In re Tony W.

91 Misc. 2d 700, 398 N.Y.S.2d 528, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2395
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 91 Misc. 2d 700 (In re Tony W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Tony W., 91 Misc. 2d 700, 398 N.Y.S.2d 528, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2395 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

Nanette Dembitz, J.

The instant motion for the sealing of a juvenile arrest record, invokes a recent amendment of the Criminal Procedure Law as a fresh basis for an order to the police to seal the record of a juvenile’s arrest. Under the law as it stood prior to the CPL amendment, the Court of Appeals had rejected a variety of arguments offered in support of efforts to secure such orders. (Matter of Richard S. v City of New York, 32 NY2d 592; Matter of Antonio P., 40 NY2d 960.)1 The court nevertheless recognized the social and economic [701]*701dilemmas that had given rise to the numerous cases seeking to expunge or seal juvenile arrest records, concluding that an arrest record may "result in unwarranted discrimination in the child’s future”. (Matter of Richard S., supra, p 595.)

The recent amendment to the Criminal Procedure Law provides for a court order to the police to seal an arrest record when a criminal action terminates in favor of the accused in a specified manner. (CPL 160.50, eff Sept. 1, 1976.) The record thereafter will be available only to the accused and to various officials, under specified circumstances.

The CPL amendment reads in the terms of adult criminal proceedings and omits any mention of Family Court juvenile delinquency proceedings, in which charges of crime against minors under 16 are adjudicated. The question at bar is whether the principle of fair and equal treatment of juvenile with adult offenders, established by a body of appellate rulings in this State and in the United States Supreme Court, requires the extension to juveniles of the new rule as to the sealing of an arrest record. For the reasons detailed below, this court holds that juveniles must be given the benefit of the CPL amendment.

A. APPLICATION OF CPL TO JUVENILES

While the United States Supreme Court recognizes that a juvenile delinquency proceeding is essentially criminal, it has left for case-by-case determination the issue of whether the various constitutional protections accorded adult defendants also cover juveniles (Matter of Gault, 387 US 1; Matter of Winship, 397 US 358; McKeiver v Pennsylvania, 403 US 528, 550). In similar vein, the New York Court of Appeals has held that the CPL does not automatically govern in its entirety in juvenile delinquency proceedings (Matter of D. [Daniel], 27 NY2d 90, 95), and applicability has been decided on a case-by-case, provision-by-provision basis.

The learning to be derived from this body of law is that the constitutional guarantee of " 'due process and fair treatment’ ” requires that courts accord the juvenile in a delinquency proceeding the protections accorded in adult criminal proceedings unless the particular procedural step "would risk destruction of beneficial aspects of the juvenile process.” (Matter of Winship, supra, pp 359, 366.) Thus, one CPL provision after another has been held applicable, as a matter of constitutional necessity, to a juvenile, because "to hold

[702]*702otherwise would deny to him his right of equal protection of the laws” and violate "the requirements of due process and fair treatment”. (Matter of Steven B., 30 AD2d 442, 444.) A failure to accord the protection of a CPL provision "based solely upon age, without other justification, denies both due process and equal protection of the law.” (Matter of Eric R., 34 AD2d 402, 403.)2 See, also, People ex rel. Guggenheim v Mucci (32 NY2d 307, 313), where the court in effect imported the CPL rules on preliminary hearings into juvenile proceedings, saying: "It would take a distorted view to believe that adult felony criminal proceedings were designed to be more tender of the rights of detained adults than the Family Court proceedings are of juveniles.”

The net result of the cases considering whether juveniles should enjoy the various constitutional or statutory protections accorded to adult criminal defendants, is that all have been held applicable to juveniles except for the right to jury trial — which was deemed disadvantageous to juveniles3 — and except for the minor, formal requirement of notice of intention to introduce an admission. (Matter of D. [Daniel], 27 NY2d 90, 95, supra.)

B. APPLICATION TO JUVENILES OF NEW CPL PROVISION ON SEALING ARREST RECORDS

1. PURPOSE AND POLICY OF CPL PROVISION

Under the principle established by the above cases that a protection conferred on adult defendants must be extended to juveniles unless inappropriate for them, it seems clear that the new provision on arrest records must be applied to juveniles. Certainly juveniles cannot be denied its benefit on the ground approved in Winship for an exception to the general principle of equality of treatment of juveniles and adults (that is application "would risk destruction of beneficial aspects of the juvenile process” [Matter of Winship, 397 US 358, 366, supra]). And, for validity, a discrimination denying a benefit to a juvenile "must, at the very least 'have some relevance to the [703]*703purpose for which the classification is made.’ ” (Matter of Patricia A., 31 NY2d 83, 88.) This principle dictates the application of the arrest-record provision to juveniles. For, there is no rational ground for distinction between adults and juveniles from the standpoint of the purpose and policy of the legislation.

The purpose of the CPL amendment, as stated in the Governor’s message approving it, was "to protect the rights of individuals” and to effectuate "the presumption of innocence.” (McKinney’s Session Laws of 1976, p 2451.) That presumption is just as basic for juveniles as adults (see Winship, supra, p 363). But, as the Court of Appeals recognized in Matter of Richard S. v City of New York (32 NY2d 592, supra), in the economic world the juvenile must prepare to enter there tends to be a presumption of guilt from an arrest record rather than the presumption of innocence that in the world of legal theory prevails until conviction. The police record of a juvenile’s arrest, even though he was never found guilty, thus is a handicap to him when he seeks public or private employment or entrance into the armed forces or a scholarship or a professional license (see Matter of Richard S., supra, p 595).4

Certainly the injustice to which the CPL amendment is directed, and the "unwarranted discrimination in the child’s future” (Matter of Richard S., supra, p 595) (ibid) is as serious for a youth as an adult. Further, many arrested juveniles are children of the poor and the minorities; it is particularly onerous, and contrary to the public interest, for them to bear the additional handicap of an arrest record when they attempt to gain a foothold on the economic ladder and climb out of the poverty ghetto.

Juvenile delinquency proceedings in place of criminal court proceedings for youths under 16 were designed to ameliorate the harsh consequences of the latter, and especially to lessen the stigma of arrest (Family Ct Act, § 784). It would be an irrational anomaly if juveniles under 16 are denied the benefit of the protection of the CPL amendment on arrest records while it is available to those tried in adult criminal proceedings or in the youthful offender part established in the criminal court for youths 16 to 19.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Misc. 2d 700, 398 N.Y.S.2d 528, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tony-w-nyfamct-1977.