134 P.2d 649 | Kan. | 1943
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an original proceeding in habeas corpus. Petitioner, a minor and appearing by his next friend, avers that he is Wrongfully deprived of his liberty by being incarcerated in the State Reformatory at Hutchinson. We are asked to determine whether a boy fourteen years of age, and an inmate of the Boys’ Industrial School, may be lawfully sentenced to the State Reformatory upon conviction under section 21-2001, G.'S. 1935.
The facts are not in dispute. From the brief (filed with permission as amici curiae) of the State Department of Social Welfare, which has jurisdiction of the Boys’ Industrial School, we summarize petitioner’s history as follows: Petitioner was born October 1, 1928. In May, 1940, after complaint and due hearing before the juvenile court of Cowley county he was committed to the Boys’ Industrial School at Topeka. On January 6, 1941, he was paroled. On May 23,1941 he was returned to the institution for violation of the parole. Between September 11, 1941, and October 11, 1942, he escaped ten times. It is stated that on various occasions when he escaped he robbed stores or filling stations and in one instance stole a truck. However, we make no finding as to such alleged offenses and nothing said herein is predicated thereon. The board states that the superintendent of the Industrial School reports that petitioner is very shrewd, a leader, and boasted that no one could handle him. At times when he escaped several other boys accompanied him. The board further says that because he had continuously broken the rules of the institution, • could not be kept on the grounds of the school and his presence was injurious to the discipline and interests of the-
Section 21-2001, under which petitioner was prosecuted was exacted in 1901. It reads as follows:
“Any person confined in the state industrial school for boys or in the state industrial school for girls, who shall attempt to set fire to any building belonging to either of such institutions, or to any combustible matter for the pui’pose of setting fire to any such building, or who shall willfully and forcibly resist the lawful authority of any officer of either of such institutions, or shall incite or attempt to incite others to do so, or shall by gross or habitual misconduct exert a dangerous and pernicious influence over other persons confined in either of such institutions, or shall commit a felonious assault upon any officer, attendant, employee or inmate of either such institutions, or shall in any manner willfully burn or otherwise destroy property of the value of more than twenty dollars belonging to either of such institutions, or shall run away or escape from either of such institutions, or from the lawful authorities thereof, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and upon conviction thereof in the district court of the county wherein such offense shall have been committed shall be punished as follows: If the person so convicted is confined in the state industrial school for boys, he shall be sentenced and committed to the Kansas state industrial reformatory for a term of not less than one year nor more than three years; and'if the person so convicted is confined in the state industrial school for girls, such person shall be sentenced and committed to the state penitentiary for a term of not less than one year nor more than three years: Provided, That for running away or escaping from either of such institutions the person so offending shall be deemed guilty of a violation of this act only upon the second or subsequent offense.”
The heart of petitioner’s contention is that under the juvenile court law (G. S. 1935, 38-401 to 38-432), no child under sixteen years of age can be regarded as a criminal; that a child under six- ■ teen who violates a law can-only be considered as a “delinquent.” Particular reliance is placed upon the provision contained in section 38-409, that “no child under the age of sixteen years shall be committed to the state reformatory,” etc. From this premise it is argued that section 21-2001 must be interpreted to apply only to boys in the Boys’ Industrial School at Topeka (or presumably to girls in the Industrial School for Girls at Beloit) who are sixteen or more
For answer to petitioner’s contention the respondents rely upon the following provision of the juvenile court law, found in section 38-402, which reads as follows: “This act shall apply only to children under the age of sixteen years, not now or hereafter inmates of any state institution or any industrial school for boys or industrial school for girls or some institution incorporated under the laws of this state” (italics supplied).
It is clear that if the unqualified provision, supra, of 38-402, be accepted at face value no part of the juvenile court act applies to children, regardless of their age, who are inmates of the institutions named. That being true, the provision of the juvenile court act (38-407, 38-409, 38-415) upon which petitioner relies has no application to his case. What escape is there from that conclusion? The statute says that “the act” shall not apply to children in these institutions. Can we read into the statute some qualification, reservation or limitation which is not there? And if so, what sort of qualification shall it be? How can we say that the legislature intended some provisions of the act to apply to children in the institutions and other provisions not to apply to them? And even if we could, by a robust act of construction, read a qualification into the statutory provision what guide is furnished us in the statute or elsewhere for drawing the line, for determining what parts of the juvenile court act apply to children who are inmates in the institutions and what parts do not apply to them? Counsel suggests no rule or principle for making such a classification or segregation.
If we have no basis for separating the provisions of the juvenile court act into two classes—those applicable and those not applicable to children in the institutions—what other escape’ is there from the conclusion that section 38-402 is controlling and determines the
This state has long been among the leaders in humanitarian approach to the problems of juvenile delinquents. Nor is this to say that there are not, perhaps, other forward steps which might well be taken. In 1879 the legislature provided for the erection of a “state reform school” building (Laws 1879, ch. 170). In 1881 was enacted the first organic act relating to this “state reform school” (Laws 1881, ch. 129). Though the name of the school was subsequently changed to “Boys’ Industrial School” fundamental pro
In 1885 the legislature took another forward step in the field of penal or correctional reform. It provided for the erection of a state reform school for the incarceration of male criminal offenders between the ages of sixteen and twenty-five (Laws 1885, ch. 187). The project, however, did not reach fruition until ten years later when the State Reformatory at Hutchinson was established (Laws 1895, ch. 200). There have been amendments, and in 1901 there was a rather general revamping of the law relating to the State Reformatory (Laws 1901, ch. 355). But many fundamental provisions, including the one here involved, have remained substantially the same. The pertinent provision of the statute (G. S. 1935, 76-2306) reads:
“Any male person between the ages of sixteen and twenty-five who shall be convicted for the first time of any offense punishable by confinement in the state penitentiary may, in the discretion of the trial judge, be sentenced either to the state penitentiary or to the Kansas state industrial reformatory;” etc.
It may be noted that this statute does not provide that in no case shall offenders under sixteen years of age be confined in the reformatory. It merely provides that offenders between sixteen and twenty-five may be committed to it instead of to the penitentiary.
In 1905 another great forward step was taken in the enactment of the juvenile court law (Laws 1905, ch. 190) which established juvenile courts and otherwise provided generally for a more enlightened treatment of juvenile offenders.
Here then is a boy fourteen years old who stubbornly refuses to . abandon his evil ways. However charitable and humanitarian an attitude the state may yet maintain toward him what can now lawfully be done with him? Counsel contends he may not lawfully be committed to the State Reformatory. What then? Shall he again be sent back to the Boys’ Industrial School? And if sent there and he continues to break the rules, to disrupt the discipline of the school and do harm to the morale of the other boys, and if he continues to escape and to commit serious offenses must such a course be tolerated until he reaches the age of sixteen? Or should walls be built, guards stationed, and the Boys’ School be turned into a prison in violation of the very spirit and purpose of the institution? Or, should this boy be turned loose, unrestrained, to his own detriment and to the injury of society?
We think it was to meet this very sort of situation that section 21-2001 under which petitioner was committed, was enacted. By its terms the act applies to all boys in the Boys’ Industrial School. We cannot usurp the legislative function and indulge the suggestion that the act be interpreted to apply only to boys in the Boys’ Industrial School who are sixteen or more years of age. Nor has any reason been shown for invalidating the whole act. Nor, again, can we say—at least as far as the Boys’ Industrial School is concerned—that the legislative classification established by section 38-402, supra, is arbitrary, capricious and invalid. Under that classification a boy under sixteen who has had the benefit of training at the Boys’ Industrial School may, under certain circumstances, be sent to the State Reformatory. But the law says, in effect, that a boy of the same age not an inmate of the Boys’ Industrial School
Possibly some better legislative solution for meeting problems like the one here presented might be devised. This court is no happier than is counsel for this boy over the thought of a fourteen-year-old boy—no matter how perverse his tendencies—being placed in an institution where older boys and adults convicted of crimes are incarcerated. But counsel points out no other recourse, under existing law, for a boy who has persistently displayed such disregard of law and rebellion against all restraint.
The writ is denied.