90 S.E. 594 | N.C. | 1916
Upon the foregoing record and the facts appearing therein, we are of opinion that the defendant has been *995
properly convicted and sentenced, and his exceptions entered to the validity of the trial should be overruled. Chapter 122, Laws 1915, entitled "An act to provide for the reclamation and training of juvenile delinquents, youthful violators of law, and the probation system," is a statute applying to all children in the State under 18 years of age who come within the descriptive terms of the law as set forth in subsectionsa and b of section 1, and was passed as an administrative police regulation in the specified instances when the well-being of the child and the interest of the public require that it should for the time be withdrawn from an environment that threatens, and cared for and (937) trained and controlled with a view of making it a law-abiding and useful citizen. To this extent, the validity of such legislation is fully upheld with us in the case of In re Richard Watson,
"(a) A child shall be known as a juvenile delinquent when he violates any municipal or State law, or when, not being a violator, he is wayward, unruly, and misdirected, or when he is disobedient to parents and beyond their control, or whose conduct and environment seem to point to a criminal career.
"(b) A child shall be known as a dependent child when, for any reason, he is destitute or homeless or abandoned, and in such an evil environment that he is likely to develop into criminal practices unless he be removed therefrom and properly directed and trained."
It thus appears that in case of "delinquent" children they are described and classified as those who are violators of State or municipal law and those who are not, and, although jurisdiction in general terms is conferred on both Superior and recorders' courts, and "like courts in cities where recorders' courts have not been established," it is evidently contemplated and provided that in cases where a delinquent is to be dealt with as a violator of the criminal law, in a given case, and on that ground alone, such violation shall have been first established by some court having jurisdiction of the offense, and the orders disposing of the child under the statute may be justified and upheld as an incident of the conviction. As said by Justice Allen in the opinion referred to: "The *996 Legislature has no unlimited and arbitrary power over minors in respect to detaining them in reformatories or otherwise, and, in view of this admitted principle, the necessity for a conviction in the proper court, in order to deal with a juvenile delinquent on the ground that he has committed a single criminal offense, will appear from a perusal of the general provisions of the statute, and is made clear, we think, by a subsequent clause of section 2: "That it shall be the duty of the court or courts, in their discretion, to suspend sentence, when the child is found guilty and place him on probation for a specified period, three, (938) six, or twelve months, or a longer period, as the court shall think best."
This, then, in our opinion, being the proper construction of the present law, on the facts established by the special verdict, in any aspect of them, defendant in this instance is guilty of the crime of larceny. S. v.Stroud,
There is no error, and the judgment of the Superior Court must be affirmed.
No error.
Cited: S. v. Burnett,