At issue in this case are the portions of St. 1991, c. 488, § 3, which amended G. L. c. 119, § 61, the statute concerning the disposition of certain juvenile matters, to read as follows:
“If the offense alleged [against a child who is fourteen years or older] is murder in the first or second degree, the commonwealth may proceed by filing a complaint in juvenile court or in a juvenile session of a district court, as the case may be, or by filing an indictment in such court. In such proceedings initiated by the filing of a complaint, a probable cause [Part A] hearing shall be held within the time set forth in this section, unless the commonwealth shall have proceeded by indictment prior to such hearing. If the commonwealth has proceeded by indictment, no probable cause [Part A] hearing shall be held, and a transfer [Part B] hearing shall be held as provided by this section. In all cases brought pursuant to the provisions of this paragraph, the child shall have the right to an indictment proceeding under section four of chapter two hundred and sixty-three, unless such child, upon advice of counsel, duly waives indictment.”
The juvenile in this case has been charged with delinquency by reason of murder by a complaint in 'the Juvenile Court Department and with murder by an indictment returned by a grand jury to the Superior Court Department. See G. L. c. 265, § 1 (1990 ed.). Both the complaint and the indictment concern the same incident. The juvenile argues that the indictment provisions of the amended § 61 impermissibly conflict with existing legislation, and, therefore, are invalid. If the provisions are found valid, the juvenile argues that, despite the existence of the indictment and the language of the new § 61, he still is entitled to receive a probable cause (Part A) hearing in the Juvenile Court. The Commonwealth disputes the juvenile’s arguments and also challenges an order of the Superior Court which denied the Commonwealth’s motion to transmit the pending murder indictment to the Juvenile Court.
The parties have agreed on the facts. On January 9, 1992, a complaint was entered in the Juvenile Court charging the juvenile, who was fourteen years old at the time of the alleged offense, with delinquency by reason of murder. On January 23, 1992, an indictment was returned to the Superior Court charging the juvenile with murder. It was ordered that notice of the indictment be furnished to the juvenile and that the indictment be immediately entered on the Superior Court docket.
On February 5, 1992, the juvenile was arraigned in the Juvenile Court on the delinquency complaint. That complaint is still pending. At the time of the juvenile’s arraignment, the Commonwealth filed a certified copy of the indictment in the
The juvenile subsequently moved in the Superior Court to dismiss the indictment, and the Commonwealth moved to transmit the indictment directly to the Juvenile Court. A Superior Court judge denied both motions and ordered that the indictment remain in the Superior Court pending the result of the transfer hearing in the Juvenile Court. The juvenile brought a petition seeking relief from the indictment pursuant to G. L. c. 211, § 3 (1990 ed.), in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk. That case was reserved and reported without decision by a single justice. The Commonwealth was also granted leave to appeal from the denial of its motion to transmit the indictment to Juvenile Court, and its appeal has been consolidated with the reported case.
Simultaneously with the amendment of § 61, the Legislature also amended G. L. c. 119, § 72, to provide mandatory penalties for juveniles convicted in the Juvenile Court and juvenile sessions of the District Court of murder in the first or second degree. St. 1991, c. 488, § 7.
2
Thus, a juvenile who
By the amendments to §§ 61 and 72, the Legislature: (a) gave to a prosecutor in a murder case involving a juvenile who is fourteen years of age or older the option of proceeding against the juvenile in the Juvenile Court or a juvenile session of the District Court by way of indictment; (b) dispensed with the probable cause (Part A) hearing when the indictment procedure is used by substituting for that hearing the grand jury’s determination that probable cause exists to find that the juvenile has committed murder; (c) provided for mandatory penalties if, after a transfer (Part B) hearing, the juvenile’s case is retained within the juvenile system and the juvenile is adjudicated delinquent by reason of first or second degree murder; and (d) conferred jurisdiction, in the nature
1.
Alleged conflict between G. L. c. 119, §§ 61 and 74.
The juvenile first directs attention to G. L. c. 119, § 74 (1990 ed.), which provides, in pertinent part, that “no criminal proceeding shall be begun against any person who, prior to his seventeenth birthday commits an offense against the law of the commonwealth . . . unless proceedings against him as a delinquent child have been begun and dismissed as required by section sixty-one.” The juvenile also refers to
A Juvenile, petitioner,
The Legislature possesses the unquestioned power to alter the jurisdiction it has conferred on the lower courts of the Commonwealth. “The Juvenile [and juvenile sessions of the District] Courts, like all the courts of the Commonwealth, except the Supreme Judicial Court, are creatures of the Legislature and derive their powers, other than those powers that are inherent in all courts . . . from the Legislature.”
Parents
Statutes concerning a common topic are to be read “as a whole to produce an internal consistency.”
Commonwealth
v.
Fall River Motor Sales, Inc.,
By amending § 61, the Legislature changed the means by which a juvenile who is fourteen years of age or over can be charged with murder in the Juvenile Court or the juvenile sessions of the District Court. At the same time, by amending § 72, the Legislature imposed mandatory criminal sentences and broadened the placement authority of the Department of Correction when it receives custody of a juvenile who is serving one of the mandatory sentences. Simultaneously with the amendments to §§ 61 and 72, the Legislature amended G. L. c. 218, § 27 (1990 ed.), by St. 1991, c. 488, § 9, to enlarge the commitment power of the Juvenile Court and the juvenile sessions of the District Court to conform with § 72, and it also amended G. L. c. 263, § 4 (1990 ed.), by St. 1991, c. 488, § 10, to provide that “[a] juvenile charged in juvenile court or in a juvenile session of a district court with delinquency by [reason of murder] shall also have the right to be proceeded against by indictment.” All of the changes described above were meant to increase the jurisdiction of the Juvenile Court and the juvenile sessions of the District Court and to expand the authority of the Department of Correction. The amendments took into account that the imposition of lengthy criminal sentences to State correctional facilities (as distinguished from commitments to the Department of Youth Services) should be accompanied by the procedures that apply to the prosecution of adults in the Superior Court. See, e.g.,
Brown
v.
Commissioner of Correction,
“[A] grant of jurisdiction [or authority] ‘carries with it by implication power to use the necessary means to exercise and
3. Transmittal of indictment from Superior to Juvenile Court. The same principles apply to the question raised by the Commonwealth’s appeal from the Superior Court judge’s denial of its motion to transmit the indictment against the juvenile to the Juvenile Court.
The new § 61 provides that “the commonwealth may proceed by filing a complaint in juvenile court... or by filing an indictment
in such
court” (emphasis added). St. 1991, c. 488, § 3. In this case, the Commonwealth intends to proceed solely on the indictment. The lack of express direction in § 61 that the indictment is to be transmitted by the Superior Court to the Juvenile Court does not prevent the Superior Court from ordering transmittal. As has been discussed, the Legislature has the power to alter the jurisdiction of lower courts and to provide them with the authority necessary for the exercise of new or changed jurisdiction.
Mountfort
v.
Hall, supra.
By the new § 61, the Legislature authorized the
4.
Constitutional challenges to the statute,
(a)
Due process.
“A State which elects to commit to its judiciary the responsibility of determining whether a youthful offender will be tried as a juvenile or an adult (as the Commonwealth presently does by means of G. L. c. 119, § 61) must observe
A probable cause hearing on a complaint and an indictment “are alternative means for establishing probable cause to hold a juvenile for trial.”
Lataille
v.
District Court of E. Hampden,
(b) Equal protection. The juvenile contends that legislation singling out juveniles charged with murder, and denying them the protection of a probable cause (Part A) hearing, violates Federal constitutional rights of equal protection. Juveniles charged with murder are not a suspect class, and they do not have a constitutionally protected right to remain in the juvenile justice system. Commonwealth v. Wayne W., supra at 226. The question is whether the different treatment given a juvenile charged with murder by the new legislation is “reasonably related to a legitimate legislative goal.” Id. We are satisfied that this standard is met.
Previously, a juvenile retained within the juvenile justice system and adjudicated delinquent by reason of murder incurred a maximum penalty of commitment to a DYS facility. See G. L. c. 119, § 58, as amended through St. 1990, c. 267, § 2. The Legislature reasonably could have concluded that this was no longer sufficient to protect the public from the risk of harm posed by juveniles who commit murder. In so doing, the Legislature appears to have been influenced by the soaring juvenile homicide rate and the escalation of senseless, and oftentimes unprovoked, acts of violence by armed youths. The Legislature also reasonably could have concluded that a comparatively short period of incarceration in a treatment setting was insufficient punishment for a juvenile who commits murder, and that the imposition of longer sentences could have a valuable deterrent effect. “It is for the Legislature to balance the interests of juveniles against the public’s interest[s],”
News Group Boston, Inc.
v.
Commonwealth,
5.
Rule of lenity.
“[The] rule [of lenity] may be applied when a statute can plausibly be found to be ambiguous to give the juvenile the benefit of the ambiguity.”
Commonwealth
v.
Roucoulet,
“The maxim [of lenity] . . . does not mean that an available and sensible [statutory] interpretation is to be rejected in favor of a fanciful or perverse one.”
Id.,
quoting
Commonwealth
v.
Tata,
6.
Disposition.
An appropriate judgment is to be entered on the petition brought by the juvenile in the county court under G. L. c. 211, § 3, denying the relief he requested. The order of the Superior Court denying the Commonwealth’s
So ordered.
Notes
The penalty portions of § 72 were amended to read as follows:
“If a child is adjudicated a delinquent by reason of having violated section one of chapter two hundred and sixty-five [and] if the adjudication is for murder in the first degree such child shall be committed to a maximum confinement of twenty years. Such confinement shall be to the custody of the department of youth services in a secure facility until a maximum age of twenty-one years and thereafter shall be to the custody of the department of correction for the remaining portion of that commitment but in no case shall the confinement be for less than fifteen years and said child shall not be eligible for parole under section one hundred and thirty-three A of chapter one hundred and twenty-seven until said child has served fifteen years of said confinement. Thereafter said child shall be subject to the provisions of law governing the granting of parole permits by the parole
The Commissioner of Youth Services, in discretion and after consultation with the Commissioner of Correction, may transfer a juvenile adjudicated delinquent by reason of murder to the custody of the Department of Correction anytime after the juvenile’s eighteenth birthday. See St. 1991, c. 488, § 8.
Consequently, we reject the juvenile’s suggestion that the Legislature was required to create a new grand jury as an appurtenance to the Juvenile Court or juvenile sessions of the District Court before an indictment could be made the charging document in a juvenile murder case.
We note that the Legislature has now expressly provided for the transmittal of an indictment of a juvenile charged with murder from the Superior to the Juvenile Court. See St. 1992, c. 398, § 7, amending G. L. c. 263, § 4. We do not rely on the 1992 amendment in our disposition of this issue. However, when the Legislature corrects a technical omission in a statutory provision by subsequent legislation, we may view the corrective legislation as clarifying the intention of the Legislature with reference to the existing legislation, in this case St. 1991, c. 488, §§ 3 and 10. See Singer, 2A Sutherland Statutory Construction § 45.15 (5th ed. 1992) (“An amendment to a statute may properly be considered when determining legislative intent”).
Out of caution, because § 61 was newly amended, had not been construed by any court, and did not explicitly provide a mechanism for the transmittal of an indictment between the Superior and Juvenile Courts, the Commonwealth obtained an indictment in the Superior Court, and filed a complaint and a certified copy of the indictment in Juvenile Court. We have concluded that the indictment should have been transmitted to the appropriate Juvenile Court and that an indictment can serve as the charging document in these cases.
The juvenile appears to argue that, because the complaint is still pending, he is entitled to a probable cause (Part A) hearing. The statute provides that the filing of an indictment obviates the need for a Part A hearing. On remand, the complaint should be dismissed. The Commonwealth should proceed on the indictment. If, after a transfer (Part B) hearing, the Juvenile Court retains jurisdiction over the juvenile, the indictment remains the charging document in Juvenile Court. If transfer is ordered, the indictment should be retransmitted to the Superior Court for further proceedings there.
At a probable cause hearing, a defendant is entitled to legal representation, may cross-examine the Commonwealth’s witnesses, and may present witnesses of his own. See
Myers
v.
Commonwealth,
The juvenile also maintains that the amendments to G. L. c. 119, § 61, depriving him of a probable cause (Part A) hearing, violate rights of due process and equal protection granted to him by art. 12. “[He] make[s] no meaningful argument, however, on the respects in which art. 12 should be construed to grant [him] greater rights than those afforded by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. We discern no basis for implying any greater rights under the State Constitution in these circumstances.” Commonwealth v. Wayne W., supra at 226.
