Riverside County Probation Dept. v. Superior Court CA4/2 (2023) · DecisionDepot
Riverside County Probation Dept. v. Superior Court CA4/2
California Court of Appeal Mar 28, 2023 No. E077962AUnpublished
Filed 3/28/23 Riverside County Probation Dept. v. Superior Court CA4/2 Opinion after vacating opinion filed on 12/22/22
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
RIVERSIDE COUNTY PROBATION DEPARTMENT, E077962 Petitioner, (Super.Ct.No. JUV086925) v. OPINION THE SUPERIOR COURT OF RIVERSIDE COUNTY,
Respondent;
J.A. et al.,
Real Parties in Interest.
ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for writ of mandate from an order of the
Superior Court of Riverside County. Samah Shouka, Judge. Petition granted.
Minh C. Tran and Gregory P. Priamos, County Counsel, Kelly A. Moran, Chief
Deputy County Counsel, and Emily C. Headlee, Deputy County Counsel, for Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
1
John F. Schuck, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Real Party in
Interest J.A.
Michael A. Hestrin, District Attorney, and Sophia Choi, Deputy District Attorney,
for Real Party in Interest the People.
Jennifer B. Henning; and James R. Williams, County Counsel (Santa Clara),
Kavita Narayan, Assistant County Counsel, Marcelo Quiñones, Lead Deputy County
Counsel, and Mona M. Williams, Deputy County Counsel, for California State
2 In 2008, the juvenile court dismissed the petition. No new petition was ever filed. Arguably, in 2021, the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction for this reason alone. However, we need not decide this point.
4
Later in 2018, we held that, under Contreras, the trial court erred by considering
defendant’s life expectancy. We reversed and remanded for resentencing. In addition,
we noted that under Proposition 57, defendant was entitled to a fitness hearing. Because
it was not clear from the appellate record whether he had already had a fitness hearing,
we directed the trial court to make that determination on remand. (People v. Ortega
(Aug. 24, 2018, E061027) [nonpub. opn.].)
On January 1, 2019 — after we issued our remittitur but before defendant was
resentenced — Senate Bill No. 1391 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.) (SB 1391) went into effect.
SB 1391 amended section 707 so as to provide that, subject to exceptions not applicable
here, a person who committed a crime at the age of 14 or 15 cannot be transferred to
adult court.
Accordingly, in June 2021, the trial court ruled (with both counsel concurring)
that, in light of SB 1391, transfer was “moot” and adult sentencing should be “vacated.” 3
It declared defendant a ward of the court and committed him to the DJJ.
In July 2021, however, the DJJ rejected the commitment. (See § 736, subd. (a).)
Thus, in August 2021, the juvenile court vacated the commitment and set a new
dispositional hearing.
3 The juvenile court correctly anticipated the holding of People v. Padilla (2022) 13 Cal.5th 152 that the presumption that an ameliorative amendment applies retroactively to a nonfinal judgment extends to a judgment that became nonfinal because it was vacated and resentencing was ordered.
5
Defendant objected that the juvenile court no longer had jurisdiction over him.
The Riverside County Probation Department (Probation) made a special appearance, also
arguing that the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction. The People argued that the juvenile
court had jurisdiction under section 607, subdivision (h).
The juvenile court agreed that it had jurisdiction under section 607, subdivision
(h). It committed defendant to Pathways to Success, an SYTF operated by Probation. It
stayed its decision temporarily to enable the parties to file a writ petition.
Defendant filed an appeal. Probation then filed a writ petition.
In the writ proceeding, we issued an order to show cause and stayed the trial
court’s order. We ordered that the appeal and the writ proceeding be considered together
(but not consolidated).4
II
DISCUSSION
Defendant and Probation contend that the juvenile court had no jurisdiction over
defendant because he was over 25.
A. Legal Background.
“‘A “juvenile court” is a superior court exercising limited jurisdiction arising
under juvenile law.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Ramirez (2019) 35 Cal.App.5th 55, 66.)
4 For this reason, we have considered all parties’ briefs in both the writ proceeding and the appeal. We have also taken judicial notice of the record in the appeal.
6
Subject to exceptions not relevant here, “any minor who is between 12 years of
age and 17 years of age, inclusive, when he or she violates any law . . . defining crime . . .
is within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, which may adjudge the minor to be a ward
of the court.” (§ 602, subd. (a).) This defines the juvenile court’s “initial jurisdiction.”
(People v. Chi Ko Wong (1976) 18 Cal.3d 698, 710, disapproved on other grounds in
People v. Green (1980) 27 Cal. 3d 1, 34-35.) By contrast, “[w]hen a juvenile is declared
a ward of the juvenile court, the juvenile becomes ‘subject to its continuing jurisdiction.’
[Citation.]” (In re Antoine D. (2006) 137 Cal.App.4th 1314, 1320.)
“Because the juvenile court’s [initial] jurisdiction is based on age at the time of the
violation of a criminal law or ordinance, ‘[i]t is . . . possible that a person might commit a
murder at age 17, be apprehended 50 years later, and find himself subject to juvenile
court [initial] jurisdiction at age 67.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Ramirez, supra, 35
Cal.App.5th at p. 66.) In that event, however, unless the juvenile court has a basis for
continuing jurisdiction, it must dismiss. (In re Arthur N. (1976) 16 Cal.3d 226, 241.)
Section 607 provides for the termination of continuing jurisdiction. In October
2021, when the juvenile court ruled, it provided, as relevant here:5
“(a) The court may retain jurisdiction over a person who is found to be a ward . . .
of the juvenile court until the ward . . . attains 21 years of age, except as provided in
subdivisions (b), (c), [and] (d) . . . .
5 All further citations to a subdivision refer to subdivisions of section 607, as it stood in October 2021, unless otherwise specified.
7
“(b) The court may retain jurisdiction over a person who is found to be a person
described in Section 602 by reason of the commission of an offense listed in subdivision
(b) of Section 707, until that person attains 23 years of age, subject to the provisions of
subdivision (c).
“(c) The court may retain jurisdiction over a person who is found to be a person
described in Section 602 by reason of the commission of an offense listed in subdivision
(b) of Section 707 until that person attains 25 years of age if the person, at the time of
adjudication of a crime or crimes, would, in criminal court, have faced an aggregate
sentence of seven years or more.
“(d) The court shall not discharge a person from its jurisdiction who has been
committed to the [DJJ] while the person remains under the jurisdiction of the [DJJ] . . . .
“(g) Notwithstanding subdivisions (b) [and] (c), . . . a person who is committed by
the juvenile court to the [DJJ] on or after July 1, 2012, but before July 1, 2018, and who
is found to be a person described in Section 602 by reason of the commission of an
offense listed in subdivision (b) of Section 707 shall be discharged upon the expiration of
a two-year period of control, or when the person attains 23 years of age, whichever
occurs later . . . .
“(h)(1) Notwithstanding subdivision (g), a person who is committed by the
juvenile court to the [DJJ], on or after July 1, 2018, and who is found to be a person
described in Section 602 by reason of the commission of an offense listed in subdivision
(c) of Section 290.008 of the Penal Code or subdivision (b) of Section 707 of this code,
8
shall be discharged upon the expiration of a two-year period of control, or when the
person attains 23 years of age, whichever occurs later . . . .”
“(2) A person who, at the time of adjudication of a crime or crimes, would, in
criminal court, have faced an aggregate sentence of seven years or more, shall be
discharged upon the expiration of a two-year period of control, or when the person attains
25 years of age, whichever occurs later . . . .
“(3) This subdivision does not apply to a person who is committed to the [DJJ]
. . . by a court prior to July 1, 2018, as described in subdivision (g).” (Former § 607,
Stats. 2021, ch. 18, § 4, pp. 220-221.)
The DJJ was “the state’s most restrictive placement for its most severe juvenile
offenders . . . .” (In re Miguel C. (2021) 69 Cal.App.5th 899, 902.) “The DJJ was
previously known as the California Youth Authority (CYA). [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 906,
fn. 4.) “The DJJ is also known as the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Facilities (DJF). [Citation.] DJJ and DJF are used
interchangeably in case law. [Citation.]” (In re J.B. (2022) 75 Cal.App.5th 410, 413,
fn. 1.)
In 2020 the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 823 (2019-2020 Reg. Sess.), also
known as “juvenile justice realignment.” (Stats. 2020, ch. 337.) Realignment requires
the eventual closure of DJJ and the devolution of its responsibilities onto the counties.
(§ 736.5, subd. (a).) The county-level equivalent of DJJ is an SYTF (§ 875), such as
Pathways. After July 1, 2021, with one exception, wards may no longer be committed to
9
DJJ. (§ 736.5, subd. (b).) Wards committed to DJJ before July 1, 2021 remain there,
unless released, discharged, or moved, until DJJ closes on June 30, 2023. (§ 736.5, subd.
(d).)
B. Subdivision (h)(2) as a Basis for Jurisdiction.
Defendant and Probation argue that defendant comes within subdivision (c), which
provides that the juvenile court may retain jurisdiction only until a ward turns 25.
Certainly he meets all of its requirements. He has been found to be “a person described
in Section 602” — i.e., a person who “violate[d] a[] law” when he was “between 12 years
of age and 17 years of age . . . .” (§ 602, subd. (a).) He committed 707(b) offenses —
robbery, kidnapping for purposes of robbery, and forcible sex offenses. (§ 707, subds.
(b)(3)-(b)(5), (b)(7), (b)(10).) Finally, in adult court, he would be facing a sentence of
seven years or more — in fact, he was sentenced to life.
The juvenile court ruled, however, that defendant comes within an exception
created by subdivision (h)(2). It viewed subdivision (h)(2) as independent of subdivision
(h)(1). Subdivision (h)(1) applies only to “a person who is committed by the juvenile
court to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Justice,
on or after July 1, 2018, and who is found to be a person described in Section 602 by
reason of the commission of an offense listed in . . . [707(b)] . . . .” By contrast,
subdivision (h)(2) has no such prefatory qualification. The juvenile court concluded that,
unlike subdivision (h)(1), subdivision (h)(2) is not limited to a person committed to the
DJJ.
10
We disagree, for six reasons.
First, the structure of section 607 shows what the Legislature intended.
Subdivisions (a), (b), (c), and (d) are primarily jurisdictional provisions.
Subdivision (a) starts by setting up a presumption that jurisdiction terminates at 21. It
makes an exception for subdivision (b), which allows the juvenile court to exercise
jurisdiction over wards who have committed 707(b) offenses until they are 23. It also
makes an exception for subdivision (c), which allows the juvenile court to exercise
jurisdiction over wards who have committed offenses that would entail a sentence in
adult court of seven years or more until they are 25. Each of these subdivisions limits
jurisdiction strictly by age; they do not provide for any extended period of control.
Subdivisions (g), (h)(1), and (h)(2) are primarily discharge provisions.
Subdivision (g) and subdivision (h)(1) are substantially similar. They both apply only to
wards committed to the DJJ; subdivision (g) applies only to wards committed between
July 1, 2012 and June 30, 2018, whereas subdivision (h)(1) applies only to wards
committed after June 30, 2018. Subdivision (h)(2), by contrast, is not expressly limited to
a ward committed to the DJJ. Each of these subdivisions provides for a two-year period
of control, which may extend beyond the age limits in subdivisions (a), (b), and (c).
None of them, however, gives the juvenile court any jurisdiction.
Of course, there is a relationship between jurisdiction and discharge. Subdivision
(d) ties the two together by ensuring that the juvenile court continues to have jurisdiction
until the ward is discharged. To repeat, it provides: “The court shall not discharge a
11
person from its jurisdiction who has been committed to the [DJJ] while the person
remains under the jurisdiction of the [DJJ] . . . .” It is an express exception to subdivision
(a). Thus, it gives the juvenile court jurisdiction during any extended period of control
under subdivisions (g) and (h)(1). As amicus the California State Association of
July 27, 2022. In Hwang, in 2001, a defendant who had been 15 at the time of the crimes
was prosecuted, convicted, and sentenced in adult court. (Id. at p. 361.) In 2018, the
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation recommended that the sentence be recalled
and that the defendant be resentenced, because his sentence was unlawful under a 2009
case. (Id. at p. 362.) The defendant then requested a transfer hearing, pursuant to
Proposition 57. The trial court denied the request and imposed a mod ified adult sentence.
(Ibid.)
The appellate court held that both Proposition 57 and SB 1391 applied
retroactively to all judgments not yet final when they went into effect. (Hwang, supra, 60
Cal.App.5th at pp. 364-366.) “That this defendant is now over 25 years old does not
15
change our conclusion . . . .” (Id. at p. 365.) It further held that the recall and
resentencing reopened the finality of the judgment. (Id. at pp. 366-367.) It concluded:
“The appropriate remedy is a remand to the trial court with directions for the matter to be
transferred to the juvenile court for a juvenile adjudication. [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 367.)
In the footnote, it commented: “We observe that our opinion does not require
defendant’s automatic release from custody. Under Welfare and Institutions Code
section 607, subdivision ([h])(2), ‘A person who, at the time of adjudication of a crime or
crimes, would, in criminal court, have faced an aggregate sentence of seven years or
more, shall be discharged upon the expiration of a two-year period of control, or when
the person attains 25 years of age, whichever occurs later, unless an order for further
detention has been made by the committing court pursuant to Article 6 (commencing
with [Welfare and Institutions Code s]ection 1800) of Chapter 1 of Division 2.5.’
Welfare and Institutions Code section 1800, subdivision (a) permits the Director of the
Division of Juvenile Justice to ask a prosecuting attorney to file a petition for a person
who ‘would be physically dangerous to the public because of the person’s mental or
physical deficiency, disorder, or abnormality that causes the person to have serious
difficulty controlling his or her dangerous behavior.’ [Citation.]” (Hwang, supra, 60
Cal.App.5th at p. 367, fn. 6.)
Thus, the Hwang court seems to have believed that the juvenile court could still
exercise jurisdiction over the approximately 33-year-old defendant under subdivision
(h)(2), and moreover that it could order him held beyond his discharge date under section
16
1800. This was dictum. The court’s holding did not turn on whether the defendant was
entitled to automatic release. Beyond citing subdivision (h)(2) and section 1800, the
court provided no analysis for its conclusions.
For the reasons already discussed, we respectfully disagree with the dictum in
Hwang.
C. The Effect of the DJJ Commitment.
The People do not rely on Hwang. In fact, they all but concede that the trial
court’s reasoning was erroneous: “[T]he prefatory language of subdivision (h)(1) is
relevant and likely applicable to subdivision (h)(2) as well . . . .”
The People argue, however, that defendant was committed to the DJJ (even though
the DJJ rejected the commitment and the juvenile court then vacated it). Defendant and
Probation respond that the juvenile court lacked jurisdiction to make the DJJ
commitment.
The provisions for a two-year period of control, in subdivisions (g), (h)(1), and
(h)(2), tee up the question: Two years from when? Subdivisions (g) and (h)(1) expressly
apply only to a ward who is committed to the DJJ. As we have already held, subdivision
(h)(2) must be construed as likewise applying only to a ward who is committed to the
DJJ. The only reasonable construction of all three subdivisions is that the period of
control begins when the DJJ commitment begins.
As part of realignment, section 607 has been amended, effective June 30, 2022, so
as to provide that the juvenile court has jurisdiction over a ward who has committed a
17
707(b) offense until the ward turns either 23 or 25, “or two years from the date of
commitment to a secure youth treatment facility . . . , whichever occurs later . . . .”
(Current subds. (b), (c).) This confirms our understanding that all two-year periods of
control begin on the date of the commitment.
The People argue that, as subdivision (c) is a jurisdictional provision, this
amendment means “that jurisdiction was established . . . by the juvenile court’s
commitment of J.A. to Pathways, an SYTF, and that the juvenile court may retain
jurisdiction over J.A. for two years from the date of commitment to Pathways.”6 As
Probation points out, however, the amendment added the same language to subdivision
(b). Aside from age, all offenders who fall under subdivision (c) also fall under
subdivision (b). Thus, if this language were a springing source of jurisdiction, regardless
of age, there would be no need to add it separately to each subdivision.
Actually, this just highlights the bootstrapping nature of the People’s argument.
Yes, the amendment clarifies that, once a juvenile court makes a commitment to an
SYTF, it can “retain jurisdiction” for two years. But it does not give the juvenile court
jurisdiction to make a commitment to SYTF in the first place. The source of that
jurisdiction must be found elsewhere. And as to J.A., we do not find it anywhere.
Yet again, the overall scheme of section 607 is clear: A DJJ commitment must be
made while the juvenile court has jurisdiction of the ward because the ward is under 21,
6 Defendant and Probation contend that the amendment is not retroactive and that, if it is retroactive, it is unconstitutionally ex post facto. We need not decide these questions. We assume it can validly be applied to defendant.
18
23, or 25, under subdivision (a), (b), or (c), respectively. Once a DJJ (or SYTF)
commitment is made, the two-year period of control begins, and it may continue beyond
the age of 21, 23, or 25, as the case may be; the juvenile court retains jurisdiction during
this extended period under subdivision (d). If the juvenile court does not have
jurisdiction to make a valid DJJ (or SYTF) commitment, a two-year period of control can
never begin.
By reading subdivision (h)(2) as a “standalone” provision, the trial court was
grasping at the only straw that would even arguably support it committing defendant to
the DJJ. However, subdivision (h)(2) is operative only after a DJJ commitment has
already been made; it does not give a juvenile court jurisdiction to order the commitment.
In sum, the juvenile court had no authority to commit a 40-year-old to the DJJ.
III
DISPOSITION
Let a writ of mandate issue directing respondent superior court to vacate
defendant’s commitment to Pathways and to terminate its jurisdiction. Our stay order is
vacated.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS RAMIREZ P. J. We concur:
McKINSTER J.
MILLER J. 19
AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. The juvenile court lacked jurisdiction to order a disposition for the defendant because he exceeded the age limits set forth in Welfare and Institutions Code section 607, and the court's reliance on subdivision (h)(2) as a basis for jurisdiction was erroneous.
Issues
Whether the juvenile court had jurisdiction to order a disposition for a defendant over 25 years of age under Welfare and Institutions Code section 607, subdivision (h)(2).
Whether Welfare and Institutions Code section 607, subdivision (h)(2) provides an independent basis for juvenile court jurisdiction over a defendant not committed to the Division of Juvenile Justice.
Disposition. Petition granted.
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“The juvenile court has jurisdiction under subdivision (h)(2), if at all, only through subdivision (d), and subdivision (d) requires a DJJ commitment.”