Opinion
The minor defendants, Brian H. and Jeffery M., appeal orders committing them to the Youth Authority and specifying maximum three-year terms. The commitments depend upon true findings of Penal Code section 71, the offenses of threatening a public official, which may be either a misdemeanor or a felony upon a first conviction. The trial court did not state at the hearing what the degree of the offenses was, hence defendants contend violation of the mandatory second paragraph of Welfare and Institutions Code section 702 stating the court shall declare whether the underlying offense is a misdemeanor or a felony.
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The People respond with these arguments: the accusatory pleadings (petitions) describe the offenses as felonies; the clerk’s minute orders for the hearing and the formal commitment orders both indicate felony status by the use of a circled “F”; and the evidence indicates several prior offenses for each minor so that it is highly improbable the court intended to classify the offenses as misdemeanors. All these arguments were rejected by
In re Dennis C.
(1980)
We find these facts substantially indistinguishable from those in Dennis C., supra, and like the court there, we agree the statute means what it says, and requires the court to expressly consider the classification of the underlying offense and make a specific finding. Courts should do what the law requires. Nothing should be subject to surmise. To affirm these orders is to encourage sloppy performance of duty.
The orders are reversed and the matters remanded to the juvenile court for a new dispositional hearing in light of this opinion.
Notes
Before Brown (Gerald), P. J., Staniforth, J. and Work, J.
