457 P.2d 666 | Or. Ct. App. | 1969
REVERSED.
This is a post-conviction proceeding. Petitioner was indicted January 30, 1962, for armed robbery. In regular proceedings immediately following indictment it was discovered he was then 17 years of age. Pursuant to ORS
Petitioner contends that the indictment was void because it was returned prior to the transfer of the case to the juvenile court and remand back to adult court. The circuit court in this post-conviction proceeding agreed with the petitioner and ordered release from imprisonment. The state has appealed.
Was the original indictment void? The answer involves construction of three Oregon juvenile court statutes:
ORS
"The juvenile court has exclusive original jurisdiction *64 in any case involving a person who is under 18 years of age * * *." (Emphasis supplied.)
ORS
"If during the pendency of a [criminal] proceeding in any court other than a juvenile court it is ascertained that the age of the [defendant] * * * is such that the matter is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the juvenile court, it is the duty of the court * * * forthwith to transfer the proceeding * * * to the juvenile court * * *." (Emphasis supplied.)
ORS
"A child may be remanded [by a juvenile court] to a circuit * * * court of competent jurisdiction for disposition as an adult if * * * [certain specific conditions exist]." (Emphasis supplied.)
The foregoing sections are part of a comprehensive juvenile code enacted by the 1959 Oregon Legislature. ORS ch 419. Parts of that act of interest in the determination of this case have been construed in State v. Zauner,
The trial judge in this proceeding took Brady to be in point and rested his decision thereon. In Brady, the Oregon Supreme Court did indeed indicate that cases involving juvenile defendants must be "initiated" in juvenile court. No other interpretation could be placed upon the wording of ORS
It is well to note that sometimes, as counsel has indicated was true in the case at bar, the juvenile at the time of arrest claims to be over 18. Hence, discovery of his correct age may not come until he is well along in an adult proceeding. In the interval he has relished the error and confusion created by his duplicity. He should not be allowed to benefit from it to the detriment of justice.
ORS
In State v. Little, supra, the Oregon Supreme Court, construing this act, said:
"In the absence of any more certain legislative direction, it is sometimes observed, courts should follow the words of the statute. * * * What the law does not forbid, it allows * * *."
241 Or at 564 .
If the legislature intended to declare indictments or proceedings void in a case like this, its enactment could have said so. It would have been reasonable also for the legislature to require that the matter be resubmitted to the grand jury if the juvenile court remanded, but such a requirement is not in the statute. Hence, it is reasonable to find legislative intent to have been that the original indictment remains viable.
Petitioner quotes language from The State v. Elbert,
In Norfleet, after the adult indictment was returned, the true age of the child was discovered and the case was transferred to juvenile court. The juvenile court remanded him back to adult court where he pleaded guilty and was sentenced. Later defendant brought habeas corpus claiming, as does the petitioner *67 here, that the original indictment was void. The Tennessee Supreme Court held:
"* * * [T]he Criminal Court having first assumed jurisdiction by arrest and indictment * * * did not permanently lose jurisdiction of the case. Its jurisdiction was only suspended, subject to being reinstated on 'remand' by the Juvenile Court. In this situation the word 'remand' means to remit and send back a cause to the court from which it was * * * transferred * * *."
184 Tenn at 346 .
We hold that the 1962 order of the circuit court denying the motion to quash the indictment was correct. It follows that the lower court judgment in this proceeding was incorrect and it is reversed. The proceeding is dismissed.
Reversed. *68