In August 2022, J.P. met a woman under the pretense of wanting to buy her
iPhone. Instead, he pulled a gun on her, took the phone, and ran away. Police
apprehended J.P. while he was driving and found a loaded gun in the car.
In August 2022, the San Bernardino County District Attorney filed a petition
against J.P. alleging violations of Penal Code sections 211 (second degree robbery), 245
subdivision (a)(2) (assault with a firearm), and 25850 subdivisions (a) and (c)(6)
(carrying a loaded firearm not registered to him in a vehicle). In November, the court
held a contested jurisdictional hearing. It found all three allegations true and sustained
the petition.
The court held a dispositional hearing later that month. It expressed its intention
to commit J.P. to an SYTF. J.P. objected, arguing that Welfare and Institutions Code
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section 875 1 precludes commitment to an SYTF unless the juvenile’s most recent offense
is listed under section 707, subdivision (b), and J.P.’s most recent offense—the gun
possession—was not such an offense. After some discussion, the People moved to
dismiss the gun possession offense under section 782. J.P. also objected to the People’s
motion, arguing that under section 782 the court had the power to strike the entire
petition, but not to strike any single alleged offense. The court, citing In re J.B. (2022)
75 Cal.App.5th 410 (J.B.) and People v. Marsh (1984) 36 Cal.3d 134 (Marsh), concluded
that its power to dismiss the entire petition included the power to dismiss portions of it,
granted the People’s motion, dismissed the third offense, and committed J.P. to an SYTF.
ANALYSIS
On appeal, J.P. makes the same argument he did to the juvenile court: that the
court lacked authority under section 782 to dismiss just one allegation in the petition and
could dismiss only the entire petition.
Under section 875, a “court may order that a ward who is 14 years of age or older
be committed to a secure youth treatment facility . . . if the ward meets” certain criteria.
(§ 875, subd. (a).) Two of these requirements are at issue here. First, the juvenile must
be “adjudicated and found to be a ward of the court based on an offense listed in
subdivision (b) of Section 707.” (§ 875, subd. (a)(1).) The second requirement is that the
relevant adjudication must be “the most recent offense for which the juvenile has been
adjudicated.” (§ 875, subd. (a)(2).)
1 Undesignated statutory citations refer to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
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Two of J.P.’s three offenses in this case—the robbery and the assault with a
firearm—are listed under section 707, subdivision (b). However, that section lists no gun
possession offenses, meaning J.P.’s third and most recent offense does not qualify him
for commitment to an SYTF. Therefore, considering all three alleged offenses in the
petition, and under section 875, J.P. could not be committed to an SYTF because his most
recent offense did not qualify him for such a commitment.
Section 782 permits a court to “dismiss the petition, or . . . set aside the findings
and dismiss the petition, if the court finds that the interests of justice and the welfare of
the person who is the subject of the petition require that dismissal.” (§ 782, subd. (a)(1).)
“This provision ‘is a general dismissal statute’ that is similar in its operation to Penal
Code section 1385.’ ” (People v. Haro (2013) 221 Cal.App.4th 718, 721; see In re Greg
F. (2012) 55 Cal.4th 393, 416 [“similar to [Welf. & Inst. Code] section 782, Penal Code
section 1385 grants trial courts the power to dismiss a criminal action ‘in furtherance of
justice.’ ”] (Greg F.).) Indeed, the two statutes are so closely analogous that “[i]n
determining whether a [Welfare and Institutions Code] section 782 dismissal is ‘in the
interests of justice’ [citation], some courts have looked to Penal Code section 1385 for
guidance.” (Greg F. at p. 416.)
No court has weighed in on whether Welfare and Institutions Code section 782
permits a court to dismiss parts of a petition without dismissing the entire petition.
However, it is well established that Penal Code section 1385 “permit[s] a judge to
dismiss not only an entire case, but also a part thereof.” (People v. Superior Court
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(Romero) 13 Cal.4th 497, 508.) This is because “ ‘[t]he authority to dismiss the whole
includes, of course, the power to dismiss or “strike out” a part.’ ” (Marsh, supra, 36
Cal.3d at p. 143.)
Indeed, our Supreme Court has in dicta endorsed the idea that a court could
dismiss individual counts of a petition to do exactly what the juvenile court here did. In
Greg F. the court considered whether a juvenile court had the authority to dismiss an
entire petition to commit a juvenile to a more secure form of custody. (Greg F., supra,
55 Cal.4th at p. 400.) In deciding that a juvenile court did have such authority, the
majority addressed a dissenting argument which “posit[ed] that section 782 gives the
court discretion to strike individual counts in a 602 petition to change the ‘most recent’
offense alleged into one that is DJF eligible.” (Greg F., at pp. 412-413.) 2 In responding,
the majority implicitly agreed with the dissent’s characterization of a juvenile court’s
dismissal authority under section 782, and it noted that this argument “recognizes that
section 782 can and sometimes should be used for the purpose of preserving the juvenile
court’s ability to order a DJF commitment.” (Id. at p. 413, italics omitted.) Indeed, the
majority argued that an alternate view, under which “the court’s discretion to use
section 782 for this purpose is completely lost once the allegations in a petition have been
admitted or found true,” would lead to absurd results. (Id. at p. 413.)
2 Greg F. concerned a commitment to the Department of Juvenile Facilities (DJF). Recent legislation closed the DJF’s parent department and “added section 875 et seq., which governs commitment to local ‘secure youth treatment facilities’ in lieu of DJF.” (J.B., supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 427, fn. 2 (dis. opn. of Lie, J.).)
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In short, both the majority and dissent in Greg F. agreed, though on a point that
was hypothetical in the case, that a juvenile court has the power under section 782 to
dismiss a section 602 petition “in whole or in part.” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 423
(dis. opn. of Cantil-Sakauye, C.J.).) They disagreed about the dispositive issue of
whether that authority continued after the juvenile court made jurisdictional findings.
(Ibid.)
This reasoning is consistent with the notion that Welfare and Institutions Code
section 782 typically functions similarly to Penal Code section 1385. As discussed
above, there is little question that Penal Code section 1385 grants a court the power to
dismiss the whole or any portion of a criminal case. This is so even though Penal Code
section 1385, like Welfare and Institutions Code section 782, states only that a court may
dismiss “an action” and does not expressly state that a court may dismiss only a portion
of that action. (Cf. Welf. & Inst. Code, § 782, subd. (a)(1) [“A judge of the juvenile court
in which a petition was filed . . . may dismiss the petition, or may set aside the findings
and dismiss the petition, if the court finds that the interests of justice and the welfare of
the person who is the subject of the petition require that dismissal.”]; Pen. Code, § 1385,
subd. (a) [“The judge or magistrate may, either on motion of the court or upon the
application of the prosecuting attorney, and in furtherance of justice, order an action to be
dismissed.”].)
As the juvenile court noted, other courts have also implicitly endorsed this reading
of section 782. In J.B., supra, 75 Cal.App.5th 410, the Sixth District considered whether
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a court could dismiss more recent but already adjudicated petitions to commit a minor to
an otherwise prohibited commitment. In so doing, it distinguished another case because
in that case “the juvenile court . . . did not exercise its discretion under section 782.
[Citation.] Nor did the juvenile court . . . dismiss a petition or any count therein.” (Id. at
p. 424.) Again, the court assumed that the court could dismiss “any count” in a petition,
though the issue was not dispositive in the case.
Nevertheless J.P. argues Greg F. “expressly found that Penal Code [section] 1385
principles could not be applied to juvenile proceedings.” This overstates Greg F.’s
holding. To be sure, Greg F. cautioned that analogies between Welfare and Institutions
Code section 782 and Penal Code section 1385 were often flawed because “ ‘[j]uvenile
proceedings are conducted not only for the protection of society, but for the protection
and benefit of the youth involved.’ ” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 416.) We follow
Greg F. and recognize that Welfare and Institutions Code section 782 requires not just
that any dismissal be in the interest of justice, but also promote “the welfare of the person
who is the subject of the petition.” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 782, subd. (a)(1); Greg F., at
p. 417.) “No corresponding concern for the welfare of an adult criminal defendant
appears in Penal Code section 1385.” (Greg F., at p. 417.)
However, these differences do not mean we must read Welfare and Institutions
Code section 782 more narrowly than we read similar language in Penal Code
section 1385. To the contrary, the additional considerations required under Welfare and
Institutions Code section 782 arguably grant juvenile courts even more discretion than