legislature, intended to give conservators the power she has sought in this case to end a conscious conservatee’s life. Considering, however, the subject’s importance and potentially controversial nature, it seems extremely unlikely that the Legislature intended to regulate the subject through the deletion of a few limiting words from a legislative finding. In any event, the commission’s reference to “the broader scope” (ibid.) of the new law more plausibly refers simply to the fact that the new law, unlike the former Natural Death Act, permits a competent person to provide by advance directive for virtually all aspects of his or her future health care rather than, as previously, simply the withdrawal of life support under narrowly circumscribed facts. (See ante, at p. 534.) Certainly the commission’s reference to “the development of case law” since 1976 cannot be understood as suggesting that conservators may end the life of conscious patients. At the time the commission wrote, no California case had addressed the subject. Moreover, of the four cases the commission cites, two involved competent patients (Bouvia v. Superior Court, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d 1127; Bartling v. Superior Court, supra, 163 Cal.App.3d 186), and two concerned patients in persistent vegetative states (Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185; Barber, supra, 147 Cal.App.3d 1006); none involved withdrawal of life support from a conscious but incompetent patient. One also finds in the commission’s lengthy report, albeit in a different comment, the cryptic statement that the amended version of section 2355 is “consistent with . . . Drabick.” (30 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep., supra, com. to § 2355, p. 263.) But Drabick was expressly limited to patients in persistent vegetative states. (Drabick, supra, 200 Cal.App.3d 185, 217, fn. 36.) Consistency with Drabick on this point does not support the conservator’s position. For all these reasons, we are not convinced the Legislature gave any consideration to the particular problem before us in this case. The prefatory note and comments to the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act are also silent on the point. Notwithstanding the foregoing, one must acknowledge that the primary standard for decisionmaking set out in section 2355 does articulate what will in some cases form a constitutional basis for a conservator’s decision to end the life of a conscious patient: deference to the patient’s own wishes. This standard also appears in the new provisions governing decisions by agents and surrogates designated by competent adults. (§§ 4684, 4714.) As applied in that context, the requirement that decisions be made “in accordance with the principal’s individual health care instructions . . . and other wishes” (§ 4684) merely respects the principal-agent relationship and gives effect to the properly expressed wishes of a competent adult. Because a competent adult may refuse life-sustaining treatment (see ante, at p. 530 et seq.), it follows that an agent properly and voluntarily designated by the principal may refuse treatment on the principal’s behalf unless, of course, such authority is revoked. (See, e.g., §§ 4682, 4689, 4695 [providing various ways in which the authority of an agent for health care decisions may be revoked or the agent’s instructions countermanded].) The only apparent purpose of requiring conservators to make decisions in accordance with the conservatee’s wishes, when those wishes are known, is to enforce the fundamental principle of personal autonomy. The same requirement, as applied to agents and surrogates freely designated by competent persons, enforces the principles of agency. A reasonable person presumably will designate for such purposes only a person in whom the former reposes the highest degree of confidence. A conservator, in contrast, is not an agent of the conservatee, and unlike a freely designated agent cannot be presumed to have special knowledge of the conservatee’s health care wishes. A person with “sufficient capacity ... to form an intelligent preference” may nominate his or her own conservator (§ 1810), but the nomination is not binding because the appointment remains “solely in the discretion of the court” (§ 1812, subd. (a)). Furthermore, while statutory law gives preference to spouses and other persons related to the conservatee (id., subd. (b)), who might know something of the conservatee’s health care preferences, the law also permits the court in its sole discretion to appoint unrelated persons and even public conservators (ibid..). While it may be constitutionally permissible to assume that an agent freely designated by a formerly competent person to make all health care decisions, including life-ending ones, will resolve such questions “in accordance with the principal’s . . . wishes” (§ 4684), one cannot apply the same assumption to conservators and conservatees (cf. § 2355, subd. (a)). For this reason, when the legal premise of a conservator’s decision to end a conservatee’s life by withholding medical care is that the conservatee would refuse such care, to apply a high standard of proof will help to ensure the reliability of the decision. The function of a standard of proof is to instruct the fact finder concerning the degree of confidence our society deems necessary in the correctness of factual conclusions for a particular type of adjudication, to allocate the risk of error between the litigants, and to indicate the relative importance attached to the ultimate decision. (Weiner v. Fleischman (1991) 54 Cal.3d 476, 487 [286 Cal.Rptr. 40, 816 P.2d 892]; accord, Addington v. Texas (1979) 441 U.S. 418, 423 [99 S.Ct. 1804, 1807-1808, 60 L.Ed.2d 323].) Thus, “the standard of proof may depend upon the ‘gravity of the consequences that would result from an erroneous determination of the issue involved.’ ” (Weiner v. Fleischman, supra, at p. 487, quoting People v. Jimenez (1978) 21 Cal.3d 595, 604 [147 Cal.Rptr. 172, 580 P.2d 672].) The default standard of proof in civil cases is the preponderance of the evidence. (Evid. Code, § 115.) Neverthel