Albiniano for Habeas Corpus Writ

6 A.2d 554, 62 R.I. 429, 123 A.L.R. 441, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 31, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 A.2d 554 (Albiniano for Habeas Corpus Writ) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albiniano for Habeas Corpus Writ, 6 A.2d 554, 62 R.I. 429, 123 A.L.R. 441, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 44 (R.I. 1939).

Opinion

*430 Baker, J.

Petition by Victor Albiniano for writ of habeas corpus. The petitioner, who is now confined in state’s prison, contends that he is illegally detained therein and wrongfully deprived of his liberty and prays for his release.

He alleges in his petition, among other things, that on March 28, 1934, he was arraigned before the superior court upon two separate indictments, each charging him with the crime of breaking and entering in the nighttime a certain shop and committing larceny therein. To these indictments he eventually pleaded nolo contendere. Sentence was then deferred and he was released on bail. Thereafter, on July 13, 1937, the petitioner was again brought before the superior court on the same indictments by reason, as the state then urged, of his having violated the terms upon which his sentence had theretofore been deferred, and he was on said date in July sentenced upon each of said indictments to be imprisoned in state’s prison for ten years, said sentences to run consecutively. The correctness of the above allegations is not .denied by the state.

Further, it is not disputed that in the indictments in question the petitioner was charged with having committed the offenses involved on January 5 and January 12, 1934, respectively. One of said indictments was returned to the superior court March 26, and the other March 27, 1934 by a grand jury which had been convened by that court on March 5, 1934. One of these indictments was a secret in *431 dictment, and was the first proceeding taken by the state in connection with the prosecution of the petitioner for the offense charged therein. In regard to the other indictment, it appears that the alleged crime which the petitioner was accused of committing came before the grand jury for its consideration because the petitioner had previously been arrested on a complaint and warrant soon after the date of the offense set out therein, and prior to February 11, 1934, and had been arraigned before a district court and adjudged by it to be probably guilty as charged and bound over under bail to await the action of said grand jury.

As a basis for his contention that he is now entitled to be released from custody, the petitioner sets out in his petition that at the time when the acts for which he was subsequently indicted and sentenced were alleged to have been done by him he was under the age of sixteen years, and urges, therefore, that the superior court did not have jurisdiction over him, and that the indictments in question were illegally returned by the grand jury and are void.

As proof of his age the petitioner submitted a certified copy of the record of births in a certain town in Italy showing that he was born there on February 11, 1918, thus becoming sixteen years of age on February 11, 1934. The state does not contest the accuracy of this certificate, and does not seriously dispute his claim that he was under sixteen years of age at the time the offenses in question were allegedly committed by him.

The general statutory provisions in regard to juvenile courts and the case of delinquent and wayward children are found in G. L. 1923, chap. 404. The first section of said chapter as amended by P. L. 1928, chap. 1226 reads in part as follows: “This chapter shall apply to all delinquent, wayward, dependent and neglected children. The term ‘delinquent’ for the purposes of this chapter shall mean and include any child under sixteen years of age who has violated any city or town ordinance, or has committed an offense *432 against the laws of the state, unless such offense be murder or manslaughter .... The provisions of this chapter shall apply to any such child who is within the above prescribed age limits at the time a petition is filed against him as hereinafter provided, notwithstanding such child may be over such age limits after the filing of any such petition, and during the hearing thereon.” (italics ours)

Section 2 of said chapter as amended by P. L. 1926, chap. 860 contains the following language: “The district courts of the several judicial districts of the state shall have and exercise within their respective districts, original jurisdiction of all cases arising under this chapter, and when sitting in the exercise of such jurisdiction each such district court shall be known and referred to as the ‘juvenile court’ of its respective district. Hereafter no proceeding either by complaint or indictment shall be had against any child under sixteen years of age for the violation of a city or town ordinance, or for an offense against the laws of the state, except such offense be murder or manslaughter, until after a petition has been filed in a juvenile court against such child as a delinquent on account of such violation or offense, and such petition has been dismissed by such court.” (italics ours)

Section 9 of said chapter as amended by P. L. 1926, chap. 860 states: “But if the court shall be of the opinion from the evidence presented that the child is a delinquent or wayward child within the meaning of this chapter, the court may adjudge such child a delinquent or wayward child as the case may be, and shall proceed as hereinafter provided: Provided, hoioever, that if in any case, ... it shall appear that such child was beyond the age limits prescribed in section one of this chapter, when the petition was filed against it, then and in such case the court shall dismiss the petition, and such proceedings may then be taken against such child, as might have been taken in the first place, if this law had not been enacted.” (italics ours)

*433 The petitioner contends that, under the statutes above referred to, if it appears that an offense has been committed by one then under sixteen years of age, with certain exceptions not pertinent here, that child, regardless of its age when proceedings are first begun against it, must be taken before the juvenile court; and that no other court has jurisdiction to entertain a valid and legal proceeding against such child in the first instance. The state disputes this contention, and maintains that, under said .statutes, the age of sixteen years relates to the time when the proceedings in question are commenced, and that it is not necessary or, in fact, proper to proceed in a juvenile court if the accused is over sixteen years of age at the time said proceedings are started. The state, therefore, urges that, on the facts appearing herein, this petition should be denied and dismissed.

We are of the opinion that the state’s position in regard to the proper construction to be placed upon the statute in question is in general sound. The act in relation to juvenile courts and the care of delinquent children must be read as a whole. When so considered, it seems clear that it is the legislative intent that, in determining whether a child comes under the provisions of the act by reason of its age, the material and controlling issue is whether the child is under sixteen years at the time proceedings against it are first taken. If at that time-the child is under sixteen years of age, proceedings against such child as a delinquent, subject to the exceptions specified in the act, must be taken in the juvenile court.

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Bluebook (online)
6 A.2d 554, 62 R.I. 429, 123 A.L.R. 441, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albiniano-for-habeas-corpus-writ-ri-1939.