M.B. v. State

815 N.E.2d 210, 2004 Ind. App. LEXIS 1865
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 28, 2004
DocketNo. 49A02-0401-JV-94
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 815 N.E.2d 210 (M.B. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M.B. v. State, 815 N.E.2d 210, 2004 Ind. App. LEXIS 1865 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

FRIEDLANDER, Judge.

Fifteen-year-old MB. appeals a true finding that he committed an act that would constitute the offense of Battery,1 a class A misdemeanor, if committed by an adult. M.B. presents the following restated issues for review:

1. Did the juvenile court lack jurisdiction by virtue of its failure to enter a separate order, pursuant to Ind. Code Ann. § 31-37-10-2 (West, PREMISE through 2008 ist Regular Sess.), finding probable cause to believe M.B. had committed a delinquent act and that it was in the best interests of the child or society to file the petition?
[212]*2122. Did the juvenile court err in placing M.B. with the Department of Correction?

We affirm.

The facts favorable to the judgment are that on November 83, 2008, fifteen-year-old AH. picked up his paycheck from a McDonald's restaurant and began walking home. MB. and several of his friends drove past A.H., and came so close to him that their car brushed against the coat AH. was carrying. AH. turned around and made an obscene gesture at the passing car. MB. pulled the car over in front of a fire station, got out of the car and, along with at least one of his passengers, confronted AH. M.B.'s compatriot punched AH. in the back of the head, after which M.B. and the other assailant pushed A.H. to the ground and got on top of him. Fireman Matthew Bennett was sitting nearby and witnessed the entire attack. Bennett positively identified M.B. as one of the assailants.

On November 3, 2003, the State filed a delinquency petition alleging that M.B. had committed an act that would constitute the offense of battery if committed by an adult. MB. was arrested that same day. The initial hearing was conducted on November 5, 2003. At that hearing, the court entered the following:

A handwritten information having been filed alleging the child to be a delinquent child, and the Intake Officer's written report of the Preliminary Inquiry, the advisement of rights to child, and the advisement of rights to parents are now filed and made part of the record.
The Court having received statements from the respondent regarding his age and date of birth, and same having been confirmed by Candy Brooks (Mother-Legal Custody) who was present, the Court finds that it has jurisdiction over this matter and that such finding will remain throughout the pendency of this action, unless and until further evidence is presented to the court. The Court therefore finds that it has jurisdiction over this matter.

Appellant's Appendix at 27. Following the initial hearing, the court ordered that M.B. should be detained. A fact-finding hearing was conducted on December 3, 2003, after which the court found M.B. to be a delinquent child. M.B. was remanded to the Marion County Juvenile Detention Facility pending a dispositional hearing. Such a hearing was conducted on January 5, 2004, and M.B. was made a ward of the Indiana Department of Correction for housing in a correctional facility for children, for a recommended period of twelve months.

1.

M.B. contends the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction because it failed to enter a separate order, consistent with I.C. § 81-37-10-2, which states:

The juvenile court shall do the following:
(1) Consider the preliminary inquiry and the evidence of probable cause.
(2) Approve the filing of a petition if there is probable cause to believe that:
(A) the child is a delinquent child; and
(B) it is in the best interests of the child or the public that the petition be filed.

M.B. contends that I.C. § 31-37-10-2 requires an affirmative finding, on the record, that there is probable cause to believe that the child subject to a delinquency proceeding is a delinquent child, and that it is in the best interests of the child or public that the petition be filed. M.B. contends that this is a jurisdictional prerequisite and that failure to comply with the statute results in a failure on the trial court's part to invoke jurisdiction over the case.

[213]*213Juvenile courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Their jurisdiction must be invoked by establishing the statutory jurisdictional prerequisites. Phares v. State, 796 N.E.2d 305 (Ind.Ct.App.2003). When jurisdictional facts are not in dispute, we apply a de novo standard of the review on the question of whether a lower court had jurisdiction over a juvenile proceeding. Id.

A recent decision by this court would seem to support M.B.'s argument on the question of jurisdiction. In K.S. v. State, 807 N.E.2d 769 (Ind.Ct.App.2004),2 this court was confronted with precisely the same issue, concerning the same statute, ie., .C. § 81-37-10-2. There, as here, the juvenile appellant did not present a jurisdictional challenge until his appeal to this court. We noted in KS. that of the three elements of jurisdiction-subject matter jurisdiction, personal jurisdiction, and jurisdiction over the case-subject matter jurisdiction alone is not waivable. We stopped short of characterizing the type of jurisdiction implicated in K.S.'s (and now M.B.'s) argument as subject matter jurisdiction. Nevertheless, we held that the jurisdiction at issue was not waivable, explaining that conclusion as follows:

We are persuaded by the weight of authority that regardless of the label attached to the type of "jurisdiction" impacted by a juvenile court's failure to follow the necessary prerequisites for proceeding with a juvenile delinquency action, it has long been recognized by our supreme court and this court that errors of this type are not waivable and may be raised at any time, with or without a contemporaneous objection. Therefore, because of the absence of any record of the juvenile court's adhering to the clear statutory and case law requirement of independently approving the initiation of delinquency proceedings, we are compelled to conclude that it lacked jurisdiction not only to enter the original order adjudicating K.S. to be delinquent, but also to find he violated his probation stemming from that adjudication and to commit him to the custody of the DOC. The fact that K.S. did not contemporaneously object to the initiation of the delinquency proceedings does not change this result.

K.S. v. State, 807 N.E.2d at 775. With respect to the views of this court in general and the author of this opinion in particular, this would seem at first blush to settle the question M.B. presents. We note, however, that the State filed a Petition for Rehearing in KS., arguing extensively that our conclusions with respect to the non-waivability of jurisdiction in that case were faulty. The author of this opinion voted to grant that petition, based upon the views set out in the remainder of this opinion. Therefore, we do not adhere to the holding in K.S. v. State.

We begin with a threshold question, viz., what element of jurisdiction is implicated by I.C.

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Bluebook (online)
815 N.E.2d 210, 2004 Ind. App. LEXIS 1865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mb-v-state-indctapp-2004.