State Ex Rel. Boyd v. Rutledge

13 S.W.2d 1061, 321 Mo. 1090, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 720
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 11, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 13 S.W.2d 1061 (State Ex Rel. Boyd v. Rutledge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Boyd v. Rutledge, 13 S.W.2d 1061, 321 Mo. 1090, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 720 (Mo. 1929).

Opinions

*1095 RAGLAND, J.

Prohibition. Relator states his case as follows: “This is an application for a Writ of Prohibition to prohibit the Circuit Court for Criminal Causes of the City of St. Louis, Division No. 11, and the Plonorable Charles W. Rutledge, Judge thereof, from taking jurisdiction of the two eases which arose against the relator in the manner hereinafter set forth.

‘ ‘ On March 2, 1928, there was filed with the Clerk of the St. Louis Court of Criminal Correction two informations against the relator. One of said informations, charged the relator with having committed robbery upon Leonard F. Morgan on December 31, 1927, in the city of St. Louis, and the other of said informations charged the relator with having committed robbery upon Walter Oechsle on February 6, 1928, in the city of St. Louis.

“On March 6, 1928, relator-was arraigned in the said Court of Criminal Correction, and was held by said court for the St. Louis Circuit Court for Criminal Causes to answer to the charge of robbery in each of the two above mentioned cases.

“On March 16, 1928, there was filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court for Oriminal Causes of the City of St. Louis two informations against the relator, each of said informations charging him with robbery, the two being similar to the two which were filed on March 2, 1928, in the Court of Criminal Correction,

“Relator was born on February 27, 1911, so that on December 31, 1927, and on February 6, 1928, the dates upon which it is alleged that he committed the above-stated offenses, relator was under the age of seventeen years, but, on March 2, 1928, when the first informa-tions were filed against him in the Court of Oriminal Correction, lie had passed the age of seventeen years.

*1096 “Each of the two eases which thus originated against the relator through the procedure hereinabove recited was assigned to Division No. 11 of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, and, on March 30, 1928, the respondent herein, as judge of said division, apparently being of the opinion that the age of the relator at the time of the alleged commission of the offenses was controlling in determining whether relator came within the purview of the Juvenile Court Act, entered an order in each of said cases transferring the said eases to the juvenile court. On May 1, 1928, the judge of the juvenile court, apparently being of the opinion that the age of the relator at the time of the filing'of the informations against the relator, or some subsequent date, was controlling in determining whether the relator came within the purview of the Juvenile Court Act, entered an order in each of said cases transferring said cases back to the Circuit Court for Criminal Causes. The respondent then acquiesced in the opinion of the juvenile court, and set said two cases down for trial, and, after a continuance, the cases were reset for June 5, 1928, but, on the application of this relator in this cause, this court, on May 29, 19'28, issued a provisional writ of prohibition, prohibiting the respondent from proceeding to try the relator in either of said two cases. ’ ’

I. Belator’s principal contentions are these: (1) “A child who is charged with having violated the law of this State, in a county having a population of 50,000, when under the age of seventeen years, is subject to trial for such offense only in the juvenile court;” and (2) “in determining whether a child is UIL(jer the age of seventeen years so to be brought within the purview of the Juvenile Court Act, the age of said child is reckoned as of the date of the alleged commission of the offense with which he is charged. ’ ’ These contentions rest on the assumption, though relator seems to disavow it, that the violation of a criminal statute by a child under seventeen years- of age is never a crime, but merely a delinquency. We say that he rests his contentions, on that assumption, because he argues at length that a mere delinquency cannot through the lapse of time ripen into a crime, and that for that reason a child after he passes his seventeenth birthday cannot be proceeded against, as for the commission of a crime in a court having only criminal jurisdiction as distinguished from one empowered to carry out the provisions of the Juvenile Court Act, for anything done by him while under seventeen. The validity of the assumption therefore challenges inquiry. Is a violation of the criminal law by a child under seventeen years of age, by virtue of the Juvenile Court Act, a mere delinquency and nothing more?

There are two juvenile court acts; one is applicable in counties of less than 50,000 population, and the other in the remaining counties of the State, including the city of St. Louis. The first constitutes *1097 Article V, Chapter 11, and. the second Article VI, Chapter 21, Revised Statutes 1919. Their provisions are very similar, but as the latter is the only one involved in this case it will be the one referred to as the Juvenile Court Act, or the act in the discussion which is to follow.

The Juvenile Court Act is applicable to children under seventeen years of age and it deals specifically with such of those children as fall within its definitions of “neglected” and “delinquent.” In the definition of a “delinquent child” there is a long enumeration of acts, the commission of any one of which will constitute the doer a delinquent; these acts range from a violation of the criminal law all the way down to the habitual use of profane language. All of the acts so catalogued are by force of the statutes acts of delinquency. In its provisions for dealing with children who violate the criminal law, the act seems to have a dual aspect. This was noted in State ex rel. Matacia v. Buckner, 300 Mo. 359, 365, 254 S. W. 179. It was there said: £ ‘ There is language in the act that gives color to the view that it authorizes trial and punishment for crime. . . . The act has another aspect ... Its principal, if not sole, purpose is not trial and punishment for crime, b'ut the protection and support of neglected children and the reformation of delinquent children. . . . A proceeding under the act, the aim of which, as in this ease, is the exertion of the State’s power, parens patriae, for the reformation of a child and not for his punishment under the criminal law, is not a criminal case, and the constitutional guaranties respecting defendants in criminal cases do not apply.”

We now turn to the act, as it was when State ex rel. Matacia v. Buckner was decided, for the language “that gives color to the view that it authorizes trial and punishment for crime.”

Section 2592: “. . . The practice and procedure prescribed by law for the conduct of criminal cases shall govern in all proceedings under this article in which the child stands charged with the violation of the criminal statutes of the State. . . .”

Section 2591: “. . .; but nothing in this article shall prevent the juvenile court from inflicting a punishment which shall extend beyond the age of majority in cases where the delinquent shall be convicted of a crime, the punishment of which under the statutes of this State, when committed by a person over the age of eighteen years, is death or imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of not less than ten years. . . .”

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.2d 1061, 321 Mo. 1090, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-boyd-v-rutledge-mo-1929.