An arrest warrant was issued on July 29, 2009, against then 15-year-old C. B.
Because she was not indicted within 180 days of her detention as required by OCGA § 17-7-50.1, the superior court entered an order granting C. B.’s motion to transfer the case to the juvenile court. However, shortly after the case was transferred to the juvenile court, the State filed a motion to transfer the
As the superior court properly found, it was required to transfer the case to the juvenile court pursuant to the mandatory provisions of OCGA § 17-7-50.1, which provide in relevant part as follows:
(a) Any child who is charged with a crime that is within the jurisdiction of the superior court, as provided in Code Section 15-11-28 or 15-11-30.2, who is detained shall within 180 days of the date of detention be entitled to have the charge against him or her presented to the grand jury. . . .
Further, subsection (b) of that Code section provides that:
(b) If the grand jury does not return a true bill against the detained child within the time limitations set forth in subsection (a) of this Code section, the detained child’s case shall be transferred to the juvenile court and shall proceed thereafter as provided in Chapter 11 of Title 15.
In this case, the State failed to procure an indictment against C. B. within 180 days of the date she was detained. Thus, pursuant to the mandatory language of that section as well as recent precedent of this Court, the superior court lost jurisdiction of the case and was required to transfer the case to the appropriate juvenile court. Hill v. State,
This question appears to be one of first impression. The State argues that the transfer back was proper because nothing in OCGA § 17-7-50.1 explicitly prevents such a transfer and because this Court has previously approved a transfer back to a superior court after the superior court transferred the case to the juvenile court. In the Interest of C. G.,
Although we agree that nothing in the statute specifically prohibits a transfer back to the superior court, we find the transfer in this case was nevertheless improper. The time limits set forth in OCGA § 17-7-50.1 are plainly stated and mandatory. Hill,
the statute plainly adopts the date of detention ... as the point from which the time is calculated, and it explicitly applies whether the child is initially subject to the jurisdiction of the superior court through committing an enumerated offense, OCGA § 15-11-28, or via a transfer to the superior court after a petition and hearing, OCGA § 15-11-30.2. OCGA § 17-7-50.1 (a).
Hill,
Moreover, although OCGA § 17-7-50.1 allows the State to request one automatic 90-day extension, as we also recently decided in Nunnally,
Further, we believe the case of In the Interest of C. G.,
It is clear to us that the legislature intended to set time limitations for the State to act in those situations in which the juvenile is detained and the superior court is exercising jurisdiction over the matter pursuant to either OCGA § 15-11-28 (b) or OCGA § 15-11-30.2, and those time limitations would be eviscerated if the juvenile court’s transfer order in this case is allowed to stand. Thus, the juvenile court’s transfer order must be reversed and the case transferred back to the juvenile court.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
C. B. was born on August 2, 1993.
The transfer order is directly appealable. Rocha v. State,
In this case, the State also sought a “retroactive” extension to present the case to the grand jury, but the trial court denied the State’s motion, and the State apparently did not seek to appeal that order.
That section provides:
If it appears to any court in a criminal proceeding or a quasi-criminal proceeding that the defendant is a child, except in cases where the superior court has exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction as provided in subsection (b) of Code Section 15-11-28, the case shall forthwith be transferred to the juvenile court together with a copy of the accusatory pleading and all other papers, documents, and transcripts of testimony relating to the case. . . .
