T. P. S. v. State

590 S.W.2d 946
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1979
DocketNo. 20113
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 590 S.W.2d 946 (T. P. S. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T. P. S. v. State, 590 S.W.2d 946 (Tex. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

GUITTARD, Chief Justice.

A fifteen-year old boy brings this appeal from an order of the juvenile court transferring him to a felony court for trial on a charge of murder. His principal complaint is that the trial court denied him a hearing on his application for temporary hospitalization under section 55.02 of the Texas Family Code.1 We hold that he was entitled to such a hearing, and we remand for further proceedings in the juvenile court. In view of such further proceedings, we hold also that section 54.02(f) of the Code, which enumerates the factors to be considered by [948]*948the juvenile judge in exercising his discretion in making the transfer, is not void for vagueness, and that no prejudice is shown from the court’s quashing a notice to take the deposition of one of the investigating officers.

1. Temporary Hospitalization

a. Applicability of Section 55.02 to Discretionary Transfers

Appellant’s request for temporary hospitalization was based on subdivision (a) of section 55.02, which provides:

If it appears to the juvenile court, on suggestion of a party or on the court’s own notice, that a child alleged by petition or found to have engaged in delinquent conduct or conduct indicating a need for supervision may be mentally ill, the court shall initiate proceedings to order temporary hospitalization of the child for observation and treatment.

The state contends that this section does not apply when the petition seeks a transfer rather than a delinquency adjudication because the child is not “alleged by the petition ... to have engaged in delinquent conduct” within section 55.02(a). We do not agree. The allegations of the petition fall within the statutory definition of “delinquent conduct.” Section 51.03 of the Code defines this term to include, among other conduct, violation of “a penal law of this state punishable by imprisonment.” The petition alleges that appellant intentionally and knowingly caused the death of an individual by beating him with a club “in violation of a penal law of this state punishable by imprisonment.” Consequently, it is clear that the petition alleges that appellant has “engaged in delinquent conduct.”

Moreover, as we read the Code, the prosecuting attorney is required to allege that the child has “engaged in delinquent conduct” as a basis for transfer to a criminal court. Transfer proceedings are governed by section 54.02 of the Code. The only provision in section 54.02 concerning the contents of the petition is subdivision (b), which provides: “The petition and notice requirements of Sections 53.04, 53.05, 53.06, and 53.07 of this code must be satisfied.” Of the sections specified, the only one pertaining to the contents of the petition is section 53.04, which contains the following:

(a) If the preliminary investigation, required by Section 53.01 of this code results in a determination that further proceedings are authorized and warranted, a petition for an adjudication or transfer hearing of a child alleged to have engaged in delinquent conduct or conduct indicating a need for supervision may be made as promptly as practicable by a prosecuting attorney who has knowledge of the facts alleged or is informed and believes that they are true. [Emphasis added].

Construed together, as they must be, section 54.02(b) and 53.04(a) require that a petition for transfer allege that the child has “engaged in delinquent conduct.” We recognize that section 53.04(a) adds “or conduct indicating a need for supervision,” and by the terms of section 54.02(a), a transfer is authorized only if “the child is alleged to have violated a penal law of the grade of felony.” Nevertheless, section 53.04 clearly applies both to petitions seeking transfer and to petitions seeking delinquency adjudication. The broad term “delinquent conduct or conduct indicating a need for supervision” defines the wliole range of conduct subject to the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, and section 54.02, when taken in connection with section 53.04(a), requires that a petition for transfer must allege a case within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court. Of course, some types of conduct included in section 53.04(a), may not be made the basis for a transfer.

In view of the specific reference to section 53.04 in section 54.02(b), we cannot agree with the state’s counsel that the “transfer” mentioned in section 53.04(a) means a transfer of the proceedings to another county under the provisions of section 51.07. Section 51.07 authorizes transfer of the proceedings to another county only in the case of a child who “has been found to have engaged in delinquent conduct or con[949]*949duct indicating a need for supervision under section 54.03 of this code.” We find no authority for transfer to another county before an adjudication of delinquency under section 54.03. Consequently, the “petition for an adjudication or transfer hearing,” required by section 53.04(a) as the first step in a judicial proceeding before the juvenile court, must necessarily refer to a discretionary transfer to a criminal court under section 54.02.

In explaining his ruling, the juvenile judge expressed the view that when transfer to a criminal court is sought, section 55.02(a) does not apply unless there has been a previous finding that the child “as a result of mental disease or defect lacks capacity to understand the proceedings in juvenile court or tq assist in his own defense” within section 55.04(a) of the Code. In this connection, the judge referred to section 55.04(f), which provides:

If the court or jury determines that the child is unfit to proceed, the court or jury shall determine whether the child should be committed for a period of temporary hospitalization for observation and treatment in accordance with Section 55.02 of this code .

We read section 55.04 to mean that whether the petition seeks discretionary transfer or delinquency adjudication and disposition, if any party raises the question of the child’s fitness to proceed, the juvenile court must hear evidence and determine the question of fitness, and, if it finds the child unfit, it shall then determine whether the child should be committed for temporary hospitalization under section 55.02. A finding of unfitness, however, is not the only situation in which the court is required to initiate proceedings for temporary hospitalization under section 55.02. Nothing in section 55.02, or elsewhere in the Code, limits its application to this situation. The only prerequisite for such proceedings in section 55.02 is that it “appears to the juvenile court . . . that a child alleged by petition or found to have engaged in delinquent conduct . . . may be mentally ill.”

The state contends that a child charged with a felony should not be permitted to use section 55.02 as a stratagem to develop a mental illness defense to be raised at the transfer hearing as well as later in a criminal prosecution. It insists that when the prosecuting attorney has exercised his pros-ecutorial discretion to seek a transfer to a criminal court, the juvenile court’s inquiry into the child’s mental health is limited to his fitness to proceed with the transfer hearing under section 55.04.

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590 S.W.2d 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-p-s-v-state-texapp-1979.