State v. Gullings

416 P.2d 311, 244 Or. 173, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 429
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 416 P.2d 311 (State v. Gullings) 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 v. Gullings, 416 P.2d 311, 244 Or. 173, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 429 (Or. 1966).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of burglary and has appealed. At the time of the commission of the crime and defendant’s detention by the au *175 thorities he was seventeen years of age. A deputy sheriff, armed with a detention warrant issued by the juvenile court, took the defendant into custody at school. There was evidence from which the trial court could and did find that the deputy sheriff promptly and effectively advised defendant that any information secured could be used against him in a criminal prosecution for burglary, that he was entitled to an attorney at government expense, and that he had an absolute right to remain silent. Thereafter, defendant immediately made incriminating admissions to the officer of his participation in the burglary. Defendant was taken from school to his home where he produced from his automobile a pair of binoculars taken in the burglary. His parents were not at home. He was then taken to the sheriff’s office where he almost immediately signed a written confession which was found by the trial judge to have been voluntarily made. There was no protracted period of custodial questioning. Subsequently defendant was remanded to adult court for trial.

Defendant’s principal claim of error on appeal is that his confession was erroneously admitted into evidence. He contends that he was within the exclusive jurisdiction of the juvenile court at all times prior to his remand to adult court and that any confession secured during this period of time is inadmissible.

*176 The basic concept of the Oregon law relating to juveniles was stated to be, by its framers in their report to the Governor and the Legislature of thé state, as follows:

“* * * juveniles who have offended against the law or who find themselves in need of protection should be dealt with through a specialized procedure in a court which, when possible, has a judge specialized in dealing with children. The procedure is civil, not criminal, and equitable in that the remedies may be flexible and based upon ‘conscience’ and' judgment, rather than upon more or less rigid rules of law.
“The most important respect in which the juvenile code departs from traditional legal machinery is that a child under 18 who has violated .a law is dealt with, not by indictment and trial according to the criminal law, but by petition in a civil proceeding before the juvenile judge. Furthérmore, the object of the proceeding is not reformation through punishment, but reformation through education, either in the child’s own home, in an adoptive or foster home or in a private or public agency or training school.”

The parens patriae theory of juvenile treatment implicit in this statement is necessarily based upon. a close relationship between the child and the representatives of the court. The desired result is the child’s trust and confidence in the representatives of the court and a full disclosure by the child to them. Until such a condition exists, the chances for successful and meaningful treatment on a parens patriae basis are minimal. The essence of such treatment is the establishment of an informal nonadversary atmos-, *177 phere which is the antithesis of adult criminal procedure. For these reasons the child is not charged with crime and therefore is not entitled to those rights which are necessary for the protection of an accused where the state is an adversary seeking criminal sanctions. The relationship and its consequences are described as follows in the case of Holmes’ Appeal, 379 Pa 599, 109 A2d 523 (1954):

“Appellant’s able counsel have urged upon us, as upon the Superior Court, many claims of illegality and deprivation of constitutional rights in conneetion with the proceedings before the Municipal Court. Such claims, however, entirely overlook, in our opinion, the basic concept of a Juvenile Court. The proceedings in such a court are not in the nature of a criminal trial but constitute merely a civil inquiry .or action looking to the treatment, reformation and rehabilitation of the minor child. Their purpose is not penal but protective, — aimed to check juvenile delinquency and to throw around a child, just starting, perhaps, on an evil course and deprived of proper parental care, the strong arm of the State acting .as parens patriae. The State is not seeking to punish an offender but to salvage a boy who may be in danger of becoming one, and to safeguard his adolescent life. * * *” 379 Pa at 603, 109 A2d at 525.

It would be inconsistent to allow admissions made by. the child in a noncriminal, nonpunitive and non-adversary trustful parens patriae atmosphere to be used to secure criminal sanctions against him. The following is a statement from Harling v. United States, 111 US App DC 174, 295 F2d 161 (1961):

“It is, of course, because children are, generally speaking, exempt from criminal penalties that safeguards of the criminal law * * * have no general application in juvenile proceedings. Aside from the requirements of expressly applicable statutes, *178 the principles of ‘fundamental fairness’ govern in fashioning procedures and remedies to serve the best interests of the child. It would offend these principles to allow admissions made by the child in the non-criminal and non-punitive setting of juvenile proceedings to be used later for the purpose of securing his criminal conviction and punishment. * * *” 111 US App DC at 176, 295 F2d at 163.

If information secured by juvenile authorities is indiscriminately used as a basis for imposing criminal responsibility, juvenile courts can not legitimately complain if traditional criminal constitutional standards are required of them in all their proceedings. Such a result would naturally be self-defeating since there is little room for the parens patriae relationship to operate within the narrow confines of standards evolved for use in the adversary criminal setting.

A few courts believe the incompatability between criminal and juvenile proceedings is so great as to require, regardless of the circumstances under which they are secured, that admissions and confessions received prior to remand must be absolutely barred from use in a criminal prosecution after remand. Harling v. United States, supra. The prohibition was required not only by “fundamental fairness” to the child but also to preserve the independence and integrity of the juvenile system. Edwards v. United States, 330 F2d 849, 850-51 (DC Cir 1964).

Presuming that federal constitutional Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights are granted, we believe that an absolute prohibition is not required so long as *179

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Bluebook (online)
416 P.2d 311, 244 Or. 173, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gullings-or-1966.