16 P.2d 765 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1932
This is an appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, sitting as a juvenile court, declaring Louis Pierce to be a ward of said court and ordering that he be committed to the Preston School of Industry at Ione, until further order of the court. It appears that no phonographic reporter was present at the hearing, hence no transcript of the proceedings could be prepared. Counsel for appellant has not seen fit to have prepared a bill of exceptions. The appeal therefore is presented on the judgment-roll alone. From the record thus presented it is made to appear first, that a petition was duly filed alleging that Louis Pierce was sixteen years of age and a person such as is defined in subdivision 13 of section 1 of the Juvenile Court Law in that on a certain date he had committed a lewd and lascivious act upon the body of a child, said act constituting a violation of section
[1] Appellant urges several reasons which he maintains warrant a reversal of the order. It is first contended that an unreasonable time elapsed between the date of the alleged commission of the offense and the filing of the petition seeking to have the minor declared a ward of the court. The offense is alleged to have been committed on April 24, 1932, and the petition was filed on June 2, 1932. The mere recitation of the above-mentioned dates is sufficient to dispose of the contention. We know of no rule of law and can *775 conceive of no legal theory that would justify us in holding that the delay in filing the petition was unreasonable.
[2] Appellant's second contention may likewise be readily determined. It is pointed out that section 3 of the Juvenile Court Law requires that, prior to the filing of a petition showing that a person has come within the provisions of section 1 of the act, "the probation officer of said county shall make such investigation as he may deem necessary, and no petition shall be filed without the approval of such probation officer except by order of the juvenile court". It is then said that the record herein fails to show that the probation officer made any investigation prior to the filing of the petition. As above noted, the appeal herein is taken on the judgment-roll alone. Under such circumstances, we must assume that the proceedings taken in the lower court were regular in all respects (Caruthers v. Hensley,
[3] Appellant's third and fourth contentions may be treated together. These contentions are that custody of the minor was improperly removed from the mother of said minor and that the findings of fact recited in the order are insufficient to invest the court with jurisdiction to make the order by which the minor was adjudged to be a ward of the court. Section 9b of the Juvenile Court Law provides as follows: "Taking Ward from Parent. No ward of the juvenile court as defined in this act shall be taken from the custody of his parent or legal guardian, without the consent of such parent or guardian unless the court shall find such parent or guardian to be incapable of providing or to have failed or neglected to provide proper maintenance, training and education for said person; or unless said person has been tried on probation in said custody and has failed to reform, or unless said person has been convicted of crime by a jury, or unless the court shall find that the welfare of said person requires that his custody be taken from said parent or guardian." In the order from which this appeal is taken the court found, first, that notice of the filing and hearing of the petition had been given in all respects as required by law; second, that the minor resides in Orange County and is 16 years of age; third, that *776
the minor is a person coming within the provisions of subdivision 13 of section 1 of the Juvenile Court Law. There is no finding that the parent of the minor is incapable of providing or has failed or neglected to provide proper maintenance, training and education for said minor or that a minor has been tried on probation in the custody of the parent and has failed to reform or that the minor has been convicted of crime by a jury or that the welfare of the minor requires that his custody be taken from the parent. [4] It has been decided that the court must make the findings required by section 9b of the act and in writing (In re Brodie,
While the offense here charged, if found to have been committed by this minor, might well justify his removal from the custody of a parent by a juvenile court, if it appears from all of the circumstances that his welfare requires such action, the statute requires what must be found by the judge of the juvenile court before this may be done. If the facts justify the required finding, the making thereof is a *778 simple matter, and in no way opens the door to those technicalities and formalities in juvenile court proceedings, which the entire spirit and purpose of that act demand should be kept therefrom.
For the single reason herein noted the order from which this appeal is taken is reversed and the matter is remanded to the juvenile court for such action as may be appropriate in conformity with the views herein expressed.
*779Barnard, P.J., and Marks, J., concurred.