In re Petition of Peterson

Decision Date17 March 1922
Docket Number22,916
PartiesIN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF AMANDA PETERSON FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS; AMANDA PETERSON v. JESSIE E. McAULIFFE
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

Upon the relation of Amanda Peterson the district court for Hennepin county granted its writ of habeas corpus directed to Jessie E. McAuliffe. The matter was heard by Bardwell, J who quashed the writ and remanded Alice Peterson to the County Home School for Girls. From the order quashing the writ, relator appealed. Affirmed.

SYLLABUS

Habeas corpus -- Juvenile Court Act.

1. On habeas corpus where the return shows that the respondent detains the person under a commitment fair on its face errors in the proceeding in which the commitment was adjudged to issue cannot be reached. The only question open to consideration on this appeal from the order quashing the writ is the constitutionality of chapter 397, Laws 1917, known as the juvenile court act, under which the judgment was rendered.

Act constitutional.

2. Said act is not designed to punish but to rescue a delinquent child, and is not repugnant to constitutional objections that it does not provide for due process of law.

Clarence A. Jones, for relator.

Floyd Olson, County Attorney, and E. W. Gray, for respondent.

OPINION

HOLT, J.

It appears that Alice Peterson, 15 years old, was on December 30, 1921, adjudged a delinquent child in the juvenile court of Hennepin county and committed to the County Home School for Girls. She was brought into that court upon a petition charging that she, being enrolled as a pupil in the public schools of the city of Minneapolis, wilfully, unlawfully and wrongfully neglects and refuses to attend the same. The record shows that notice of the hearing was duly served. The notice was directed to the father and was served by leaving a copy at his home with his wife, the mother of the child.

A writ of habeas corpus was issued on the petition of the mother. The respondent, the superintendent of the school mentioned, made a return that Alice Peterson was detained in the school under the commitment issued as above stated. The commitment is regular on its face. The writ was quashed by the district court issuing it, and the petitioner appeals.

The constitutionality of the Juvenile Court Act, chapter 397, p. 561, Laws 1917, is the only matter open to consideration on this appeal. Irregularity or error in the procedure occurring prior to the commitment cannot be reached by habeas corpus. Neither can an inquiry be made whether the evidence warranted the finding that Alice was a delinquent child. If there be any error in these respects the remedy is to be found in the cause wherein delinquency was adjudged, either through motion or through appeal.

The act is conceded by appellant to be constitutional and valid as applied to dependent and neglected children, but delinquent children are claimed to be in another class. It is said that when children commit crime the state cannot lay hold of them except by due process of law, as usually administered by criminal courts under our constitutions, state and Federal, for a child may no more than an adult be deprived of liberty or punished for crime without a trial in the ordinary way by jury.

The principle is now rather firmly established that, for its protection and the good of the child, the state may, through its courts, place the child in charge of some person or institution for proper training and support. It matters little whether the danger to the child and society comes because of the fault of others or that of the child. The right of the state to step in and save the child is the same. In that view the restraint put upon the child cannot be regarded as punishment for crime. Children are...

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