delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal challenges the constitutionality of Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. (1980 Repl. Vol.) Code Ann. § 3-817 (c), which
As а result of his drawing a handgun on one person, shooting another in the stomach, and shooting at still another, appellant was charged with two attempted murders, assault, and use of a handgun and was alleged to be a juvenile delinquent. This sixteen-and-one-half year old boy had been previously on probation for one assault with his fists and for another assault in which the victim hаd been stabbed in the back.
Exclusive jurisdiction over a child alleged to be a delinquent is (with certain exceptions,
see
Courts Art. § 3-804 (d) ) vested in the juvenile court by Courts Art. § 3-804 (a). Courts Art. § 3-817 allows the juvenile cоurt to waive its jurisdiction over the alleged delinquent, after an appropriate hearing, if the child is fifteen years or older or, if the child is not yet fifteen, where the child has committed a criminal act "which if committed by an adult, would be punishable by death or life imprisonment.” A juvenile waiver hearing is not a trial but a judicial inquiry concerning the advisability of waiving
vel non
a child from the juvenile system to that
As a guide for the court, the General Assembly has mandated that certain "criteria individually and in relation to each other [be considered] on the record.” Section 3-817 (d) specifies that the juvenile court consider:
"(1) Age of the child;
(2) Mental and physical condition of the child;
(3) The child’s amenability to treatment in any institution, facility, or program available to delinquents;
(4) The nature оf the offense and the child’s alleged participation in it; and
(5) The public safety.”
Each factor is to be weighed in relation to whether the child is an unfit subject for juvenile rehabilitation.
In Re Appeal No. 646,
If the juvenile court waives jurisdiction, the child may, as here, enter an immediate appeal which brings the matter to an abrupt halt in the trial court until the appeal is decided. Courts Art. § 3-817 (f). On the other hand, should the court refuse to grant a waiver, the matter goes forward in accordance with the Courts Article, Subtitle 8, Juvenile Causes.
Appellant asserts that Fourteenth Amendment due process demands that the minimal standard of proof in a juvenile waiver hearing be "clear and convincing.” Although the Supreme Court of the United States has paid much attention
Appellant urges us to do what the Supreme Court has not done and set aside the legislative "preponderance of the evidence” standard. The basis of his request is his suggestion thаt Addington v. Texas, supra, mandates that the standard of proof even in juvenile hearings be "clear and convincing evidence.”
Addington involved a constitutional attack on the "clear and convincing” stаndard of proof in a civil commitment hearing. A jury was to determine whether Addington was mentally ill and, consequently, subject to confinement in a state mental institution for some indefinite periоd of time. The trial judge instructed the jury to use a "clear unequivocal and convincing evidence” standard in making its determination. Based upon the evidence, the jury found Addington to be mentаlly ill. He was to be institutionally confined. On appeal, Addington claimed that the proper standard of proof that should have been applied in his case was that of "beyond а reasonable doubt.” The Texas Supreme Court affirmed the trial court. It approved the "clear and convincing” standard and noted that even "preponderance of the evidence” would have been sufficient. The United States Supreme Court, on certiorari, sanctioned the use of the "clear and convincing” standard of proof. The Court sаid that such a standard met the minimal requirements of due process. The "preponderance” standard was, however, expressly rejected as insufficient to satisfy due procеss.
Addington
was based on two primary considerations. Noting that evidentiary standards of proof "serve.... to allocate the risk of error between the litigants and to indicate
Addington is neither persuasively apposite nor authoritatively controlling in the matter before us. The significant difference between confinement in an institution as in Adding-ton and a waiver hearing in a juvenile cause is that after waiver the juvenile is not committed to an institution until and unless he has been charged, tried, and convicted in a criminal trial (although he may be confined while awaiting trial). Throughout the entire process he. is entitled to the full panoply of constitutional protections. The purpose of the waiver hearing is to assess whether the child is capable of rehabilitation within the juvenile system, not to determine whether the child is guilty or innocent of the crime alleged, nor even to determine whether he is to be confined.
Moreovеr, although it may be argued that the waiving of juvenile jurisdiction changes an alleged delinquent child to an alleged criminal, we do not find that any stigma results upon juvenile waiver. The stigma or labelling of a child as
Finally, appellant argues that waiver to the criminal court means exposure to enhanced punishment. The punishment, it is true, may be greater if meted out by a criminal court, but therе is no ironclad rule that it shall or must be more severe than that imposed by the juvenile court. More significantly, waiver does not mean that a conviction inevitably will follow. The juvenile is сloaked with the same presumption of innocence that attends every other person appearing in the criminal courts. Waiver does not subject the child to a criminal record, although it does expose him thereto. Only a conviction consummates that stigma.
Nothing in the Addington, Kent and Winship trilogy dictates our holding that the evidentiary standard for juvenile waiver must be "clear and convincing” or "beyond a reasonable doubt.” We refuse to presage what course the Supreme Court will take in the future, and we see no reason to light the way by announcing a rule of law requiring "clear and convincing evidence” as the standard of proof before a juvenile may be waived to the criminal process.
It follows that we find that the "preрonderance of the evidence” rule embodied in Courts Art. § 3-817 (c) meets the constitutional due process test. Upon review we find that the court below amply considered all сriteria and that sufficient evidence existed to justify the waiver.
Judgment affirmed.
Costs to be paid by the appellant.
Notes
. We do not address the argument that the "beyond a reasonable doubt” standard is constitutionally required in juvenile waiver heаrings. We have emphatically stated our position with respect thereto in Hazell v. State,
