LC v. State

625 P.2d 839
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1981
Docket4401/4411
StatusPublished

This text of 625 P.2d 839 (LC v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LC v. State, 625 P.2d 839 (Ala. 1981).

Opinion

625 P.2d 839 (1981)

In the Matter of L.C., a minor, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Alaska, Appellee.

Nos. 4401/4411.

Supreme Court of Alaska.

January 30, 1981.

*840 John B. Salemi, III, Norman S. Besman and Deborah Paquette, Asst. Public Defenders, and Brian Shortell, Public Defender, Anchorage, for appellant.

David Mannheimer, Asst. Atty. Gen., Anchorage, and Avrum M. Gross, Atty. Gen., Juneau, for appellee.

Before RABINOWITZ, C.J., and CONNOR, BOOCHEVER, BURKE and MATTHEWS, JJ.[*]

OPINION

CONNOR, Justice.

These consolidated appeals present questions concerning procedures to be followed in a juvenile delinquency case.

Having previously declared L.C. delinquent for a drug offense, the superior court ordered her institutionalized in October, 1976, when she was fifteen years old. She was placed in McLaughlin Youth Center in Anchorage. Following her release from McLaughlin at the beginning of July, 1978, she was put on probation and placed in the Mary Johnson House (Long House), an approved juvenile "halfway house" also in Anchorage. On July 10, L.C. failed to return to this house by curfew time, and did not return the next day. As a result her caseworker in Kenai filed a request for her detention and a petition to modify or revoke her probation. L.C. was found and detained on July 14. She testified that she had been raped on the 10th by a man who had given her a lift in his car, and had subsequently gone to her brother's and stayed there.

After a hearing on July 20, the superior court revoked L.C.'s probation and ordered her to be reinstitutionalized. On July 26, a *841 classification committee of the Division of Corrections, with L.C. present and represented by counsel, assigned her to the Excelsior School for Girls in Colorado. L.C. moved for postconviction relief in October, which the court denied after a hearing. She now appeals both the July order of institutionalization and the denial of her motion for postconviction relief.[1]

The governing statute in this case is AS 47.10.080(b), as it existed in 1976:

"(b) If the court finds that the minor is delinquent, it shall
(1) order the minor committed to the Department of Health and Social Services for an indeterminate period of time not to extend past a specified date or in any event past the day the minor becomes 19, except that the department may petition the court for continued supervision for an additional one-year period for minors who have not responded to treatment; the department shall place the minor in the juvenile facility which the department considers appropriate and which may include a juvenile correctional school, detention home, or detention facility; the minor may be released from placement or detention and placed on probation on order of the court and may also be released by the department, in its discretion, under § 200 of this chapter; or
(2) order the minor placed on probation, to be supervised by the department, and release him to his parents, guardian, or a suitable person; if the court orders the minor placed on probation, it may specify the terms and conditions of probation; the probation may be for an indeterminate period of time, not to extend past a specified date and in no event past the day the minor becomes 19, except that the department may petition the court for continued supervision for an additional one-year period for minors who have not responded to treatment."[2]

Pursuant to subsection (1), L.C. in July, 1976, was committed to the custody of the department for an indeterminate period. She was ordered institutionalized "until released, upon a showing by an officer of the department ... that the minor has completed a program of rehabilitation and has been amenable thereto." As noted, the department released L.C. to the Long House in July of 1978.

L.C. claims that she did not receive a disposition hearing, required by Alaska Rule of Children's Procedure 12(a), in connection with her probation revocation. That rule reads:

"Phases of Hearing. The child hearing consists of two phases — the adjudicative phase and the dispositive phase.
(1) Adjudicative Phase. The adjudicative phase determines the issue of delinquency or dependency, or both, or need of supervision, according to allegations of the petition for adjudication. The issues may be determined either by the admission or confession of the party or by the taking of evidence.
(2) Dispositive Phase. The dispositive phase consists of the measures taken and *842 the orders issued by the court with respect to the child or his parents, guardian, or custodian, designed to correct any undesirable situation found in the adjudicative phase."

The state responds that L.C. was not entitled to a disposition hearing and, if she was, she received such a hearing from the classification committee.

In resolving this dispute, we must first determine the nature of L.C.'s conditional freedom following her release from McLaughlin. Since it was the department which authorized L.C.'s release from institutionalization at McLaughlin, and placed her at Long House, we cannot accept L.C.'s argument that she was on court-ordered probation.[3] But neither can we accept the state's contention that no hearing was required because L.C. had never left the custody of the department, and was not therefore actually on probation. We find this contention overly technical, ignoring as it does the significant increase in L.C.'s freedom that resulted from her reassignment from the institutionalization of a "closed" facility to the significantly less restrictive environment of a halfway house. We conclude that L.C. was placed on administrative probation when released from McLaughlin to Long House.[4]

The next question is whether the requirement in Children's Rule 12(a) of a disposition hearing applies to a court-ordered revocation of administratively granted probation. We hold that it does. In Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 488, 92 S.Ct. 2593, 2603, 33 L.Ed.2d 484, 498 (1972), the United States Supreme Court ruled that due process[5] requires that a parolee be entitled to show "that circumstances in mitigation [of the act violating parole] suggest that the violation does not warrant revocation." The court ruled that the hearing must be broader than merely determining probable cause that parole conditions are violated. 408 U.S. at 488, 92 S.Ct. at 2603, 33 L.Ed.2d at 498. We can perceive of no reason why due process should not impose the same requirement with regard to juvenile probationers.[6]

It is clear that L.C. was not given a chance to argue about the proper disposition of her case before the superior court.[7] But, the state asserts, she was given that chance before the department's classification committee, which assigned her to the Excelsior School. This argument ignores *843 the fact that L.C. had already been ordered reinstitutionalized by the court before the matter was brought before the classification committee. That committee's function, according to its chairperson, was only to implement the court's order by choosing an appropriate institutional placement. The initial decision of whether to institutionalize was made by the court and not the committee.

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Related

Morrissey v. Brewer
408 U.S. 471 (Supreme Court, 1972)
L. C. v. State
625 P.2d 839 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
625 P.2d 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lc-v-state-alaska-1981.