*1500 Opinion
credits—for time spent both on “house arrest” and in two of his nonsecure prior placements—against his maximum term of commitment to the Youth Authority. He also claims the amount of credit otherwise calculated by the juvenile court is incorrect. In the published portion of this opinion, we reject the former contention. In the unpublished portion, we decline to reach the latter. As a result, we shall affirm.
Facts
The nature of the minor’s appellate contentions renders irrelevant any facts relating to his offenses, so we will not recount them. Pursuant to a July 1989 petition, the juvenile court ordered the minor to be subject to home arrest from July 24 to August 14, and again from September 26 to February 28, 1990. At a March 15, 1990, dispositional hearing, the court determined the minor was subject to a maximum period of physical confinement of five years, against which he was entitled to credit of twenty-eight days. The court removed the minor from his parents’ custody, granted probation, and committed him to the custody of the probation department for placement with a relative, foster home, group home, or private school.
The probation department placed the minor at an institution called “Pride House” in Martinez on April 2. On June 6, the minor ran away from the placement and was taken into custody by the probation department on June 8. According to the respondent, the minor returned to Pride House on June 12. The minor ran away a second time on June 19; the probation department obtained a bench warrant for his arrest. The probation department obtained custody of the minor on July 29.
Pursuant to a supplemental petition filed in August based on the failed placement with Pride House, the court ordered the minor committed to the Youth Authority, but suspended the commitment in favor of a placement with a Nevada-based “Rite of Passage” program. At this time, the court calculated predispositional custody credits of 85 days. The minor arrived at Rite of Passage on October 18.
Although the minor received a satisfactory evaluation of his progress in the program in February 1992, on March 15 he failed to return after a home visitation. On May 4, he was involved in an accident while driving a stolen car. Giving the police an alias, he was processed as an adult and subsequently escaped from the Men’s Honor Farm on May 18. On June 18, the *1501 probation department regained custody of the minor. 2 Pursuant to a supplementary petition based on the minor’s involvement with the stolen car, the court ordered the minor committed to the Youth Authority on July 28. The court calculated the maximum term of confinement at five years, eight months, and the amount of predispositional custody credits at one hundred eighty-six days.
Discussion
I
In pertinent part, Welfare and Institutions Code section 726 (undesignated section references will be to this code) provides, “In any case in which the minor is removed from the physical custody of his parent ... as the result of an order of wardship made pursuant to Section 602, the order shall specify that the minor may not by held in physical confinement for a period in excess of the maximum term of imprisonment which could be imposed upon an adult convicted of the offense . . . which brought ... the minor under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court. [¶] As used in this section and Section 731, ‘maximum term of imprisonment’ means the longest of the three time periods set forth in [Pen. Code, 1170, subd. (a)(2)], but without the need to follow the provisions of [Pen. Code, § 1170, subd. (b)] or to consider time for good behavior or participation pursuant to [Pen. Code, §§ 2930-2932], plus enhancements which must be proven if pled.” The statute subsequently defines physical confinement as “placement in a juvenile hall, ranch, camp, forestry camp[,] or secure juvenile home pursuant to Section 730, or in any institution operated by the Youth Authority.” 3 (Italics supplied.)
As a less restrictive alternative for a section 602 ward to the placements otherwise authorized by sections 730 and 731 (i.e., secure facilities and the
*1502
Youth Authority), those statutes authorize thé juvenile court to order a placement pursuant to section 727
(In re Harm R.
(1979)
With these statutes in mind, we now address the minor’s arguments. Conceding that neither Pride House nor Rite of Passage is a secure facility as defined by section 726, 4 the minor asserts he is nonetheless entitled to credit for time spent in these facilities (as well as for home arrest). To render his analysis down to its bare bones, he claims the provisions of Penal Code section 2900.5 (the statute governing custody credits for adult offenders) are either directly applicable to him or should be applied by analogy in interpreting section 726. In the alternative, he claims there is a violation of the constitutional doctrine of equal protection if he is denied custody credits.
II
In terms of statutory analysis, there are two components to our inquiry. The first is whether the Legislature intended minors to receive custody credits. Only then can we consider in what types of placements the Legislature intended minors to accrue credit against any subsequent physical confinement. The axiom guiding our inquiry is that our primary task in construing statutes is to determine the Legislature’s intent.
(Brown
v.
Kelly Broadcasting Co.
(1989)
A
On the question of a minor’s entitlement to custody credit for an earlier physical confinement, the Supreme Court addressed the issue in
In re Eric J.
(1979)
Thus, under
In re Eric J., supra,
The minor acknowledges that the Supreme Court subsequently described the direct applicability of Penal Code section 2900.5 to minors as a “subject
*1504
of some uncertainty.”
(In re Ricky H.
(1981)
Thus governing authority entitles minors to custody credits solely as a matter of interpretation of section 726. We must now examine the types of facilities in which a minor may earn custody credit pursuant to section 726.
B
As a matter of statutory analysis, the minor’s claim of entitlement to credit for time spent on home arrest, at Pride House, and in the Rite of
*1505
Passage program quickly falls in light of our elucidation of the nature of the entitlement to custody credit. Under
In re Eric. supra,
Although the minor points to a number of amendments to other statutes, none of these change the pertinent language of section 726 and are therefore irrelevant. Similarly irrelevant is the Legislature’s failure to provide explicitly in the section 726 definition for any time spent in county jail. In
In re Mikeal D., supra,
We therefore find ourselves in accord with
In re Harm R., supra,
Ill
This leaves the minor’s equal protection argument. As he views it, “[w]ithin the class of wards removed from their parents’ custody, there are two classes, those committed to government[-]operated juvenile facilities and those committed to other facilities. Under current state law, those committed to govemment[-]operated juvenile facilities or jails are entitled to have their time served credited against their maximum period of imprisonment [sic]. In contrast, wards committed by the court to privately[-]operated juvenile facilities, no matter how similar they may be to government[-] operated juvenile facilities, are not entitled to such credit.”
The prerequisite to any meritorious claim under the doctrine of equal protection of the laws is a showing that the state has adopted a classification that affects two or more similarly situated groups.
re Eric J., supra,
Thus, properly framed, the distinction drawn by the statute is between section 602 minors placed in nonsecure facilities and section 602 minors placed in facilities that can permissibly be secured. These are not similarly situated categories, and the Legislature consequently is entitled to treat them differently without running afoul of equal protection.
IV *
Disposition
The judgment (order) is affirmed.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 12, 1994.
Notes
After turning 18 years old in July, the minor was transferred to the county jail pending disposition of his case.
To set out the provisions of the pertinent cross-referenced statutes, section 730 provides in relevant part, “When a minor is adjudged a ward of the court on the ground that he is a person described by Section 602, the court may order any of the types of treatment referred to in Section 727, and as an additional alternative, may commit the minor to a juvenile home, ranch, camp or forestry camp. If there [are none of the latter alternatives] within the county, the court may commit the minor to the county juvenile hall.”
In relevant part, section 731 provides, “When a minor is adjudged a ward of the court. . . [under] Section 602, the court may order any of the types of treatment referred to in Sections 727 and 730 and, in addition, may order [restitution, a fine, uncompensated work programs, commitment to a sheltered-care facility, or family counseling as a condition of continued parental custody] or may commit the minor to the Department of the Youth Authority. [¶] A minor committed to the Department of the Youth Authority may not be held in physical confinement for a period of time in excess of the maximum period of imprisonment which could be imposed upon an adult [for the same crime or crimes].”
Section 727 will be subsequently cited in the text.
Both parties seem to assume these facilities come within section 727, perhaps as a residual category. Since the question of custody credits for these facilities was never raised in the juvenile court, their exact nature is not a matter of record. The minor cites extensively to facts derived from the report of a select committee of the state Senate. They are unsuitable for judicial notice. It will be sufficient for our purposes to accept that these are section 727 facilities.
In re Harm. R., supra,
In contrast, the statute expressly states the calculation of the adult maximum period of confinement should not include any conduct credits.
He also cites our decision of
In re John H.
(1992)
The court concluded that a minor’s failure to remain at home under a home confinement program was not within the ambit of the “escape” statute (§ 871). (214 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1614-1615.)
This doctrine is developed in
People
v.
Rodgers
(1978)
See footnote 1, ante, page 1497.
