VAN HOOMISSEN, J.
The issue in this case is whether the jurisdictional phase of a juvenile proceeding under ORS 419.476(l)(a)
(“delinquency proceeding”) is a “criminal prosecution” within the meaning of Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution. For the reasons that follow, we hold that it is not.
A petition was filed in juvenile court in March 1991 alleging that the child, then 13, had done acts that, if done by an adult, would constitute sodomy in the first degree, ORS 163.405, a Class A felony; sexual abuse in the first degree, ORS 163.425, a Class B felony; and furnishing obscene materials to minors, ORS 167.065, a Class A misdemeanor.
Before the adjudicatory hearing, the child moved for a jury trial, citing Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, and the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
The juvenile court denied the child’s motion for a jury trial and, in May 1991, heard the matter without a jury. ORS 419.498(1). After taking the matter under advisement, the court informed the parties that it had found beyond a reasonable doubt that the child had committed two of the acts alleged in the petition and, therefore, that the child was within the court’s jurisdiction pursuant to ORS 419.476(l)(a). The third allegation,
concerning sodomy, was dismissed by the juvenile court. After a dispositional hearing, the child, who already was on
informal
bench probation to the juvenile court as a result of earlier difficulties, was placed on
formal
probation for two years.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed
per curiam,
citing
State v. Turner,
253 Or 235, 453 P2d 910 (1969).
State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Reynolds,
116 Or App 243, 839 P2d 288 (1992). This court allowed the child’s petition for review to consider his claim that he had a constitutional right to a jury trial.
Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, provides in part:
“In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have the right to public trial by an impartial jury * *
The child’s principal claim is that he is entitled to a jury trial, because the juvenile court proceeding in his case was a “criminal prosecution” under Article I, section 11.
Frequently, this court has approached constitutional questions under Article I of the Oregon Constitution by examining the historical context of the constitutional provision in question. A prime example is
State v. Kessler,
289
Or
359, 614 P2d 94 (1980), in which this court was called on, for the first time, to determine the scope of Article I, section 27, of the Oregon Constitution, which provides that “[t]he people shall have the right to bear arms for the defence (sic) of themselves, and the State.” In outlining its interpretive approach, the court wrote:
“Despite the many variations in wording, the states’ constitutional provisions guaranteeing the right to bear arms share a common historical background. We
begin first with an examination of this historical background and then with an examination of the meaning and purpose of the particular words chosen by the Oregon drafters.
We are not unmindful that there is current controversy over the wisdom of a right to bear arms, and that the original motivations for such a provision might not seem compelling if debated as a new issue.
Our task, however, in construing a constitutional provision is to respect the principles given the status of constitutional guarantees and limitations by the drafters',
it is not to abandon these principles when this fits the needs of the moment.” 289 Or at 362 (emphasis added).
The court took a similar approach to Article I, section 20 — the “equal privileges and immunities” clause of the Oregon Constitution — in
State v. Clark,
291 Or 231, 630 P2d 810,
cert den
454 US 1084 (1981). In
Clark,
this court considered whether the denial of a preliminary hearing to a defendant indicted by the grand jury, instead of by a district attorney’s information, violated Article I, section 20. The court began by examining the history of that clause:
“This guarantee, taken like most of Article I from Indiana’s Constitution of 1851, has been a part of the Bill of Rights since Oregon became a state in 1859. Antedating the Civil War and the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment, its language reflects early egalitarian objections to favoritism and special privileges for a few rather than the concern of the Reconstruction Congress about discrimination against disfavored individuals or groups.” 291 Or at 236.
Another example of such a historical approach to state constitutional interpretation appears in this court’s Article I, section 8, jurisprudence. In Article I, section 8, cases, this court determines whether the limitation on speech falls within a “historical exception” to the constitutional free speech guarantee.
State v. Henry,
302 Or 510, 732 P2d 9 (1987), provides an example of that approach. In
Henry,
this court was called on to determine whether a statute criminalizing the dissemination of obscene material violated Article I, section 8. The court concluded that obscene expression could not be so restricted, because the prohibition did not fall within any historical exception to the state’s free speech guarantee.
Finally, this court has applied a historical approach in at least one case involving the right to jury trial under Article I, section 11. In
State ex rel Dwyer v. Dwyer,
299 Or 108, 698 P2d 957 (1985), the question posed was whether a criminal contempt proceeding for failure to pay child support was a “criminal prosecution” within the meaning of Article I, section 11. The court examined criminal contempt proceedings in a historical context and concluded that such proceedings are “wholly confined within an historical exception that was well-established when the Oregon constitutional guarantee of a jury trial in all criminal prosecutions was adopted.” 299 Or at 114.
Dwyer
and the other state constitutional cases cited above indicate that we should begin our analysis by determining whether, in 1859, when the Oregon constitutional guarantee of a jury trial “in all criminal prosecutions” was adopted, a person in the child’s position would have been entitled to a jury trial. We turn to that question.
At common law, children under a certain age were conclusively presumed to lack criminal capacity. 1 LaFave & Scott, Substantive Criminal Law 566, § 4.11 (1986); 4 Blackstone, Commentaries, chs II, XIX (Lewis ed 1900). In the United States, that age was 7 in some states and 10 in others. Mack,
The Juvenile Court,
23 Harv L Rev 104, 106 (1909). Children between 7 (or 10) and 14 were presumed to lack criminal capacity, but that presumption could be rebutted. 1 LaFave & Scott,
supra,
at 566-68. Children 14 years old and older were deemed to be criminally responsible.
Ibid.
The common law did not differentiate between adults and children who had reached the age of criminal responsibility; those children were criminally convicted and punished as adults would be. Mack,
supra,
23 Harv L Rev at 106. Oregon’s Deady Code contained no statutes regarding juvenile offenders or the age of criminal responsibility, so it is likely that Oregon applied the common law rule. Thus, it would appear that, in 1859, a juvenile in the position of the child could have been prosecuted in the same manner as could any other accused felon. It follows that, in 1859, such a juvenile would have been entitled to a jury trial.
The question then becomes: Have circumstances so changed that today a child in a juvenile delinquency proceeding under ORS 419.476(l)(a) is faced with a “criminal prosecution, ’ ’ as that term is used in Article I, section 11? We turn to that inquiry.
Late in the nineteenth century, the Oregon legislature enacted legislation that allowed some exceptions for children. One statute permitted courts to send children under 16 who were convicted of crimes to state reform school instead of to prison. 1 Hill’s Laws Annot § 1414 (1887). In 1893, the legislature enacted statutes that gave adult criminal courts discretion to treat juveniles differently from adults: (1) the court could suspend judgment against a minor under 16 if the court believed that the child could be reformed; (2) although the court could send a child between the ages of 10 and 16 who was convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment to reform school or county jail instead of sending the child to prison, children still were subject to capital punishment; (3) the grand jury could recommend reform school rather than indicting a child under 16; (4) the court could stay criminal proceedings for youths between 10 and 16, and commit them to the care of an institution. I Codes and Statutes of Oregon, ch XII, § 1449, II Codes and Statutes of Oregon, ch VII, §§ 3639-41 (Bellinger and Cotton 1902).
In sum, juvenile proceedings, as we now know them, did not exist in the nineteenth century in Oregon.
See State v. Dunn,
53 Or 304, 309-10, 99 P 278, 100 P 258 (1909) (“delinquency” was unknown to the common law).
Oregon created its first juvenile court in 1907. From 1907 to the present, juvenile justice in Oregon has been based primarily on a “rehabilitation” model, rather than on a “due process” or “crime control” model.
That is to say, for 86
years, juvenile courts in Oregon have emphasized the rehabilitation of allegedly delinquent children. Those courts often have been criticized for showing too much leniency toward youthful offenders; they rarely have been criticized for the severity of their dispositional judgments. Without exception, this court’s cases support the conclusion that the Oregon juvenile justice system always has been focused on the rehabilitation of delinquent youth.
See, e.g., State v. Gullings,
244 Or 173, 177, 416 P2d 311 (1966) (juvenile court salvages and guides rather than punishes);
Hills v. Pierce,
113 Or 386, 231 P 652 (1925) (the purpose of juvenile court is not to convict or punish but to protect);
State v. Dunn, supra, 53
Or at 309-10 (juvenile court treats delinquent children not as criminals but as wards to be protected);
State v. Eisen, 53
Or 297, 300, 99 P 282 (1909) (general purpose of juvenile code is not to punish, but to reform). Unlike many states that recently have shifted their focus from juvenile rehabilitation to juvenile accountability and punishment, Oregon has remained faithful to its original emphasis on the rehabilitation of delinquent youth.
After almost a half-century, the 1957 legislature recognized that, since 1909, the laws affecting juveniles had been enacted piecemeal and were overdue for comprehensive revision.
See
Report of the Legislative Interim Committee on Judicial Administration, Part II, Juvenile Law (1959) (reporting history of juvenile courts and recommending proposed new juvenile code). For example, juvenile courts were not courts of exclusive original jurisdiction in juvenile matters, but exercised concurrent jurisdiction with adult courts.
See In re Loundagin,
129 Or 652, 675, 278 P 950 (1929) (unless juvenile courts have exclusive jurisdiction, minors may be tried for crimes in circuit courts). Before 1959, in juvenile delinquency matters the district attorney determined in the first instance whether the case would be heard in juvenile court or in adult court. Adult felons could be confined in juvenile training schools and, under certain circumstances,
juvenile delinquents could be confined in adult penal institutions. ORS 421.265 (1955).
The 1957 legislature created a legislative interim committee to recodify and amend the juvenile laws to ensure uniform and intelligent treatment of juvenile crime. The result of that effort was the enactment, in 1959, of the current juvenile code, creating a separate court system to deal with children under 18 years of age.
See
Holman,
Oregon’s New Juvenile Code,
39 Or L Rev 305, 305-06 (1960) (describing process). However, the new juvenile code reflected the drafters’ view that the basic philosophy of the pre-1959 code “is sound and should be retained.” Report of the Legislative Interim Committee on Judicial Administration, Part II, Juvenile Law,
supra,
at 10.
The 1959 juvenile code, effective January 1960, was a complete recodification of the laws affectingjuveniles. Or Laws 1959, ch 432. Under ORS chapter 419, juvenile court proceedings became
sui generis.
For the first time, the juvenile court was given exclusive original jurisdiction in specified circumstances involving children.
However, as Judge Holman, a member
of the legislative interim committee that drafted, the new code and later a justice of this court, observed: “This concept
[i.e.,
the rehabilitation model of juvenile justice] was retained by the [legislative interim] committee in the drafting of the new code.” Holman,
supra,
39 Or L Rev at 305.
That concept, and the statutory scheme that is designed to further it, has remained essentially unchanged to the present day. The concept provides the context in which we address the question now before us, a question that we believe comes down to this: By creating a separate juvenile court system, with all of its special provisions and rules, has the legislature created a form of proceeding for determining whether a juvenile committed a felonious act that is so different from the criminal
prosecution norm that the proceeding can be said not to be a “criminal prosecution” within the meaning of Article I, section 11?
The question is not entirely new. This court has, on one previous occasion, discussed the question whether juries are constitutionally required in juvenile delinquency proceedings. In
State v. Turner,
253 Or 235, 237, 453 P2d 910 (1969), the facts were as follows:
“Joan Turner, a 15-year-old girl, was accused by petition in juvenile court of causing the death of a woman in the course of an assault and robbery. The court conducted a hearing without a jury, and determined that Joan had committed an act which, if committed by an adult, would have been a crime (murder). The court declared her a ward of the court and committed her to the Hillcrest School. She appeals, contending that she was entitled to a trial by jury. ’ ’ (Footnote omitted.)
In Turner’s appellate brief in this court, she expressly relied on Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, as well as on the Sixth Amendment, in contending that she was entitled to a jury trial. In rejecting Turner’s constitutional arguments in support of her claim for a jury trial, this court stated:
“Prior to
[In re Gault,
387 US 1, 87 S Ct 1428, 18 L Ed 2d 527 (1967)], this court and a majority of courts elsewhere had held that juvenile proceedings were not ‘criminal’ within the meaning of specific constitutional guarantees of trial by jury in criminal prosecutions. See Oregon Constitution, Art I, § 11, and United States Constitution, Amendment VI. And see
State v. Gullings,
244 Or 173, 176-77, 416 P2d 311 (1966). We adhere to the view that juvenile proceedings are not ‘criminal[.]’ ”
Id.
at 238.
It is clear from reading
Turner
as a whole, however, that the court did not separately analyze the scope of Article I, section 11. Thus, the case is not a strong precedent on the scope of that provision. The
Turner
case is more useful, however, for
its discussion of the nature of the juvenile court process.
Id.
at 242-44.
With
Turner
in mind, we turn to whether the current juvenile code, as well as its application to the child in this case, has the characteristics of a criminal prosecution.
We note that, in circumstances like those in the present case, first degree sexual abuse is a Class B felony punishable by up to 10 years’ imprisonment. ORS 163.427, 161.605. An adult convicted of first degree sexual abuse would have faced a minimum presumptive sentence of 16 to 18 months’ imprisonment, OAR chapter 253, App 1. Furnishing obscene materials to minors is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to one year of imprisonment or a $10,000 fine. ORS 167.065,161.615. By contrast, the juvenile court in this case merely upgraded the child’s previous informal probation to formal probation and sent him home. We conclude that the juvenile court in this case demonstrated the juvenile code’s focus on the “rehabilitative” model of juvenile justice rather than on the “punitive” model.
Although confinement in a juvenile training school has certain characteristics of a criminal prosecution, in that it deprives a child of liberty, we note that many other provisions of law provide for a form of confinement without also providing for a jury trial on the merits.
See, e.g.,
ORS 33.045 (direct and indirect civil contempt); ORS 419.569(l)(b) (temporary custody of child for care, placement, and supervision); ORS 426.095 (involuntary commitment to a mental health facility); ORS 426.215
et seq
(involuntary commitment of
mentally retarded); ORS 426.460 (detention in drug or alcohol addiction facility). In 1859, as now, mental commitments and other proceedings that could result in confinement for non-punitive reasons were tried to the court without a jury.
Moreover, the noncustodial dispositional alternatives provided by the juvenile code are far more extensive and flexible than those available in the adult criminal justice system. Likewise, the pretrial enforcement procedures in the juvenile justice system emphasize noncustodial, at-home disposition in the physical custody of parent, guardian, or relative. Additionally, unlike an adult who may be photographed and fingerprinted whenever he or she is taken into custody, a child may be photographed or fingerprinted by a law enforcement agency only under narrowly authorized circumstances. ORS 419.584. Moreover, the storage and use of photographs and fingerprints of juveniles is restricted by law. ORS 419.584 (3)-(6).
The clear and unequivocal message of Oregon’s juvenile code is to notify and involve parents whenever possible and to focus on the family, to involve schools and appropriate social agencies as early as possible, to handle matters informally, and to approach each child’s alleged delinquency as an equitable problem rather than as a criminal problem. The least restrictive alternative disposition is preferred; detention, even on a temporary basis, is not favored.
Among the many significant differences between the juvenile code and the adult criminal code are the provisions in ORS chapter 419 allowing, and in some cases mandating,
parental
involvement in the rehabilitative process. For example, ORS 419.474(2) expresses a clear legislative choice that supervision and treatment shall “preferably [be] in the child’s own home.” Generally, juvenile court proceedings must be conducted “in the county where the child resides.” ORS 419.479(1). Notice of any proceedings must be given to the child
and to the parents,
if their identity and whereabouts are known. ORS 419.486, 419.497, 419.573.
But the juvenile code goes even further; it empowers the juvenile court to mandate the involvement of the parents in the process, ORS 419.507(l)(a) and (8), 419.513, 419.519, and to punish for contempt of court parents failing to comply
with any lawful order of the court, ORS 419.519. ORS 419.507(8) permits the juvenile court to order parents to assist the court in any reasonable manner in providing appropriate education or counseling for the child, to order parents to participate in educational or counseling programs, to participate in alcohol or drug treatment programs, and to participate in, or to be directly involved in, treatment. Coupled with the juvenile code’s focus on the best interests and welfare of the child, this policy of parental involvement in the rehabilitation of children distinguishes a delinquency proceeding from an adult criminal prosecution for purposes of Article I, section 11. The message of the juvenile code is clear and unequivocal — rehabilitation of children in trouble is a
family
affair. In no way is the adult criminal justice system comparable to that model.
In summary, in the jurisdictional phase of a delinquency proceeding under ORS 419.476(l)(a), the issue is not whether the child should be punished for his or her conduct but, rather, whether the statutory grounds for jurisdiction have been established and, if so, what disposition is in the child’s best interests. Juvenile courts are concerned with rehabilitation, not punishment. If the state wishes to prosecute a child criminally, it must do so by transferring the child to an adult criminal court.
Admittedly, juvenile delinquency proceedings have many of the “due process” characteristics of adult criminal prosecutions. Many procedural requirements of the adult system now are required in juvenile delinquency proceedings, some imposed by federal authority and others by state authority. It is significant, however, that no federal or Oregon authority heretofore has required a jury trial in juvenile court. To the contrary, federal and Oregon authority consistently have held that no jury is required.
See, e.g., McKeiver v. Pennsylvania,
403 US 528, 545, 91 S Ct 1976, 29 L Ed 2d 647 (1971);
In re Gault, supra; State v. Turner, supra; State ex
rel Juv. Dept. v. Jackson,
122 Or App 389, 858 P2d 158 (1993);
see also
Annot,
Right to Jury Trial in Juvenile Court Delinquency Proceedings,
100 ALR2d 1241, 1242-43 (1965 & Supp 1993) (collecting cases showing that it is now almost universally held that, in the absence of a statute that provides for a jury trial in juvenile delinquency proceedings, the individual charged with being a delinquent has no right, under the federal or pertinent state constitution, to demand that the issue of his or her delinquency be determined by a jury).
We conclude that, in the juvenile code, the legislature so changed the way that a juvenile is treated as to create a proceeding that is
sui generis.
We hold that the jurisdictional phase of a juvenile proceeding under ORS 419.476(l)(a) is not a “criminal prosecution” within the meaning of Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution. Accordingly, the juvenile court properly denied the child’s motion for a jury trial.
The decision of the Court of Appeals and the order of the circuit court are affirmed.