4 Conn. Cir. Ct. 55 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1966
No finding or transcript of evidence has been filed by the defendant, nor is the appeal directed toward the finding of guilty on the second count, on which the defendant was committed to the Connecticut state farm for women concurrently with the commitment on the first count. The slim record before us yields little information on the factual background which of necessity we must consider in deciding the questions of law raised by the demurrer to the first count. After a full trial on the facts, we cannot pass on the court’s ruling on the demurrer as a disembodied proposition of law.
With such meager facts as we can glean from the record, the following appears to be admitted or undisputed. The defendant was arrested in Norwalk on March 17, 1966, on the charge of being in manifest danger of falling into vice. General Statutes § 17-379.
The rules stated in the Sul case, supra, with meticulous precision and particularity were ignored by the defendant in the case before us, but we do not rest our decision on that ground alone. The exact question presented on the merits has been overlooked by the defendant except for one sentence in the closing paragraphs of her brief: “There is no crime of being vicious or of falling into vice.” Both parties appear to agree on this crucial point, and the applicable law thereon appears to be well settled in Connecticut.
Turning our attention to the merits of the appeal, we “cannot impute to the Legislature an intent to
It should be noted at the outset that title 17 of the General Statutes is devoted to a wide variety of sociological problems and legislative policy and methods for their correction and solution. It is entitled “Humane and Reformatory Agencies and Institutions.” The aims and purposes of this legislation are unequivocal, clear, and unquestionably within the powers of legislature to achieve by law. They are, generally, to preserve and increase the benefits to an orderly society deriving from the care, protection and welfare of the individuals who, because of lack of physical, mental or moral resources or discipline, are especially in need of Salutary aid and earnest concern on the part of the general public. Section 17-379 is incorporated in chapter 309, “Reformatory Institutions,” which is a component part of title 17, part III, “Miscellaneous Agencies.” As we shall develop later, it is not a penal statute. Constituting the remainder of chapter 309 are part I, “The Connecticut State Farm for Women”; II, “Long Lane School”; IV, “Connecticut Reformatory”; V, “Connecticut School for Boys”; and VI, “General Provisions.” The next succeeding and separate portion of the General Statutes, title 18, is denominated “Penal Institutions” and deals with state prisons and jails.
The same reasoning is reiterated, and a like result reached, in Cinque v. Boyd, 99 Conn. 70. The case arose out of a habeas corpus proceeding to procure the release of a minor, fourteen years old, who had been committed to the Connecticut School for Boys in Meriden by the Juvenile Court of the city of New Haven. The final question propounded by the reservation to our Supreme Court was answered by advising that the writ of habeas corpus be dismissed. The court said (p. 80): “The law is attacked in this case largely upon constitutional grounds, and in some other respects as being invalid by obscurity and insensibility to an extent rendering its full enforcement impossible. The constitutional objections turn upon whether the Act is one for the punishment of crime, and therefore subject in its form and in the manner of its administration to the constitutional guarantees in various particulars contained in the Bill of Rights, or whether it is concerned with the care and protection which every State as parens patriae in some measure affords to all inhabitants who from personal deficiencies or incapacities or conditions of life are in some degree abnormal, and hence in its scope, intent and method of administration is entirely of a civil nature.” And the court, after citing cases in many jurisdictions upholding the principle that inquiries conducted by juvenile courts are not criminal trials, quotes with approval (p. 85) from Commonwealth v. Fisher, 213 Pa. 48, 53: “To save a child from becoming a criminal, or from continuing in a career of crime, to end in maturer years in public punishment and dis
Although many of those cases deal with juveniles, according to the age limits defined by state law, the conclusion is inescapable that § 17-379, read within the context of the statutes in title 17, is not one that imposes a penalty for a crime but rather acts as a protective safeguard for the purpose of providing custody, care and training for females, between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one, who may be in manifest danger of falling into habits of vice, or who may be leading a vicious life, or who may have committed any crime.
What we have already said makes it unnecessary to discuss further the claim made by the defendant of vagueness or uncertainty in the use in the statute of the words “vice ” and “vicious.”
There is no error.
In this opinion Pruyn and Dearington, Js., concurred.
“Sec. 17-379. commitment op gibes oveb sixteen. Any unmarried female between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one years who is in manifest danger of falling into habits of vice, or who is leading a vicious life, or who has committed any crime, may, upon the complaint of the prosecuting attorney of the circuit court, be brought before said court for the circuit within whose jurisdiction