State ex rel. A.J.
This text of 27 So. 3d 247 (State ex rel. A.J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
VICTORY, J.
1 jPursuant to Article V, Section 5(D)(1) of the Louisiana Constitution, this is a direct appeal of an Orleans Parish Juvenile Court judgment declaring that Article 882 of the Louisiana Children’s Code, which denies juveniles the right to a jury trial in juvenile adjudications, violates the United States and Louisiana Constitutions where the juvenile is subject to a potential deprivation of liberty of more than six months. After reviewing the record and the applicable law, we reverse the juvenile court’s ruling.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On April 15, 2008, the state filed a petition to commence a delinquency proceeding in Orleans Parish Juvenile Court, alleging that A.J., age fourteen, committed six felony-grade delinquent acts, ie., six aggravated rapes, upon his five and seven-year-old siblings, in the interval between January 1, 2007, and December 31, 2007.1
|20n May 7, 2008, A. J. moved for a jury trial.2 The juvenile court judge asked for supplemental briefing on the following:
[249]*249(1) Under a federal due process fundamental fairness analysis, does a juvenile have a 14th Amendment right to a jury trial?
(2) Under a federal minimum scrutiny equal protection analysis of the 14th Amendment, does a juvenile have a right to a jury trial?
(3) Under the Louisiana constitution’s due process clause in Art. I, sec. 2, using the four part test from In re C.B.[, 97-2783 (La.3/4/98), 708 So.2d 391] outlined above (but not limited to same), does a juvenile have a right to a jury trial? (4) Under the Louisiana constitution’s equal protection clause in Art. I, sec. 3, using the test as outlined in Sibley[ v. Bd. of Supervisors, 477 So.2d 1094 (La.1985) (on reh’g) ] in regard to age classifications, the state must show:
1. What is the state purpose of the age classification found in Ch.C. Art. 882; and
2. How is that purpose substantially related to the statute’s age-based classification.
A.J. responded as follows. First, he contended that, although the plurality in McKeiver v. Pennsylvania, 403 U.S. 528, 91 S.Ct. 1976, 29 L.Ed.2d 647 (1971) (in which the Supreme Court considered whether the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment assures the right to trial by jury in state juvenile delinquency proceedings), stopped short of extending the right to a jury trial to juveniles, McKeiver left open the possibility that the Court would extend the right in the future if the line between delinquency proceedings and adult criminal prosecutions became sufficiently blurred. The instant proceedings, A.J. argued, would be sufficiently like |san adult prosecution because they would be public and the penalty would be severe.3 Second, A.J. briefly asserted that there was no rational basis for denying juveniles the right to a jury trial and thus La.Ch.C. arts. 808 and 882 violated the Equal Protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Third, A.J. contended that juvenile delinquency proceedings that might result in confinement for more than six months are fundamentally unfair in the absence of a jury and therefore those juveniles are denied the due process to which they are entitled by La. Const. Art. 1, § 2. Fourth, A.J. briefly asserted that differentiating between a juvenile and an adult (who are both accused of aggravated rape) with regards to the right to a jury is an age-related classification that does not substantially further an appropriate governmental purpose and is therefore prohibited by La. Const. Art. 1, § B.
The state argued that A.J. had offered no basis to overturn settled law. First, the state noted that the Supreme Court in McKeiver and this Court in State ex rel. D.J., 01-2149 (La.5/14/02), 817 So.2d 26, rejected the claim that juvenile delinquency adjudications were fundamentally unfair because the proceedings are conducted without a jury. Second, the state asserted that equal protection challenges to similar statutory provisions have failed in other [250]*250jurisdictions, and the state contended that La.Ch.C. art. 882 passes the minimal rational-basis scrutiny that is applicable under federal equal protection jurisprudence. Third, the state applied the analysis from In re C.B. to conclude that the enactment also does not deny the movant due process under the state constitution. Fourth, the state contended that the age classification at issue ensures that juveniles “receive proper care and rehabilitation” and assures that they not be “exposed to the adult penal system,” and thus substantially furthers the appropriate governmental purposes of “rehabilitation and well-being.”
I ¿The juvenile court judge granted A.J.’s motion for a jury trial on January 20, 2009, and issued extensive reasons for judgment in 83 pages. At the outset, the juvenile court judge revealed frustration with the status quo in this area of law:
After ten years on the juvenile bench, this court cannot continue to indulge the legal fictions of juvenile court: that jail does not mean jail, that juvenile crime is not really crime; that a proceeding that uses armed guards and shackles is actually civil; or that liberty means one thing for adults and something else for juveniles. Who are we trying to convince? The juvenile? The victim? These fictions have only one purpose: to rationalize not applying the United States and Louisiana Constitutions as written. To this court, constitutional rights should not fall to legal fictions.
Based on centuries of Anglo-American common law tradition, basic concepts of fairness, and the words of the federal and state constitutions, this court is of the opinion that a juvenile cannot be constitutionally deprived of liberty for more than six months, without the right to a jury trial.
Regarding A.J.’s federal due process claim, the juvenile court judge criticized McKeiver for framing the issue as a false dichotomous choice between rehabilitative juvenile proceedings and the right to a jury trial, and the juvenile court distinguished McKeiver on the nature of the delinquent acts alleged4 as well as the structure of juvenile adjudications in Louisiana today,5 before ultimately construing [251]*251the holding | sof McKeiver narrowly as neither compelling nor prohibiting jury trials in juvenile proceedings.
With this backdrop, the juvenile court scrutinized the terms used in the Children’s Code and Code of Criminal Procedure before concluding that a delinquency adjudication is equivalent to a criminal prosecution for purposes of the Sixth Amendment, and that the Sixth Amendment (in conjunction with the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment) requires a jury trial if a juvenile is to be deprived of liberty for more than six months.
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VICTORY, J.
1 jPursuant to Article V, Section 5(D)(1) of the Louisiana Constitution, this is a direct appeal of an Orleans Parish Juvenile Court judgment declaring that Article 882 of the Louisiana Children’s Code, which denies juveniles the right to a jury trial in juvenile adjudications, violates the United States and Louisiana Constitutions where the juvenile is subject to a potential deprivation of liberty of more than six months. After reviewing the record and the applicable law, we reverse the juvenile court’s ruling.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On April 15, 2008, the state filed a petition to commence a delinquency proceeding in Orleans Parish Juvenile Court, alleging that A.J., age fourteen, committed six felony-grade delinquent acts, ie., six aggravated rapes, upon his five and seven-year-old siblings, in the interval between January 1, 2007, and December 31, 2007.1
|20n May 7, 2008, A. J. moved for a jury trial.2 The juvenile court judge asked for supplemental briefing on the following:
[249]*249(1) Under a federal due process fundamental fairness analysis, does a juvenile have a 14th Amendment right to a jury trial?
(2) Under a federal minimum scrutiny equal protection analysis of the 14th Amendment, does a juvenile have a right to a jury trial?
(3) Under the Louisiana constitution’s due process clause in Art. I, sec. 2, using the four part test from In re C.B.[, 97-2783 (La.3/4/98), 708 So.2d 391] outlined above (but not limited to same), does a juvenile have a right to a jury trial? (4) Under the Louisiana constitution’s equal protection clause in Art. I, sec. 3, using the test as outlined in Sibley[ v. Bd. of Supervisors, 477 So.2d 1094 (La.1985) (on reh’g) ] in regard to age classifications, the state must show:
1. What is the state purpose of the age classification found in Ch.C. Art. 882; and
2. How is that purpose substantially related to the statute’s age-based classification.
A.J. responded as follows. First, he contended that, although the plurality in McKeiver v. Pennsylvania, 403 U.S. 528, 91 S.Ct. 1976, 29 L.Ed.2d 647 (1971) (in which the Supreme Court considered whether the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment assures the right to trial by jury in state juvenile delinquency proceedings), stopped short of extending the right to a jury trial to juveniles, McKeiver left open the possibility that the Court would extend the right in the future if the line between delinquency proceedings and adult criminal prosecutions became sufficiently blurred. The instant proceedings, A.J. argued, would be sufficiently like |san adult prosecution because they would be public and the penalty would be severe.3 Second, A.J. briefly asserted that there was no rational basis for denying juveniles the right to a jury trial and thus La.Ch.C. arts. 808 and 882 violated the Equal Protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Third, A.J. contended that juvenile delinquency proceedings that might result in confinement for more than six months are fundamentally unfair in the absence of a jury and therefore those juveniles are denied the due process to which they are entitled by La. Const. Art. 1, § 2. Fourth, A.J. briefly asserted that differentiating between a juvenile and an adult (who are both accused of aggravated rape) with regards to the right to a jury is an age-related classification that does not substantially further an appropriate governmental purpose and is therefore prohibited by La. Const. Art. 1, § B.
The state argued that A.J. had offered no basis to overturn settled law. First, the state noted that the Supreme Court in McKeiver and this Court in State ex rel. D.J., 01-2149 (La.5/14/02), 817 So.2d 26, rejected the claim that juvenile delinquency adjudications were fundamentally unfair because the proceedings are conducted without a jury. Second, the state asserted that equal protection challenges to similar statutory provisions have failed in other [250]*250jurisdictions, and the state contended that La.Ch.C. art. 882 passes the minimal rational-basis scrutiny that is applicable under federal equal protection jurisprudence. Third, the state applied the analysis from In re C.B. to conclude that the enactment also does not deny the movant due process under the state constitution. Fourth, the state contended that the age classification at issue ensures that juveniles “receive proper care and rehabilitation” and assures that they not be “exposed to the adult penal system,” and thus substantially furthers the appropriate governmental purposes of “rehabilitation and well-being.”
I ¿The juvenile court judge granted A.J.’s motion for a jury trial on January 20, 2009, and issued extensive reasons for judgment in 83 pages. At the outset, the juvenile court judge revealed frustration with the status quo in this area of law:
After ten years on the juvenile bench, this court cannot continue to indulge the legal fictions of juvenile court: that jail does not mean jail, that juvenile crime is not really crime; that a proceeding that uses armed guards and shackles is actually civil; or that liberty means one thing for adults and something else for juveniles. Who are we trying to convince? The juvenile? The victim? These fictions have only one purpose: to rationalize not applying the United States and Louisiana Constitutions as written. To this court, constitutional rights should not fall to legal fictions.
Based on centuries of Anglo-American common law tradition, basic concepts of fairness, and the words of the federal and state constitutions, this court is of the opinion that a juvenile cannot be constitutionally deprived of liberty for more than six months, without the right to a jury trial.
Regarding A.J.’s federal due process claim, the juvenile court judge criticized McKeiver for framing the issue as a false dichotomous choice between rehabilitative juvenile proceedings and the right to a jury trial, and the juvenile court distinguished McKeiver on the nature of the delinquent acts alleged4 as well as the structure of juvenile adjudications in Louisiana today,5 before ultimately construing [251]*251the holding | sof McKeiver narrowly as neither compelling nor prohibiting jury trials in juvenile proceedings.
With this backdrop, the juvenile court scrutinized the terms used in the Children’s Code and Code of Criminal Procedure before concluding that a delinquency adjudication is equivalent to a criminal prosecution for purposes of the Sixth Amendment, and that the Sixth Amendment (in conjunction with the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment) requires a jury trial if a juvenile is to be deprived of liberty for more than six months. Regarding the movant’s federal equal protection claim, the juvenile court rejected the state’s justifications for distinguishing between juveniles and adults with regard to the right to a jury trial (ie., “to provide a court system for juveniles that provides treatment and rehabilitation and to protect the juvenile from incarceration at hard labor for a lengthy sentence or possibly for life in the adult criminal justice system”), and instead concluded that there was no rational basis for denying a jury trial to a juvenile who faces a substantial deprivation of liberty. Regarding the movant’s state due process claim, the juvenile court applied a three-part test6 to find that: (1) jury trials were permitted to children as young as eight during some historical periods of the common law; (2) the flexibility, informality, and speed of juvenile adjudications would not be | ^negatively impacted by jury trials;7 and (3) the right to a jury trial is fundamental and the link between the withholding of that right and any putative benefits is tenuous. With regard to the movant’s state equal protection claim, the juvenile court found that La.Ch.C. art. 882 classifies persons on the basis of age without substantially furthering an appropriate governmental purpose.8 Therefore, the ju[252]*252venile court granted the motion for a jury trial:
When the potential penalty for criminal conduct is deprivation of liberty in excess of six months, the choice of a judge or a jury is a decision that our Anglo-American common law tradition has placed in the hands of the defendant and the defendant alone. The U.S. Constitution’s Sixth Amendment and Art. I, Sec. 17 of the Louisiana Constitution, as written, guarantee the right to a jury trial: both provisions extend to all persons and on their face make no distinction on the basis of age. However, due solely to the historical anomaly of juvenile court theory, those rights are not applied as written to juveniles. The result of a delinquency adjudication can be a constitutional deprivation of liberty; as such, the right to a jury trial should be applied as written in both constitutions, to proceedings that place liberty in jeopardy for more than six months, without an age-based exception.
The state objected to the juvenile court’s ruling at the hearing on January 28, 2009, and filed its motion for appeal on January 30, 2009. In brief to this Court, the 17state contends that the juvenile court erred both in granting the motion for a jury trial and in declaring that La.Ch.C. art. 882 violates the state and federal constitutions.
DISCUSSION
The Children’s Code articles at issue provide:
Art. 808. Constitutional rights of accused delinquents.
All rights guaranteed to criminal defendants by the Constitution of the United States or the Constitution of Louisiana, except the right to jury trial, shall be applicable in juvenile court proceedings brought under this Title.
Art. 882. Adjudication by the court.
The adjudication hearing shall be held before the court without a jury.
These articles in conjunction effectively prohibit jury trials in all juvenile court proceedings. See State ex rel. D.J., supra at 28-29. In the instant case, the juvenile court judge found that this prohibition violates both state and federal guarantees of due process and equal protection. For the following reasons, we find that juvenile court judge erred in his ruling.
I. Due Process
In Duncan v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 145, 88 S.Ct. 1444, 20 L.Ed.2d 491 (1968), the Supreme Court extended the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. The Duncan Court applied a “fundamental rights” test9 [253]*253to decide that the right to a jury trial is necessary | Rfor due process in certain criminal trials. Weighing the institutional concerns in granting all defendants the right to a jury trial, the Duncan court held that a jury trial is a fundamental right when the defendant is accused of a serious crime. Thus, the Duncan Court decided that whether a jury trial is a fundamental right should be decided based on the potential sentence. Duncan, 391 U.S. at 159-61, 88 S.Ct. at 1452-54. The court later qualified in Baldwin v. New York, 399 U.S. 66, 69, 90 S.Ct. 1886, 1888, 26 L.Ed.2d 437 (1970), that the potential for any prison term longer than six months entitles a defendant to a jury trial.
Previously, in Kent v. United States, 383 U.S. 541, 86 S.Ct. 1045, 16 L.Ed.2d 84 (1966), the Supreme Court had expressed concern about the state of the juvenile courts,10 and made numerous references to due process and fair treatment in dicta.11 Shortly afterward, the Court in Application of Gault, 387 U.S. 1, 87 S.Ct. 1428, 18 L.Ed.2d 527 (1967), held that due process requires that a juvenile defendant be provided with notice of charges, right to counsel, the right to confront and cross-examine witnesses, and the privilege against self-incrimination. Following Gault, the states were divided over whether “fundamental fairness” also meant that the right to a jury trial was |9extended by the due process clause to state delinquency proceedings.12 The Court decided this issue in McKeiver v. Pennsylvania and held that fundamental fairness did not require [254]*254states to provide a jury in juvenile delinquency proceedings. McKeiver, 403 U.S. at 545, 91 S.Ct. at 1986 (“we conclude that trial by jury in the juvenile court’s adjudicative stage is not a constitutional requirement”). Based on what the Court perceived as fundamental differences between juvenile and criminal proceedings, the McKeiver court refused to extend Duncan v. Louisiana to juvenile court proceedings.13 The McKeiver plurality, however, left open the possibility that |inthe Court might revisit its ruling in the future, stating “[pjerhaps that ultimate disillusionment will come one day, but for the moment we are disinclined to give impetus to it.” McKeiver, 403 U.S. at 551, 91 S.Ct. at 1989.
In the instant case, the juvenile court judge, A.J., and the amicus devote considerable effort to challenging McKeiver.14 [255]*255Although framed in terms of “distinguishing” this decision, the bulk of their analy-ses consists of critiques of the reasons provided by the plurality for its holding. Furthermore, all three suggest that the McKeiver Court simply erred in holding that trial by jury in a juvenile adjudication is not a constitutional requirement. These arguments thus exceed the claim that an apparently similar prior case is distinguishable from the instant one and instead are tantamount to a challenge to the eon-tinuing precedential ■viability of McKeiver. However, despite initially indicating that it may revisit its holding in the future, the Supreme Court has yet to do so and McKeiver remains controlling law.15 Therefore, in ruling in spite of McKeiver that La.Ch.C. art. 882 violates federal standards of due process, the juvenile court judge simply issued a ruling contrary to |n controlling precedent from the United States Supreme Court,16 which is clearly has no authority to do.17
[256]*256Furthermore, in light of McKeiver, Louisiana, as well as most other jurisdictions, have considered it settled that jury trials in juvenile delinquency proceedings are not mandated by concerns of fundamental fairness.18 Before the enactment of La. Ch.C. art. 882, this Court in State in the Interest of Dino, 359 So.2d 586 (La.1978), found that the right to a jury trial was not among the rights afforded juveniles by due process:
|12The juvenile court determined that a person in relator’s circumstances is denied the right to a jury trial by La. R.S. 13:1579(A), which, in pertinent part, provides:
“All cases of children shall be heard separately from the trial of cases against adults and shall be tried without a jury.”
For a majority of this Court, the only question presented by this ruling is whether a jury trial is among the essentials of due process and fair treatment required during juvenile adjudicatory proceedings. A majority of the United States Supreme Court, in McKeiver v. Pennsylvania, 408 U.S. 528, 91 S.Ct. 1976, 29 L.Ed.2d 647 (1971), held that the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not impose the Sixth Amendment right to jury trial upon the states in juvenile delinquency proceedings. For reasons similar to those expressed in McKeiver, a majority of this Court has concluded that the Louisiana due process guaranty, La. Const. 1974, Art. 1, § 2, does not afford a juvenile the right to a jury trial during the adjudication of a charge of delinquency based upon acts that would constitute a crime if engaged in by an adult.
State in the Interest of Dino, 359 So.2d at 597-98 (footnote omitted). Later, in the context of a challenge to Children’s Code art. 808, this Court in State ex rel. D.J., supra, declined to overrule State in the Interest of Dino and again relied on McKeiver to hold that:
... [A] trial by jury in a juvenile proceeding is not constitutionally required under the applicable due process standard in juvenile proceedings.
State ex rel D.J., supra at 34. In State ex rel. D.J., this Court noted that McKeiver had been criticized as an anachronism whose rationale was inapplicable to the present reality (circa 2001) of juvenile justice:
In the present case, the juveniles and the amici strenuously argue that this policy-based analysis applied more than 20 years ago when McKeiver and Dino were decided is outdated and that recent changes in state law, as well as an ongoing national critique of the juvenile justice system, render the reasoning behind the two cases outdated and inapplicable to current conditions. The juveniles and their amici argue that since the McKeiver decision, the Louisiana juvenile system has taken on more trappings of the criminal justice system, so much so that the only substantial difference between [257]*257the two is the right to a jury trial. They argue that not only do juvenile defendants have virtually all of the constitutional rights afforded to adult defendants (except the jury trial right), but that the following two recent legislative amendments [i.e., that certain juvenile cases are open to the public and that certain juvenile adjudications may be used to enhance subsequent felony offenses] have torn down the remaining characteristics of what traditionally identified the juvenile system.
State ex rel D.J., supra at 30-31. However, we rejected that criticism:
|13[I]n spite of these arguments, for the reasons stated below, we find that fundamental fairness does not require us to overrule Dino’s holding that due process does not afford a juvenile the right to a jury trial during the adjudication of a charge of delinquency in juvenile court. Since Dino, this Court had occasion to review the juvenile justice system in accordance with the fundamental fairness standard in In re C.B., supra.[19]
In that case, this Court considered the constitutionality of a recently enacted statute which authorized the transfer of adjudicated juvenile delinquents to adult correctional facilities when the delinquents reached the age of 17. The Court noted that changes in the juvenile system have resulted in the Children’s Code now granting “to juveniles adjudicated in juvenile court proceedings essentially all rights guaranteed to criminal defendants by the federal and state constitutions, except the right to trial by jury.” Id. at 396. However, we specifically discussed “recent amendments to the Children’s Code” that have “blurred the distinction between the adult and juvenile court systems,” which are the same amendments that the appellees in this case point to as justification for overruling Dino, i.e., that certain juvenile delinquency cases are now open to the public by virtue of La.Ch.C. art. 407, and that the Habitual Offender Law, La. R.S. 15:529.1, now provides that juvenile
[258]*258adjudications for drug offenses or certain crimes of violence may be used to enhance subsequent felony offenses. Id. Consequently, in considering whether the statute at issue was constitutional in In re C.B., the Court stated that “the issue now becomes how much of the unique nature of the juvenile procedures can be eroded before due process requires that the juveniles be afforded all the guarantees afforded adult criminals under the constitution, including the right to trial by jury.” Id. Ultimately, we decided that confinement |14to hard labor at adult facilities would erode the unique nature of the juvenile procedure so far that due process required all the guarantees under the constitution; however, rather than require a jury trial, the Court declared the statute allowing the transfer to adult facilities to be unconstitutional under the due process clause. This holding is significant, because it infers that the Court determined that the other statutes that “blurred the distinction” between adult and juvenile proceedings, such as the public hearing and the sentence enhancement statutes, did not offend due process requirements to such an extent that a jury trial would be required.
State ex rel. D.J., supra at 32 (footnote omitted). Further, we emphasized three factors we found persuasive in rejecting that movant’s arguments: (1) the necessity, as recognized in McKeiver, of maintaining the juvenile judge’s flexibility;20 (2) the great disparity in severity between juvenile dispositions and adult sentences;21 and (3) that the majority of jurisdictions have rejected the claim that McKeiver is no longer controlling law.22 This Court [259]*259has subsequently cited State ex rel. D.J. favorably and | )r,used it as part of its rationale for ruling in State v. Brown, 03-2788 (La.7/6/04), 879 So.2d 1276, that juvenile adjudications cannot be used to enhance adult felony convictions pursuant to La. R.S. 15:529.1. In fact, in In re C.B., this Court noted that it had already resolved the following issues in prior decisions:
Consequently, this Court has determined, inter alia, that the juvenile has a right to plead not guilty by reason of insanity and a right to a hearing to determine his mental capacity in his defense, Causey, 363 So.2d 472, the right to bail pending adjudication, State v. Hundley, 263 La. 94, 267 So.2d 207 (1972); In re Aaron, 390 So.2d 208 (La.1980), and the right to a public trial, Dino, 359 So.2d at 586.
This Court, however, based on the United States Supreme Court’s reasoning in McKeiver, supra, determined that due process and fundamental fairness did not require that the juvenile be granted the right to trial by jury; a right that is guaranteed by Article 1, § 17 of our state constitution in certain criminal cases, (emphasis added).
In re C.B., 708 So.2d at 398 (footnotes omitted).
In spite of our prior holdings, much of the juvenile court judge’s analysis focuses on concern that juvenile justice has become increasingly like criminal justice. However, this concern appeared in McKeiver itself and was addressed in In re C.B. and State ex rel. D.J. In language prefatory to the fundamental fairness analysis in In re C.B., we commented on the increasing focus on the punitive aspects of delinquency proceedings and suggested that it may reach a point at which due process may dictate a right to a trial by jury for juveniles:
The changing nature of juvenile crime, however, has engendered changes in the nature of the juvenile delinquency adjudication which have blurred the distinction between juvenile and adult procedures. The Children’s Code now grants to juveniles adjudicated in juvenile court proceedings essentially all rights guaranteed to criminal defendants by the federal and state constitutions, except the right to trial by jury. La. Ch. C. Ann. art. 808 (West, 1995). Additionally, the Louisiana Legislature has, with recent amendments to the Children’s Code, blurred the distinction between the juvenile and adult court systems. Juvenile delinquency cases involving crimes of violence as defined by LSA-RS 11ñ14:2(13) are open to the public, which essentially destroys the confidentiality of certain juvenile proceedings. See La. Ch. C. Ann. art. 407(A), amended by 1994 La. Acts 120. The Habitual Offender Law provides that juvenile adjudications for drug offenses or crimes of violence, as defined by LSA-RS 15:529.1, may be used to enhance subsequent felony offenses. LSA-RS 15:529.1 (West Supp., 1998). Prior to this change, juvenile adjudications were sealed and did not follow an individual into adulthood.
Consequently then, the once heralded distinctions between juvenile and adult [260]*260proceedings in this state are fast diminishing, and are farther accelerated by the statute currently before us. The issue now becomes how much of the unique nature of the juvenile procedures can be eroded before due process requires that the juveniles be afforded all the guarantees afforded adult criminals under the constitution, including the right to trial by jury. We now turn to the applicable legal principles for guidance on this issue.
In re C.B., supra at 396. Indeed, we then found that the enactment of the statute allowing the transfer of adjudicated delinquents to adult correctional facilities “has sufficiently tilted the scales away from a ‘civil’ proceeding, with its focus on rehabilitation, to one purely criminal.”23 Therefore, we declared La. R.S. 15:902.1 as applied by Regulation B-02-008 unconstitutional, and thereby restored the boundary between juvenile delinquency proceedings and adult criminal prosecutions to its status quo ante. Accordingly, in State ex rel. D.J., we later rejected the argument that “the Louisiana juvenile system has taken on more trappings of the criminal justice system, so much so that the only substantial difference between the two is the right to a jury trial.” State ex rel. D.J., 01-2149 at 7, 817 So.2d at 30. Likewise, in State v. Brown, supra at 1288-89, this Court found juvenile adjudications sufficiently distinct from adult convictions and therefore unsuitable for recidivist sentence enhancement purposes:
Even though it was argued that because (1) the juvenile justice system had taken on more of the trappings of the criminal justice system; (2) the role of punishment had increased in the juvenile system; and (3) the legislative amendments opening the proceedings to the public and allowing juvenile adjudications to serve as predicate offenses for adult felony sentence enhancement, due process required juveniles receive a jury trial, we continued to uphold Dino’s decree that Art. I, § 2 of our State Constitution does not afford a juvenile the right to a jury trial in a juvenile proceeding. State in the Interest of D.J., p. 13, 817 So.2d at 34. Among our reasons for our continued holding is that even with the changes in the juvenile justice system, “there remains a great | l7disparity in the severity of penalties faced by a juvenile charged with delinquency and an adult defendant charged with the same crime.” Id. p. 10, 817 So.2d at 33. To allow these adjudications to serve as “prior convictions” for purposes of sentence enhancement for adult felony offenses would lessen this disparity and contribute to “blurr[ing] the distinction between juvenile and adult procedures.” In re C.B., p. 8, 708 So.2d at 396.
Thus, this Court has closely monitored the “blurred boundary” at issue and has found that boundary to be properly restored; therefore, the juvenile court judge erred in using this rationale to determine that La. Ch.C. art. 882 is unconstitutional at this time.
Furthermore, although A.J. argues that juvenile justice in Louisiana is becoming increasingly like criminal justice, he is not able to name any developments that postdate this Court’s ruling in State ex rel. D.J. Instead, the arguments underlying the instant ruling largely mirror those previously rejected by this Court. Although some commentators call for states to give juvenile offenders the right to trial by jury,24 attempts to establish a constitutional right to a jury trial for juveniles have been largely unsuccessful, and challenges, [261]*261like the instant one, claiming that fundamental changes in the nature of the juvenile justice system have undermined the validity of the McKeiver Court’s analysis have been routinely rejected.25 Likewise, attempts to recognize a state constitutional right to a jury trial in juvenile matters have been largely unsuccessful.26 Arguments claiming that particular statutory schemes are so punitive and have little or no rehabilitative focus so as to render McKeiver inapplicable have been similarly unavailing.27 Finally, arguments that other federal | ^constitutional protections invoke a juvenile’s right to a jury trial have failed.28 Thus, despite the variety of arguments on the issue, courts have almost universally rejected the claim that juveniles possess a constitutional right to a trial by jury.29 Finally, a majority of state jurisdictions continue to declare by statute that juvenile proceedings shall be conducted without a jury.30
While A.J. and amicus emphasize that a number of states now provide the [262]*262right to a jury trial in juvenile delinquency adjudications in some circumstances, significantly, the majority of these jurisdictions have provided the right by statute.31 | ^Furthermore, of those jurisdictions in which the right is established judicially, only one, a recent decision from Kansas, has found any basis for such a right under the Sixth Amendment.32 This decision, however, arises from a very different legal environment than the instant case. The Kansas Supreme Court, after initially holding that juveniles are not entitled to jury trial in Findlay v. State, 235 Kan. 462, 681 P.2d 20 (1984), has since held in In re L.M., 286 Kan. 460, 186 P.3d 164 (2008), that juveniles are entitled to jury trial under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments as well as the Kansas constitution,33 because it found that a wholesale legislative reworking of that jurisdiction’s equivalent statutory enactment to the Louisiana’s Children’s Code (the Kansas Juvenile Justice Code) has demonstrated a shift from a rehabilitative purpose to a more punitive one and made juvenile proceedings more akin to criminal proceedings in that jurisdiction.34 Sixteen year old L.M. was [263]*263charged as a juvenile offender with one count of sexual battery in violation of K.S.A. 21-3518 and one count of minor in possession of alcohol in violation of K.S.A. 2005 Supp. 41-727. In re L.M., 186 P.3d at 171. L.M.’s motion for a jury trial was denied, L.M. was found guilty after a bench trial, and L.M. was sentenced to 18 months in a juvenile correctional facility but the sentence was suspended. Id. L.M. was also ordered to register as a sex offender. One of L.M.’s contentions on appeal was that the Kansas statutes which gave the |2ojuvenile court discretion in determining whether he should be granted a jury trial were unconstitutional. Id. at 165-66. The Kansas Supreme Court noted that it previously found in 1984 in Findlay v. State that juvenile adjudications at that time were not criminal prosecutions to which the Sixth Amendment applies. However, in the intervening 24 years, the court found that dramatic legislative action had occurred that made juvenile adjudications more adversarial in nature and thus more equivalent to criminal prosecutions in Kansas.35 Louisiana, in contrast, has gone through no comparable wholesale revision, and this Court examined contentions identical to those of the instant movant and rejected them just 7 years ago in State ex rel. D.J. Thus, with the exception of Kansas, the legal landscape in this area remains largely unchanged since this Court last addressed this issue in State ex rel. D.J. For these reasons, we find that the juvenile court judge erred in finding that La.Ch.C. art. 882 runs afoul of state and federal principles of due process.
II. Equal Protection
The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides in pertinent part that “no State shall ... deny within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” For equal protection purposes under federal law, age is not a suspect classification and distinctions based on age are subject to rational basis review. Gregory v. Ashcroft, 501 U.S. 452, 111 S.Ct. 2395, 115 L.Ed.2d 410.
We note at the outset that the Supreme Court has never upheld an equal protection claim in a juvenile delinquency case.36 Similarly, although not decided on |2ithe basis of equal protection, this Court noted [264]*264in State ex rel. D.J. that federal equal protection challenges to statutes that disallow the use of juries in delinquency adjudications have been unsuccessful. In fact, McKeiver provides an enormous obstacle to any equal protection challenge. Although decided on due process grounds, McKeiver rests on the determination that juvenile courts are legitimately distinct from criminal courts.37 Therefore, citations to McKeiver abound in determinations that there is a rational basis for treating juvenile differently from adult offenders.38 Furthermore, although equal protection and due process utilize distinct analyses, jurisdictions often find it significant to equal protection claims that due process does not require jury trials in juvenile proceedings.39 Instead, the consensus appears to be that equal protection simply does not provide the proper analytical framework for the discussing a right to jury trial in delinquency proceedings given that the Supreme Court in McKeiver so firmly rooted the discussion in due process:
The existence of the juvenile court system itself is a recognition of the validity of the separate classification of juveniles for correctional purposes. We think that the right of a juvenile to a jury trial in juvenile court, if one exists, does not have its origin in the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
DeBacker v. Sigler, 185 Neb. 352, 175 N.W.2d 912, 913 (1970). Similarly, this Court has rejected the comparison of juveniles to adults that is a prerequisite to any equal protection analysis:
Gault recognized that post-adjudication dispositions of juveniles are unique to the juvenile process. Thus, we reject at the outset Bank’s contention that juvenile delinquents are situated similarly to convicted adult defendants. Their positions are simply not analogous.
|¾,State in Interest of Banks, 402 So.2d 690, 695 (La.1981).40 Other jurisdictions have agreed:
The state “may not draw distinctions between individuals that are irrelevant to a legitimate governmental objective.” Lehr v. Robertson (1983), 463 U.S. 248, 265, 103 S.Ct. 2985, 2995, 77 L.Ed.2d 614. Thus, as the first step in the equal protection analysis, “the Court must determine whether persons similarly situated are in fact being treated differently.” Grove v. Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine (S.D.Ohio 1976), 424 F.Supp. 377, 387. (Emphasis added).
[265]*265We find that juveniles adjudicated delinquent and adults convicted of a crime are not groups that are similarly situated. Courts have recognized in a variety of contexts that the state is justified in treating juveniles differently than adults because of its interest in preserving and promoting the welfare of the child. See e.g., Schall v. Martin (1984), 467 U.S. 253, 104 S.Ct. 2403, 81 L.Ed.2d 207; McKeiver v. Pennsylvania (1971), 403 U.S. 528, 91 S.Ct. 1976, 29 L.Ed.2d 647; Prince v. Massachusetts (1944), 321 U.S. 158, 64 S.Ct. 438, 88 L.Ed. 645; Mominee[v. Scherbarth], supra, at [28 Ohio St.3d 270]273-74[28 OBR 346, 503 N.E.2d 717]. This proposition is particularly applicable in the context of delinquency proceedings.
Juveniles are entitled to proceedings that “measure up to the essentials of due process and fair treatment,” In re Gault (1967), 387 U.S. 1, 30, 87 S.Ct. 1428, 1445, 18 L.Ed.2d 527. However, “the Constitution does not mandate elimination of all differences in the treatment of juveniles.” The state’s interest in the welfare of children makes “a juvenile proceeding fundamentally different from an adult criminal trial.” Schall, supra, at 263, 104 S.Ct. at 2409.
For example, the United States Supreme Court has not extended the right to jury trials to juveniles in delinquency proceedings because to do so would destroy the informality and flexibility inherent in juvenile court proceedings. McKeiver, supra, at 545, 91 S.Ct. at 1986.
In re Vaughn, 1990 WL 116936 *5 (Ohio App.1990).
Regardless, even assuming that due process has not foreclosed further discussion, for the purpose of delinquency laws, juveniles are not members of a suspect class, are not similarly situated to adult criminal defendants, and even if they | mwere, there is a rational basis for treating them differently.41 As noted above, the McKeiver Court ultimately concluded that “trial by jury in the juvenile court’s adjudicative stage is not a constitutional requirement,”42 and that if a state legislature chooses to afford juveniles jury trial rights, it “is the State’s privilege and not its obligation.”43 Therefore, the question is whether the state has rationally opted not to extend this right juveniles while affording it to adults.44 The Supreme Court has stated that a state’s interest in “safeguarding the physical and psychological well-being of a minor is compelling.”45 [266]*266As a result, the Court has sustained legislation aimed at protecting the physical and emotional well-being of youth even when the laws have operated in the sensitive area of constitutionally protected rights.46 Given the state’s recognized compelling interest in this area, courts have routinely found that statutes like La.Ch.C. art. 882 pass minimal basis scrutiny.47
The analysis is not much changed under state law. La. Const, art. 1, § 3 provides as follows:
I24N0 person shall be denied the equal protection of the laws. No law shall discriminate against a person because of race or religious ideas, beliefs, or affiliations. No law shall arbitrarily, capriciously, or unreasonably discriminate against a person because of birth, age, sex, culture, physical condition, or political ideas or affiliations. Slavery and involuntary servitude are prohibited, except in the latter case as punishment for crime.
Unlike the federal constitution, a state constitution’s provisions are not grants of power, but instead are limitations on the otherwise plenary power of the people of a state, exercised through its legislature.48 Therefore, the legislature may enact any legislation the state constitution does not prohibit.49 In Sibley v. Board of Supervisors of Louisiana State University, 477 So.2d 1094, 1107-1108 (La.1985), this Court provided a succinct analysis of Louisiana’s equal protection clause:
Article I, Section 3 commands the courts to decline enforcement of a legislative classification of individuals in three different situations: (1) When the law classifies individuals by race or religious beliefs, it shall be repudiated completely; (2) When the statute classifies persons on the basis of birth, age, sex, culture, physical condition, or political ideas or affiliations, its enforcement shall be refused unless the state or other advocate of the classification shows that the classification has a reasonable basis; (3) When the law classifies individuals on any other basis, it shall be rejected whenever a member of a disadvantaged class shows that it does not suitably further any appropriate state interest.
More recently, this Court held in Manuel v. State, 95-2189 (La.3/8/96), 692 So.2d 320, that when a statute classifies persons on the basis of any of the six enumerated grounds found in the third sentence of La. Const, art. 1, § 3, including age, the statute is unconstitutional unless the proponents are able to prove that the legislative classification “substantially furthers an appropriate state purpose.”50 Manuel fur[267]*267ther dictates that because age is specifically enumerated in Section 3, “the burden of proof is on the proponent of constitutionality to show that the statute establishing such a classification substantially furthers an appropriate governmental purpose.”51
I2.5A comprehensive juvenile system was established by the Louisiana Legislature to protect and rehabilitate juvenile offenders and to “insure that he shall receive .. the care, guidance, and control that will be conducive to his welfare and the best interests of the state ...” La. Ch.C. art. 801. As we have previously stated, “[t]he hallmark of the [juvenile] system was its disposition, individually tailored to address the needs and abilities of the juvenile in question,” State ex rel. D.J., supra at 29 (cites omitted) and “the unique nature of the juvenile system is manifested in its non-criminal, or “civil,” nature, its focus on rehabilitation and individual treatment rather than retribution, and the state’s role as parens patriae in managing the welfare of the juvenile in state custody.” In re C.B., supra at 396-97 (cites omitted). We find that is specialized treatment of juveniles is an appropriate governmental purpose for purposes of the equal protection clause.
Next, we must consider whether denying juveniles the right to a jury trial substantially furthers that purpose. As we noted in State ex rel. D.J., “[t]he Supreme Court reasoned in McKeiver that if a jury trial were required it would ‘remake the juvenile proceeding into a fully adversary process and [would] put an effective end to what has been the idealistic prospect of an intimate, informal protective proceeding.’ ” State ex rel. D.J., supra at 26 (citing McKeiver, 403 U.S. at 545, 91 S.Ct. at 1986). We further noted that in McKeiver, the Court “focused on the role of the jury as a ‘fact finder,’ ... and noted that the imposition of a jury trial would not ‘strengthen greatly, if at all, the fact-finding function, and, would, contrarily, provide an attrition of the juvenile court’s assumed ability to function in a unique manner.’ ” Id. Finally, we found that “affording juvenile offenders the right to a trial by jury would tend to destroy the flexibility of the juvenile judge as the trier of fact, which allows the judge to take into consideration social and psychological factors, family background, and education in order to shape the disposition in the best interest of both the child and society.” Id. Thus, not only does the lack of a jury trial substantially further an appropriate governmental purpose, we have also found that granting that right would destroy that purpose.
lijfiln the instant case, the juvenile court judge erred in focusing narrowly on the specific role a jury might play during the adjudicative phase, rather than considering the rationale for separate treatment of juveniles as a whole, in concluding that withholding the right to a jury trial is unrelated to any rehabilitative purpose espoused by the state — primarily because rehabilitative services are not generally available until the disposition phase.52 However, [268]*268even if the juvenile court’s approach is accepted, the court erred in ignoring the fact that the U.S. Supreme Court has already found that a jury’s role as a fact finder in juvenile adjudications would not strengthen the fact finding process and would inhibit the juvenile court’s ability to function in a unique manner.53 Further, even as to the adjudicative phase, the juvenile court erred in | ^finding that La.Ch.C. art. 882 is not reasonably related to concerns for speedy and less formal delinquency adjudications.54 Moreover, in an [269]*269equal protection analysis in State v. Ferris, 99-2829 (La.5/16/00), 762 So.2d 601, this Court noted that in Manuel-.
We further took judicial notice that all of the other states had enacted similar legislation raising the drinking age to twenty-one years to comply with the National Minimum Drinking Age Act, 23 U.S.C. § 158, observing: “Admittedly, those legislative decisions are not subject to the same equal protection scrutiny as the Louisiana statutes. Nevertheless, unanimous utilization of this approach to the problem is a significant indication that this approach ‘substantially furthers [the] appropriate state purpose-’ ” 95-2189 (on reh’g) at p. 8, 692 So.2d at 341.
Ferris, 99-2329 at 7, 762 So.2d at 605. Thus, the juvenile court should have considered that nearly all other states do not allow jury trials in juvenile cases in considering whether this denial substantially furthered the state’s purpose regarding juvenile proceedings. For all of the above reasons, the juvenile court erred in finding Igsthat the denial of jury trials in juvenile adjudications violated the equal protection clauses of the state and federal constitutions.
CONCLUSION
The United States Supreme Court has long declared that the lack of jury trials in juvenile adjudications does not violate due process. Reaffirming our prior ruling in Diño, we likewise determined seven years ago that the lack of jury trials did not violate due process in In re D.J. These rulings were based on the fundamental differences between criminal cases, in which the Sixth Amendment requires jury trials when the potential punishment is greater than six months, and juvenile adjudications. While A.J. argues that juvenile adjudications have become more akin to criminal prosecutions such that jury trials must now be allowed, there have been no statutory enactments since we last considered this issue in State ex rel. D.J., and other courts still almost universally reject the claim that juveniles have a constitutional right to trial by jury. Only the Kansas Supreme Court has ruled since State ex rel. D.J. that juveniles are entitled to a jury trial and that decision was based on that court’s finding that the Kansas legislature had made dramatic changes to the law governing juvenile adjudications which made them equivalent to criminal prosecutions.
Further, although this Court has never decided this issue on equal protection grounds, we find that neither the federal nor state equal protection clauses provide for a right to trial by jury in juvenile adjudications. The United States Supreme Court has never upheld an equal [270]*270protection claim in a juvenile delinquency case, and although not decided on equal protection grounds, the ruling in McKeiver rests largely on the Court’s determination that juvenile courts are legitimately distinct from adult criminal courts. Thus, we have serious reservations about whether the prerequisites can even be met for an equal protection analysis. But, even assuming that the equal protection clause provides the proper analytical framework, reasons abound in the jurisprudence that there is a rational basis for treating juveniles differently. Further, under a state equal protection analysis, treating juveniles on an individual basis with a focus on rehabilitation rather than retribution in an informal protective proceeding is an appropriate purpose, which purpose is substantially furthered by allowing a juvenile | apcourt judge, rather than a jury, to function as fact finder and shape the juvenile’s disposition.
In conclusion, even when a juvenile is deprived of liberty in excess of six months, because a juvenile proceeding is distinct from criminal proceeding, neither the Sixth Amendment, nor the Due Process or Equal Protection Clauses of the United States or Louisiana Constitutions require that the juvenile be entitled to a trial by jury.
DECREE
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Juvenile Court for the Parish of Orleans is reversed and the matter is remanded for further proceedings.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Judge Benjamin Jones, of the Fourth Judicial District, assigned as Justice Pro Tempore, participating in the decision.
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