MEMORANDUM
Petitioner seeks a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 to release him from state custody. He alleges that he was deprived of his liberty without due process of law, as a result of the proceedings by which he was bound over for trial in the Superior Court from the Juvenile Court where he was initially charged. The court grants his petition, because of the failure of the juvenile court judge to make a detailed statement of the reasons for dismissing the juvenile proceedings against petitioner and binding him over for trial in the Superior Court.
I
The background facts have been stipulated by the parties. On January 18,1969, the body of a night watchman, Armand Cerbone, was discovered by Boston police. Five months later, juvenile delinquency complaints were issued against the petitioner by reason of alleged breaking and entering and murder. Two other young men were charged with murder and breaking and entering, in adult complaints, arising out of the same incident. Petitioner was 16 years old at the time.
On June 25, 1969, petitioner appeared before the Municipal Court for Dorchester where he was committed, without bail, to the Charles Street Jail to await hearing. On July 8, 1969, petitioner appeared before the Municipal Court for a hearing on the juvenile delinquency complaints. These complaints were dismissed. Identical criminal complaints were issued. A probable cause hearing on the criminal complaints was held.
Petitioner was subsequently tried and convicted of murder in the first degree by the Superior Court and sentenced to life imprisonment. On appeal, his conviction was reduced to second degree murder.
Petitioner brought a petition for habeas corpus in this court in 1972, which was dismissed for failure to exhaust his state remedies. 1
In a subsequent petition for a writ of error before the full bench of the Supreme Judicial Court, all the issues now presented here were presented to the court and rejected.
Stokes v. Comm.,
1975 Mass.Adv.Sh. 3030,
*149 II
Of petitioner’s four arguments, 2 only one requires lengthy discussion. Petitioner argues that he was deprived of his liberty without due process of law because the municipal judge dismissed the juvenile complaints against him, and thus waived the jurisdiction of the juvenile court over him, without giving a statement of his reasons for doing so. 3 The only comment made by the judge at the conclusion of the initial hearing was: “This young man is to be held.” On the back of the two juvenile complaints, the judge wrote: “July 8, 1969 That the interest of the public requires that he shall be tried for the said offence,” followed by the signature, “Jerome P. Troy, Justice.” This was the only statement of. reasons given by the judge for his decision to dismiss the juvenile complaints. It repeats verbatim the language of the governing statute, Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 119, § 61.
The seminal case in this area is
Kent v. United States,
*150 Meaningful review requires that the reviewing court should review. It should not be remitted to assumptions. It must have before it a statement of the reasons motivating the waiver including, of course, a statement of the relevant facts. It may not “assume” that there are adequate reasons, nor may it merely assume that “full investigation” has been made. Accordingly, we hold that it is incumbent upon the Juvenile Court to accompany its waiver order with a statement of the reasons or considerations therefor. We do not read the statute as requiring that this statement must be formal or that it should necessarily include conventional findings of fact. But the statement should be sufficient to demonstrate that the statutory requirement of “full investigation” has been met; and that the question has received the careful consideration of the Juvenile Court; and it must set forth the basis for the order with sufficient specificity to permit meaningful review.
In reaching its conclusions about the procedural requirements for transfer hearings, the Court relied in part on the language of the District of Columbia statute, and in part on constitutional principles, 4 thus leaving ambiguous whether all of the procedures that they outlined for transfer hearings would be constitutionally required, absent the statute in question.
Subsequently, in
In re Gault,
Although our decision [in Kent] turned upon the language of the statute, we emphasized the necessity that “the basic requirements of due process and fairness” be satisfied in such proceedings.
. With respect to the waiver by the Juvenile Court to the adult court of jurisdiction over an offense committed by a youth, we said that “there is no place in our system of law for reaching a result of such tremendous consequences without ceremony — without hearing, without effective assistance of counsel, without a statement of reasons.” We announced with respect to such waiver proceedings that while “We do not mean ... to indicate that the hearing to be held must conform with all of the requirements of a criminal trial or even of the usual administrative hearing; but we do hold that the hearing must measure up to the essentials of due process and fair treatment.” We reiterate this view . as a requirement which is part of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of our Constitution.
Several courts have held that Kent, examined in the light of Gault, must be found to set out constitutionally required procedures for bind-over hearings. 5 Comments in subsequent Supreme Court decisions have also given support to this view. 6 Oth *151 er courts have refused to find, that the procedures set forth in Kent were constitutionally required, finding instead that the decision was based primarily on the District of Columbia statute. 7 This court finds most persuasive the intermediate approach taken by the Fourth Circuit:
Whether Gault and Kent, taken together, form a constitutional imperative as to juvenile waiver proceedings is not self-evident. However, Kent and Gault do make it unquestionably clear that juvenile court proceedings that affect a young person’s substantial rights “must measure up to the essentials of due process and fair treatment,” Gault,387 U.S. at 30 ,87 S.Ct. 1445 , in the same manner as must criminal proceedings affecting the substantial rights of adults.
Kemplen v. State of Maryland,
We look first at the nature of the interest at stake. Under the Massachusetts statutory scheme, as in that of the District of Columbia, “the waiver of jurisdiction is a ‘critically important’ action determining vitally important statutory rights of the juvenile.”
A Juvenile v. Comm.,
1976 Mass. Adv.Sh. 1237,
Under the Massachusetts scheme, the waiver decision may be appealed by means of a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction in the Superior Court, or by a petition for relief in the nature of certiorari in the Supreme Judicial Court.
See A Juvenile v. Comm., supra,
The purpose such a statement of reasons would serve is clear. For example, in the case at bar, the juvenile court might have acted as it did on the basis of a determination that the “public interest” test was satisfied whenever a juvenile was charged with murder. If that conclusion had been articulated, petitioner would have had a basis for challenging the waiver decision, because the Massachusetts legislature has determined that an accusation of murder, without more, does not require that a child be tried as an adult. 11 There are also instances in other jurisdictions where waivers of juvenile jurisdiction have been overturned on appeal because the reviewing court found that the reasons as stated by the juvenile court were inadequate to support the waiver decision. 12
Statements of reasons have been held to be constitutionally required in proceedings before a wide variety of administrative bodies where often the rights at stake are of less magnitude than in the case at bar.
13
Respondent would seek to distinguish those proceedings on the grounds that such requirements are necessary for administrative bodies but not for judges, who are given wide discretion in the performance of such functions as sentencing.
See e. g., Williams v. New York,
Accordingly, the combined impact of the issues to be considered at the waiver hearing, the availability of review, and the necessity that the judge make an independent factual determination, lead to the conclusion that a failure to provide a statement of reasons at the conclusion of the waiver hearing deprived the petitioner of an essential element of fair treatment. His habeas corpus petition is granted.
Ill
The question of relief remains. The juvenile court may no longer exercise jurisdiction over petitioner, as he has passed the age of 18. Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 119, § 72. In accordance with the procedure suggested by the Supreme Court in
Kent v. United States, supra,
An order will issue.
Notes
. Stokes v. O’Shea, No. 72-16-M (D.Mass., filed Dec. 30, 1972).
. Petitioner argues first that he was put twice in jeopardy by being subjected to trial in the Superior Court following a hearing in the juvenile court. This argument must be rejected on the basis of the First Circuit’s decision in
Jackson v. Justices of the Superior Court,
Secondly, petitioner argues that he was deprived of due process by the juvenile judge’s dismissal of juvenile charges against him under authority of Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 119, § 61, because the statute is impermissibly vague. Section 61 permits a juvenile judge to dismiss a juvenile complaint, and thus waive juvenile court jurisdiction, when “the interests of the public” require that the juvenile be tried as an adult. Vagueness arguments ordinarily arise in two contexts: where a criminal statute fails to give warning of the forbidden conduct,
Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville,
Petitioner’s third argument is that he has been denied equal protection of the laws because Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 119, § 61 does not require that the state show a compelling state interest for dismissing the juvenile complaint. This argument would require the court to find, without any authority for so doing, that petitioner has a fundamental right to be treated as a juvenile, or at least a fundamental right not to be incarcerated. The court declines to do so.
. Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 119, § 74 states, in relevant part:
[N]o criminal proceeding shall be begun against any person who prior to his seventeenth birthday commits an offense against the law of the commonwealth or who violates any city ordinance or town by-law, unless proceedings against him as a delinquent child have been begun and dismissed as required by section sixty-one or seventy-two A
Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 119, § 61 provided, at the time of the initial proceedings against petitioner:
If it be alleged in a complaint made under sections fifty-two to sixty-three, inclusive, that a child has committed an offense against a law of the commonwealth, or has violated a city ordinance or town by-law, and if such alleged offense or violation was committed while the child was between his fourteenth and seventeenth birthday, and if the court is of the opinion that the interests of the public require that he should be tried for said offense or violation, instead of being dealt with as a delinquent child, the court may, after a hearing on said complaint, order it dismissed.
Prior to 1975, dismissal of a juvenile complaint under § 61 brought into play § 75, which required the immediate issuance of a criminal complaint. Consequently, dismissal of juvenile charges under § 61 amounted to a waiver of the jurisdiction of the juvenile court over the accused.
. On the one hand, the Court stated:
The Juvenile Court Act and the decisions of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit provide an adequate basis for decision of this case, and we go no further.
We believe that this result is required by the statute read in the context of constitutional principles relating to due process and the assistance of counsel.
.
Powell v. Hocker,
.
In re Whittington,
In
Breed v. Jones,
Although the juvenile-court system had its genesis in the desire to provide a distinctive procedure and setting to deal with the problems of youth, including those manifested by antisocial conduct, our decisions in recent years have recognized that there is a gap between the originally benign conception of the system and its realities. With the exception of McKeiver v. Pennsylvania,403 U.S. 528 ,91 S.Ct. 1976 ,29 L.Ed.2d 647 (1971), . the Court’s response to that perception has been to make applicable in juvenile proceedings constitutional guarantees associated with traditional criminal prosecutions.
.
Bombacino v. Bensinger,
.
Bombacino v. Bensinger,
only in terms of the adequacy of a particular state procedure to ‘protect the [juvenile] from oppression by the Government,’ . and to protect him against ‘the compliant, biased or eccentric judge.’
. In addition, the waiver hearing is the only opportunity that the juvenile has to advance the “defense” that he is a juvenile, which is akin to a plea of diminished responsibility.
Harris v. Procunier,
. See also In re Gault, supra, where the Court observed in dicta:
As the present case illustrates, the consequences of failure to state the grounds for the juvenile court’s conclusion may be to throw a burden upon the machinery for habeas corpus, to saddle the reviewing process with the burden of attempting to reconstruct a record, and to impose upon the Juvenile Judge the unseemly duty of testifying under cross-examination as to the events that transpired in the hearings before him.
. By a statute enacted in 1948, Mass.Stat. 1948, ch. 310, §§ 3, 12, the Legislature exempted all juveniles accused of murder from the statutory requirements of Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 119, § 74, that no criminal proceedings be commenced against a juvenile until juvenile proceedings had been begun and dismissed in accordance with § 61. In 1960, the murder exception was expressly removed by the Legislature. Mass.Stat. 1960, ch. 353, § 3.
See generally A Juvenile v. Commonwealth, supra,
.
See, e. g., In re Stevenson,
. Statements of reasons are necessary in parole hearings,
Morrissey v. Brewer,
. See also Bombacino v. Bensinger, supra.
