State Ex Rel. Juvenile Department v. Smith

853 P.2d 282, 316 Or. 646, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 83
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1993
DocketCC 90-475; CA A68527; SC S39706
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 853 P.2d 282 (State Ex Rel. Juvenile Department v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Juvenile Department v. Smith, 853 P.2d 282, 316 Or. 646, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 83 (Or. 1993).

Opinion

*648 GRABER, J.

ORS chapter 419 governs juvenile court proceedings. ORS 419.476(1) provides in part:

“The juvenile court has exclusive original jurisdiction in any case involving a person who is under 18 years of age and:
“(c) Whose behavior, condition or circumstances are such as to endanger the welfare of the person or the welfare of others[.]”

In this case, we consider two issues: (1) What is required to establish juvenile court jurisdiction under ORS 419.476(l)(c) of a child whose condition or circumstances are such as to endanger the child’s welfare, and (2) was it proper for the juvenile court, under that provision, to take jurisdiction of a six-year-old boy (the child) whose father subjected the child’s mother’s 12-year-old sister (the aunt) to sexual conduct?

On de novo review of the juvenile court’s determination that it had jurisdiction, the Court of Appeals reversed, on the ground that a single incident of sexual conduct by father toward the child’s aunt was not evidence from which a reasonable inference could be drawn that the child’s welfare was endangered. State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Smith, 114 Or App 594, 836 P2d 173 (1992). We review de novo 1 and reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals.

Father and mother dissolved their marriage in 1989. The judgment granted them joint custody of the child; father was granted primary physical custody. Father and mother began living together again in 1990, along with the child and mother’s nine-year-old son by a different father.

At about 10:30 p.m. on October 13,1990, the child’s 12-year-old aunt arrived at the home of father and mother, planning to spend the night there. After the aunt arrived, she, father, and mother watched television in the living room of the house. The child and his half brother were asleep in their *649 bedrooms. After father and mother retired to their bedroom, the aunt continued to watch television. Around midnight, father entered the living room, conversed briefly with the aunt, went into the bathroom, returned to the living room, stood near the aunt for a few moments, and then returned to his bedroom. He was nude. The aunt turned off the television and lay down on the couch in the living room. Father, who was thirsty from having smoked marijuana, came out of his bedroom a second time, walked through the living room, got a drink of water from the kitchen, and returned to his bedroom. He was still nude.

The aunt eventually went to sleep. Sometime later, she was awakened by father, who was “rubbing” her hair. He was “squatting” by the couch, still unclothed. The aunt told father to “give me a hug and go to bed.” Father hugged her and “started kissing me down my neck. And then he put his hand on my breast and started rubbing. ” The aunt asked him to stop. Father returned to his bedroom. The aunt telephoned her mother, who picked her up and took her home.

One month later, a Children’s Services Division worker filed a petition for juvenile court jurisdiction of the six-year-old child, on the ground that father’s sexual conduct toward the child’s 12-year-old aunt constituted “conditions and circumstances” of the child that endangered his welfare and that, because father and mother shared custody of the child, mother was unable adequately to protect the child from that risk of harm. The juvenile court determined that it had jurisdiction and made a disposition in the case. 2

Father argues that, in order to take jurisdiction of a child, a juvenile court must find facts that give rise to a “reasonable prediction” that, unless the court assumes jurisdiction, “harm will come to the child.” Father argues that the evidence of his conduct toward the child’s aunt, by itself, was insufficient to demonstrate either a direct or an indirect risk of harm to the child and that no other facts in the record, taken together with that incident, supported the required prediction of harm. Father concludes that the state failed to *650 meet its burden of proof 3 that the child’s conditions or circumstances were such as to endanger his welfare.

In response, the state contends that, in order to assume jurisdiction under ORS 419.476(l)(c), the juvenile court need not find a direct risk of harm to a child by a person, but may find that there is a risk of harm to the child from remaining in a “harmful environment” without juvenile court intervention or supervision. Relying in part on statutory provisions establishing prerequisites to the termination of parental rights regarding a child, 4 the state argues that sexual conduct by a person toward another child in a child’s home demonstrates a risk of a harmful environment to the latter child sufficient to support juvenile court jurisdiction of that child.

This court has not previously considered what “ condition^] or circumstances are such as to endanger the welfare” of a child over whom juvenile court jurisdiction is sought. ORS 419.176(l)(c). In answering that question, we begin with the text and context of the statute. See State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Ashley, 312 Or 169, 174-75, 818 P2d 1270 (1991) (in construing a statute, this court begins by considering its text and context). The text and context of ORS 419.176(l)(c) suggest that there is a broad general standard for the establishment of juvenile court jurisdiction. See State v. McMaster, 259 Or 291, 297, 486 P2d 567 (1971) (legislature generally *651 intended to grant flexibility to juvenile court in administration of juvenile code).

If the text and context left any doubt, legislative history would resolve it. See State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Ashley, supra, 312 Or at 175 (where intent of legislature is not clear from text and context of statute, court examines legislative history). ORS 419.476(1)(c) originally was enacted in 1959, as part of a major revision of the entire juvenile code. Or Laws 1959, ch 432. The bill, HB 153, was largely the result of work done by the 1957-59 Interim Committee on Judicial Administration (Subcommittee on Juvenile Law). Letter to Multnomah County Delegation to the Legislative Assembly from Multnomah County Circuit Judge Virgil H. Langtry, April 10, 1959, filed as Exhibit, 1959 House Committee on the Judiciary.

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Bluebook (online)
853 P.2d 282, 316 Or. 646, 1993 Ore. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-juvenile-department-v-smith-or-1993.