Matter of Robinson

71 P. 690, 138 Cal. 491, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 709
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1903
DocketCrim. No. 989.
StatusPublished

This text of 71 P. 690 (Matter of Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Robinson, 71 P. 690, 138 Cal. 491, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 709 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus to obtain the release of Frank Peterson, a boy twelve years of age, in the custody of the sheriff of Alameda County, under a commitment issued from the superior court of that county to the Preston School of Industry. It appears from the petition and the return that the boy was arrested and brought before a justice’s court in that county upon a charge of having committed the larceny of three pigeons, in connection with three other boys, charged jointly with him; that upon arraignment Peterson pleaded guilty, and thereupon the justice suspended judgment and remanded him to the custody of the sheriff of Alameda County. Three days thereafter, one John H. Ravekes, who does not appear to have been a relative of the boy, filed in the superior court of Alameda County a petition, reciting that the boy had been found guilty of petit larceny, and alleging that the justice made an order finding him to be a fit subject for commitment to the Preston School of Industry, and suspended sentence upon the plea, in order that the boy might be examined and committed by the judge of the superior court of that county to the Preston School of Industry, and praying for a commitment accordingly. In fact, however, the justice did not make any order finding him to be a fit subject for admission to the Preston School of Industry. The record in the justice’s court merely shows that he suspended sentence upon the plea. Thereupon the boy was brought before the superior court and examined, and, after hearing the testimony of several witnesses, an order of commitment was issued, directing the sheriff to take the boy and deliver him to the custody of the *493 superintendent of the Preston School of Industry, there to be kept for the period of three years, or until legally discharged.

The question presented by the petition is whether or not, under the laws of this state, a minor under eighteen years of age, who has been found guilty of a crime by a justice of the peace, can be thereupon, for that cause alone, by an order of the superior court, committed to the Preston School of Industry.

The Preston School of Industry was established by the act of March 11, 1889, and the provisions concerning the commitments to the institution are contained in sections 15 and 16 of the act (Stats. 1889, p. 103). They are as follows:—

“Section 15. When any boy under the age of eighteen years shall be found guilty, by a magistrate or court of competent jurisdiction, of any offense punishable by fine, or by imprisonment, or by both, and who, in the opinion of such magistrate or court, would be a fit subject for commitment to the said school, it shall be lawful for the magistrate or court to suspend judgment or sentence (except when the penalty is life imprisonment or death), and to commit such boy to the said school for a period not exceeding the time when he shall attain his twenty-first birthday, unless sooner discharged by law, or as in this act provided; but no boy who is under the age of eight years, or who is of unsound mind, shall be committed to the said school. ... It shall be the duty of all courts and magistrates committing any boy to such school to certify to the superintendent thereof the age of the person so committed, as nearly as can be ascertained by testimony taken under oath before such court or magistrate, or in such manner as the court or magistrate may direct.
“Section 16. Before any commitment, made by a police court, or by a justice of the peace, under this act, shall be executed, it shall be approved by a judge of the superior court of the county in which the police court or justice of the peace has jurisdiction, and his approval indorsed on the warrant of commitment. But if such sentence shall be disapproved, the police court or justice of the peace shall then impose the ordinary sentence prescribed by law.”

Under the provisions of these sections, any minor under the age of eighteen could be committed to the institution, whether found guilty by a superior court or by a justice of the peace *494 or other inferior magistrate, including persons guilty of ordinary misdemeanors and persons guilty of felonies. The only restriction upon the power of a justice of the peace or judge of a police court in this respect was, that their commitments should be -first approved by a judge of the superior court of the county, and the approval indorsed on the warrant; but the commitments of persons charged with crimes cognizable by such court were made direct by the justice or judge of those courts, and not by the superior court. On March 26, 1895, however, another act was passed (Stats. 1895, p. 122), which, with reference to this subject, contained the following provisions: “Section 1. The superior judge of any county and no other judicial officer, shall have power to examine, discharge, or commit any offender either to the Whittier State School or the Preston School of Industry.” The section contained a further provision to the effect that the superior j'udge should determine whether the parent or guardian was able to pay for the maintenance of the minor during the commitment, and should make an order requiring him to pay eleven dollars per month, in case he should find him able to do so.

On behalf of the respondent it is claimed that the only effect of this act is to substitute the superior judge as the officer who should act, after conviction, instead of the justice of the peace and police justices in all cases arising in those inferior courts, and that it does not have the effect of excluding from the institution persons found guilty of offenses in those courts. The petitioner, however, insists that the effect of the act is to limit the class of persons who can be committed to the institution to those who are found guilty in the superior court, and that it was the intention of the act not only to prevent persons from being committed by the justices of the peace or police judges, but also to exempt persons charged in those courts from the operations of the act of 1889.

We are of the opinion that the latter contention should prevail. Some light is thrown upon the intention of the legislature in enacting the act of 1895 by a consideration of the previous legislation regarding the Whittier State School and the Preston School of Industry. Both these institutions were established by the legislature of 1889, and the acts establishing them each provided that persons could be committed to *495 the institution direct from justices’ courts and police courts, in cases of conviction in those courts. (Stats. 1889, p. 103, secs. 15, 16, and p. 115, secs. 16, 18.) Section 16 of the act establishing the Whittier State School provided for the commitment to that school of minors “convicted before any court of competent jurisdiction.” Section 18 provided that where any minor was “arraigned for trial” in any court of competent jurisdiction, with the consent of the accused, the proceedings could be suspended at any time and the minor committed. In 1893 these two sections were amended. Section 16 was changed by substituting the words “found guilty by a superior court” for the words “convicted before any court of competent jurisdiction,” and adding some further restrictions.

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Bluebook (online)
71 P. 690, 138 Cal. 491, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-robinson-cal-1903.