Appellant, now serving a state imposed life sentence for murder with malice aforethought, appeals from the District Court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
At the age of sixteen, appellant stabbed two minors, injuring Michael Lethcoe and killing Linda Ruble. The state brought charges against appellant in the juvenile court 1 *seeking to have him declared a delinquent child solely on the basis of the non-fatal assault. Appellant’s counsel filed a supplemental petition presenting the fatal assault to the court. The state moved to strike this petition, but the court denied the motion after considering arguments and authorities submitted by both sides. Although the court suggested that an appeal would be appropriate, the state did not challenge the court’s denial of its motion. The juvenile court then heard testimony concerning both offenses, accepted appellant’s confession to both crimes, and adjudged him a delinquent child on the basis of both the assault and the murder. Appellant was committed to the control of the Texas Youth Council until his twenty-first birthday. However, when appellant reached the age of seventeen he was indicted, tried and convicted as an adult of murder with malice in the killing of Linda Ruble, and sentenced to life imprisonment. Appellant has unsuccessfully sought relief on both the *217 state and federal levels contending that his conviction for murder with malice subjected him to double jeopardy and denied him due process of law under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Supreme Court, although it has had recent opportunity to do so, Chicos v. State of Indiana, 1966,
The federal and state courts in Texas have in recent years considered whether the procedure to which appellant was subjected violates the Fourteenth Amendment. Both courts have agreed that “A juvenile cannot ‘be adjudged a delinquent child and held in custody as such, and, without regard to how he may respond to the guidance and control afforded him under the [Texas] Juvenile Act, be indicted, tried, and convicted of the identical offense after he reaches the age of 17.’ Garza v. State, (Tex.Cr.App.1963)
Reversed and Remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In 1960, when these events took place, Texas law forbade the prosecution as an adult of a male under the age of seventeen. Article 30, Texas Penal Code of 1925.
. The Supreme Court gave implied approval to the
Sawyer
rational in In re Gault, 1967,
The impact of denying fundamental procedural due process to juveniles involved in “delinquency” charges is dramatized by the following considerations: * * *. In some jurisdictions a juvenile may be subjected to a criminal prosecution for the same offense for which he has served under a juvenile court commitment. However, the Texas procedure to this effect has recently been held unconstitutional by a federal district court judge, in a habeas corpus action. Sawyer v. Hauck *
In re Gault, supra at 20-21, n. 26,
