The facts relevant to disposition of this criminal
appeal may be stated briefly. After trial by court, respondent was convicted of taking a wild deer by artificial light, in violation of 10 V.S.A. § 4747. At the time of the alleged offense, respondent was only 18 days over the age of 16; he filed a motion for transfer of the case to juvenile court under 83 V.S.A. § 635, asking for hearing on the merits, which was denied by docket entry and refusal to make findings on the issue. These denials, he claims, constituted abuse of discretion, violated the principles of the applicable juvenile statutes, and deprived him of due process under
Kent
v.
United States,
Unnoticed by counsel and, apparently, by the court itself, is a defect in the record fatal to the judgment below. The complaint alleged the taking of a wild deer by artificial light, in violation of 10 V.S.A. § 4747. Trial was by court, with many stipulations in lieu of direct evidence, and findings of fact were made, with a conclusionary finding that the appellant “took a wild deer in closed season within the meaning of 10 V.S.A. 4747.” The judgment order, when eventually entered, followed the form of the complaint.
Even though this error was not raised by the respondent, we deem it grounds for reversal under the rule of “plain” or “egregious” error. V.ft.Cr.P. 52(b);
State
v.
Morrill,
Since, however, the aspect of unusual gravity that prosecutors seem to assign to fish and game violations indicates a high possibility of another trial, with reconsideration of respondent’s motion to transfer to juvenile court, we deem it appropriate to comment upon the assigned errors that were briefed for argument here. Although
Kent
and
Gault, supra,
are not precisely in point, in that they involve a determination for transfer from juvenile court to criminal court rather than the reverse determination here in issue, we think the principles that they express are governing. 33 V.S.A. § 635(b) makes transfer to juvenile court, and subsequent treatment of the offender as a delinquent child rather than as a criminal, discretionary with the trial court. But we think more is involved than judicial whim, and that attainment of the salutary purposes of the juvenile statutes calls for the exercise of sound judicial discretion, as defined in
Russell
v.
Pilger,
We are well aware that the precise terms of the juvenile statutes vary from state to state, and that the decisions of a sister state are not usually “on all fours” with our own statutory requirements. But the general considerations underly *170 ing juvenile legislation have substantial similarity, and we subscribe to the following recent pronouncement of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court:
Although the Kent decision and subsection 28(a) involve the “waiver of the original and exclusive jurisdiction of the juvenile court,” we believe an adult criminal court, when dealing with a person who might ‘potentially qualify for treatment as a juvenile, must follow the same due process requirements. The privileges of juvenile jurisdiction, although not conferred in the first instance, are potentially as important to the youth accused of murder as the youth accused of delinquency. Assuming there are those who would initially be within the jurisdiction of the criminal court and who would be deserving of transfer, the only way to insure that such juveniles are not arbitrarily denied access to juvenile treatment is to insist that they be given the same procedural rights.
Commonwealth
v.
Pyle,
There are two possible outcomes on remand. A determination that transfer to juvenile court should have been accorded in the first instance can only result in dismissal of the charges; now that the respondent has passed eighteen, the rights he should have had cannot be given him. A contrary determination will mean retrial, should the state be so advised.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
