Opinion
Pеtition to mandate the superior court to find petitioner unfit for juvenile court proceedings and certify her for criminal prosecution as an adult.
On 2 April 1977, when she was 17 years, 11 months old, Cheryl Rucker assertedly committed a battery, apparently upon a peace officer. Charged as a minor with violating criminal law (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 602), she was arraigned in juvenile сourt May 11, nine days after she had reached the age of eighteen, full adulthood under the Civil Code (§§ 25, 25.1). Petitioner avers she is emancipated, living apart from her parents, self-supporting, and the mother of a child of her own. On June 3 she moved for a finding of unfitness for disposition as a juvenile and demanded prosecution as an adult. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 707, 707.1.) The People did not оppose her motion, the referee found petitioner not amenable to juvenile court process, and he ordered the petition dismissed on the filing of adult charges. Nо probation officer’s investigative report or other relevant evidence substantiated the referee’s finding, as specified under the statutoiy procedure. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 707.) *200 Thereupon the juvenile court judge on his own motion granted a rehearing, ruled a “minor” lacks authority to move for a declaration of unfitness, found petitioner fit for disposition as a juvenile, and denied her motion for prosecution as an adult. This petition followed.
The issue is whether the circumstances at bench make relinquishment of jurisdiction by the juvenile court apрropriate. Under Welfare and Institutions Code section 602 juvenile court jurisdiction is based on age at the time of the
violation
of a criminal law or ordinance. It is therefore possible thаt a person might commit a murder at age 17, be apprehended 50 years later, and find himself subject to juvenile court jurisdiction at age 67. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 603, 604, 606; see
State
v.
Dehler
(1960)
Yet laws must be given a reasоnable construction and harmonized with the general legal scheme of which they form a part. As the court observed in
Holy Trinity Church
v.
United States
(1891)
The Juvenile Court Law (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 500, 502
ff.)
is explicitly designed for the benefit of the juvenile, and its provisions must be construed with its principal purpose in mind.
(In re Gault
(1967)
So here. Where one now an adult wishes to waive the benefits of juvenile court law and answer charges as an adult in a criminal court, we *202 think such waiver should be honоred almost automatically and the cause transferred to the municipal or superior court having jurisdiction under general criminal law. The mechanism for this transfer-is at hand in the prоcedure for the finding of unfitness. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 707, 707.1.) Any other result would impinge on the requirements of due process of law and be contrary to the common sense of mankind, for what possible compelling interest can either the People or the juvenile court have in trying an adult as a juvenile against the adult’s own wishes? Indeed, it may be considered axiomatic that when аn adult who is within the technical jurisdiction of the juvenile court knowingly demands to be prosecuted as an adult, he “would not be amenable to the care, treatment and training progrаm available through facilities of the juvenile court,” for the adult may be said to have made himself unfit for juvenile treatment by choice.
Such an interpretation of the statute avoids constitutional difficulties, for it is hornbook law that when an adult is tried in a manner that deprives him of constitutional guarantees, his conviction must be reversed. Since an adult has a constitutional right to trial by jury and a juvenile does not
(McKeiver
v.
Pennsylvania,
No problem involving exclusive jurisdiction of a particular court exists, because with respect to violations of criminal law committed by persons between the ages of 16 and 18 the juvenile court and the criminal courts have concurrent jurisdiction, with priority lodged in the juvenile court. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 603, 604, 707, 707.1.) Exercise of priority, however, like the exercise of other judicial functions, remains subject to rules governing judicial discretion, and when general constitutional and statutory patterns of law make assertion of priority inappropriate, common sense requires thаt priority be relinquished. Such a situation arises when a competent adult demands that he be prosecuted as an adult. The demand must be honored. We recognize that petitioner *203 may have an ulterior motive behind her demand for trial as an adult—that under criminal prosecution she may anticipate a more favorable judge, more technical rulings governing admissibility of evidence, or more sympathetic consideration from a jury as finder of fact that she would receive from a judge of the juvenile court under a charge of assаulting a police officer. Petitioner’s motive, however, is immaterial, for the issue involves the propriety of juvenile court relinquishment of jurisdiction to enable petitioner to exercise her right to be prosecuted as an adult. The only factual issue for determination in petitioner’s fitness hearing was whether petitioner knowingly, intelligently, and advisedly waived her rights tо the benefits of juvenile process. If she properly waived them—and the record indicates she did—then the juvenile court in the exercise of sound discretion was required to certify her for prosecution as an adult.
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue requiring respondent court to vacate its order of 5 July 1977 denying petitioner’s motion and enter a nеw and different order finding her unfit for juvenile process and authorizing her prosecution under general criminal law.
Compton, J., and Beach, J., concurred.
The petition of the respondent and the real party in interest for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied January 26, 1978. Clark, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
