Opinion Number: 2000-NMCA-024
Filing Date: February 25, 2000
Docket No. 20,254
IN THE MATTER OF AARON L.,
Child-Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF EDDY COUNTY
JAY W. FORBES, District Judge
PATRICIA A. MADRID, Attorney General
STEVEN S. SUTTLE, Assistant Attorney General
Santa Fe, NM
for Appellee
PHYLLIS H. SUBIN, Chief Public Defender
LISABETH L. OCCHIALINO, Assistant Appellate Defender
Santa Fe, NM
for Appellant
PICKARD, Chief Judge.
{1}
Child appeals the decision of the children's court
committing him to the New Mexico Boys' School for an
indeterminate period not to exceed two years after he admitted
violating the terms of his probation at a probation revocation
hearing. On appeal, Child argues the trial court's decision
should be reversed on two grounds: (1) the trial court
violated his fundamental right to due process at the
revocation hearing by failing to follow the mandatory
procedures set forth in the Children's Code and (2) his trial
attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel by not
objecting to the trial court's failure to follow the
procedures set forth in the Children's Code. Child argues
that if we remand his case, a different judge should be
assigned to it because the judge's actions demonstrate bias
against Child.
{2}
The State claims we lack jurisdiction to review the
issues presented by Child's appeal because he failed to
preserve them at the trial court level. On the merits, the
State argues Child was not entitled to receive the same formal
inquiries at his revocation hearing that he was entitled to
receive at his delinquency proceeding. Alternatively, the
State claims Child was not prejudiced by the trial court's failure to provide him with formal inquiries at his revocation
hearing.
{3}
In our view, Child's failure to preserve error below is
not fatal because the first issue presented in his brief in
chief implicates his right, as a juvenile probationer, to
receive a certain minimal level of procedural due process at
the revocation hearing. On the merits, we reverse the trial
court's decision because its failure to follow the mandatory
procedures set forth in the Children's Code raises significant
issues of whether Child's admission was supported by an
adequate factual basis and whether Child's admission was
knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. Due to our holding, we
do not address the issue of whether Child's trial attorney
provided effective assistance of counsel. We remand Child's
case to the same judge for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
BACKGROUND
{4}
In April 1998, the State filed a delinquency petition
after Child was charged with possessing drug paraphernalia and
causing criminal damage to property. One month later, Child
entered an admission to the drug paraphernalia charge at his
first appearance. Child was subsequently found guilty of the
property damage charge at an adjudicatory hearing held before
a special master.
{5}
In July 1998, Child appeared before the trial court for
a dispositional hearing. Child's juvenile probation officer
(JPO) recommended that Child be placed on two years' probation
and pay restitution for the property damage he had caused.
The trial court accepted the JPO's recommendations. In doing
so, the trial court told Child that if he was called before
the court again, he would be sent to the Boys' School. When
asked if he understood the admonition, Child responded that he
did.
{6}
In November 1998, the State petitioned to revoke Child's
probation after he was allegedly expelled from school for the
duration of the school year. The State's petition claimed
Child's expulsion from school violated the probation condition
that Child "attend school with no unexcused absences in each
and every class." As a result of the State's petition, Child
appeared before the trial court the following month for a
revocation hearing.
{7}
In December 1998, at the revocation hearing, the trial
court began the hearing by asking the parties if they had any
comments they wanted to make. Child's defense counsel
indicated that he did, stating that Child admitted to the
charge in the State's petition that he had been expelled from
school. After describing the JPO's recommendation that Child
go back to school and begin reporting to the JPO, defense counsel advised the court that Child had successfully appealed
his expulsion at the administrative level. Defense counsel
informed the court that, as a result of appeal, Child was
going to be allowed back into school when the school year
commenced the following calendar year, January 1999. The JPO
further explained that his recommendation was for a weekend in
detention, in addition to the school and reporting
requirements.
{8}
In response to defense counsel's statement, the trial
court observed that Child had been informed at his delinquency
hearing that if he came before the court again, he was going
to be committed to the Boys' School. The trial court asked
Child if he remembered that statement at the delinquency
hearing. Child responded that he did. The trial court then
proceeded to commit Child to the Boys' School for an
indeterminate period not to exceed two years.
{9}
In the trial court's judgment and disposition, the court
formally committed Child to the Boys' School for two years.
According to the judgment and disposition, Child had freely
and knowingly admitted to the charge contained in the State's
petition only after "being fully advised of his constitutional
and statutory rights." The record wholly fails to support the
trial court's recital that Child was advised of any rights
under the Children's Code, the State Constitution, or the
federal constitution at any time during the revocation
hearing.
DISCUSSION
I. JURISDICTION
{10}
The State claims we lack jurisdiction to review Child's
appellate issues because he failed to preserve them at the
trial court level. The State correctly recites the general
rule regarding preservation of error. See Rule 12-216(A) NMRA
2000 ("To preserve a question for review it must appear that
a ruling or decision by the district court was fairly invoked
. . . ."). However, as an exception to the general rule, we
may address propositions not raised in the trial court in
order to protect an appellant's fundamental rights. See Rule
12-216(B) ("This [preservation] rule shall not preclude the
appellate court from considering . . . questions involving .
. . fundamental error or fundamental rights of a party.").
{11}
In this appeal, Child correctly asserts that as a
juvenile probationer, he had a constitutionally protected
liberty interest in his probationary status. See State v.
Tony G., 121 N.M. 186, 188, 909 P.2d 746, 748 (Ct. App. 1995).
Before Child's probation could properly be revoked, he was
therefore entitled to certain minimal protections afforded by
procedural due process. See id. Child claims the trial court
violated his fundamental right to due process by failing,
among other things, to ensure that there was an adequate
factual basis to support his admission and that his admission
was intelligent and voluntary with knowledge of rights. See State ex rel. Children, Youth & Families Dep't v. Stella P.,
1999-NMCA-100, ¶¶ 11-12, 21, 127 N.M. 699, 986 P.2d 495
(ruling that minimum consideration of due process required
court to inquire on the record whether mother waived certain
due process rights and failure to do so was fundamental
error); State ex rel. Children, Youth & Families Dep't v.
Lilli L., 121 N.M. 376, 379-82, 911 P.2d 884, 887-90 (Ct. App.
1995) (concluding that court's failure to personally ascertain
from mother whether her admission was knowing and voluntary
violated due process). Because Child's appeal raises
questions in this case similar to those raised in Stella P.
and Lilli L., and because we are concerned that the judgment
and disposition contain recitals that are in no way supported
by the transcript of the revocation hearing, we address the
merits of this appeal.
II. DUE PROCESS
{12}
Child claims the trial court violated his fundamental
right to due process on four grounds: (1) failure to advise
him of his rights at his first appearance; (2) failure to make
a record establishing that his admission was knowing,
voluntary, and intelligent; (3) failure to afford him his
right to allocute before proceeding to disposition; and (4)
failure to remain impartial and unbiased. We consolidate for
review the first and second issues listed above as both claims
concern the issue of whether the trial court could have
properly relied on Child's admission to revoke his probation.
Upon reviewing these issues together, we conclude the trial
court violated Child's right to due process. This conclusion
is dispositive of Child's appeal and so we refrain from
reviewing the third and fourth issues listed above except as
necessary to address procedure on remand.
A. Child's Arguments
{13}
Child claims the trial court's decision to commit him to
the Boys' School must be reversed because it was improperly
predicated upon his invalidly entered admission. Child argues
his admission was invalidly entered because the trial court
failed to follow several mandatory procedures set forth in the
Children's Code. In particular, Child claims the trial court
violated his fundamental right to due process when it failed
to explain to him the consequences of the allegations against
him; make a record establishing his admission was voluntary,
intelligent, and knowing; and ensure his admission was
supported by an adequate factual basis. See Rule 10-208B NMRA
2000; Rule 10-210 NMRA 2000; Rule 10-224 NMRA 1999. (Rules
10-224 and 10-232 discussed in this opinion were amended
effective August 1, 1999, after the December 1998 revocation
hearing.) We agree with Child that the trial court's failure
to follow the mandatory procedures set forth in Rule 10-224
rendered his admission invalid.
{14}
Under Rule 10-224(C), the trial court lacked the
authority to accept Child's admission without first addressing
Child personally in open court in order to determine that:
(1) he understands the charges against him;
(2) he understands the dispositions authorized
by the Children's Code for the offense;
(3) he understands that he has the right to
deny the allegations in the petition and have a
trial on the allegations;
(4) he understands that if he makes an
admission . . . he is waiving the right to a trial;
and
(5) the admission . . . [is] voluntary and not
the result of force or threats or of promises . . .
.
Although Rule 10-224 specifically refers to delinquency
hearings, its provisions are made applicable to probation
revocation hearings by NMSA 1978, § 32A-2-24 (1993). Section
32A-2-24(B) states in relevant part that "proceedings to
revoke probation shall be governed by the procedures, rights
and duties applicable to proceedings on a delinquency
petition." See also Rule 10-232(A) NMRA 1999 ("[T]he
respondent whose probation is sought to be revoked shall be
entitled to all rights that a respondent alleged to be
delinquent . . . is entitled to under law and these rules . .
. .").
{15}
In the case at bar, the record indicates the judge failed
to ask Child a single question contemplated by Rule 10-224(C).
Instead, the record reveals that after Child's defense counsel
entered Child's admission, the trial court limited its line of
inquiry to whether Child remembered what the court had said
five months earlier at his delinquency hearing. When Child
indicated that he did, the trial court immediately proceeded
to sentence.
{16}
In our view, the trial court had an affirmative duty
under Rule 10-224(C) to ascertain whether Child's admission
was supported by an adequate factual basis and whether Child's
admission was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. See Rule
10-224(C) committee commentary ("The determination is required
in cases involving either a consent decree or an admission.
The original committee believed that such an inquiry is
constitutionally mandated."); Boykin v. Alabama, 395 U.S. 238,
242 (1969) (ruling that trial court cannot accept a guilty
plea without affirmatively establishing on the record the
validity of such a plea); State v. Garcia, 121 N.M. 544, 547,
915 P.2d 300, 303 (1996) (noting that adult counterpart on
guilty pleas codifies the rule set forth in Boykin). The
trial court's failure to fulfill its affirmative duties under
Rule 10-224(C) invalidates Child's admission. See Garcia, 121
N.M. at 548, 915 P.2d at 304 (court's partial compliance with
Rule 5-303 was insufficient and rendered plea invalid where
court failed to ascertain if defendant understood the nature
of the charge and possible range of penalties); Lilli L., 121
N.M. at 379-82, 911 P.2d at 887-90 (concluding that court's
failure to ascertain whether mother's admission was knowing
and voluntary violated due process and thus invalidated admission).
B. State's Counter-Arguments
1. Rule 10-224
{17}
The State concedes that in the children's court context,
probation revocation hearings are generally supposed to be
conducted like delinquency hearings. The State argues,
however, that Child was not entitled to receive the same
instructions set forth in Rule 10-224(C) because it is not
apparent just how those instructions can be applied to
revocation hearings. The thrust of the State's argument
appears to be that if Child was not entitled to all of the
protections afforded by Rule 10-224(C), then it becomes less
likely that he suffered prejudice as a result of the trial
court's failure to ask him any probative questions at the
revocation hearing. We will address each one of the State's
claims in the order that they appear in Rule 10-224(C).
{18}
First, the State claims the requirements set forth in
Rule 10-224(C)(1) and (2) do not transfer smoothly from
delinquency proceedings to probation revocations because "the
child has already been formally advised both of the charge
against him, [10-224(C)(1)], and of the potential disposition,
[10-224(C)(2)]." According to the State these inquiries are
redundant and consequently meaningless at a revocation
hearing. We disagree.
{19}
Rule 10-232(A)(3) explains how Rule 10-224(C)(1) applies
to probation revocations. In particular, Rule 10-232(A)(3)
states that the petition "shall state the terms of probation
alleged to have been violated and the factual basis for these
allegations." The clear import of this language is that the
"charge" contemplated in the delinquency proceeding is
replaced with the "probation violation" contemplated in the
revocation hearing.
{20}
Rule 10-232(B) explains why Rule 10-224(C)(2) should
apply to probation revocations. In revocation hearings, the
children's court has the authority to "make any other
disposition which would have been appropriate in the
[delinquency] proceedings" if it finds that the juvenile has
violated the terms of probation. See Rule 10-232(B). A
juvenile faces a full two-year commitment from the date of
disposition on the probation revocation irrespective of the
disposition at the delinquency hearing. It is therefore not
redundant for the children's court to inform a juvenile of the
range of possibilities at a revocation hearing because the
potential disposition at such a hearing can vary significantly
from the disposition entered at the delinquency proceeding.
{21}
Second, the State claims the requirements set forth in
Rule 10-224(C)(3) and (4) do not transfer smoothly from
delinquency proceedings to probation revocations because a
"juvenile probationer . . . is not entitled to a trial on a
petition to revoke probation." In support of its argument, the State relies on In re Lucio F. T., 119 N.M. 76, 77-80, 888
P.2d 958, 959-962 (Ct. App. 1994). We find nothing in In re
Lucio F. T. that stands for the stated proposition. Moreover,
if In re Lucio F. T. did stand for such a proposition, it
would be at odds with Rule 10-232(A)(2), which contemplates a
hearing on the petition. See Rule 10-232(A)(2) ("[T]he
hearing on the petition shall be to the court without a jury
. . . ."). In probation revocation proceedings, the right to
a trial may be construed to be the right to a hearing, and the
children's court can easily, and should, inform a juvenile of
this right.
{22}
Finally, the State claims Rule 10-224(C)(5) cannot apply
to revocation hearings because it applies only to consent
decrees. The State's argument is meritless in view of the
fact that Paragraph (C)(5) explicitly applies to both
admissions and consent decrees. See Rule 10-224(C)(5) ("[T]he
admission or provisions of the consent decree are voluntary
and not the result of force or threats or of promises . . . ."
(Emphasis added.))
2. Boykin Requirements
{23}
The State next argues the requirements for accepting
guilty pleas mandated by Boykin and Garcia do not apply to
Child's appeal because those cases were not decided in the
probation revocation context. The thrust of the State's
argument appears to be that Child did not have a "due process
right to Boykin warnings at [his] probation revocation
hearing."
{24}
The State's argument is misplaced. As stated above, the
Children's Code and the Children's Rules both mandate that
juveniles be afforded the same rights and procedures in
revocation proceedings that they are afforded in delinquency
proceedings. This mandate explains why the State cannot rely
on the cases cited in its answer brief, which involve adult
revocation proceedings, to support its claim that the
inquiries required by Boykin and Garcia are inapplicable to
juvenile revocation hearings. Child did have a right based on
New Mexico law to receive Boykin-type warnings at his
revocation hearing, warnings that he did not receive.
3. Prejudicial Error
{25}
Finally, the State argues that notwithstanding the trial
court's failure to follow the mandatory procedures set forth
in the Children's Code and its corresponding failure to give
Boykin-type warnings, Child's commitment should not be
overturned because he was not prejudiced therefrom. We reject
this argument on the ground that an admission is invalid when
a children's court fails to ascertain on the record the
minimum requirements that the child's admission was knowing
and voluntary and that the child understood the nature of the
charge and possible range of penalties. See Boykin, 395 U.S.
at 242; Garcia, 121 N.M. at 547, 915 P.2d at 303; Lilli L.,
121 N.M. at 379-81, 911 P.2d at 887-89. We hold that the trial court's failure to faithfully follow the procedures
outlined herein constitutes fundamental error.
{26}
In addition, as in Lilli L. and Stella P., we harbor
serious doubts about whether Child would have made his
admission to the violation charged in the petition (expulsion
from school for the entire year) had the trial court
interrogated him prior thereto in the manner required by the
children's court rules and statutes. The record reflects that
at the time Child's attorney made his admission to the
allegations of the petition, he knew that the allegations were
not entirely true. The record also reflects that the JPO,
whose recommendations had earlier been followed in this case,
was recommending a disposition considerably more lenient than
two years in the Boys' School. Thus, there is a real
possibility of actual prejudice in this case that could have
been avoided had the trial court followed the letter and
spirit of the rules requiring an on-record inquiry about what
the accused knows and thinks he is doing by entering an
admission or plea.
{27}
In expressing these doubts, we have not relied on a
footnote in Child's brief referring to matters not of record,
which the State moved to strike by separate motion filed
during the briefing process. This Court will not consider and
counsel should not refer to matters not of record in their
briefs. See State v. Cumpton, 2000-NMCA-___, ¶ 20, ___ N.M.
___, ___ P.2d ___ [No. 20,216 (N.M. Ct. App. Feb. 8, 2000)];
Sosa v. Empire Roofing Co., 110 N.M. 614, 618, 798 P.2d 215,
219 (Ct. App. 1990). Rather than moving to strike, however,
it would be preferable from the standpoint of both judicial
and litigant economy to simply address the inappropriate
reliance on matters not of record in the briefing addressed to
the merits.
III. REMAND
{28}
Child claims that on remand, he should have a new
children's court judge because the judge is predisposed
against him. Child's claim is based on his concern that the
judge remembered his statement to Child at the original
disposition that Child would be committed to the Boys' School
if Child appeared before the judge again. We do not believe
it is necessary to remand the case to a different children's
court judge in response to this concern. The judge was well
within his authority to commit Child to the Boys' School on
the ground that Child was suspended from school inasmuch as
any unexcused failure to attend school was a clear violation
of the terms of Child's probation. Child fails to cite any
case law, and we have not found any, in which the enforcement
of sentencing judge's earlier threat to punish a probationer
in a particular way for a probation violation has been deemed
error or a reflection of bias and prejudice. Accordingly, on
remand, this case may be heard by the same judge.
CONCLUSION
{29}
For the reasons stated, we reverse and remand with
instruction to hold a new hearing on the petition to revoke
probation.
{30}
IT IS SO ORDERED.
_______________________________
LYNN PICKARD, Chief Judge
WE CONCUR:
__________________________________
RICHARD C. BOSSON, Judge
__________________________________
JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge