IN RE D. M. D. (a minor), Appellant, v. STATE, Respondent.
No. 242
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
March 28, 1972
54 Wis. 2d 313 | 195 N. W. 2d 594
Argued March 1, 1972.
For the respondent the cause was argued by Sverre O. Tinglum, assistant attorney general, with whom on the brief was Robert W. Warren, attorney general.
ROBERT W. HANSEN, J. Challenged by this appeal is the issuance of a petition in a children‘s court proceeding without a prior judicial determination of probable cause.1 In so doing, appellant (1) analogizes the issuance of the petition in juvenile proceedings with the issuance of an arrest warrant in an adult criminal case; (2) assumes that all rights given defendants in adult criminal trials must be provided to juveniles in children‘s court proceedings; and (3) argues that issuance of a petition in a juvenile proceeding without a prior judicial determination of probable cause is constitutionally invalid. The analogy, the assumption and the argument alike require analysis.
Question. Is the issuance of a petition in a juvenile court proceeding the equivalent of issuing a warrant for arrest in an adult criminal case?
Answer. No. The arrest warrant creates a detentiоn situation. The petition does not. As the circuit judge noted, “The juvenile was never detained at any time as a result of these petitions. . . .” That would not be the case where an arrest warrant was served. “A warrant is а written order . . . commanding a law-enforcement officer to arrest a person and bring him before the magistrate. . . .”2 That involves placing the person
Question. Must all rights provided for the adult accused in criminal trials be imposed upon state juvenile court proceedings?
Answer. No. Even if an analogy between a petition in juvenile proceedings and an arrest warrant in аdult criminal cases could have been established, it would not follow, from that fact of analogy alone, that the statute authorizing issuance of such petitions would have to be struck down as constitutionally infirm. This is clear from a reading of the case of McKeiver v. Pennsylvania,6 dealing with this exact question. There the United States Supreme Court held that “. . . trial by jury in the juvenile court‘s adjudicative stage is not a constitutional requirement. . . .”7 In so doing, the high court mаjority “. . . refrained . . . from taking the easy way with a flat holding that all rights constitutionally assured for the adult accused are to be imposed upon the state juvenile proceeding.”8 Instead, it observed that: “If the formalities of the criminal adjudicative process are to be superimposed upon the juvenile court system, there is little need for its separate existence. . . .”9 Due process and fair treatment are to mark juvenile proceedings as well as adult trials. Both have a common harbor, the fair and just disposition of matters before the court, but they may sail by different routes to the shared destination. Each must avoid the reefs of constitutionally assured protections, but they need not sail side by side in so doing. Any analogy established between steps in juvenile proceedings with stages in the processing of criminal cases may be arguably persuasive, but it is not controlling.
Answer. Nо. Appellant argues that the issuance of the petition here, with no prior judicial determination of probable cause, is in violation of the fourth amendment of the United States Constitution. The case of In Re Gault,10 while not “. . . concerned with the procedures or constitutional rights applicable to the pre-judicial stages of the juvenile process . . .,”11 as we are here, made clear that “. . . the due process clause has a role to play”12 in juvenile court proceedings. However, due process is an exact synonym for fundamental fairness, so “. . . the applicable due process standard in juvenile prоceedings is fundamental fairness. . . .”13 Applying this test to the procedure here challenged requires a brief summary of the manner in which court inquiries are initiated and eventual dispositions made in Wisconsin juvenile courts undеr the juvenile code.14
The emphasis of the Wisconsin statutes in the early and preadjudicative phases of a juvenile court proceeding is entirely on fact-finding. When a problem involving a juvenile is brought to juvenile court attention, “. . . an investigation shall be made by persons designated by the court to determine the facts. . . .”15 If the facts indicate a problem over which the juvenile court has jurisdiction, a juvenile delinquenсy petition may be filed as a prelude to a formal court hearing, or the court may defer such petition and hearing if the child appears with his parents or guardian so that the court can recom-
In the case before us, the petition (in fact, two petitions) was issued. (Appellаnt contends that a summons was also issued although the summons does not appear in the record.) In response to the petition, or petition and summons, the appellant did appear in court at the proper time, but did not submit to the jurisdiction of the court, making a special appearance to contest such jurisdiction. At no time was appellant detained or placed in custody. As the circuit court put it: “She has remained secure. There has been no intrusion into her life.” At least, there has been no intrusion of a degree or significance sufficient to raise constitutional questions. She and her parents arе in the same situation as someone summoned to appear in court in civil litigation, or subpoenaed as a witness in a civil action or to testify before a grand jury. We do not have a situation where a juvenile has
By the Court.---Judgment affirmed.
WILKIE, J. (concurring). The narrow question presented in this appeal is whether a juvenile, who is not faced with the possibility of pretrial dеtention, has a constitutional right to a preliminary hearing. I agree that the child in this situation does not have such a right. I would affirm the order on that basis and not attempt to consider the very difficult questions of the extent duе
I am authorized to state that Mr. Justice HEFFERNAN joins in this concurring opinion.
