State v. Scallan

10 So. 2d 885, 201 La. 1026, 1942 La. LEXIS 1319
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
DocketNo. 36738.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 So. 2d 885 (State v. Scallan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Scallan, 10 So. 2d 885, 201 La. 1026, 1942 La. LEXIS 1319 (La. 1942).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

On May 5, 1942, F. E. Didier, probation officer, made and filed an affidavit in the Juvenile Court of Avoyelles Parish, charging that the defendant, Albert Scallan, on or about May 2, 1942, did “contribute to the delinquency of his minor daughter [we omit the name], who is under the age of 17 years, by encouraging and permitting her to enter the Black Cat Night Club, where her morals may be corrupted, endangered or depraved, or may likely be impaired, in violation of the law of this state, the orders of the 12th Judicial District Court and the orders of affiant, a duly constituted Probation officer of this parish”.

On May 18, following, the district attorney filed a bill of information against defendant, making a charge identical with that set out by the probation officer in his affidavit made May 5.

These charges were brought under Act No. 139 of 1916, page 328, which makes it a misdemeanor for parents, guardians, and others, having the control or custody of a child or children under 17 years of age, to abuse, mistreat, or ntglect such child or children, to permit such child or children to associate with vicious, immoral, or criminal persons or to grow up in idleness, or to permit such child or children “ * * * to enter any place where the morals of such child may be corrupted, endangered or depraved, or may likely be impaired.”

It will be noted that the charge made against the defendant in this case follows the language of the statute, which makes it a misdemeanor for a parent having the custody of a child or children to permit such child or children “to enter any place where the morals of such child may be corrupted, endangered or depraved, or may likely be impaired”.

The defendant was brought to trial, as shown by the minutes of the Juvenile Court, on May 18, 1942. Before proceeding to trial, the accused through his counsel filed a motion to quash the affidavit, which motion was argued and submitted and overruled by the court, to which ruling of the court counsel for the accused objected and reserved a bill of exception. Thereupon, the accused waived arraignment and pleaded not guilty. He was tried and found guilty. On May 26, 1942, defendant was sentenced by the court to pay a fine of $25 and costs and to serve a period of 60 days in the parish jail.

The minutes of the court recite that then and there “the suspended sentence which had been imposed upon him on February 24, 1942 under Juvenile Division Court No. 80 was recalled and the sentence therein imposed, namely three (3) months jail and $25 fine and costs was declared executory immediately and in default of the payment of the fines, to serve an additional period of 30 days in the Parish Jail”.

The suspended sentence referred to in the above extracts from the minutes of *1031 the Juvenile Court of May 26, 1942, was imposed upon defendant in the Juvenile Court after he had entered a plea of guilty to a like charge filed by the probation officer of Avoyelles Parish on January 2, 1942. The defendant was brought to trial on the former charge on February 24, 1942, and the minutes of the court, of that date show that the accused through counsel filed .a motion to quash the affidavit after the district attorney had filed a bill of particulars requested by the defendant. The motion to quash was overruled by the court. Thereupon, according to the minutes of the Juvenile Court, “The accused then through his counsel in open Court, waived arraignment and pleaded guilty to the above charge and was sentenced to serve a period of three (3) months in the Parish Jail and to pay a fine of $25 and costs which sentences were ordered by the Court suspended, during good behavior.”

On May 26, 1942, after the Juvenile Court had pronounced the defendant guilty of the charge brought against him on May 2 and had sentenced him for that offense, and after the court recalled the suspended sentence which had been imposed upon him on February 24, 1942, the court ordered the defendant incarcerated immediately.

Thereupon, counsel for the defendant gave notice in open court that he would apply to this court for a writ of certiorari commanding the judge of the Juvenile Court to send up the records in both cases to the end that the rulings of the court might be reviewed and their validity ascertained, and for a writ of prohibition prohibiting the juvenile judge from proceeding to carry out t,he sentences imposed upon the defendant “until the further orders of this Honorable Court”.

. Counsel for defendant filed application for the writs in this court on June 5, 1942, and the writs were granted on the same day wij:h stay order. The case is now before this court for review.

The record sent up to this court shows that two charges of juvenile delinquency were filed against the minor child of the defendant, one on January 2 and one on May 5, 1942, and that she was not convicted. The district attorney requested that the cases against her be set aside or dismissed. The judge allowed the dismissal of these cases and stated that “her conduct has been such that nothing but good can be said of her, that she is well behaved, is a regular student of the Marksville High School, where she is doing good work, and attends to her religious duties regularly, for all of which she is to be praised and complimented”.

Counsel for relator argues that the defendant could not be legally convicted because his minor daughter, under 17 years of age, had not been convicted and was not in fact a delinquent child.

There is no merit in this contention. Act No. 139 of 1916 was adopted “For the protection of children under seventeen years of age”, and sets out in detail “the facts and causes” which constitute misdemeanors on the part of parents relating to the care, treatment, and control of their minor children. Specifically, the act declared .that it shall be a misdemeanor for *1033 a parent having custody of a child under 17 years of age to permit such child “to enter any place where the morals of such child may be corrupted, endangered or depraved, or may likely be impaired”.

The complaint made against the defendant was that he encouraged and permitted his minor child to enter a night club where her morals might be corrupted, endangered, or might likely be impaired. The charge is in the language of the statute. Under the plain terms of the act, parents having control or custody of minor children under 17 years of age are prohibited from permitting them to enter any place where their morals may be corrupted or may be endangered or may be impaired. Therefore, under the act, parents may be guilty of a misdemeanor for permitting their minor child or children to do certain things, even though, by the doing of those things, the child or children may not have become delinquent in fact.

The act declares that a parent who “knowingly or wilfully is responsible for, encourages, aids, causes or connives at, or who knowingly or wilfully does any act or acts to produce, promote, or contribute to the conditions which cause such child to be adjudged guilty of juvenile delinquency” is guilty of a misdemeanor; so that, if the child becomes a delinquent or is “adjudged guilty of juvenile delinquency”, the parent is guilty of a misdemeanor if he encouraged, aided, consented to, or connived at, such acts or conduct of the child as may have caused her to become a delinquent.

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Bluebook (online)
10 So. 2d 885, 201 La. 1026, 1942 La. LEXIS 1319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-scallan-la-1942.