Opinion of the Court by
Judge ClarkeReversing.
In October, 1920, the appellant, then fifteen years of age, upon a trial in the Fayette county court under section 331e, Kentucky Statutes, was adjudged to be a delinquent child and committed “to the care of the Kentucky House of Reform and to remain under the care and control of said institution and subject to its rules until he arrives at legal age or until discharged by said juvenile court or by due process of law.”
On June 28, 1921, J. M. Sullivan, the father of appellant,' entered a motion in the Fayette county court for a modification of the judgment and order committing appellant to the house of reform and upon a hearing of that motion the following order was entered:
“This cause came on for hearing on motion of the father of the defendant herein, and it appearing that the said defendant’s parents were not notified of the hearing at which said defendant was convicted, and the following judgment entered:
“And further appearing to the court that the defendant has been confined in the Kentucky House of Reform for more than eight months, and. it is for the best interests of said infant defendant that the judgment herein should be suspended, and said defendant placed upon probation, it is hereby ordered that the judgment herein be suspended and the defendant be put in custody of his parents, subject to the friendly visitation of the probation officer of this court. ’ ’
A copy of this order was served upon the appellees, State Board of Charities and Corrections, in which is *332vested by law tbe management and control of the house of reform, and the board refused to comply with the court’s order to release appellant. Thereupon appellant, suing by his next friend, instituted this action in the Fayette circuit court for a mandamus requiring appellees to release him as directed! by order of the juvenile court. A demurrer having been sustained to his petition, same was dismissed and he has appealed.
It is the contention of appellees that by the judgment committing appellant to the house of reform during his minority the Fayette county court exhausted its powers in the matter and was without authority as was attempted in that judgment to retaip. control of the case or to enter the later order releasing appellant from the institution and placing him in care of his parents subject to the friendly visitation of the probation officer of-the court. Whether this is true -or not, is the question for decision upon this appeal.
Section 331e' of Kentucky -Statutes, enacted in 1906, defines the terms “delinquent child,” “dependent child” and “neglected child,” and confers upon the county courts of the state as juvenile courts exclusive jurisdiction to try and dispose of such children. Though not entirely accurate, for our present purposes delinquent children may be described as such boys seventeen years of age and under and girls eighteen years of age and under as upon trial are found to have'exhibited criminal or incorrigible dispositions and tendencies, while dependent and neglected children are treated as a single class and are such children of like ages as because of improper environment or the absence of proper paternal control are liable to develop such dispositions and tendencies.
■Subsection 7 of the act prescribes what disposition the court may make of a delinquent child, while subsection 9 thereof provides for the disposition of dependent or neglected children. In any case the child may be allowed to remain- in the home of its parents or other suitable persons' subject to the friendly visitation and supervision of the probation -officer of •the juvenile court, but the provisions for the commitment of such child to private or public institutions are somewhat different. Delinquent children may be committed by -the court to the house of detention provided for by the act, the state house of reform for boys. *333or girls as the ease may be or to any institution that has been or may be provided by the state, county or city for the care of delinquent children, or “to any association that will receive them embracing in its objects the care of neglected, dependent or delinquent children.” Dependent or neglected children may be committed only to some “association, society or corporation willing to receive them embracing in its objects the care of neglected, dependent or delinquent children; provided, however, that the court shall not commit any dependent or neg-. lected child within the meaning of this act to any association, society, or corporation receiving delinquent children unless suitable provision is made by such association, society or corporation for separating delinquent from neglected or dependent children. ’ ’
As to dependent and neglected children, the juvenile court by subsection 9 is given express authority after commitment to set aside, change or modify such order; but as to a delinquent child it is provided by subsection 7 that the governing board of the institution to which it has been committed may release it with the approval of the county court or the court may release it upon recommendation of the board, and there is no express authority-in subsection 7 for the court without the concurrence of the governing -board of the institution to which the child has been committed to order a release. If these were the only provisions of the act the contention'for appellees would doubtless be sound; since in this case the governing authorities of the house of reform to which appellant was committed neither recommended nor approved the order of release. However, subsection 11 of the act provides that:
“Whenever it shall appear to the court in the case of any child under this act taken from its home that the home of such child or of its parents or former guardian or custodian is a suitable place for such child and that such child could be permitted to remain or ordered to be returned to said home consistent with the public good or the good of such child the court may order such child returned to its home under probation or otherwise, it being the intention of this act that no child shall be taken from or kept -out of its home or away from its parents or guardian any longer than is reasonably necessary to» preserve the welfare of such child and the interests of the state.”
*334This subsection very clearly applies to all classes of children considered by the act and just as clearly confers upon the juvenile court the power to order any such child to be returned to its own home at any time when in the court’s sole discretion that may be done “consistent with the public good and the good of such child.” This construction of this subsection does not, as counsel for appellees contend, render meaningless the provisions of subsection 7 for releases by the concurrent action of the officials of the house of reform and the county judge, but simply restricts same to releases for other reasons than to return the child to its own home when, as suggested in that subsection, the child has been reformed or when for any other reason its release is deemed advisable and it has no proper home of its own to which it can be returned. Such construction of the two subsections not only harmonizes them so as to give some effect to both, but the very effect we feel sure the legislature intended that each should have, while to construe subsection 7 as appellees contend would give no force whatever to subsection 11.
Hence if section 331e controls, the circuit court erred in sustaining the demurrer to appellant’s petition and dismissing same.
But it is insisted by the Attorney General for appellees that if this act be so construed it is inconsistent with provisions for releasing inmates of houses of reform found in section 2095b and section 3828 of the Kentucky 'Statutes and that these last named acts must control. Section 2095b is the act providing for the establishment ■of houses of'reform for boys and girls and in subsection 17 thereof it is provided that:
“The trustees may at any time discharge any boy or girl in the custody of such institution upon the advice of or with the consent of the Governor or of the judge of the court committing said child. ’ ’
This act, however, was enacted in 1896 and consequently its provisions for the release of children from houses of reform, in so far as it is inconsistent with the provisions of section 331e thereafter enacted, was repealed thereby.
Section 3828 of the statutes was enacted in 1914 and therefore later than section 331e and it contains the provision that the State Board of Penitentiary Commissioners, whose duties and powers were conferred upon the *335appellees, State Board of Charities and Corrections, by an act of 1920, “shall have power and authority with the approval of the Governor of the state and subject to the conditions, provisions and limitations of this act to parole and permit to go and remain at large outside the buildings and inclosures of the same any person that is now confined and that hereafter may be confined in any penitentiary, reformatory, house of reform or other penal institution of the state, etc.” This act, however, as clearly appears from its title and terms, was intended only to apply to persons convicted of crime and confined in the named institutions in pursuance of a judgment of the criminal courts of the state.
Subsection 5 of section 331e provides that the juvenile court in any case of a delinquent child brought before it upon warrant or indictment charged with a crime, in its discretion may permit such child to be tried in the ordinary way by the criminal courts of the state, and we have held in numerous cases that the criminal courts can acquire jurisdiction of and convict of crime a child coming within the provisions of section 331e only in the manner therein pointed out, and that when so convicted they shall be confined in the house of reform during their minority and thereafter in the penitentiary if the term of imprisonment imposed upon them in a circuit court extends beyond their minority.
We are therefore clearly of the opinion that the legislature only intended to confer upon the governing: board and the Governor the power to parole those convicted of crime and confined in any state penal institution under judgment of the regular criminal courts and has no reference whatever to a child committed to the custody of the house of reform by the juvenile courts under section 331e, Ky. Statutes, the prime purpose of which is to render such children immune from criminal prosecution even, except when the juvenile courts shall consider it necessary.
In accordance with the above conclusions it results that it was the duty of the appellees to release appellant as ordered by the Fayette county juvenile court and that the lower court erred in sustaining a demurrer to and dismissing the petition herein.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.