Matter of Welfare of CAW

579 N.W.2d 494, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 700, 1998 WL 312686
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 16, 1998
DocketC0-98-96, C2-98-97
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 579 N.W.2d 494 (Matter of Welfare of CAW) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Welfare of CAW, 579 N.W.2d 494, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 700, 1998 WL 312686 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

CRIPPEN, Judge.

Both these appeals, brought to this court on the same day and subsequently consolidated for review, are premised on the contention that the St. Louis County juvenile court ordered 21-day out-of-home correctional placements without adequate evidence or findings of fact. The appeals having merit, we reverse the disposition in each proceeding.

FACTS

In separate cases, by orders respectively on December 16 and December 17, 1997, different trial court judges transferred custody of C.AW. and L.R.M.B. for 21-day residential placements at an institution identified as Chisholm House. These dispositions followed adjudications that each juvenile girl, while age 15, committed separate acts of delinquency.

C.AW., who admitted a gross-misdemean- or-level act of receiving stolen property in September 1997, had been in the company of a friend who took a purse and cashed checks in the purse to get approximately $225 in cash. CAW. admitted using some of this money to buy “a bunch of little things,” including a pair of earrings. She also admitted having some pizza and pop that her friend bought with part of the stolen money. A police report stated that she also smoked marijuana purchased by the friend.

L.R.M.B. admitted a misdemeanor-level assault of another girl in August 1997. In court, the juvenile admitted having slapped the face of the other girl and “punching her in the back.” A police report in the record indicates that there were three or four punches in the back.

Neither juvenile had a record of prior delinquencies. Each previously had committed a single juvenile petty offense for possessing or using a tobacco product. Both had evidently been adjudicated in child protection proceedings on truancy reports.

The records in these cases include very little evidence on the social circumstances of either child. Recommendations of probation officers were orally stated to the court. As to each child, the record provides the following information:

a. Referring to a report on supervision of CAW. during the pendency of the case, a probation officer noted that she had “minimally met their expectations, meaning that she basically has been truanting from school.” The officer added that supervision staff “is not recommending any further involvement at this time.” Noting earlier child protection proceedings, the officer reported that the child “did not complete” a day treatment program. 1 The attorney for C.A.W. reported to the court that “the family has been working with Social Services,” including involvement of the child in day treatment, and that the court had succeeded in arranging for her return to school. Urging that the Chisholm House placement be ordered but stayed, her attorney noted that C.A.W. had been cooperative with police.

b. A probation officer reported that L.R.M.B. had been in day treatment and was discharged after “she wasn’t making any more progress.” Social service personnel reported that the juvenile had been a victim of a sexual assault, had begun attending “the ALC Program” (not otherwise described in *496 the record), and that “[tjhere’s a lot of help that this young lady still needs in her life.” The same observer noted that the juvenile had begun to understand the seriousness of her behavior. L.R.M.B. stated to the court, “I don’t want to be taken away from my mom. She’s the most important thing in my life and I don’t want to be taken away from her.”

In C.A.W.’s proceedings, the Chisholm House program was not described. In the other ease, a probation officer characterized it as a “consequence program where they work,” using a “positive peer culture” as a “treatment modality.”

On these separate records, the trial court in each case ordered transfer of child custody for a 21-day placement at Chisholm House, plus probationary supervision for six months, on conditions including an apology to each victim. A restitution condition was added for C.A.W., and L.R.M.B. was not to have contact with the victim of her assault.

Different juvenile court judges in each case found that placement at Chisholm House

has the advantage of providing a consequence substantial enough to impress upon the respondent the seriousness of what she has done, a trained staff to provide the respondent with insight into the causes and nature of her behavior, and * * ⅜ insights from the Chisholm House staff into any problems that the respondent might be having requiring any further intervention or support. A regular daytime community service program would not provide these needs. (The finding in L.R.M.B. also credited the program with “an intensive educational program.”)
Each trial court order added findings that reasonable efforts have been made to prevent or eliminate the need for the removal of the respondent and to make it possible for the respondent to remain at home; that it is in the best interests of the respondent and the community that the respondent be placed outside the home for the purpose of meeting her treatment needs.

More personal to the juveniles, the trial court noted that (a) C.A.W. had been discharged from day treatment, 2 and (b) the public social services agency “is involved with the family (of L.R.M.B.) and is exploring placement options outside the parental home due to allegations of sexual assault perpetrated on the respondent.”

Finally, each trial court order of placement ended with the following observation:

While awaiting placement for this purpose the Court will make a separate determination as to whether a supervised placement in the home would be feasible.

ISSUE

Do the records in these cases include evidence or findings sufficient for a corrections placement?

ANALYSIS

These cases require that we revisit the issue of findings needed under state law for 21-day correctional placements in St. Louis County eases. See Matter of Welfare of M.A.C., 455 N.W.2d 494, 499 (Minn.App.1990) (reversing St. Louis County disposition due to the absence of findings mandated by statute).

We note, initially, as was true in M.A.C., that the challenged 21-day residential confinement orders have already been executed. Absent a dispositional stay, placements like these will always be served before review is completed. We review the dispositions, which are “capable of repetition while evading review,” so that parties are not unjustly discouraged from seeking appellate relief, and so that we do not unjustly encourage erroneous trial court processes. Id. at 496.

By statute, similar in this respect to statutes in a number of other states 3 , juve *497 nile court delinquency dispositions in Minnesota are lawful only when determined “necessary to the rehabilitation of the child.” Minn.Stat. § 260.185, subd. 1 (1996).

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Bluebook (online)
579 N.W.2d 494, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 700, 1998 WL 312686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-welfare-of-caw-minnctapp-1998.