In the Matter of S.M.K.-S.H.

2012 MT 281
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 2012
Docket11-0772
StatusPublished

This text of 2012 MT 281 (In the Matter of S.M.K.-S.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of S.M.K.-S.H., 2012 MT 281 (Mo. 2012).

Opinion

December 5 2012

DA 11-0772

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 2012 MT 281

IN THE MATTER OF:

S.M.K.-S.H.,

A Youth.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eighteenth Judicial District, In and For the County of Gallatin, Cause No. DJ 09-20A Honorable Holly Brown, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Wade Zolynski, Chief Appellate Defender; Eileen A. Larkin, Assistant Appellate Defender; Helena, Montana

For Appellee:

Steve Bullock, Montana Attorney General; Katie F. Schulz, Assistant Attorney General; Helena, Montana

Marty Lambert, Gallatin County Attorney; Eric Kitzmiller, Deputy County Attorney; Bozeman, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: September 26, 2012

Decided: December 5, 2012

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 S.M.K.-S.H. appeals a dispositional order from the Montana Eighteenth Judicial

District Youth Court, Gallatin County (Youth Court). After the youth violated the terms

of his initial probation agreement, the court revoked that agreement and entered a

dispositional order that extended the youth’s probationary period for an additional three

years. We affirm.

¶2 We address the following issues on appeal:

¶3 1. Did the Youth Court exceed its statutory authority by imposing on revocation

an additional three-year probationary term that lasts until S.M.K.-S.H’s twenty-first

birthday?

¶4 2. Did the imposition of an additional three-year term of probation violate

S.M.K.-S.H’s constitutional right to equal protection of the laws?

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶5 On December 15, 2009, the State filed a petition seeking a determination that

fourteen-year-old S.M.K.-S.H. was a delinquent youth or a youth in need of intervention.

The State alleged that the youth committed assault with a weapon, a felony, in violation

of § 45-5-213, MCA, when he struck a fellow student in the head with a glass bottle and

then punched him in the nose. Initially, the youth denied the State’s allegations.

¶6 On June 29, 2010, S.M.K.-S.H. entered a signed admission to the charge filed

against him. That same day, the Youth Court held a hearing at which the court accepted

the youth’s admission and set a dispositional hearing for August 3, 2010.

2 ¶7 At the dispositional hearing, the court declared that S.M.K.-S.H. was a delinquent

youth for committing assault with a weapon. The Youth Court entered a dispositional

order, which committed S.M.K.-S.H. to its jurisdiction and placed him on probation until

his eighteenth birthday. As part of its order, the Youth Court expressly forbade S.M.K.-

S.H. from owning, possessing or being in control of any firearms or other deadly

weapons.

¶8 On October 3, 2011, when S.M.K.-S.H. was sixteen years old, the State filed a

petition to revoke his probation and to take the youth into custody. That action was

prompted by a report from the youth’s probation officer that S.M.K.-S.H. had violated the

terms of his probation agreement by possessing a 9mm handgun. The Youth Court

authorized the State to take the youth into custody and, on November 7, 2011, S.M.K.-

S.H. entered a signed admission to the allegations contained in the State’s petition to

revoke.

¶9 That same day, the Youth Court held a change of plea and dispositional hearing.

The court informed S.M.K.-S.H. that it was alleged that he “had violated the terms of

[his] probation” by possessing “a 9mm handgun” in violation of the conditions of his

probation. The youth then admitted to those allegations. In response, the Youth Court

accepted S.M.K.-S.H.’s admission and revoked his probation. Next, the court proceeded

to the dispositional portion of the hearing. The State recommended that the court should

commit the youth “to the Montana Department of Corrections until his 18th birthday for

3 placement at the Pine Hills Youth Correctional Facility,” but did not ask “for any

probationary period beyond that.” Counsel for S.M.K.-S.H. agreed with that request.

¶10 The Youth Court questioned the basis upon which the State and counsel for the

youth had decided not to recommend extending the youth’s probation. The court stated:

But what can you give me to consider as far as the reasoning regarding any additional supervision after 18? I’m just going to tell you my hesitation is that once he turns 18, he just kind of gets dropped out there in whatever community he’s living at the time, whether it’s here or anywhere else, and then he has no support services or supervision -- if I agree to this -- to help make sure that he makes good choices . . . . But what if he just needs support to help get additional education or additional training or just to be responsible to get a job?

¶11 The court then explained to the youth why it was concerned about not extending

his probation. The court noted that S.M.K.-S.H. had “done well when [he was] under

supervision.” Further, the court explained that it was “worried that if we just have you

released from Pine Hills at age 18 and there’s no follow-up, nobody to go to . . . I’m not

willing to say that we’ve given everything that we could possibly give to support you.”

The youth responded, “I understand completely where you’re coming from, yes.”

¶12 Shortly after that exchange, counsel for the State interjected that he was concerned

that, in its original dispositional order, the Youth Court only had committed S.M.K.-S.H.

to the court’s jurisdiction until his eighteenth birthday. The State questioned whether the

Youth Court had the authority to extend the youth’s probationary period past his

eighteenth birthday when it had failed to do so in its original dispositional order. The

court asked counsel for both parties whether there was any legal authority for extending a

youth’s probationary period after his original probation agreement had been revoked. 4 Counsel for S.M.K.-S.H. stated that, because “the Montana Constitution says adults and

youth are to be treated similarly,” an “argument could be made that the Court wouldn’t be

able to . . . give more time on the revocation than it would have originally imposed.”

Counsel for both parties agreed that they were not aware of any cases from this Court that

either authorized or prohibited a youth court from extending its jurisdiction over a

delinquent youth upon revocation. Counsel for the State did observe, however, that

“there’s a specific statute on point that says you can modify those orders at any time.”

¶13 After considering arguments made by S.M.K.-S.H.’s attorney, the court informed

the parties that it was still concerned that failing to extend S.M.K.-S.H.’s probation to his

twenty-first birthday would not be in the youth’s best interests. The Youth Court told

S.M.K.-S.H. that when it sentenced youth offenders, it hoped the sentence would provide

“an opportunity to learn and change and what we call be rehabilitated to become a good

adult . . . .” The Youth Court ultimately determined that it should order the youth to be

placed on probation until he turned twenty-one. The main reason for the court’s decision

was that it wanted “to make sure [the youth] continue[d] to change [his] thinking and

make good decisions, and I want to insure [sic] that we have a way to know that.”

¶14 After the hearing, the court entered a dispositional order, which declared S.M.K.-

S.H.

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2012 MT 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-smk-sh-mont-2012.