MORRISTOWN -- A 29-year-old woman with severe anorexia nervosa is seeking a court ruling to end forced feedings at a hospital in a right-to-die case, the Daily Record reported.

The woman, identified only as A.G., weighs about 65 pounds and has been receiving treatment at Morristown Medical Center, the report said. The woman has previously been an involuntary patient at Greystone Psychiatric Hospital in Parsippany, the newspaper reported.

The case is being heard by Superior Court Judge Paul W. Armstrong, who in the 1970s represented the parents of Karen Ann Quinlan in a landmark right-to-die decision.

Quinlan, 21, was in a persistent vegetative state and Armstrong successfully sued on behalf of the parents to remove their daughter from life support. She lived for nine more years at Morris View Nursing Home after being removed from the ventilator.

Armstrong on Friday heard testimony in A.G.'s case and is expected to issue a written decision, the Daily Record reported.

The woman's mother, her court-appointed attorney and Morristown Medical Center support the woman's wish to stop receiving nutrition, the newspaper reported.

Her current intake is diet soda, black coffee and the small amounts of food she immediately purges, the newspaper reported.

The Department of Human Services, which operates Greystone, has argued that she may not be fully competent to make the decision due to malnutrition.

Justin Zaremba may be reached at jzaremba@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @JustinZarembaNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.