In re J.B., a Person Coming
H049130 (Santa Cruz County Super. Ct. No. J22783C)
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
Filed 2/18/22
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
J.B.,
Defendant and Appellant.
I. INTRODUCTION
Minor J.B. challenges the juvenile court‘s order committing him to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Justice (DJJ)1 on the most recently sustained juvenile wardship petition, where minor admitted committing second degree murder (
Minor contends that the juvenile court lacked authority under
Based on our de novo review of
II. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
The parties stipulated that the factual basis for minor‘s plea were the facts adduced at the transfer hearing and the preliminary hearing. Neither hearing is part of the record on appeal. At the jurisdictional hearing, the prosecution summarized the facts as follows: “[O]n or about August 8th, 2012 [minor] and a number of other minors drove to the City of Santa Cruz from the City of Watsonville and sought and located the juvenile victim Joey M. [Minor] then shot and killed Joey M. in the County and City of Santa Cruz.” The prosecution stated that the offense occurred “in the context of gang activity.” Minor‘s counsel added, “[T]he group of which [minor] was a part was not specifically looking for victim Joey M. but happened upon him.”
B. Procedural History
1. Prior 602 Petitions4
On August 20, 2012, in case No. J22783, minor admitted the allegation that on July 16, 2012, he committed misdemeanor resisting, delaying, or obstructing a peace officer (
On November 6, 2012, in case No. J22783A, minor admitted the allegation that on October 11, 2012, he possessed a concealable pistol, revolver, or other firearm as a juvenile (
On January 4, 2013, in case No. J22783B, minor admitted the allegation that on December 15, 2012, he possessed a concealable pistol, revolver, or other firearm as a juvenile and admitted that he violated the terms of his probation. An additional misdemeanor allegation was dismissed. The juvenile
2. Current 602 Petition & Admission
In October 2013, minor was arrested for a homicide that occurred on August 8, 2012, when minor was 14 years old. According to the prosecution, “[t]he thorough investigation of the homicide and the discovery of all participants resulted in a delay between the date of the homicide and the filing of charges of almost 14 months.” The probation report details law enforcement‘s investigation of the homicide from August 8, 2012 through September 19, 2013.
The prosecution filed a complaint in adult court against minor on October 15, 2013.5 Minor was transferred to the county jail on October 27, 2015, after he turned 18. On December 16, 2016, after the passage of Proposition 57, which eliminated the ability of prosecutors to charge minors directly in adult court, the prosecution filed a petition in juvenile court alleging minor committed murder.6 A transfer hearing was conducted, and the juvenile court determined that minor should be transferred to adult court.
In March 2021, after extensive litigation, minor was transferred back to juvenile court based on the passage of Senate Bill No. 1391 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.), which amended Proposition 57 to prohibit the transfer to adult court of minors under age 16 at the time of the offense. (See
On April 16, 2021, in case No. J22783C, the prosecution filed an amended 602 petition alleging that minor committed murder (
3. Disposition Hearing on Current Petition
The prosecution moved the juvenile court to exercise its discretion under
Minor filed written opposition. Minor argued that the juvenile court was precluded from dismissing the prior petitions because the dismissals would occur post-disposition and because the court lost jurisdiction in those cases when the wardships terminated in 2018.7
At the May 4, 2021 disposition hearing, the juvenile court dismissed the previously adjudicated petitions in case Nos. J22738A and J22783B, declared minor a ward of the court, and committed him to DJJ.
Citing Greg F., the court observed that in deciding whether to exercise its discretion under
The court found that “[o]nly if [it] orders DJJ . . . is [minor] eligible to receive the help and assistance he still needs up to age 25 and transitional services by our local probation department three months before his release date.” The court explained that DJJ offers job training and certification programs as well as college classes, and that 90 days before a minor‘s release, probation helps the minor transition back to society, connecting the minor with counseling, therapy, and career counseling. The court observed that minor had witnessed violence, experienced isolation, periodically lacked a father figure, and had “kill[ed] a stranger [his] own age by shooting them in the back twice and liv[ed] out critical formative teenage years behind bars as a teen and now as a young adult. . . . [¶] All of those events led him and has kept him involved in the gang lifestyle as a northerner believing he is safer with them than without them. He is in need of cognitive behavioral interventions and modalities intensively available to him only in DJJ.” The court
The court found, “Releasing [minor] now without support only because he is over 21 and has aged out of other dispositional options, [would] make[] all that he, his family, and the victim‘s family have gone through these years without value.” The court observed that when minor was placed out of county during an earlier wardship, it “really helped [him]. And so I do believe that getting out of this lifestyle, out of the same connections to be able to go away and work on you will be really helpful and give you a break from the tension and the responsibilities that you feel to your gang lifestyle.” The court found minor amenable to treatment and that minor had “a higher need than most for intensive trauma focused cognitive behavior individual counseling.”
The court noted that minor had been in the county jail for the last three years where no programs were offered to him. The court stated, “I believe the encouragement and foundation for [minor‘s] success will be through the hard work and [DJJ] programs. . . . [¶] The year and a half available to him for rehabilitation will give him an opportunity to gain understanding of his trauma, find his independence, find his gifts, and get the encouragement by the mental health professional team, educational coaches, and career technical educators. [¶] I see him obtaining college credits, engaging in apprentice and career readiness programs, so when he returns to our county he has a way to choose a productive and safe future for himself, his family, and the community.” The court concluded, “[Minor‘s] mental and physical condition and qualifications render it probable that [he] will benefit from the reformatory discipline and other treatment provided by [DJJ].”
The court entered “the specific reasons” stated above for its dismissal of the adjudicated petitions pursuant to
III. DISCUSSION
Minor contends that the juvenile court was without authority to dismiss the previously adjudicated petitions in order to commit him to DJJ because
Although unlike Greg F. this case involves the dismissal of adjudicated petitions, for the reasons stated there and based on our de novo review of
A. Sections 733(c) and 782
Enacted in 2007 as part of the realignment legislation,
Subdivision (c) of
B. Greg F.
The minor in Greg F. was on probation for a 707(b) offense when he committed battery, a non-707(b) offense. (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 401, 405.) Rather than alleging a probation violation in a
A divided court held that the juvenile court had the discretion under
The court observed that “[f]or over 40 years,
Although the court found it unnecessary “to resort to legislative history,” the court found nothing in
The court limited its holding to the dismissal of a second petition to allow a DJJ commitment on a probation violation on the minor‘s previously sustained 602 petition (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 400, 420), and stated “no opinion” on whether a
C. Standard of Review
A
D. Section 733(c) Did Not Bar the Dismissal of the Adjudicated Petitions Under These Circumstances
As we stated above, the California Supreme Court in Greg F. upheld the juvenile court‘s
As the court observed in Greg F., “[n]othing in the language of
Indeed,
“If the juvenile court exercises its discretion under
in place—appellate review of a
The Legislature has not amended
While the Greg F. court questioned whether a
Based on the different procedural posture here, minor contends that Greg F. does not support the juvenile court‘s dismissal of the adjudicated petitions and that In re A.O. (2017) 18 Cal.App.5th 390 (A.O.) demonstrates that the juvenile court lacked the authority to dismiss. We find A.O. distinguishable.
In A.O., the Court of Appeal reversed the juvenile court‘s order dismissing a non-707(b) offense in a multicount petition and recommitting the minor to DJJ. (A.O., supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 392.) The dismissal was ordered for the sole purpose of rendering the minor DJJ-eligible and occurred after DJJ had rejected the court‘s initial commitment order because the minor‘s most recent offense was a non-707(b) offense. (Id. at pp. 392-393.) The Court of Appeal held that the commitment was barred by
Thus, A.O. does not stand for the proposition that a juvenile court‘s discretion to dismiss under
In his reply brief, minor relies on In re D.B. (2014) 58 Cal.4th 941 (D.B.) to urge this court to “enforc[e] the plain meaning of section 733(c).” In D.B., the California Supreme Court held that the plain language of
Unlike here, the juvenile court in D.B. did not exercise its discretion under
Minor contends “[t]here is no basis in this case for making an exception to the prohibition found in
We commend minor‘s progress and his amenability to treatment. However, minor‘s assertion that based on his progress “[h]e is not among the ‘most dangerous offenders’ ” does not bear on the statutory issue at hand—whether
As minor states, “the sole issue on appeal is a question of law: did the juvenile court have the power to dismiss eight-year-old petitions that rendered [him] ineligible for a DJ[J] commitment pursuant to
“Flexibility is the hallmark of juvenile court law.” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 411.) “The statutory scheme governing juvenile delinquency is designed to give the court ‘maximum flexibility to craft suitable orders aimed at rehabilitating the particular ward before it.‘” (Ibid., italics added; see In re Aline D. (1975) 14 Cal.3d 557, 566-567 [stating that if an assessment found that the minor “would not benefit from the treatment she would receive at [DJJ], and if no appropriate alternative placement exists at that time, then the proceedings should be dismissed” pursuant to
Based on our de novo review of
IV. DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
BAMATTRE-MANOUKIAN, J.
I CONCUR:
ELIA, ACTING P.J.
In re J.B.
H049130
Lie, J., Dissenting:
Urged by the prosecution to “take a risk” and “remedy the absurdity” of
I. Background of Section 733
In November 2004, the State of California stipulated to the entry of a consent decree in Farrell v. Harper (Super. Ct. Alameda County, 2003,
Seven years later, the Supreme Court concluded, “[a]lthough reasonable minds may debate the wisdom of the chosen approach, decisions about how to limit DJF commitments are the Legislature‘s to make. [¶] . . . [¶] The language of
B. Application of Greg F.
The persistence of argument over the utility of
Even assuming the interstitial opening Greg F. identified between
1. Status of the DJF-Ineligible Petition at Dismissal
Although the court in Greg F. “express[ed] no opinion on whether [a post-disposition] dismissal could ever be appropriate,” it cautioned that “[d]ismissing a 602 petition after disposition potentially raises a host of constitutional concerns not presented in the case before us.” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 415.) In Greg F., the admission of a DJF-ineligible offense had resulted in no material deprivation of the minor‘s liberty in the few days between admission and the dismissal of the petition: the minor was already detained in juvenile hall awaiting placement when he committed the DJF-ineligible offense and during pendency of the ensuing petition. (Id. at p. 401.)
But J.B., adjudged a ward of the court in 2012 only for DJF-ineligible offenses, was ordered to out-of-home placements, first in a local treatment facility, then in an out-of-county facility, for a period of approximately 10 months. Notwithstanding the record of their undisputed rehabilitative effect, the conditions of J.B.‘s wardship and his submission to those conditions
The majority suggests that J.B.‘s failure to allege a constitutional claim on appeal should allay Greg F.‘s “host of constitutional concerns” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 415) implicated by postdisposition dismissal for the purpose of evading
The Legislature has amended
2. Conduct of the Wardship Proceedings
In resolving the tension between
Nothing in the litigation of the instant wardship petitions suggests a need for accommodation analogous to those animating Greg F.‘s narrow holding. The record reflects neither haste nor inadvertence, but rather deliberate and consistent tactical choices over several years as the prosecution, as was its prerogative, exhausted every means of securing the maximum period of J.B.‘s confinement. Having initially charged J.B. as an adult, the prosecution responded to the passage of Proposition 57 by seeking his transfer back to the criminal court. When J.B. sought dismissal of the DJF-ineligible petitions during the transfer litigation, the prosecution opposed the request as ” ‘not justice.’ ” Upon the passage of Senate Bill 1391 (Stats. 2018, ch. 1012, § 1), the prosecution challenged the constitutionality of the new prohibition on the transfer of juveniles accused of committing crimes at age 14 or 15 unless first apprehended after the end of juvenile court jurisdiction. (
Accordingly, nothing in the practical exigencies of prosecuting the wardship petitions themselves would appear to necessitate any expansion of Greg F.
3. Absurdity Doctrine
Irrespective of the conduct of the wardship proceedings themselves, however, the record does support an inference that law enforcement would not
Although the majority concludes that D.B.‘s silence as to
Had the Legislature been content to continue relying on the ad hoc discretion of the juvenile court when the most recent offense alleged in any
LIE, J.
People v. J.B.
H049130
Trial Court: Santa Cruz County Superior Court
Superior Court No.: J22783C
Trial Judge: Hon. Denine J. Guy
Attorneys for Defendant and Appellant: J.B.
Paul Couenhoven Sixth District Appellate Program
Attorney for Plaintiff and Respondent: The People
Rob Bonta Attorney General of California Lance E. Winters Chief Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey M. Laurence Senior Assistant Attorney General Rene A. Chacon Supervising Deputy Attorney General Bruce Ortega Deputy Attorney General
In re J.B.
H049130
