By the Court,
In this оpinion, we address the applicability of NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2), a statutory provision that divests a juvenile court of jurisdiction over a person who commits a class A or B felony between 16 and 18 years of age but is not identified until after reaching 21 years of age. We conclude that this statutory provision governs jurisdiction over any proceedings initiated after the provision went into effect on October 1, 2009, regardless of when the offense was committed. See 2009 Nev. Stat., ch. 25, § 3, at 50-51; NRS 218D.330. Here, respondent Gregory Barren allegedly committed class A and B felonies at 17 years of age but was not identified until after reaching 21 years of age. Because NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2) was in effect when the State initiated proceedings against Barren, we conclude that the district court,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 2005, a woman was kidnapped and sexually assaulted.
The justice court transferred the case to the juvenile court, but the juvenile court found that it lacked jurisdiction over Barren’s case because the State did not file a petition with the juvenile court before Barren turned 21 years of age. Barren’s cаse was subsequently transferred back to the justice court. The justice court concluded that it had jurisdiction because of newly enacted NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2), a provision which divests a juvenile court of jurisdiction over a person who committed a category A or B felony between 16 and 18 years of age, but “is not identified by law enforcement as having cоmmitted the offense until the person reaches 21 years of age.” Specifically, the justice court concluded that the statutory provision applied to the facts of Barren’s case, and that “[ajfter October 1, 2009, the Juvenile Court ‘does not have jurisdiction’ over the persons described in NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2).” The justice court further found that applying NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2) did not constitute an ex post facto violation because based on Barren’s age, ‘ ‘he would not have been subject to juvenile court jurisdiction [even] prior to the [2009 amendment to NRS 62B.330].” “As a result, jurisdiction would have defaulted to the adult trial court.” The justice court also noted that even absent the 2009 amendments, the Nevada Constitution and сaselaw require that some court, district or juvenile, must always have jurisdiction over a criminal defendant.
DISCUSSION
This court “generally review[s] a district court’s grant or denial of writ relief for аn abuse of discretion.” Koller v. State,
At the outset, we note that notwithstanding exceptions inapрlicable here, some court always has jurisdiction over a criminal defendant. See NRS 171.010 (“Every person, whether an inhabitant of this state, or any other state, or of a territory or district of the United States, is liable to punishment by the laws of this state for a public offense committed therein, except where it is by law cognizable exclusively in the courts of the United States.”); see also Castillo v. State,
The Nevada Constitution grants the district court “original jurisdiction in all cases excluded by law from the original jurisdiction of justices’ courts” and “final appellate jurisdiction in cases arising in Justice Courts and such other inferior tribunals as may be established by law.” Nev. Const, art. 6, § 6(1). This court has explained that a district court has jurisdiction over “all criminal cases except as otherwise provided by law.” Battiato v. Sheriff,
By statute, “the juvenile court has exclusive original jurisdiction over a child living or found within the county who is alleged or adjudicated to have committed a delinquent act.” NRS 62B.330(1) (еmphases added). NRS 62A.030(l)(b) defines a “child,” inter alia, as “[a] person who is less than 21 years of age and subject to the jurisdiction of the juvenile court for an unlawful act that was committed before the person reached 18 years of age.” NRS 62B.330(3) limits the otherwise broad definition of “delinquent act” by listing acts that are not considered to be “delinquent acts” and arе therefore not within the juvenile court’s exclusive original jurisdiction.
For the purposes of this section, each of the following acts shall be deemed not to be a delinquent act, and the juvenile court does not have jurisdiction over а person who is charged with committing such an act:
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(e) A category A or B felony and any other related offense arising out of the same facts as the category A or B felony, regardless of the nature of the related offense, if the person was at least 16 years of age but less than 18 years of age when the offense was committed, and:
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(2) The person is not identified by law enforcement as having committed the offense until the person reaches 21 years of age.
The parties dispute whether NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2) governs jurisdiction in this case, because it did not go into effect until after the date Barren allegedly committed the offenses. The relevant inquiry, thus, is whether juvenile court jurisdiction is determinеd on the date when the State initiated the proceedings or on the date when Barren allegedly committed the offenses.
The parties focus on whether NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2) is retroactive, but a retroactivity analysis is unnecessary because NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2) is a jurisdictional statute.
Additionally, many courts have held that “ ‘[t]he jurisdiction of the juvenile court does not depend on the defendant’s age at the time the criminal act was committed, but [on] his age at the time judicial proceedings were initiated.’ ”
Similarly, in State v. Hodges, the Supreme Court of Utah analyzed whether a district court would have jurisdiction over a 21-year-old defendant who was a juvenile at the time of the alleged offenses.
In Nevada, NRS 62B.410(2) limits a juvenile court’s jurisdiction to persons less than 21 years of age, and NRS 62B.330(1) similarly limits the juvenile court to having jurisdiction over a “child,” which NRS 62A.030 defines, in relevant part, as “[a] person who is less than 21 years of age.” Similar to the reasoning in Hodges, to conclude that the Nevada Revised Statutes give ‘ ‘the juvenile court exclusive jurisdiction over all offenses committed by minors, regardless of the age of the person when the proceedings are commenced, would render the lаnguage concerning proceedings against persons younger than [21] years of age superfluous.”
Based on these considerations, we conclude that jurisdiction in this case is determined on the date when the State initiated proceedings against Barren rather than the date when Barren allegedly committed the offenses. At the time the State initiated the proceedings against Barren, NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2), the statute governing jurisdiction, was in effect, and the juvenile court did not have jurisdiction.
Cherry, C.J., and Pickering, J., concur.
Notes
Barren’s alleged crimes are not triable injustice court. See NRS 4.370(3). Thus, if the juvenile court is divested of jurisdiction, the justice court’s role would be to hold a probable cause hearing. NRS 171.196. If Barren waives this hearing, his alleged crimes will be tried in the district court. Id. If the hearing is not waived, and probable cause is found, Barren’s alleged crimes would likewise be tried in the district court. NRS 171.206; see also Woemer v. Justice Court,
The documents containing the specific facts surrounding this inсident have been stricken from the record on appeal as they were never filed in the district court. However, the stricken documents are irrelevant to the disposition of this case.
In response to a motion from the State, this court has granted a stay of the district court’s order and the proceedings in the justice court pending a resolution of this appeal.
Trior to the 2009 amendments, NRS 62B.330(3) excluded from the juvenile court’s jurisdiction cases involving a child who committed (1) murder or attempted murder; (2) sexual assault, attempted sexual assault, or an offense with the use or threatened use of a firearm, if the person was at least 16 years of age and had already been аdjudicated delinquent for a previous felonious act; or (3) a felony resulting in death or substantial bodily harm if committed with a weapon at a school. See 2009 Nev. Stat., ch. 25, § 3, at 50-51. The 2009 amendments to NRS 62B.330(3) did not alter these exclusions. Because these acts are excluded from the juvenile court’s jurisdiction and they fall within the district court’s original jurisdiction, the district court has jurisdiction over these offenses even when they are committed by a child.
We have previously held in regard to penal statutes that “ ‘the general rule is that the proper penalty is that in effect at the time of the commission of the offense’ unless the Legislature demonstrates clear legislative intent to apply a criminal statute retroactively.” State v. Dist. Ct. (Pullin),
Other courts have held that jurisdiction is determined by a defendant’s age at the time of the offense, see H.D. Warren & C.P. Jhong, Annotation, Age of Child at Time of Alleged Offense or Delinquency, or at Time of Legal Proceedings, as Criterion of Jurisdiction of Juvenile Court,
Barren argues that the State intentionally waited to file charges until NRS 62B.330(3)(e)(2) went into effect. There is insufficient evidence in the record before us to support Barren’s argument. Additionally, as discussed above, some court would have jurisdiction over Barren regardless of when the State initiated proceedings.
Although the parties argue whether retroactive application would constitute an ex post facto violation, we need not reach that issue because we conclude that a retroactive application of the statute is unnecessary.
