Willard v. State Board of Control

275 N.W. 537, 225 Wis. 553, 1937 Wisc. LEXIS 244
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 275 N.W. 537 (Willard v. State Board of Control) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willard v. State Board of Control, 275 N.W. 537, 225 Wis. 553, 1937 Wisc. LEXIS 244 (Wis. 1937).

Opinion

Wickhem, J.

In the view that the court takes of the matter, the sole question here is whether an appeal lies by the State Board of Control to the circuit court for Jefferson county from an order of the juvenile court of that county releasing from the Wisconsin industrial school for girls a delinquent minor theretofore committed to that school by that court. While, in view of the court’s conclusion that an appeal to the circuit court does not lie, we do not reach [555]*555the merits of this controversy, it will be necessary, in order to make intelligible the court’s conclusions with reference to the right of appeal by the board, incidentally to construe the statutes upon which the merits of the controversy are based and to give a fairly complete history of the litigation.

On May 6, 1935, one Emma Tietz filed a petition setting forth that Dorothy Mae Willard, a child of the age of sixteen, continuously frequented a tavern owned and operated by petitioner and her husband, and that the said Dorothy Mae Willard had had improper relations with petitioner’s husband, and is a delinquent child. After a hearing, in which these facts were conclusively established, the county court, acting as juvenile court, committed Dorothy Mae Willard to the Wisconsin industrial school for girls during the period of her minority. Commitment was temporarily suspended, and the child paroled to a Mr. and Mrs. Grady in Watertown. After a short trial, the Gradys declined to continue their custody because of failure on the part of the girl to co-operate with their efforts in her behalf. Thereafter, an order was issued on June 26, 1935, committing Dorothy Mae Willard to the Wisconsin industrial school for girls. The petition for rehearing was filed April 22, 1936, and the order modifying the commitment and placing her in custody of her grandmother was entered on June 26, 1936.

The first question relates to the scope and extent of the juvenile court’s jurisdiction to entertain a petition for rehearing in the case of a delinquent minor where there had been a previous hearing and commitment to the Wisconsin industrial school for girls. This involves a consideration of the proper construction to be given to ch. 48, Stats., commonly called the “Children’s Code.”

Prior to the enactment of this code in 1929, the sole authority to discharge a delinquent juvenile child lawfully committed to the Wisconsin industrial school for girls was [556]*556vested in the State Board of Control. Sec. 4970 — 5, Stats. 1917. In addition, the State Board of Control was given the right to parole any inmate of this school. Sec. 4970 — 4, Stats. 1917. These sections were amended prior to 1929, but not in such a manner as to change them in substance. It was also provided that commitments to the Wisconsin industrial school for girls were to be for the full period of minority, subject to1 the power of the board to discharge or parole. Sec. 4969, Stats. 1917. The important changes enacted as a part of the Children’s Code and which bear upon the question of jurisdiction are:

Sec. 48.01 (5) (b), which provides:

“Whenever the juvenile court shall determine any child to be delinquent, such child shall continue for the purposes of sections 48.01 to 48.28 under the jurisdiction of the court until he becomes twenty-one years of age, unless discharged prior thereto.”

Sec. 48.07 (1) (b), which gives the court power to—

“Commit the child to a suitable public institution or to a suitable child welfare agency licensed by the state board of control and authorized to care for children or to place them in suitable family homes. The terms and durations of such commitments, other than to the industrial school for boys or to- the industrial school for girls, shall in each case be fixed by the court, subject to modification by the court on its own motion or otherwise. ...”

Sec. 48.07 (2a), which provides:

“Upon the discovery of additional evidence which raises a question as to the advisability of the commitment made in any case in any juvenile court, the parent, guardian or next friend of the child so committed may at any time .petition the court for a rehearing and if the court deems such rehearing advisable, it may again hear the case and make such disposition thereof as is in the best interests of the child.”

In spite of these changes, ch. 48 still expressly provides (sec. 48.15) that all commitments of delinquent children to [557]*557any industrial school shall be to the age of twenty-one years or unless paroled in accordance with sec. 48.16 (2) (b), which continues to vest the Board of Control (sec. 48.16 (1)) with the sole authority to discharge a delinquent child lawfully committed to the Wisconsin industrial school for girls. The parole powers of the Board of Control theretofore contained in sec. 4970 — 4 are retained in the Children’s Code (sec. 48.16 (2)' (b)), and it is further provided (sec. 48.16 (2) (a)) that the board may restore'a child committed to the industrial school for girls to the care of its parents or guardians before the expiration of the term of commitment if in its judgment that is in the best interests of the child. The contention of the respondent, and the view evidently entertained by the juvenile court, was that the provision in sec. 48.01 (5) (b) continuing for the purposes of the chapter the jurisdiction of the juvenile court until the delinquent attained the age of twenty-one years, must be considered to have modified the pre-existing law, especially when considered in connection with sec. 48.07 (2a), which provides for a rehearing, and gives the court, upon a rehearing, pow'er to make such disposition of the case as is in the best interests of the child.

After careful consideration, it is the court’s conclusion that respondent’s contentions with respect to the interpretation of the law cannot be sustained. Secs. 48.15 and 48.16 were re-enacted when the Children’s Code was passed, and an examination of the legislative history indicates that the legislature resisted all attempts to modify those sections. While sec. 48.01 (5) (b) appears at first sight to give the juvenile court a continuing jurisdiction, destructive of the powers of the Board of Control detailed in sec. 48.16, an examination of other provisions of the section indicates that such is neither its purpose nor effect. Sec. 48.07 (1) (b) gives to the juvenile court wide powers to select a custodian [558]*558for delinquent children, and to fix the term of such commitments, but it has no discretion with respect to the term where the commitment is to the Wisconsin industrial school for girls, and no power to modify its orders with respect to the placing and custody of the child exists in case of such commitments. All commitments to the industrial schools are required by sec. 48.15 to be for the period of minority unless the child is paroled in accordance with sec. 48.16 (2) (b). Sec. 48.07 (1) (b) discloses at least one purpose for extending the jurisdiction of the juvenile court beyond the time of commitment. This purpose is to permit the court to modify such of its commitments as under this subsection it is authorized to modify. A consideration of this subsection discloses that it is wholly consistent with secs. 48.15 and 48.16, that it was carefully drafted to make it so, and that the subsection does not give to the juvenile court jurisdiction to fix the term of a commitment to the Wisconsin industrial school for girls or to modify this commitment.

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Related

Helland v. Jones
37 N.W.2d 513 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1949)
James v. Fish
17 N.W.2d 558 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1945)
Willard v. State Board of Control
275 N.W. 541 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 N.W. 537, 225 Wis. 553, 1937 Wisc. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-state-board-of-control-wis-1937.