This is an appeal to this court in its jurisdiction as a juvenile court from the Regional Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court for Frederick County taken by the juvenile as a result of the actions of the Regional Court.
June 14, 1971, a petition was filed alleging that on June 9th, the juvenile unlawfully ill treated .and maimed a cat, referring to § 18.1-216. After preliminary proceedings, an adjudicatory hearing was had on July 6th. From the stipulation of counsel in this appeal, it appears that the principal witness against the juvenile was the owner of the cat, which had subsequently died, and the evidence showed that the juvenile had admitted to the owner as well as to the dog warden shooting the cat with a BB air rifle. The juvenile and both his parents also testified. The Regional Court found the juvenile innocent on the basis he had a right to protect his parents’ property and the birds on it.
Within thirty days pursuant to § 16.1-214, that court granted a rehearing for good cause shown, such cause being that the cat owner complained that several witnesses she desired to be present had not been summoned nor appeared. The juvenile judge granting the motion for rehearing disqualified himself, and a judge specially appointed reheard the case on August 5th. At the rehearing, the cat owner and the juvenile and his parents again testified, but
The stipulation asserts that the testimony of additional witnesses corroborated the facts testified to at the first hearing and that there was no conflict at the second hearing with any evidence introduced at the first. (Though it is not clear from the stipulation, a written statement of the juvenile was introduced either at the first or at both hearings.) The Regional Court then found the juvenile "not innocent" and imposed certain sanctions.
Prior to the rehearing, the juvenile filed a plea of autrefois acquit which was denied, and he has reasserted that plea in this court, thus raising the issue of double jeopardy as a defense available to juveniles in juvenile proceedings.
The first juvenile statute was adopted in Illinois in the last year of the last century. Nearly all, if not all, American Jurisdictions have followed that lead in endeavoring to embody benevolent social theory respecting children in statutory form. Consonant with that endeavor, in this Commonwealth, the juvenile law by its terms "shall be construed liberally and as remedial in character; and the powers hereby conferred are intended to be general to effect the beneficial purposes herein set forth. It is the intention of this law that in all proceedings concerning the disposition, custody, or control of children coming within the provisions hereof, the court shall proceed upon the theory that the welfare of the child is the paramount concern of the state, and to the end this humane purpose may be attained, the judge shall possess all necessary and incidental powers and authority, whether legal or equitable in nature." § 16.1-140, Code of Virginia (1950). For example, no adjudication is considered a conviction and the juvenile is not denominated a criminal and does not suffer disabilities which would ordinarily result from conviction. § 16.1-179, Code.
The juvenile statutes are protective, not penal in nature and are designed for the general protection of society and the specific protection of the child to save him from "evil tendencies and bad surroundings" and to provide for his proper care and training. Jones v. Commonwealth, 185 Va. 335 (1946). As is true in most
Though termed civil cases, juvenile cases involving delinquency carry criminal overtones and implications.1 The great diversity among individual juveniles, the extensive variety and degrees of seriousness of delinquencies necessarily demand a juvenile code, despite its beneficent intent, with sanctions which at least smack of the criminal if juvenile proceedings in the more extreme situations with which they must deal are to be more than idle exercises.2 Jones v. Commonwealth, supra, takes cognizance of the criminal overtones, despite the "civil" appellation, by requiring a standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt in delinquency proceedings.
It was nearly a half century after enactment of the first juvenile code before the U. S. Supreme Court addressed itself to the constitutional problems raised by juvenile cases.3 More recently there have been several pronouncements by that court on a variety of such problems,4 though none on double jeopardy. These holdings enunciate a due process standard of, albeit rather vague, "fundamental fairness," particularly with regard to "fact-finding procedures," for juvenile proceedings. McKeiver v. Pennsylvania, 403 U.S. 528, 91 S. Ct. 1976 (1971).
The juvenile appellant here seeks by his plea of autrefois acquit a determination that due process for juveniles affords constitutional protection against double jeopardy. The rehearing in the court below was ostensibly in pursuance of the provisions of § 16.1-214. The juvenile in effect asks a determination that the rehearing provisions of that section are unconstitutional. In my view, regardless of the guidance and inferences which may be gathered from extant U. S. Supreme Court decisions as to what a proper application of due process vis-a-vis presumed juvenile double jeopardy, such a broad and extreme finding is not necessary to resolve this case.
An examination of § 16.1-2147 reveals that it deals
However that may be, statutes are to be construed as far as reasonably possible so that they are constitutionally inoffensive. A basic constitutional requirement is notice to one of a proceeding or step therein to a party whose rights may be affected thereby; at least where there is no constitutionally excusable reason for lack of notice. For example, extreme emergency permitting the grant ex parte of a temporary injunction, or grant of adoption when the unknown whereabouts of a parent make personal
In this case, while the aggrieved party appeared and applied for a rehearing, it was granted without notice of the application to the juvenile and without his appearance or opportunity to appear in opposition to its allowance. The juvenile and his parents received notice of the scheduled rehearing, but when they did, the grant of a rehearing was a fair accompli. Consistent with constitutional requirements for notice and with the principle of statutory construction so as to avoid constitutional invalidity, the statute under the facts of this case made notice to the juvenile or his parents necessary as a prerequisite to the grant of the rehearing.
Notice merely of the rehearing itself does not satisfy the statutory requirement mentioned. The law generally is somewhat parsimonious in allowing rehearings and strict in the requirements therefor. As a consequence, they are rarities. Policy, constitutionality and principles of construction as applied to this statute do not permit an ex parte grant of such an unsettling thing as a rehearing where the result might be the imposition of restraints on one’s liberty.
The rehearing being the product of an infirm grant thereof, was in legal contemplation unauthorized and so its result a nullity. That being so, it is voided and the original judgment of the juvenile court is its final judgment.9
Section 16.1-214 clearly indicates that the trial of a juvenile appeal to a court of record is one de novo. This being true how can this court go into matters of procedure in that court? This court can as a preliminary to its further proceedings and to determine if its further proceedings are required, examine into procedures of that court to resolve whether the judgment appealed from is
1.
E.g., detention is permissible and can take the form of commitment to corrective institutions, Section 16.1-178; and such detention can be of considerable length as it may extend through the minority of the juvenile.
2.
Perhaps to avoid some of the possible idle exercises of jurisdiction over delinquencies, one of the later juvenile amendments (Section 16.1-177.1), enacted 1956) under certain circumstances permits a child fourteen or over who would be a misdemeanant if an adult to receive the penalties which could be imposed upon a misdemeanant adult. This sanction is essentially a criminal one.
3.
Haley v. Ohio, 332 U.S. 596, 92 L. Ed. 224 (1948).
4.
The format of those cases, noted below, is the measurement of specific juvenile procedures against the standard of due process under the Federal Constitution.
5.
The lumping of all forms of juvenile proceedings, e.g., delinquency, adult offenses against juveniles, neglect, dependency, custody, etc., together in our statutes with little delineation and discrimination among them as to procedure, disposition and the like adds further anomalies and creates confusions and ambiguities, effective sorely to tax and try the legal mind.
6.
Coerced confessions — due process forbids. Haley v. Ohio, 332 U.S. 596, 92 L. Ed. 224 (1948), and Gallegos v. Colorado, 370 U.S. 49, 8 L. Ed. 2d 325 (1962).
Notice of charges — due process requires notice adequate to a civil or criminal proceeding: timely, written, containing specification of charge or factual allegations. In re Gault, 387 U.S. 1, 18 L. Ed. 2d 527 (1967).
Right to counsel — due process requires (where the result may be commitment to an institution or a curtailment of freedom) informing parents or the child of the right to counsel, retained or appointed. Ibid.
Confrontation and Cross Examination — due process requires these rights to be afforded and, absent a valid confession, a finding of delinquency will not stand absent sworn testimony subjected to opportunity for cross examination. Ibid.
Self-incrimination — due process affords the right to the privilege against self-incrimination, and the same requirements apply in juvenile as in adult cases with respect to Confessions and Admissions. Ibid. (Special problems as to waiver respecting self-incrimination, confessions and admissions are involved in juvenile cases, such as the presence of counsel, the presence and competence of parents, the age and condition of the juvenile, are pointed out by this decision. It declined to rule on the questions of the right to juvenile appellate review and to transcript of the hearing.)
Proof beyond a reasonable doubt ~ due process requires this at the adjudicatory stage as to every fact necessary to constitute the "crime" charged, as a prerequisite to "conviction." In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 25 L. Ed. 2d 368 (1970). See Jones v. Commonwealth, supra, establishing this standard in this jurisdiction nearly a quarter century before.
Trial by jury at the adjudicatory stage — due process does not require.
Waiver of jurisdiction by juvenile to criminal court — constitutionally permissible if the procedural steps involved meet the basic requirements of due process, "fairness" being a necessity in juvenile proceedings. Kent v. U.S., 383 U.S. 541, 16 L. Ed. 2d 84 (1966). While not passing on the points the court mentioned, it had been held that a juvenile was not entitled to bail, indictment by grant jury, speedy and public trial, nor (the opinion antedating McKeiver and Gault) trial by jury, immunity against self-incrimination, confrontation, nor, in some jurisdictions, counsel.
7.
"Jurisdiction of appeals; procedure — From any final order or judgment of the juvenile court affecting the rights or interests of any person under the age of eighteen years coming within its jurisdiction, an appeal may be taken within ten days by any person aggrieved to the circuit, corporation, or hustings court having equity jurisdiction of such city or county. From any final order or judgment of the court affecting the rights of interests of any person of the age
8.
Consider the anomaly of a final judgment in the juvenile court, a timely appeal to a court of record which determines the case by final judgment prior to the expiration of thirty days from the date of the juvenile court judgment, and a rehearing also within the thirty-day period granted by the juvenile court. Further, the only judge mentioned in reference to rehearing is the "judge of that court” which in the context refers to the court of record.
9.
It is unnecessary and probably beyond the scope of a hearing de novo to go into the question of whether the showing of good cause required by the statute as a prerequisite to grant of rehearing was met on the basis of the absence at the first hearing of known and available witnesses whose testimony at the rehearing proved to be only corroborative and cumulative. See generally 16 M.J., Rehearing, sects. 4 et seq.