A.A., S.F., & N.A. v. State

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 27, 2019
Docket17-2075 & 18-0963 & 18-0995
StatusPublished

This text of A.A., S.F., & N.A. v. State (A.A., S.F., & N.A. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.A., S.F., & N.A. v. State, (Fla. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed February 27, 2019. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing. ________________

Nos. 3D17-2075, 3D18-963 & 3D18-995 Lower Tribunal Nos. 15-2421, 17-1143, 17-1154, 17-1155, 18-335 & 17-2334 ________________

A.A., a juvenile; S.F., a juvenile & N.A., a juvenile, Appellants/Petitioners,

vs.

The State of Florida, Appellee/Respondent.

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Maria I. Sampedro-Iglesia, Judge. (3D17-2075).

Cases of Original Jurisdiction—Prohibition. (3D18-963 and 3D18-995).

Carlos J. Martinez, Public Defender, and Billie Jan Goldstein and Jonathan Greenberg, Assistant Public Defenders, for appellants/petitioners.

Ashley Moody, Attorney General, and David Llanes and Christina L. Dominguez, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee/respondent.

Before EMAS, C.J., and FERNANDEZ1 and SCALES, JJ.

1 Did not participate in oral argument. SCALES, J.

In these consolidated cases, two juvenile defendants in delinquency cases,

S.F. and N.A., challenge, via petition, “do not run” orders entered against them. The

third juvenile defendant, A.A., concedes the do not run order entered against her was

authorized, but challenges, via appeal, the contempt adjudication resulting from

A.A.’s violation of her do not run order. The challenged orders prohibited each

respective juvenile from running away from his or her home or alternate placement

while a delinquency proceeding was pending. For the reasons set forth below, we

deny S.F. and N.A.’s petitions for writ of prohibition (and their alternate petitions

for habeas corpus) and uphold the trial courts’ issuance of do not run orders in their

cases. We reverse, however, the judgment holding A.A. in contempt of court because

of procedural and evidentiary problems occurring at A.A.’s contempt trial.

I. Procedural and Factual Background

A. Introduction

In each of these three cases, the trial court issued a do not run order to a

juvenile who was pending a court adjudication and whom the trial court was

concerned would not appear for hearing. A do not run order is a species of injunction

generally requiring the juvenile to remain in the juvenile’s home or placement. In

each instance, the juvenile violated the do not run order and, as a result, potentially

became subject to a contempt of court judgment. Of the three juveniles, only A.A.’s

2 case graduated to a contempt trial. The trial courts consider a do not run order to be

a form of nonsecure detention. See § 985.03(18)(b), Fla. Stat. (2017). The defense

in each of these cases argues that the trial court does not hold the authority to issue

a do not run order to a juvenile pending a finding of delinquency because no

provision of chapter 985 of the Florida Statutes specifically provides for such an

order.

B. The case of S.F.

On February 14, 2018, the State filed a petition for delinquency charging

sixteen-year-old S.F. with (i) misdemeanor battery of her mother, and (ii)

misdemeanor criminal mischief by damaging the hood of her mother’s car (lower

tribunal case number J18-335). When the State filed its delinquency petition, S.F.

was also the subject of a dependency case pursuant to chapter 39 of the Florida

Statutes (lower tribunal case number D18-15129). On February 15, 2018, the trial

court conducted a hearing in accordance with section 985.255(1) of the Florida

Statutes. At this hearing, the trial court (presiding over both the delinquency and the

dependency cases) issued a shelter placement order that released S.F. to the Miami

Bridge Shelter (“Bridge”).

While the record is not entirely clear, it appears that on May 8, 2018, the trial

court entered a “pick up order in both the delinquency case and the dependency case

3 for S.F.’s failure to appear at a scheduled hearing that day.”2 With S.F. in custody,

the trial court quashed the pick-up order at S.F.’s May 11, 2018 preliminary hearing.

At this hearing, the trial court released S.F. to the custody of the Department of

Children and Families (“DCF”) to be placed in Miami’s Rivers of Life shelter.

Bridge, the previous shelter, declined to allow S.F. to remain there after an alleged

violent incident. S.F.’s case manager advised the trial court that S.F.’s recent history

of not following directions and not attending school had led to her removal from

foster family care.

At the May 11, 2018 preliminary hearing, the Clerk advised the trial court

that, in the delinquency case, S.F. had an upcoming docket sounding scheduled for

May 16, 2018, with trial set for July 9, 2018. At the end of this May 11, 2018 hearing,

when the trial court released S.F. to the Rivers of Life shelter, the trial court, over

the objection of S.F.’s counsel, verbally entered a do not run order from the shelter.3

S.F. then filed the instant petition with this Court challenging the do not run

order, seeking prohibition, or, in the alternative, habeas relief. (3D18-963).

2 A pick-up order is an order entered by a trial court to take a juvenile into custody when that juvenile has failed to appear for a scheduled delinquency hearing. See A.K. v. Dobular, 951 So. 2d 989, 991 (Fla. 3d DCA 2007). 3 Section 985.255 sets forth juvenile detention criteria. S.F. was charged with committing an offense involving domestic violence (section 985.255(1)(d)) and had failed to appear for an adjudicatory hearing (section 985.255(1)(i)). Thus, S.F. was eligible for a form of detention to be determined by the trial court. As explained, infra, a do not run order is a form of nonsecure detention.

4 C. The case of N.A.

On November 14, 2017, the State filed a petition for delinquency charging

N.A., a fourteen-year-old boy, with third degree felony grand theft (later changed to

misdemeanor second degree petit theft) for allegedly stealing a wallet and its

contents at school (lower tribunal case number J17-2334). N.A. was arrested for this

crime on October 4, 2017, but the record is unclear as to whether the Department of

Juvenile Justice (“DJJ”) took custody of him and placed him in detention care, and

whether N.A. received a hearing within twenty-four hours of being taken into

custody. See §§ 985.25(1), 985.255(1), Fla. Stat. (2017).

N.A. failed to appear for a November 27, 2017 court hearing in case number

J17-2334, and the trial court issued a pick-up order. N.A. was arrested on the pick-

up order on January 27, 2018, and also was charged with a new misdemeanor for

loitering and prowling (lower tribunal case number J18-209B). The State, however,

took no action on this latter charge. After being held in secure detention due to the

pick-up order, N.A. was released to his mother and the pick-up order was quashed;

however, two days later, for a reason not stated in the record, N.A. was custody-

released to Miami’s River of Life shelter. On January 28, 2018, as a result of N.A.

being arrested in the loitering and prowling case, the DJJ, pursuant to section

985.245 of the Florida Statutes, had prepared a Detention Risk Assessment, finding

that N.A. was of minimal risk and eligible for release.

5 N.A. missed another court appearance in case number J17-2334 on March 13,

2018, and another pick-up order was issued.

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A.A., S.F., & N.A. v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aa-sf-na-v-state-fladistctapp-2019.