State Ex Rel. Palagi v. Freeman

262 P. 168, 81 Mont. 132, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 16
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1927
DocketNo. 6,156.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 262 P. 168 (State Ex Rel. Palagi v. Freeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Palagi v. Freeman, 262 P. 168, 81 Mont. 132, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 16 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*135 MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

On March 22, 1927, the relator, Guy Palagi, chief probation officer of Cascade county, presented to the district court of that county a petition charging that Patrick Freeman, a minor of the age of fourteen years, was a juvenile delinquent, and that Gertrude Freeman, his widowed mother, was unwilling and unable to care for, protect, train, educate, control and discipline him. The petition further recites that young Freeman “is incorrigible, in that he violates the laws of the state,” and then charges that on March 16, 1927, Freeman took from the street and drove an automobile without the consent < of the owner, and that, on the following day, he with William Fenton, Jr., Charles Ireland and Victor Hutton, “took, stole, and carried away one Buick automobile,” of the value of $1,500. At the same time like petitions were filed concerning Fenton, Ireland and Hutton, wherein it is alleged that, on March 1, Fenton and Ireland, and on March 2, Fenton, Ireland and Hutton, took automobiles from the street, and drove them without the consent of the owners, and each petition charges that the four boys joined in the theft of the Buick car on March 17.

Citations were issued on March 22, and served on the 2'3d on each of the boys and on their parents, which citations were made returnable on March 26. On the return day all of the boys appeared in the courtroom with their parents, with the exception of Mrs. Hutton, who was ill; whereupon such proceedings were had that the following minute entry was made by the clerk of the court, varying only as to the name of the minor:

*136 “The county attorney with the defendant came into court * * * in charge of the sheriff. The court duly advised Patrick Freeman of the charge filed against him. The defendant * * # waived time in which to plead, and forthwith entered his plea of guilty. The following witnesses were duly sworn and examined, * * * with reference to Patrick Freeman and three other boys implicated with him. After the conclusion of evidence, the court ordered that the said Patrick Freeman be committed to the Montana State Industrial School until he has attained the age of twenty-one years, or until he is discharged,” etc.

The entry in the Freeman case recites that the defendant came into court “with no attorney”; in the Ireland case it is shown that the “defendants” were represented by John McKenzie, and in the Hutton case by “F. A. Ewald, Esq.”

No judgment was entered in either of the cases, other than as the minute entry contains the decision of the court. What testimony was elicited from' the witnesses examined is not disclosed. The court made no findings, and, it will be observed, no reference is made in the minute entry to the parents of the children. The court at the conclusion of the proceedings had, issued a commitment in each case, and the four boys were taken to the industrial school.

Upon application of the defendants, this court thereafter issued writs of habeas corpus returnable before the district court of Dawson county, upon the record as made up, and thereupon the trial court made, signed, and filed judgments, regular in form, containing recitations to the effect that the parents were unable to care for, protect, educate, and discipline the boys, and amended the minute entries of March 26 above to show that the boys and their parents were advised that they were entitled to a trial by jury, and waived the same; that the court proceeded to hear evidence; and that in each case, the boy named was “adjudged by the court * * * guilty as charged in the petition.” While these amendments of the record were made on April 9, they were dated as of March 28, and, with the record then appearing regular on its *137 face, the habeas corpus proceeding collapsed. The defendants in the three cases above referred to then moved for a new trial, for an order striking the amended minutes, and for an order setting aside the judgment. These motions were submitted to, and denied by, the court, and on the hearing thereof considerable light was thrown upon the proceedings which we are now called upon to review on the appeal of the three cases from the judgments entered and the orders denying new trials. The boys are now in the custody of their parents on bail.

By affidavits, oral testimony, statements by the presiding judge and general discussion appearing in the record, we gather the following facts: At the time the citations were served, the probation officer, in all good faith and in a friendly manner, advised the parents of the boys that “there would be nothing to the case”; that they need not employ counsel, and, on the hearing, the cases would be turned over to the Cascade county juvenile committee; that the boys would not be sent to the industrial school, would probably receive “a reprimand.” Notwithstanding this advice, on the morning of the hearing, Hutton employed F. A. Ewald, Esq., to represent his boy, and a friend of the Irelands requested John McKenzie, Esq., to' appear for Charles Ireland, although McKenzie had no opportunity to consult with his clients. Owing to the lack of time and the fact that general practitioners are not often called into such cases, neither the defendants nor their attorneys present knew the procedure to be followed, or had more than the vaguest idea of what was going on at the hearing, and relied upon the advice of the probation officer. Being thus lulled into fancied security, they entered pleas of guilty for the boys, which meant no more than that the boys admitted that they took the cars as charged. Members of the Cascade county juvenile committee were present in the courtroom, but the cases were not turned over to them.

No evidence was introduced or inquiry made as to the ability of the parents, or any of them, to care for and control the boys. Mr. Ewald addressed the court in a plea for leniency. Mr. McKenzie requested leave to address the court *138 while the court was talking to the boys, but receiving no reply, refrained from interrupting the court further. On the motion for a new trial, the judge advised counsel that no trial was had. He merely accepted the pleas of guilty, and then heard evidence to aid him in reaching a decision as to what he should do with the boys. He also advised counsel to the effect that he only included in the judgments the statement, concerning the inability of the parents to care for, control and discipline the boys, at the request of the county attorney, and not because he considered a finding on the subject necessary.

It further appears from the record that, prior to the filing of the petitions, the probation officer, under direction of the court, had made an investigation in each of the cases, and had reported the result thereof to the court. As to young Freeman, the report shows that his family had lived in the county seven years; that he attended school with “attendance good, conduct fair, but scholarship very poor; in the fifth grade, but should be in the seventh”; home training good, church and Sunday-school attendance fair; “laxity of discipline due to absence of father”; mother a widow with three other children, two of 'whom are younger than Patrick, and the one older is but fourteen, and a girl; having a hard time to make a living.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 P. 168, 81 Mont. 132, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-palagi-v-freeman-mont-1927.