Opinion
Minor appeals from order sustaining petition, declaring him a ward of the court (§ 602, Welf. & Inst. Code) and imposing home probation.
*779 About 7 p.m. the minor and another juvenile were standing on a street corner; minor’s companion looked in the direction of officers riding in an unmarked patrol car and turned toward the minor whereupon the minor threw a bag over a hedge and his companion ducked behind a car. The bag, retrieved by one of the officers, contained less than an ounce of marijuana. The minor neither testified nor offered a defense.
The petition alleged that the minor was 17 years of age and comes within the provisions of section 602, in that on October 5, 1978, he possessed not more than one ounce of marijuana, thereby violating section 11357, subdivision (b), Health and Safety Code, a misdemeanor. When the People rested their case on the adjudication hearing, the minor moved to dismiss for insufficiency of evidence, and argued the matter to the court which denied the motion. Immediately thereafter the minor submitted the cause without further evidence or argument whereupon the court said “The court will sustain the petition;” no objection to this finding was made and it was followed by a colloquy concerning disposition. The minor now complains that because the court did not go through the form of articulating that the allegations of the petition are true, the subsequent dispositional hearing and order are void for lack of jurisdiction. Inasmuch as appellant disputes neither the legal sufficiency of the petition to bring him within the provisions of section 602 nor that a finding that the petition is true would be legally sufficient
(In re J. T.,
The Juvenile Court Law does not require the making of specific findings, and a general finding that the allegations of the petition are true is sufficient to show the facts upon which the court exercised its jurisdiction to declare the minor a ward of the court.
(In re J. T.,
After a dispositional hearing, the court declared the minor a ward of the court under section 602, Welfare and Institutions Code, and the offense to be a misdemeanor, and ordered him placed on home probation on terms and conditions wholly appropriate to a minor. Equating his objection to this disposition with a refusal of probation, and relying on the general rule that a grant of probation is an act of clemency 1 which an adult offender has a right to refuse, appellant claims a denial of equal protection. Any right of a minor to refuse probation as contended for here because its terms are more onerous than the $100 fine, would be entirely inconsistent with the purpose, nature, reasons for and consequences of probation in juvenile proceedings.
One of the purposes of the Juvenile Court Law is to secure for each minor under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court such care and guidance, preferably in his own home, as will best serve his welfare and “preserve and strengthen the minor’s family ties.” (§ 202, Welf. & Inst. Code). Thus with this in mind, a comprehensive statutory scheme was devised to best provide for the placement and treatment of juveniles. It is apparent from section 726 et seq., Welfare and Institutions Code that probation in a juvenile proceeding is not an act of leniency which a minor can refuse but the preferred disposition if warranted by the circumstances. “Unlike adult criminal proceedings in which probation may be granted as an act of leniency in appropriate cases, but where denial of probation and imposition of sentence to a term of imprisonment is ordinarily not an abuse of discretion, the Juvenile Court Law ‘ “contemplates a progressively restrictive and punitive series of disposition orders in cases such as that now before us—namely, home placement under supervision, foster home placement, placement in a local treatment facility and, as a last resort, Youth Authority placement.” ’
(In re Aline D.
(1975)
*781
Section 11357, subdivision (b), Health and Safety Code provides that “every person who possesses not more than one avoirdupois ounce of marijuana . . . shall be punished by a fine of not more than one hundred dollars ($100).” Violation of the statute amounts to a misdemeanor.
(Tracy
v.
Municipal Court, 22
Cal.3d 760, 764 [
Involved in
People
v.
Olivas,
The statutory scheme for the processing of applications to cause a petition for wardship under section 602 to be filed in the juvenile court provides for the commencement of such proceedings by the probation officer
(Marvin F.
v.
Superior Court,
Inherent in a section 602 wardship is the continuing jurisdiction over the minor by the court which can place him in the home of his parents under probation supervision (§ 727, Welf. & Inst. Code, made applicable by § 730). This is exactly what the court did here—it declared the minor a ward under section 602 in that he committed a misdemeanor, ordered him placed in the home of his mother on probation and continued the matter to February 11, 1980. (See
In re John R., 92
Cal.App.3d 566, 568 [
Thus, in consideration of the primary purpose of the Juvenile Court Law to promote the welfare of the minor, the involvement of the probation officer in virtually all phases of the juvenile court process, the lack of physical confinement here, the authority of the court to impose placement in the home under the supervision of the probation officer
2
and the obvious need of the juvenile in a narcotic offense, albeit a relatively minor one, for professional counseling of the probation officer, we find that the greater potential for the rehabilitation of the juvenile offender justifies the placement in the home under the supervision of the probation officer in which to undertake such rehabilitation efforts, as distinguished from the fine and/or summary probation available to an adult offender who violates the same statute; and conclude the distinction to be reasonable and valid. As stated in
In re Harm R.,
The order is affirmed.
Hanson, J., and Ackerman, J., * concurred.
Notes
This is the traditional view discredited in favor of the modern view that probation “should be deemed an alternative form of.punishment
in those cases when it can be used as a correctional
tool. . . .”
(People
v.
Edwards,
Under section 727, the court may “order the care, custody, control and conduct of such minor to be under the supervision of the probation officer or . . . commit such minor to the care, custody and control of: [certain persons or institutions].”
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
