PEOPLE v. ROSS.
Docket No. 177
Supreme Court of Michigan
Decided July 1, 1926
235 Mich. 433
BIRD, C. J., and SHARPE, FELLOWS, WIEST, CLARK, and MCDONALD, JJ., concurred. Justice MOORE took no part in this decision.
Although the statutes of this State define degrees of murder and prescribe punishment, they leave prosecutions to follow the course of the common law.1
2. INFANTS—JUVENILE COURT ACT—PROVISO AS TO WAIVER OF JURISDICTION BY PROBATE COURT HAS REFERENCE TO AGE WHEN CHARGED RATHER THAN WHEN OFFENSE COMMITTED.
The proviso in the juvenile court act (
3. SAME—STATUTES—REPEAL BY IMPLICATION.
The provision in
4. SAME—CHILD UNDER 17 COMMITTING FELONY MUST BE SUBMITTED TO PROBATE COURT—WAIVER OF JURISDICTION.
Where a child under the age of 17 years and above the age of 15 years is charged in a criminal proceeding with a felony, and his age is ascertained during the pendency of said charge, the officer making the arrest, or the court ascertaining the age, must submit the matter to the juvenile court, and that court may waive jurisdiction and permit the child to be tried in the court having general сriminal jurisdiction of the offense.4
5. HOMICIDE—NO LIMITATION OF TIME IN MAKING CHARGE.
There is no limitation of time within which one committing murder must be charged therewith.5
6. INFANTS—JUVENILE COURT LAW—NO THEORY OF IRRESPONSIBILITY OF CHILDREN TO COMMIT CRIME.
The juvenile court law does not proceed on the theory that there is a period of irresponsibility in regard to crime or legal incapacity to commit crime by children, but leaves the common-law rule in full force, except as to procedure against offenders under the age of 15 yеars at the time they are charged with a felony.6
7. SAME—HOMICIDE—JUVENILE COURT HAS NO JURISDICTION OVER CRIMINAL OFFENSES.
A child may not be charged with or held for the crime of murder in the juvenile court, since that court has no jurisdiction over criminal offenses, the proceedings therein being in no sense criminal.7
One is not in law charged with a felony within the meaning of the juvenile court act (
9. CRIMINAL LAW—CHARGE IS FIRST STEP IN PROSECUTION.
A charge is the first step in the prosecution of a crime, being an accusation in legal form, made in the course of procedure for the apprehension of an offender and his trial before a court of competent jurisdiction.9
10. INFANTS—JUVENILE COURT ACT—WAIVER OF JURISDICTION BY PROBATE COURT VALID—CRIMINAL LAW.
Where a boy 35 days under the age of 15 years committed the crime of murder, waiver of jurisdiction by the probate court under the provisions of the juvenile court act (
BIRD, C. J., and SNOW and MCDONALD, JJ., dissenting.
Exceptions before judgment from Marquette; Flannigan (Richard C.), J. Submitted February 9, 1926. (Docket No. 177.) Decided July 1, 1926.
Fred Ross, Jr., was convicted of murder in the second degree. Affirmed.
Clarence E. Lott, for appellant.
Andrew B. Dougherty, Attorney General, and Thomas Clancey, Prosecuting Attorney, for the people.
BIRD, C. J. (dissenting). Defendant was charged with murder in the Marquette circuit court and convicted, and the case comes to this court on exceptions before sentence. It appears that at the time the crime was committed, on July 10, 1925, the defendant was
”Provided, however, that in any case where a child over the age of fifteen years is charged with a felony, the judge of probate may, after investigation and examination, and upon motion of the prosecuting attorney, waive jurisdiction; whereupon it shall be lawful to try such child in the court having general criminal jurisdiction of such offense.”
Act No. 105, Pub. Acts 1923, § 6 .
This motion was granted. Jurisdiction was waived by the probate court, and defendant was then taken into the circuit court, where he was charged, tried, and convicted of second-degree murder. Defendant‘s counsel moved to quash the information because the defendant was under 15 years of age when the offense was committed, and, therefore, the probate court could not waive jurisdiction. The trial court denied the motion on the ground that defendant was 15 years of age when charged with the offense in the circuit court.
The sole question raised is whether the probate court can waive jurisdiction where the boy is 15 years of age when charged, but where the offense for which he is charged was committed while he was 14 years of age. In construing this proviso, we should keep in
”Provided, however, That in any case where a child over the age of fifteen years commits a felony the judge of probate,” etc.
This is the only interpretation that is in accord and consistent with the constitutional and legislative changes, and the only interpretation that will work out the purpose of the law. This question has been before other courts. An interesting case is that of Mattingly v. Commonwealth, 171 Ky. 222 (188 S. W. 370). It was there said, in part:
“Upon the question of jurisdiction the only point raised here that is not concluded by former decisions of this court is the suggestion that the age at the timе of trial, rather than at the time the crime was committed, should prevail. This suggestion, however, is, in our judgment, unsound from the very terms of the statute as well as upon reason. The statute defines a ‘delinquent’ child to be one who, of the ages specified, commits any of the acts named, including the crime charged here, and then vests in county courts of the State exclusive jurisdiction to try such ‘delinquent’ children. They become ‘delinquent’ children by the commission of the act denounced when the acts are committed, and the jurisdiction then vests exclusively in the county court, which court, having thus acquired exclusive jurisdiction, cannot be ousted by its failure to act. The very purpose of this law, as has been declared by this court upon more occasions than one, is to provide for the protection and care of juvenile offenders in a humanitarian effort to prevent them from becoming outcasts and criminals rather than to inflict punishment for their delinquencies. To hold that the officers charged with the execution of the law may defer action until the offending child has passed the age thus protected by the statute, and then prose-
cute him as a criminal, and not as a juvenile, would defeat the very purpose of the lаw and cannot be sanctioned.”
Other cases in accord are Waters v. Commonwealth, 171 Ky. 457 (188 S. W. 490); Compton v. Commonwealth, 194 Ky. 429 (240 S. W. 36); Ex parte Parnell (Okla. Cr.), 200 Pac. 456; In re Tom, 17 Cal. App. 678 (121 Pac. 294); People v. Oxnam, 170 Cal. 211 (149 Pac. 165); State v. Thomas, 250 Mo. 189 (157 S. W. 330); Sams v. State, 133 Tenn. 188 (180 S. W. 173); State v. Coble, 181 N. C. 554 (107 S. E. 132); State v. Superior Court, 105 Wash. 684 (179 Pac. 79).
Due, undoubtedly, to the many changes in this law in recent years, there appears to be no provision for the disposition of delinquent children under 15 years of age who commit felonies beyond the usual penalties for minor delinquencies. This is a subject for legislative consideration.
The judgment of conviction should be set aside and defendant should be committed to the cаre of the county agent and confined in the detention home until the further order of the probate court.
SNOW and MCDONALD, JJ., concurred with BIRD, C. J.
WIEST, J. I am not in accord with the opinion prepared by the Chief Justice. It may be well to state the case we have before us: Defendant believed that August LaPlant, a neighbor, had money, so, July 10, 1925, he took a rifle and shells from the family home, and, accompanied by his 11-year old brother, lay in wait alongsidе the railroad track over which he knew Mr. LaPlant would walk on his return from the city of Negaunee. When Mr. LaPlant had passed the hiding place, defendant stepped upon the railroad track and shot him in the back, killing him instantly. Then defendant robbed the body of a pocket-book con-
In considering the provisions of the juvenile court act, we should keeр in mind certain principles firmly established for the protection of life and the safeguarding of society. Our statutes define degrees of murder and prescribe punishments, but leave prosecutions to follow the course of the common law. Construction of the juvenile court act is aided by consideration of all of its provisions, and, when this is done, it clearly appears that it is the age of the child when charged in a criminal proceeding with a felony rather than his age at the time of the commission of a felony that is contemplated. At the time defendant committed the crime of murder, and when the proceeding was instituted in the juvenile court and when that court waived jurisdiction that a criminal prosecution might be instituted in the circuit court, there stood upon the statute book the following provision with reference to juvenile courts:
“Proceedings under this act shall not be deemed to be criminal proceedings and this act shall not prevent
the trial by criminal procedure in the proper courts of children over fourteen years of age, charged with the commission of a felony.” 1 Comp. Laws 1915, § 2012 .
That provision clearly related to criminal proceedings in the circuit court against children over 14 years of аge at the time of trial, if charged with the commission of a felony. The provision mentioned remained a part of the statute until amended by
”Provided, however, That in any case where a child over the age of fifteen years is charged with a felony, the judge of probate may, after investigation and ex-
amination, and upon motion of the prosecuting attorney, waive jurisdiction; whereupon it shall be lawful to try such child in the court having general criminal jurisdiction of such offense.”
This clearly relates to a charge of crime pending in a court of criminal jurisdiction. Where a child under the age of 17 years and above the age of 15 years is charged in a criminal proceeding with a felony, and his age is ascertained during the pendency of a criminal case against him, the officer mаking the arrest, or the court ascertaining the age, must submit the matter to the juvenile court, and that court may, where a child over the age of 15 years is so charged with a felony, waive jurisdiction and permit the child to be tried in the court having general criminal jurisdiction of the offense.
The learned circuit judge accepted the act of 1923 as it reads, and held the language that, in any case where a child over the age of 15 years is charged with a felony, the judge of probate may waive jurisdiction, contemplates the age at the time of the charge in a court of criminal jurisdiction, and not the age at the time of committing the felony. The circuit judge was right. Such construction avoids an astounding possibility attending my Brother‘s construction.
Suppose a youth, one day under 15 years of age, lies in wait, deliberately shoots and kills a neighbor, robs and hides the body, conceals the weapon, and is not discovered as the murderer until he is one day past the age of 17 years, then, if my Brother is right, the offender is beyond the reach of the law, for his age at the date of the crime fixes exclusive jurisdiction in the juvenile court, and that court has no jurisdiction
The statute in question leaves with the judge of the juvenile court determination whether jurisdiction will be retained or be waived, thereby providing for the sifting of those who should respond for their crimes from those who can be weaned from vicious habits and turned to respectable citizenship. The juvenile law does not proceed on the theory that there is a period of irresponsibility in regard to crime or legal incapacity to commit сrime by children, but leaves the well-known common-law rule in full force, except as to procedure against offenders under the age of 15 years at the time they are charged with a felony. Defendant was not, and could not be charged with or held for the crime of murder in the juvenile court; that court has no jurisdiction over criminal offenses, for the proceedings there are in no sense criminal. One is not in law charged with a felony, within the meaning of this statute, until the charge is made in a court having criminal jurisdiction. The juvenile law is commendable in purpose, and recognizes there may be felonies committed by vicious juveniles for whom the benign provisions of that law would prove wholly unsuited and against whom the criminal law should take its course.
A charge is the first step in the prosecution of a crime; it is an accusation in legal form, made in the course of procedure for the aрprehension of an offender and his trial before a court of competent jurisdiction.
“A criminal charge, strictly speaking, exists only when a formal written complaint has been made against the accused and a prosecution initiated. It is true the popular understanding of the term is ‘accusation,’ and it is freely used with reference to all accusations, whether oral, in the newspapers, or otherwise; but in legal phraseology it is properly limited to such accusations as have taken shape in a prosecution. In the eyes of the law a person is charged with crime only when he is called upon in a legal proceeding to answer to such a charge. Mere investigation by prosecuting officers, or even the inquiry and consideration by examining magistrates of the propriety of initiating a prosecution, do not of themselves create a criminal charge.” United States v. Patterson, 150 U. S. 65 (14 Sup. Ct. 20).
The cases cited by my Brother, with two exceptions, relate to prosecutions in the criminal courts without preliminary proceedings in the juvenile courts. In Mattingly v. Commonwealth, 171 Ky. 222 (188 S. W. 370), the court held, under a statute somewhat different from ours, that the date of the crime governs the question of jurisdiction. We have stated our reasons for not following this decision.
In State v. Coble, 181 N. C. 554 (107 S. E. 132), the court followed the rule stated in Mattingly v. Commonwealth, supra. The statute of Tennessee involved in Sams v. State, 133 Tenn. 188 (180 S. W. 173), is not at all like ours. In State v. Thomas, 250 Mo. 189 (157 S. W. 330), the question of the jurisdiction of the juvenile court turned on the age of defendant at the time of the trial. In People v. Oxnam, 170 Cal. 211 (149 Pac. 165), it appears the statute of California made it the duty of judges, upon the suggestion that,
“‘the person charged is under 18 years of age,’ * * * to suspend all proceedings and examine into the question of age, and if, ‘from such examination, it shall appear to the satisfaction of said judge that said рerson is under the age above specified,’ he shall certify the matter to the juvenile court, and ‘immediately thereupon all proceedings against the said person on said charge shall be suspended until said juvenile court shall issue its mandate * * * directing the court * * * to proceed.‘”
That statute appears to relate to age at the time of trial. The same may be said of In re Tom, 17 Cal. App. 678 (121 Pac. 294), and Ex parte Parnell (Okla. Cr.), 200 Pac. 456.
While the waiver of jurisdiction was made at a time defendant had not yet been charged, under criminal procedure, with a felony, I think the waiver was valid.
The conviction is affirmed, and judgment advised.
SHARPE, STEERE, FELLOWS, and CLARK, JJ., concurred with WIEST, J.
