In re N.M.

102 Wash. App. 537
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 11, 2000
DocketNo. 43924-3-I
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 Wash. App. 537 (In re N.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re N.M., 102 Wash. App. 537 (Wash. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Ellington, J.

— The legislature intended detention for a limited period of time as a sanction to be available for contempt in juvenile status offense cases. We hold that the statutory authorization for “up to seven days” is a maximum detention sanction not subject to aggregation in any one proceeding.

Facts

N.M. was found to be an at-risk youth (ARY). Pursuant to RCW 13.32A.196, the court ordered the 16-year-old to obey a curfew, comply with outpatient drug and alcohol treatment, attend AA meetings, abstain from possession or use of drugs and alcohol, and refrain from verbal abuse.

Less than two weeks later, N.M.’s parents filed a contempt motion, alleging that N.M. violated his curfew, refused to attend AA meetings, verbally abused his mother, [539]*539and came home “stoned.” The court found that N.M. had violated the conditions of his AEY supervision on five separate occasions, and held N.M. in contempt. In lieu of 35 days of detention (7 days for each violation), the court imposed 14 days of electronic home monitoring. N.M. was permitted to purge the contempt by following the court’s previous orders, or voluntarily checking into inpatient treatment.1

N.M. moved for revision, arguing that a juvenile court could impose no more than seven days of detention for violating a dispositional order.

The revision judge granted N.M.’s motion, but on different grounds, holding that the juvenile contempt statutes, as amended in 1998, were unconstitutional because while they labeled all contempt as “remedial,” the amended statutes in fact authorized only a punitive sanction, and the juvenile court’s imposition of a 14-day determinate sentence therefore violated N.M.’s criminal due process rights.

N.M. argues on appeal that the court on revision erred in its characterization of the amended statute. He reiterates his assertion that the juvenile contempt statutes authorize imposition of a maximum of seven detention days as a coercive sanction for violation of a dispositional order.

Discussion

1. Mootness

The issues presented here are technically moot. We will nonetheless reach the merits, because the questions [540]*540involve matters of continuing and substantial public interest.2

2. Constitutionality of 1998 Amendments

In 1998, the Washington State Legislature amended the Becca Bill3 to expressly characterize as “remedial”4 all detention sanctions for violations of ARY, child in need of services (CHINS), and truancy dispositional orders.5 The general contempt statute, RCW 7.21.030(2), was amended to add subsection (e), which provides:

(2) If the court finds that the person has failed or refused to perform an act that is yet within the person’s power to perform, the court may find the person in contempt of court and impose . . . the following remedial sanctions:
(e) In cases under chapters 13.32A [CHINS, AKY], 13.34 [dependency], and 28A.225 [truancy] RCW, commitment to juvenile detention for a period of time not to exceed seven days. This sanction may be imposed in addition to, or as an alternative to, any other remedial sanction authorized by this chapter. This remedy is specifically determined to he a remedial sanction.[6]

(Emphasis added.)

RCW 13.32A.250, which governs ARY and CHINS cases, was also amended to read:

(2) Failure by a party to comply with an order entered under this chapter is a civil contempt of court as provided in RCW 7.21.030(2)(e), subject to the limitations of subsection (3) of this section.
[541]*541(3) The court may impose remedial sanctions including a fine of up to one hundred dollars and confinement for up to seven days, or both for contempt of court under this section.[7]

In addition, the legislature made the following findings:

The legislature finds that an essential component of the children in need of services, dependency, and truancy laws is the use of juvenile detention. As chapter 7.21 RCW is currently written, courts may not order detention time without a criminal charge being filed. It is the intent of the legislature to avoid the bringing of criminal charges against youth who need the guidance of the court rather than its punishment. The legislature further finds that ordering a child placed in detention is a remedial action, not a punitive one. Since the legislature finds that the state is required to provide instruction to children in detention, use of the courts’ contempt powers is an effective means for furthering the education and protection of these children. Thus, it is the intent of the legislature to authorize a limited sanction of time in juvenile detention independent of chapter 7.21 RCW for failure to comply with court orders in truancy, child in need of services, at-risk youth, and dependency cases for the sole purpose of providing the courts with the tools necessary to enforce orders in these limited types of cases because other statutory contempt remedies are inadequate.[8]

The first issue presented here is whether the revision court erred in holding that the juvenile contempt statutes, as amended in 1998, are unconstitutional. We recently resolved this issue in In re Interest of M.B., and held the statutes constitutional so long as the juvenile courts supply the requisite due process safeguards to ensure the sanctions are remedial in nature.9

As the revision court here correctly noted, a punitive [542]*542contempt sanction does not become remedial just because it is called remedial by the legislature; these distinctions have constitutional significance.10 But it is clear the 1998 legislature intended to ensure that detention remains available to juvenile courts as a remedial sanction for contempt in status offense cases. As we held in M.B., the legislative intent can be given effect without constitutional violation if courts supply the necessary due process safeguards:

So long as the required purge condition is supplied by the court, both legislative intent and the requirements of due process are satisfied.
This is not a strange or even a strained approach. . . . Indeed, we note that under the general contempt statute, no mention is made of purge conditions, yet courts routinely impose purge conditions to render the use of the incarceration sanction properly coercive.[11]

The statutes, thus applied, are not unconstitutional.

[543]*5433. Stacking

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Related

In Re The Truancy Of R.l.P.
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2019
In re the Dependency of M.H.
278 P.3d 1145 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2012)
State v. ALH
64 P.3d 1262 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 Wash. App. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nm-washctapp-2000.