Opinion
No. 20886.
Decided February 1, 1965.
From a judgment of the County Court adjudicating plaintiff in error a delinquent child, error was brought.
Affirmed.
1. INFANTS — Delinquent Child Proceedings — County Court — Record — Evidence — Waiver — Statute. In delinquent child proceedings in county court as defined in C.R.S. '63, 22-8-1, a verbatim record of the proceedings and evidence is to be maintained unless expressly waived.
2. Delinquent Child Proceedings — Reporter — Record — Retrial — Best Interests. Where county court failed to have reporter present at proceedings in which plaintiff in error was adjudicated a delinquent child and no verbatim record of proceedings was made, Supreme Court would not direct remanding cause for retrial where retrial was not sought and prejudice was not claimed, and best interests of child would not be served.
3. Delinquent Child — Definition — Statute. Under C.R.S. '63, 22-8-1 (2), a delinquent child is defined as any child who has violated either once or more than once any laws or municipal ordinances other than state traffic or game and fish laws or regulations or municipal traffic ordinances.
4. Hearsay Evidence — Delinquent Child Proceedings — Value of Property. Where in delinquent child proceedings, decree of court imposed probation condition on plaintiff in error, a minor, that full restitution be made to persons whose property was damaged by him, and value of property was not established by owners but was communicated to court by sheriff who obtained his information from various owners, held, obtaining of this information by sheriff and the transmission to judge of what was told him is without doubt a prime example of hearsay evidence, but of immaterial matter and therefore not reversible error.
5. Delinquent Child Proceedings — Acts — Value of Property — Materiality — Determination. In delinquent child proceedings only the acts and not the value of the property was material to determination by court of delinquency.
6. Information — Sanction — Court — Conditions of Probation — Rules of Evidence — Compliance. Information which will assist court in determining sanction to be imposed, or upon which the court relies in fashioning conditions of probation, can be obtained by court in variety of ways, none of which need comply with rules of evidence.
7. Evidence — Value of Property — Victim of Vandalism — Presented to Court — Motion to Vacate. Evidence that value of property destroyed is different from that which court ordered to be paid to victim of vandalism should be presented to court in motion to vacate its decree.
Error to the County Court of Rio Blanco County, Hon. Dorothy B. Herring Judge.
FRANK G. COOLEY, for plaintiff in error.
DUKE W. DUNBAR, Attorney General, FRANK E. HICKEY, Deputy, PETER L. DYE, Assistant, for defendant in error.
PLAINTIFF in error seeks to have this court set aside a decree of the Rio Blanco County Court, finding him a delinquent child as defined in 22-8-1, C.R.S. 1963.
In the summary of argument he sets up three points: 1. That the county court is a court of record, but no reporter was present during the trial and no verbatim record of the proceedings was made, thus precluding proper review in this court; 2. that the status of delinquency cannot be established by one act or episode; 3. that the decree is based on hearsay.
We treat each of the points in order named.
1. The Question of the Necessity of a Court Reporter.
[1, 2] In view of the previous pronouncements of this court, there should be no doubt remaining that in cases of this kind a verbatim record of the proceedings and evidence shall be maintained unless expressly waived. Clerkin v. Geisendorfer, 137 Colo. 139, 323 P.2d 633; Herren v. People, 147 Colo. 442, 363 P.2d 1044. (See also Colorado Session Laws 1964, chapter 45, section 35, re county courts, enacted subsequent to the trial of this cause). In the case at bar there has been furnished to this court a record, which, though lacking a transcript of the proceedings, is not challenged as to its accuracy. Furthermore, there is no claim by plaintiff in error to prejudice by reason of the dereliction of the county court to follow our directive as contained in the Clerkin and Herren cases, supra.
No good purpose would be served, under the circumstances disclosed by the record, in remanding this cause for retrial. A retrial is not sought, and because this court, as a matter of law, cannot on the record here order the case dismissed, retrial would be the only relief available. It would not be in the best interests of the child to order one. The child involved is now two years older, and this court has been advised by counsel that the conditions of the decree have been faithfully performed by plaintiff in error.
2. The Question Whether Delinquency can be Established by a Single Act or Episode.
In 22-8-1 (2), C.R.S. 1963, a delinquent child is defined as any child who has violated either once or more than once any laws or municipal ordinances other than state traffic or game and fish laws or regulations or municipal traffic ordinances. It was under the definition that the proceedings were held in the county court. Other definitions in the same section do not apply here.
It is contended that the decision of this court in Spencer v. People, 133 Colo. 196, 292 P.2d 971, precludes a finding of delinquency on a single violation of a state law. In the Spencer case, the following statement is relied upon in this assignment of error:
"* * * Moreover, the authorities are generally agreed that a single violation of any of the acts defining delinquency is not enough upon which delinquency can be determined. It is the repetition of such acts and the frequency thereof that creates a state of delinquency or incorrigibility. Kahm v. People, 83 Colo. 300, 264 P. 718."
The language cited as authority was not the ratio decidendi in the Spencer case. it was pure dictum. The Kahm, case, which was cited in support of the proposition, did not hold that a single violation of the law cannot create a status of delinquency. The Kahm case said that a single act does not establish "incorrigibility" or "living a life of crime." The statute in force at the time of the Spencer case has been repealed, and the definition here under attack was enacted by the legislature in 1960. Among the significant changes made in the law, the legislature changed the previous definition. Whereas C.R.S. '53, 22-8-1, defined a delinquent child as including any child under eighteen years of age "who violates any law of this state or any city or village ordinance," the legislature subsequently placed in the amended definition the words "has violated either once or more than once, any state law or municipal ordinance, * * *" (C.R.S. '63, 22-8-1). We are convinced this was a legislative repeal of the dictum in the Spencer case.
Moreover, we are not, in this case, confronted with a single violation of a law, but rather a violation of several laws in the course of a one-night rampage, with acts of vandalism which disclosed a flagrant disregard of law and order and the property rights of others.
3. The Question of Whether Hearsay Evidence Received by the Court was Reversible Error.
[4, 5] The decree of the court contained a number of conditions to be fulfilled during the period of probation granted to plaintiff in error. One was that full restitution be made to persons whose property was damaged by plaintiff in error. The value of the property involved was not established by the owners, but was communicated to the court by the sheriff, who said he obtained his information from the various owners. The obtaining of this information by the sheriff, and the transmission to the judge of what was told him, is without doubt a prime example of hearsay. However, only the acts and not the value of the property was material to the determination by the court of delinquency.
[6, 7] Information which will assist the court in determining the sanction to be imposed, or upon which the court relies in fashioning conditions of probation, can be obtained by the court in variety of ways, none of which need comply with the rules of evidence. If there was evidence that the value of the property destroyed was different from that which the court ordered to be paid to the victims of the vandalism, it should have been presented to the court in the motion to vacate its decree.
The judgment and decree of the court is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE PRINGLE and MR. JUSTICE FRANTZ concur.