Ex Parte Guisti

269 P. 600, 51 Nev. 105, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 17
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 8, 1928
Docket2827
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 269 P. 600 (Ex Parte Guisti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Guisti, 269 P. 600, 51 Nev. 105, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 17 (Neb. 1928).

Opinion

*108 OPINION

By the Court,

Coleman, J. :

This is an original proceeding in habeas corpus to have Guilio Guisti, a minor under the age of eighteen years, released from the custody of Frederick Davis, as superintendent of the Nevada School of Industry.

On the 10th of April, 1928, a petition was filed in the juvenile department of the Sixth judicial district court, in and for Pershing County, charging Guilio Guisti with being a delinquent child. This petition was verified on information and belief as authorized by statute. Thereupon a summons was issued directing the defendants to appear at two o’clock p. m. of the day mentioned. The parents acknowledged in writing upon the summons service of the petition, waived service of the summons, and agreed to be present in person at the hour mentioned. At the time set all of the defendants appeared in court in person, without counsel. Upon being informed of the nature of the charge, Guilio- Guisti admitted having been caught in possession of a bottle of wine. A hearing was had to the court, in which considerable evidence was given, at the conclusion of which the court found all of the allegations of the petition to be true, and ordered that the said Guilio Guisti be committed to the Nevada School of Industry.

After the said minor had been committed, a petition for a writ of habeas corpus was presented to this court and a show cause order made. The petition herein alleges the proceedings in the district court, as stated; that an application for a writ of habeas corpus had been presented to the Fourth judicial district court of the State of Nevada, in and for Elko County, the district and county in which the said minor is confined, and that the same had been denied; it alleges that the court was without jurisdiction to make the order of commitment *109 under which custody of the said minor is maintained, in that the necessary facts required by section 731 of Rev. Laws are not averred; that no notice of the pend-ency of said petition was properly given to the parents of the said minor; that the defendants were denied “due process of law,” in that they were in effect denied a jury trial, denied the right to answer said petition, and never had an opportunity to seek and obtain the advice of counsel; -that no evidence was given showing or tending to show that the parents of said minor were unfit or improper guardians of said minor, or unable to care for, protect, train, educate, correct, control or discipline said child, or that said parents or either of them consented that said child be taken from their custody. .

We will consider first the contention that the petition filed in the district court did not aver sufficient facts to give that court jurisdiction to make the order of commitment complained of. Section 731, Rev. Laws, which is the section authorizing the filing of such a petition, so far as is here material, reads:

“Any reputable person, being a resident of the county, may file with the clerk of the court having jurisdiction of the matter, a petition in writing setting forth that a certain child, naming it, within his county, is either dependent, neglected or delinquent as defined in section 1 hereof; and that it is for the interest of the child and this state that the child be taken from its parent, parents, custodian or guardian and placed under the guardianship of some suitable person to be appointed by the court; and that the parent, parents, custodian or guardian of such child are unfit or improper guardians, or are unable or unwilling to care for, protect, train, educate, correct, control or discipline such child, or that the parent, parents, guardian or custodian consent that such child shall be taken from them.”

It is said that a petition, to confer jurisdiction, must contain the following allegations: (1) The name of the child; (2) that it is either dependent, neglected or delinquent; (3) that it is for the interest of the child and this state that the child be taken from- its parents and placed *110 under the guardianship of some person to be appointed by the court; (4) that the parents of such child are unfit or improper guardians, or are unable or unwilling to care for, protect, train,- educate, correct, control or discipline such child, or consent that said child be taken from them, and that the matters stated under the four heads must be alleged in the conjunctive.

The portion of section 731, Rev. Laws, quoted, is not in the disjunctive, but is in the conjunctive as to the matters required to be alleged in the petition when it is sought to take a child from the custody of its parents, or other person legally entitled to its custody, and the petition in question not containing allegations in the conjunctive of all of said matters did not confer jurisdiction to make the order in question, though it did confer jurisdiction authorizing the court to proceed, and, upon proper showing, to make findings and orders requiring the minor to report as provided in section 736.

That the point made is well taken is not debatable. In fact, the Attorney-General concedes the correctness of the contention. Such was the holding in Ex Parte Satterthwaite, 52 Mont. 550, 160 P. 346, and in Mill v. Brown, 31 Utah, 473, 88 P. 609. There is no dissent on this point among the authorities..

However, it must be kept in mind that under designation 4 any one of several matters may be alleged, but it must be alleged together with the other matters required.

It is clear that the minor must be discharged from custody, but it does not necessarily follow that he was not properly found to be a delinquent child and that an order may not be made requiring him to report as above intimated. In fact, we think there is no merit in the other contentions made.

The procedure against one who is charged merely with being a delinquent child, under statutes such as ours, is almost universally held to be purely statutory in nature, and is not criminal nor quasicriminal, nor a proceeding according to the course of the common law.

*111 The juvenile court law is .based upon the inherent right of the State to assume the care, custody and control of a child when conditions make it necessary for the welfare of the child and the state that it be done. In England, long before statutes such as ours were thought of, Lord Redesdale said in Wellesley v. Wellesley, 2 Blight (N. S.) 124, that the right of a chancellor to exercise powers such as are conferred by our statute had not been questioned for 150 years.

The Supreme Court of Michigan, having under consideration a similar statute, in the case of Robison v. Wayne Circuit Judges, 151 Mich. 315, 115 N. W. 682, said:

“* * * In a large number of cases considered by the courts of last resort in various states similar legislation has been under consideration. The beneficent character of legislation making provision for the care of unfortunate, delinquent or neglected children has been generally recognized. But a single case has fallen under our notice in which the court has looked with jealousy upon legislation of this character, and that is the case of People ex rel. O’Connell v. Turner, 55 Ill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P. 600, 51 Nev. 105, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-guisti-nev-1928.