This is an appeal from a judgment of the Chittenden District Court, sitting as a juvenile court, adjudicating the juvenile appellant, J. E. G., a delinquent child and trans-' ferring custody to the Commissioner of Corrections. 33 V.S.A. § 657(a) (3). The issues presented for our review are: (1) whether the juvenile’s confession should have been suppressed because it was the product of custodial interrogation, taken in violation of the constitutional safeguards articulated in Miranda v. Arizona,
On January 24, 1981, J. E. G., a thirteen year old, was taken into custody by the South Burlington Police Department, 33 V.S.A. § 639 (1), as a suspect in the setting of two to four simultaneous fires at a neon sign company in South Burlington. J. E. G.’s father was notified and, after his arrival at the police station, J. E. G., in the presence of his father, was advised of his Miranda rights. J. E. G., with the assent of his father, agreed to police questioning, during the course of which he denied responsibility for the fires. A temporary detention hearing was held, and, following the issuance of a temporary detention order, 33 V.S.A. § 642, J. E. G. was turned over to two deputy sheriffs for transportation to the Waterbury juvenile detention center.
The court found that, while in the car, J. E. G. initiated a conversation with the officers. In response to his expression of anxiety over being kept at the juvenile detention center, the officers assured him he would be well treated. J. E. G. asked the officers if they knew what the penalty for arson was, to' which they responded that they did not. He then told the offi
J. E. G. contends that the officer’s “what” constitutes custodial interrogation and because there had been no renewal of Miranda warnings the court should have suppressed his confession. Assuming, arguendo, that the “what” amounted to interrogation, the record clearly shows, and the court so found, that J. E. G.’s inculpatory statements were made prior to rather than in response to or as a result of the officer’s “what.” The court found, and the finding is not refuted by J. E. G., that he initiated the conversation with the officers during which he stated he set the fires. He points to no other statements or aspects of the officers’ conduct or demeanor amounting to an “ ‘interrogation environmenf created by the interplay of interrogation and custody” that subjugated him to the will of the officers. Rhode Island v. Innis,
We are mindful that the appellant here is a juvenile and that we are required to exercise special caution when the issue of a juvenile confession arises. In re Gault,
J. E. G. next argues that he was denied his right to a speedy resolution of the delinquency proceedings as guaranteed by the juvenile procedures act, Chapter 12, Title 33, and as articulated by our holding in In re B. M. L.,
We note first that appellant failed to raise either aspect of his speedy resolution argument below. We have often held that matters not raised below, even of a constitutional significance, will not be considered by this Court on appeal. Rassman v. American Fidelity Co.,
The first prong of appellant’s argument concerns the interpretation to be given to 33 V.S.A. § 647 (a). This section provides in pertinent part:
At the time of the filing of the petition, . . . the court shall fix a time for a hearing thereon, which, if the child is in detention or shelter care, shall not be later than fifteen days after the filing thereof ....
The State filed its delinquency petition, 33 V.S.A. § 645(b), on January 26,1981, at which time the court ordered J. E. G.’s continued placement at the Waterbury detention center, and set hearing on the petition for February 4,1981. On February 4, the court convened for the purpose of hearing the petition, but the appropriate authorities had, for some unexplained reason, failed to transport J. E. G. from Waterbury to the court. The court ordered the hearing continued. The next day, February 5, the court convened again with all parties present. The court found jurisdiction, and probable cause. Substitute counsel for J. E. G. entered a denial to the delinquency petition. The court then continued the hearing, apparently to allow J. E. G.’s regular attorney time to prepare. The hearing reconvened on February 25,1981.
Although both appellate counsel for J. E. G. and counsel for the State assume that the merits hearing required to be held by § 647 (a) was not held until February 25, this conflicts with our holding in In re R. S.,
J. E. G. next argues that the aggregate delay of 80 days between the January 24 temporary detention order and the May 18 disposition hearing and order, while not in violation of any specific statutory requirement of Chapter 12, nevertheless violates the legislative intent that proceedings under Chapter 12 be resolved in a speedy manner. In re B. M. L., supra,
Once again, however, we remind the courts that “ [t] he important policies supporting the speedy resolution of juvenile proceedings outweigh the hardship imposed upon the parties by requiring them to prepare their cases on short notice.” In re R. S., supra,
Affirmed.
