MacOn v. Holloway

96 So. 933, 19 Ala. App. 234, 1923 Ala. App. LEXIS 107
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1923
Docket3 Div. 446.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 96 So. 933 (MacOn v. Holloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacOn v. Holloway, 96 So. 933, 19 Ala. App. 234, 1923 Ala. App. LEXIS 107 (Ala. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BRICKEN, P. J.

In the absence of a juvenile court law, the petitioner would be subject to indictment and prosecution, in a court of competent jurisdiction, for any violation of law.

In establishing juvenile courts, the Legislature undertook to create a special tribunal for the handling of cases of juvenile defendants, in order to'relieve juvenile defendants under certain circumstances from the rigidity of the law prevailing in courts of more general jurisdiction and for other humane and worthy purposes.

By section 20 of the Acts 1920, p. 88, the Legislature provided in substance that if this specially created tribunal came to the conclusion, after a thorough investigation, or a trial of its disciplinary measures, that a delinquent juvenile was past reformation, then such delinquent could be put to trial in the court that would have originally had jurisdiction of the offense, but for the juvenile law.

We see nothing -unconstitutional in this provision. The state may adopt this method of ascertaining whether or not a delinquent is past reformation, and the state may say that a delinquent who is past reformation may be tried in one court and given a certain punishment, and that a delinquent child who is not past reformation may be treated otherwise'.

The power lodged in the juvenile court by section 20 of the act 1920, supra, is not an arbitrary discretion. That section contemplates a. judicial investigation of the question of whether the child can be reformed. The petition shows that there was a trial in the juvenile court, and “that after the hearing of the evidence, and the conclusion of her said trial,” the judge of the juvenile court committed the petitioner to the circuit court of Montgomery county, Ala., to answer an indictment which might be found against her for the offense of grand larceny.

It was as competent for the Legislature to confer jurisdiction on the juvenile court to determine whether the child was past reformation, as it was to confer on that court jurisdiction to determine the age of the child and’the fact of its delinquency.

The fact that the child was past reformation having been found by the court, the law, and not the court, says what becomes of the delinquent.

The ruling of the court below in sustaining a demurrer to the petition was correct. ' It is here affirmed.

Affirmed.

On Rehearing.

Among other things, the act' approved October 2, 1920 '(Acts 1920, Special Session, p. 76), declares that “delinquent child” shall mean any male child who, while under 16 years of age, or any female child while under 18 years of age, being or residing in such county, violates any penal law of the United States, or of this state, or any regulation, ordinance or other law of any city, town, or municipality of 'such county, and who commits • any offense or act which he or she could be prosecuted in a method'partaking of the nature of a criminal action or proceeding.

Section 5 authorizes the juvenile court to determine the question of delinquency and, when so adjudicated, to declare such children to be, for the purpose of the act, wards of the state and to make and settle such judgments or orders for their custody, discipline, supervision, care, protection, and guardianship as in the judgment of the court will be for the welfare and best interest of such child or children.

In the absence of a provision _of this character, a child charged with the commission of a felony would be triable in the circuit court of the county in which the offense was committed. The effect of the provision above referred to is to temporarily suspend the right of the state to proceed against a child in the circuit court for the violation of a criminal statute of the state, and to authorize the juvenile court to adjudge the child to be a delinquent and a ward of the state and to be eared for accordingly. These statutory provisions do not, as is contended in the able brief in- behalf of the appellant on application for rehearing, add an element to crime in the case of a juvenile offender. The appellant contends that it is an essential element of every crime when committed by a child that the juvenile court be convinced that the child cannot be made to lead a correct life and cannot be properly disciplined under the provisions of the juvenile court act. This contention is manifestly wrong. If a child feloniously takes and carries away personal property, it is guilty of larceny; but the right or power of the state to pr.oseeute for the offense in the case of a juvenile offender is, by the statute, suspended pro tempore; it is only in cases in which the juvenile court ascertains, eithqr by thorough investigation or a practical trial of its disciplinary measures, *237 that a juvenile offender is incorrigible, that' the law says the state may proceed.

It is unquestionably the law that a statute creating an offense must define the offense with reasonable certainty; that is, with such certainty as that before the commission of the offense the offender may know whether or not he is committing a crime, U. S. v. Cohen Gro. Co., 255 U. S. 81, 41 Sup. Ct. 298, 65 L. Ed. 516, 14 A. L. R. 1045; State v. Goldstein, 18 Ala. App. 587, 93 South. 308. But this well-settled principle of law in no wise affects section 20 of the act under review. It is not an offense for a child to be incorrigible. No punishment is prescribed for incorrigibility. The only effect of the finding by the court of a child’s incorrigibility is that it authorizes the state to proceed in the common-law court with the prosecution to which a child would be subject in the absence of the special act here in question. If a child is tried and convicted in the common-law court, it is punished for the crime it has committed and not for being incorrigible. It is now .well settled that the classification of persons amenable - to punishment for crime within the constitutional liriiitation is a legitimate exercise of legislative authority. E. C. L. vol. S, p. 04. Two children of the same age are brought before the court. One of them, by reason of physical and mental defects.. previous training and environment, is a confirmed criminal. Both of the children are of the same age; both charged with- a serious offense. The other child by reason of entirely different conditions is readily amenable to discipline and instruction; there is no constitutional objection to the Legislature saying that in the first case the first child may be tried by common-law court for the violation oí a criminal law, and that in the second case the child shall not be,tried so long as it is amenable to discipline and is influenced by proper instructions.

Appellant’s complaint is that section 20 of the act vests in the juvenile court, or its judge, an unbridled and arbitrary discretion to determine whether or not a child can be made to lead a correct life and be properly disciplined under this act. And appellant, argues that no person can tell before the commission of a crime whether a juvenile offender can be made to lead a correct life.

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Bluebook (online)
96 So. 933, 19 Ala. App. 234, 1923 Ala. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macon-v-holloway-alactapp-1923.