A probate court referee ordered a St. Paul nursing home to allow the daughter of an ailing woman to visit her mother in hospice care, despite the nursing home's claim that the daughter's conduct is "severely detrimental" to Edna Wigen's health and "disrupts the orderly and safe operation" of the facility.
Judy Luzaich, 66, of Stillwater, and two of her mother's longtime friends were barred from St. Mary's Home in St. Paul's Highland Park this year after complaining that the 91-year-old woman was receiving substandard care.
St. Paul police and officials from the state Department of Health are investigating allegations of suspicious injuries to Wigen's head, arms and legs that were photographed by her longtime friends Patty and Al Noren. Nursing home officials deny that Wigen was mistreated, saying everything done was necessary and appropriate.
Ramsey County District Court Referee Dean Maus said that Luzaich should be allowed to visit her mother three times in the next week but he didn't address future visits, leaving that to a state judge who is expected to conduct a hearing on the dispute sometime next month.
Maus also told Luzaich to behave herself, instructing her to visit her mother and no one else and to abide by the nursing home's rules.
"We have some people very concerned about your past actions and behavior," Maus said. "I'm giving you the opportunity to visit with your mother. You need to be very careful and abide by these guidelines."
Luzaich's mother entered St. Mary's in October 2008 for rehabilitation after breaking her elbow and hip a month earlier. Wigen still wants to return to her home in St. Paul, but her condition continued to deteriorate at the nursing home and she still gets nutrition with a feeding tube. Luzaich said her mother was given narcotic painkillers that rendered her nearly comatose. She went into hospice care after several bouts with pneumonia, Luzaich said.
Luzaich and her sister, Mary Jane Hamblin, soon got into a battle over who should make decisions about their mother. In March, a state court judge appointed Lutheran Social Services as an independent guardian to oversee her care. Luzaich said she was allowed monthly visits until July 8, when the court-appointed guardian Tonya Wilhelm ordered the visits to stop.

