Lead Opinion
|, The State of Arkansas brings this interlocutory appeal from the Washington County Circuit Court’s order granting ap-pellee James Griffin, Jr.’s motion to suppress his statement to police. For reversal, the State argues that the circuit court erred in its interpretation of Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-317(g) (Repl. 2015). We reverse and remand.
On July 6, 2013, Griffin was arrested for robbing and assaulting a female in Fay-etteville, Arkansas. At the time of his arrest, Griffin was sixteen years old and in the custody of the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS).. Griffin was initially transported to the Washington County Juvenile Detention Center but was transferred to the Washington County Detention Center on July 9, 2013, after he was formally charged as an adult with robbery and aggravated assault in case number. 72CR-13-1127.
Sergeant Rick Frisby and Detective Matt Ray with the Springdale Police Department interviewed Griffin on July 9, 2013, in connection with an assault of a female pin Springdale on June 29, 2013. The officers read Griffin his Miranda rights, and Griffin signed a form indicating that he had waived his rights. During the interview, Griffin admitted entering the female’s apartment in Springdale and rubbing her shoulders and legs and tickling her. While he did not rape her, Griffin admitted that before entering the apartment, he had planned to have sex with her. The day after his statement, on July 10, 2013, Griffin was charged as an adult in case number 72CR-13-1136 with residential burglary, sexual assault in the second degree, and aggravated assault.
On April 1,2016, Griffin filed a motion in both cases to suppress his July 9 statement to police, claiming that at the time of the interview, he was in DHS custody and unable to waive his right to counsel pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-317(g). Griffin also filed a motion to transfer his case to the juvenile division.
A suppression hearing was held on May 31, 2016, and the circuit court entered an order on June 1, 2016, granting Griffin’s motion to suppress. The court found that Griffin could not waive his right to counsel because he was in DHS custody. The court noted that the officers conducting the interrogation did not know at. that time whether Griffin would be charged as a juvenile or as an adult because Griffin was not charged as an adult in case | ¡¡number 72CR-13-1136 until the day- after the interrogation. The circuit court thus found that all statements made by Griffin to the Springdale Police Department on July 9, 2013, were inadmissible in any prosecution. The State timely appealed the circuit court’s order on June 9, 2016.
As a preliminary matter, this court must first decide if it has jurisdiction to hear the State’s appeal in this case. Unlike that of a criminal defendant,' the State’s right to appeal is limited to the provisions of Rule 3 of the Arkansas Rules of Appellate Procedure-Criminal. State v. Colvin,
The issue presented in this appeal is whether the circuit court erred in its interpretation of Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-317(g). We have not previously addressed this particular subsection of the statute, and because this is an issue of first impression involving statutory interpretation that has widespread ramifications, jurisdiction of this appeal is properly in this court. See State v. L.P.,
Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-317 is titled, ‘Waiver of right to counsel— Detention of juvenile—Questioning,” and subsection (g) of this statute states that “[n]o waiver of the right to counsel shall be accepted when a juvenile is in the custody of the Department of Human Services, including the Division of Youth Services of the Department of Human Services.” Because Griffin was in the custody of DHS when he waived his Miranda rights and gave his statement to the Springdale police, the circuit court found that section 9-27-317(g) barred the State from using Griffin’s statement against him, despite the fact that he had been charged as an adult in circuit court for the offenses.
We agree with the State that the circuit court erred in granting the motion to suppress on this basis. In Boyd v. State,
We reaffirmed this holding in Ring v. State,
Subsequent to our decisions in Boyd and Ring, we have continued to hold that the provisions in section 9-27-317 apply only to juvenile-court proceedings. See, e.g., Jackson v. State,
While Griffin contends that Boyd and its progeny should be overruled, we have expressly declined to do so in previous cases. Jackson, supra; Misskelley, supra. We noted in Misskelley that “it would be the height of unfairness” for this court to overrule Boyd after nearly three years of consistently following its line of reasoning. Misskelley,
We share the circuit court’s concern with protecting a juvenile in Griffin’s situation. As Griffin argues, our interpretation of the statute at issue provides incentive for a prosecutor to charge a juvenile in circuit court rather than in the juvenile division when a statement has been taken in violation of the statute. Thus, even though this statute was intended to provide greater protection for juveniles, our interpretation in Boyd and subsequent cases has had the opposite effect. Nonetheless, while we agree that the result may seem egregious, we are bound by the principles of stare decisis to follow the interpretation of section 9-27-317 that we set out in the Boyd line of cases. We note that the legislature has had ample opportunity during this time to extend the rights contained in section 9-27-317 to adult proceedings, but it has chosen not to do so. Bay, supra. It is well settled that an interpretation of a statute by this court subsequently becomes a part of the statute itself. Corn v. Farmers Ins. Co.,
Griffin further argues that his situation can be distinguished from our earlier cases because he was in DHS custody. He asserts that Boyd and subsequent cases following that line of reasoning contemplated only juveniles in the custody of their parents and that juveniles in DHS custody should be afforded a greater degree of legal protection. This |7argument is not persuasive, however, as we have been consistent in our interpretation of the various provisions in section 9-27-317 and in holding that the juvenile code applies only to juvenile-court proceedings.
In granting Griffin’s motion to suppress, the circuit court noted that Griffin had not yet been charged as an adult when he made his July 9, 2013 statement to police. However, this was also the situation in both Boyd and Ring, and we held that it was the court in which the juvenile was ultimately charged and tried that determined whether the protections in section 9-27-317 applied. Ring,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The circuit court has not yet ruled on this motion, and the proceedings below have been stayed during the pendency of this interlocutory appeal.
. Although the dissent asserts that section 9-27-317(g) should be interpreted differently because it does not contain the language in subsection (a) limiting its application only to proceedings in juvenile court, we have previously interpreted other subsections in the statute that do not contain such language in a similar manner, and we have held that the juvenile code, as a whole, applies only to juvenile proceedings. See, e,g., Jackson, supra (discussing section 9—27—317(i)); Ray, supra.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
The ability of the state to charge a dangerous juvenile as an adult is an important tool of prosecutors trying to protect society. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-318 (Repl. 2015). The responsibility to protect minors and their families from overzealous state actors during investigations and interrogations is both an 18important function of the judiciary and the public policy of this state as expressed by the General Assembly. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-317 (Repl. 2015). This case brings us to the intersection of these two competing principles.
While the legislature has addressed both the need to protect minors and the need to treat some minors as adults for the purpose of bringing criminal charges, they have not clearly addressed when each principle prevails in the event of a conflict. In the absence of clear guidance from the General Assembly, it is our role to determine when each statute applies.
To resolve this, I would propose a simple balancing test between the decision to charge as an adult and the effectiveness of the waiver of counsel based on the timing of the two events. Under this test, a waiver of the right to counsel made after the decision to charge as an adult has been made and communicated to the minor defendant would be effective while a waiver made prior to the decision to charge as an adult or a juvenile has been made and communicated would be ineffective with the minor retaining the protection of the juvenile code.
This balancing test is consistent with the tenets of Boyd v. State,
The timing of the event is important. Prior to being charged as an adult in circuit court, the minor is still afforded the protection of a juvenile and that which is invalid cannot be made valid retroactively by a subsequent decision of the State, which is likely often made based on the invalid act in the first place. As it stands now, under the Ring ruling, prosecutors are almost forced into the decision to charge as an adult in order to take advantage of the otherwise defective waiver. See Boyd v. State,
Under this proposed test, the ability of the prosecutor to charge as an adult under section 9-27-318 is unchanged. However, in those cases where a minor is charged as an adult and where there is a waiver of counsel, statements made under the waiver would be admissible only if the prosecutor either (a) makes and communicates to the defendant the decision to charge as an adult prior to the waiver; or (b) obtains the waiver in compliance with section 9-27-317 if it is obtained prior to the making and communicating of the charging decision.
The facts in the current, case are unusual in their sequence. In Griffin, the Appel-lee was charged as an adult for the Fay-etteville crime and while in jail, as an adult, he was interrogated, and he waived his right to counsel. Based on admissions made during that | ^interrogation, he was subsequently charged as an adult' for a separate crime committed in Springdale. I agree with the majority in the outcome based on the loss of juvenile code protection upon the initial decision to charge as an adult in the Fayetteville case. However, I write this concurrence to highlight the fact that, but for the initial charging of the Fayetteville crime, the waiver-based interrogation that resulted in the confession of the Springdale, crime would have .stood under the Ring decision but should have been invalid under the test proposed herein.
Baker, J., joins.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-317(g) (Repl. 2015) provides, “No waiver of the right to counsel shall be accepted when a juvenile is in the custody of the Department of Human Services, including the Division of Youth Services of the Department of Human Services.” Subsection (g) is an absolute prohibition: no waiver of the right to counsel shall be accepted when a juvenile is in the custody of the Department of Human Services. James Griffin, Jr., was in the custody of the Department of Human Services. Thus, his waiver of counsel was ineffective, and the circuit court properly suppressed the statement he gave to the police.
The majority not only concludes that the case before us is one of first impression but also concludes that its decision to reverse is compelled by stare decisis, presumably because of cases interpreting another statutory' provision, section 9-27-317(a)(3). The majority relies on Boyd v. State,
In contrast to section 9-27-317(g), section 9-27-317(a)(3) is not stated as an absolute prohibition barring a juvenile’s waiver of the right to counsel. Moreover, as the Boyd court observed, section 9-27-317(a)(3) specifically references only proceedings in juvenile courts. The Boyd court concluded, “[T]he section of the juvenile code requiring parental consent to a waiver is limited to proceedings in the juvenile division of chancery court.” Id. at 173,
In Ring v. State,
In applying Boyd and its progeny, the majority admits that “our interpretation of [section 9—27—317(g)] provides incentive for a prosecutor to charge a juvenile in circuit court rather than in the juvenile division when a statement has been taken in violation of the statute,” that “even though this statute was intended to provide greater protection for juveniles, our interpretation in Boyd and subsequent cases has had the opposite effect,” and that “the result may seem egregious.” I agree with these observations but, unlike the majority, I would hold that the clear wording of section 9-27—317(g) establishes a requirement that this court must affirm.
. The majority also cites to Jackson v. State,
