G W v. State of Indiana ( 2024 )


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  •                       IN THE
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Supreme Court Case No. 23S-JV-246
    FILED
    G.W.,                               Apr 10 2024, 11:09 am
    Appellant (Respondent below)                        CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    –v–
    State of Indiana,
    Appellee (Petitioner below)
    Argued: October 31, 2023 | Decided: April 10, 2024
    Appeal from the Rush Circuit Court,
    No. 70C01-2208-JD-62
    The Honorable David E. Northam, Judge
    On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals,
    No. 22A-JV-3076
    Opinion by Justice Goff
    Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa and Molter concur.
    Justice Slaughter dissents with separate opinion.
    Goff, Justice.
    A juvenile court must, by statute, accompany its dispositional decree
    with specific written findings and conclusions on the record. When the
    juvenile court fails to comply with this statutory mandate, an appellate
    court is left to speculate over the theory supporting the judge’s decision.
    Such speculation is especially improper when disposition results in the
    juvenile’s confinement in the Department of Corrections. What, then, is
    the proper appellate remedy for curing a deficient dispositional order?
    When a juvenile court fails to enter the requisite findings of fact in its
    dispositional order, an appellate court should neither affirm nor reverse.
    Instead, the proper remedy is to remand the case under Indiana Appellate
    Rule 66(C)(8) while holding the appeal in abeyance. This process adheres
    to the applicable statutory requirements, preserves the distinct roles
    played by our trial courts and appellate courts, and (in some cases)
    justifies the cost of juvenile detention.
    Because the juvenile here has been released from confinement, there’s
    no need for us to stay the appellate proceedings. Instead, to dispose of the
    case, we exercise our discretion under Appellate Rule 1 and remand to the
    juvenile court for entry of its amended dispositional order.
    Facts and Procedural History
    In 2022, the State filed a delinquency petition in which it alleged that
    G.W., then seventeen years old, had committed acts that would be theft
    and criminal trespass if committed as an adult and that he had left home
    without permission from a parent or guardian. App. Vol. 2, p. 34. When
    G.W. allegedly committed further acts that amounted to theft and criminal
    trespass if committed as an adult, the State amended its petition to add
    those allegations. Id. at 41, 53. About a month later, the juvenile court
    accepted G.W.’s admission to one allegation of theft and one allegation of
    criminal trespass. Id. at 58–60. Not long after that, G.W. went missing,
    apparently having fled the state with his adult sister. Id. at 73. Authorities
    eventually located him in Mississippi and returned him to Indiana to
    await his dispositional hearing. Id. at 61, 77. At that hearing, G.W. testified
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024          Page 2 of 12
    that he was “lost” and “need[ed] guidance,” that he had left the state to
    find work, and to “prove that [he] could do things on [his] own.” Tr. Vol.
    2, pp. 34–35.
    The court, having considered the predispositional report, rejected
    G.W.’s request for home detention. The court instead ordered wardship of
    G.W. to the Department of Correction (or DOC), observing that he had
    “been involved in criminal activity” for “most of [his] teenage life” and
    that it was the court’s “last chance to do something for” him. Id. at 43–45.
    However, the court’s dispositional order included no specific findings to
    support G.W.’s commitment, as required by statute. Instead, the order
    contained a generic list of things the court “reviewed and considered,”
    including the “statements, evidence and recommendations offered by the
    parties”; the “best interests of the child and the child’s community”; and
    the “various alternatives available for the care, treatment and
    rehabilitation of this child.” App. Vol. 2, p. 80.
    The Court of Appeals affirmed in an unpublished memorandum
    decision. G.W. v. State, No. 22A-JV-3076, 
    2023 WL 3476513
    , at *3 (Ind. Ct.
    App. May 16, 2023). “Based upon the record,” and considering “G.W.’s
    delinquent behavior and failure to adequately respond to prior attempts
    at rehabilitation,” the panel found no abuse of discretion by the juvenile
    court in committing G.W. to the DOC. 
    Id.
     Acknowledging, however, the
    order’s failure to comply with the applicable statutory requirements, the
    panel remanded “for an amended dispositional order which includes the
    written findings and conclusions required by the statute.” 
    Id.
    After the Court of Appeals had delivered its decision, but before it had
    certified that decision, the juvenile court issued an amended dispositional
    order which included the required statutory findings. State’s Ex. C.
    G.W. petitioned for transfer, which we granted, thus vacating the Court
    of Appeals’ decision. See Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A).
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024       Page 3 of 12
    Standard of Review
    An abuse-of-discretion standard of review applies to a juvenile court’s
    disposition of a delinquent child. K.S. v. State, 
    114 N.E.3d 849
    , 854 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2018). A court abuses its discretion by misinterpreting the law or “if
    its decision clearly contravenes the logic and effect of the facts and
    circumstances before it.” T.D. v. State, 
    219 N.E.3d 719
    , 724 (Ind. 2023).
    Discussion and Decision
    Our decision today consists of two parts: In Part I, we consider the
    issue of justiciability—namely, whether G.W.’s release from the DOC
    renders this case moot. Concluding that the public-interest exception
    applies to this otherwise moot case, we proceed to the substantive issue
    before us, deciding on the proper appellate remedy for curing a deficient
    dispositional order.
    I. Our “public interest” exception to mootness allows
    us to offer guidance on an issue likely to recur.
    On July 10, 2023, G.W. “completed his obligation to the State,” resulting
    in his discharge from the DOC without supervision. State’s Ex. A. On
    October 17, after this Court granted G.W.’s petition for transfer, the State
    moved to dismiss the appeal as moot, arguing that G.W. had “obtained
    the relief he requested,” leaving “no further relief for this Court to grant.”
    Mot. to Dismiss at 2.
    We agree with the State that G.W.’s release from confinement renders
    this case moot. Indeed, the “long-standing rule in Indiana courts” holds
    that a case is “moot when no effective relief can be rendered to the parties
    before the court.” T.W. v. St. Vincent Hosp. & Health Care Ctr., Inc., 
    121 N.E.3d 1039
    , 1042 (Ind. 2019) (quoting Matter of Lawrance, 
    579 N.E.2d 32
    ,
    37 (Ind. 1991)). But Indiana also recognizes a public-interest exception to
    the mootness doctrine. 
    Id.
     A party may invoke—and a court may apply—
    this exception when the litigated issue involves a “question of great public
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024         Page 4 of 12
    importance which is likely to recur.” Matter of Tina T., 
    579 N.E.2d 48
    , 54
    (Ind. 1991). We’re presented with such an issue here.
    To begin with, we’ve long recognized the “paramount public
    importance” of “the procedures implemented to determine the fates of
    juvenile wards under the protection of the agencies of this State and the
    conditions under which they are cared for.” 
    Id.
     Indeed, juvenile
    confinement, like any temporary civil commitment, has a “very significant
    impact on the individual” and “constitutes a significant deprivation of
    liberty that requires due process protection.” See E.F. v. St. Vincent Hosp. &
    Health Care Ctr., Inc., 
    188 N.E.3d 464
    , 467 (Ind. 2022) (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). Given “the fundamental interests at stake in
    these cases,” and the need to balance those interests against the “safety of
    individuals and the public,” appellate “review of the issues presented is
    important, including the nuances of the sufficiency of the evidence to
    support a commitment.” Id. at 465, 467.
    Second, we find the issue here likely to recur. The average age of a
    juvenile at intake into a correctional facility is sixteen years. Ind. Dep’t of
    Correction, Annual Report: Changing Lives 18 (2021). Many of these
    offenders may be committed for up to two years. See 
    Ind. Code § 31-37-19
    -
    10. But the average length of a juvenile’s stay is just over eight months for
    “serious” offenses and just over four months for those deemed to have
    committed a “minor” offense. Ind. Dep’t of Correction, Fact Card (July 1,
    2023), http://tinyurl.com/5e73wjpf. The length of time that passes between
    commitment and a decision on appeal can often take just as long or
    longer. In this case, for example, the Court of Appeals issued its decision
    more than five and a half months after the juvenile court committed G.W.
    to the DOC. Cf. Matter of Tina T., 579 N.E.2d at 53–54 (addressing an
    otherwise moot claim given the brevity of a juvenile’s interim placement
    pending a committee’s review and recommendation).
    Finally, while appellate courts need not resolve every moot case
    involving juvenile commitments, we “readily do so to address novel
    issues or close calls, or to build the instructive body of law to help trial
    courts make these urgent and difficult decisions.” E.F., 188 N.E.3d at 466.
    And, here, we’re presented with a novel issue. As G.W. points out, this
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024         Page 5 of 12
    Court has never been asked to determine the appropriate remedy when a
    “juvenile court has failed to make the statutorily required findings.” Resp.
    to Mot. to Dismiss at 4. We do so today.
    II. What’s the proper appellate remedy for curing a
    deficient dispositional order?
    By statute, a “juvenile court shall accompany [its] dispositional decree
    with written findings and conclusions upon the record,” whether in
    approving, modifying, or rejecting the “dispositional recommendations
    submitted in the predispositional report.” I.C. § 31-37-18-9(a) (the
    Disposition Statute) (emphasis added). Specific findings include, among
    other things, (1) the care, treatment, rehabilitation, or placement needs of
    the child; (2) the need for participation by the parent, guardian, or
    custodian in the plan of care for the child; (3) any services provided to the
    child; and (4) the “court’s reasons for the disposition.” Id.
    There’s no dispute that the juvenile court here neglected to include
    these findings in its dispositional order. Rather, the parties’ arguments
    center on the proper appellate remedy for curing that error.
    G.W. initially argued that reversal and remand for further proceedings
    were necessary, “not affirmance with remand to fill in the gaps,” as the
    Court of Appeals concluded. Pet. to Trans. at 8. At oral argument, G.W.
    shifted course, opposing affirmance but acknowledging that “reversal
    may not be the appropriate remedy.” OA at 2:01–2:07. Instead, G.W.
    proposes remand under Appellate Rule 66(C)(8) for the entry of findings
    under Indiana Trial Rule 52(B). This avenue of relief, G.W. stresses, would
    permit the juvenile court to “decide either to amend the order” or to
    “change course based upon any changed circumstances that have
    occurred since the issuance of the insufficient order.” Pet. to Trans. at 10;
    see also OA at 6:37–7:04 (raising similar points). While amenable to this
    procedure, the State raises concerns over “the stability of the juvenile’s
    placement” pending remand. OA at 17:11–17:16.
    With these arguments and concerns in mind, we proceed with guidance
    to appellate courts for resolving cases like this one.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024         Page 6 of 12
    A. An appellate court should stay the proceedings—and
    maintain the juvenile’s placement—pending remand for
    the requisite findings.
    When a juvenile court fails to enter the requisite findings of fact in its
    dispositional order, an appellate court should neither affirm nor reverse.
    Instead, the proper remedy is to remand the case under Appellate Rule
    66(C)(8) while holding the appeal in abeyance. See Salk v. Weinraub, 
    271 Ind. 115
    , 121, 
    390 N.E.2d 995
    , 999 (1979). Appellate Rule 66(C)(8) expressly
    permits a reviewing court to issue an order directing the trial court to
    enter findings or to modify a judgment under Trial Rule 52(B). Trial Rule
    52(B), in turn, applies when (among other circumstances) the required
    “special findings of fact” by the trial court “are lacking, incomplete,” or
    otherwise “inadequate in form or content.”1 T.R. 52(B)(2).
    Pending remand, and unless the DOC deems otherwise,2 the appellate
    court should maintain the juvenile’s placement in the DOC to avoid
    disruption of rehabilitation and to ensure the safety of others. To limit
    potential harm to the juvenile from the delay in proceedings, the appellate
    court should instruct the juvenile court to issue its findings promptly—
    typically within 30 days. See Salk, 
    271 Ind. at 122
    , 
    390 N.E.2d at 999
     (setting
    forth a similar timeframe); cf. Smith v. State, 
    558 N.E.2d 841
    , 844 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 1990) (finding harmless a delay after remand to trial court for
    specific statement of reasons supporting sentence where defendant made
    no objection to hearing set 34 days later). Upon entry of those findings, the
    clerk of the juvenile court must certify them to the clerk of the appellate
    1We acknowledge, as G.W. points out, that “no appellate case has construed [Trial Rule] 52 in
    the context of findings under [Indiana Code section] 31-37-18-9.” Pet. to Trans. at 11–12.
    However, the Indiana Rules of Court as a whole “apply to all criminal proceedings” to the
    extent they don’t conflict with our criminal rules, Ind. Crim. R. 1.1 (2024), and the “procedures
    governing criminal trials apply in all matters not covered by the juvenile law,” I.C. § 31-32-1-
    1.
    2 When granted wardship by the court, “the DOC determines both the placement of the
    juvenile and the duration of the placement.” D.C. v. State, 
    958 N.E.2d 757
    , 759 (Ind. 2011). See
    also I.C. § 11-13-6-4 (vesting authority in the DOC to discharge the juvenile from commitment
    at any time).
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024                         Page 7 of 12
    court for inclusion in the record. See Salk, 
    271 Ind. at 122
    , 
    390 N.E.2d at 999
    .
    During this time, “the appellate court retains jurisdiction to see that its
    instructions are carried out.” Skendzel v. Marshall, 
    263 Ind. 337
    , 339, 
    330 N.E.2d 747
    , 749 (1975); see also Stepp v. Duffy, 
    686 N.E.2d 148
    , 152 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 1997) (a trial court exercises only limited jurisdiction to carry out
    “what it was requested to do by the appellate court”). If the juvenile court
    fails to comply with the order on remand, whether intentionally or by
    mistake, the juvenile “may promptly seek a writ of mandate from the
    Court issuing the order to enforce compliance with its terms.” Skendzel,
    
    263 Ind. at 339
    , 
    330 N.E.2d at 749
    .
    This process, we believe, serves several important purposes.
    To begin with, the juvenile court must enter a dispositional decree that
    reflects “the least restrictive (most family like) and most appropriate
    setting available” and that “imposes the least restraint on the freedom of
    the child.” I.C. § 31-37-18-6. While commitment to the DOC “should be
    treated as a last resort,” C.H. v. State, 
    201 N.E.3d 202
    , 205 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2022), that option may be appropriate when “consistent with the safety of
    the community and the best interest of the child,” I.C. § 31-37-18-6. To
    properly balance these interests, the juvenile court must “carefully follow
    the language and logic” of the Disposition Statute. See In re N.E., 
    919 N.E.2d 102
    , 108 (Ind. 2010) (internal citation omitted). And the reviewing
    court must be able to say—conclusively—that the juvenile court
    considered the factors it was required to consider.
    Second, remand (rather than affirmance) preserves the distinct roles
    played by our trial courts and appellate courts. Indeed, we generally agree
    with G.W. that an “appellate court should not be in the business of
    making findings.” OA at 7:49–7:51. That task falls squarely within the trial
    judge’s capabilities, given his or her familiarity with the child and the
    circumstances of the case. When clearly articulated, findings made under
    the Disposition Statute “provide the parties and reviewing courts with the
    theory upon which the judge decided the case so that the right of review
    for error might be effectively preserved.” See Shafer v. Lambie, 
    667 N.E.2d 226
    , 232 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996). Without such findings, an appellate court is
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024          Page 8 of 12
    left to speculate over what the trial judge was thinking. Cf. T.R. 52(D) (a
    trial court’s failure to make required findings “shall not be resolved by
    any presumption”). Such speculation is especially improper when, like
    here, disposition results in the juvenile’s confinement.
    Finally, a juvenile court’s findings may be necessary to justify the cost
    of DOC placement.3 Upon a finding of delinquency, the juvenile court
    must order a probation officer to prepare a predispositional report with
    recommendations for the child’s care, treatment, rehabilitation, or
    placement. I.C. § 31-37-17-1(a)(2). If the Department of Child Services (or
    DCS) is responsible for paying the cost of the recommended placement or
    service,4 that agency is entitled to review and either concur with the
    report’s recommendations or offer an alternative proposal. I.C. § 31-37-17-
    1.4. The report submitted to the juvenile court must include a statement of
    DCS’s concurrence or DCS’s alternative proposal. I.C. § 31-37-17-1(a)(4).
    The Disposition Statute, in turn, requires the juvenile court to accompany
    its “dispositional decree with written findings and conclusions upon the
    record concerning approval, modification, or rejection” of the report’s
    recommendations. I.C. § 31-37-18-9(a). And if it disagrees with the report
    and with any alternative recommendations made by DCS, the court must
    accompany its decree with written findings explaining why those
    recommendations are “unreasonable” or “contrary to the welfare and best
    interests of the child.” I.C. § 31-37-18-9(b)(1). The court must also preserve
    a complete record of “all documents referenced in the report” should DCS
    exercise its right to appeal the dispositional decree. I.C. § 31-37-18-9(b)(2).
    If DCS prevails on appeal, the agency is not responsible for any costs and
    3The economic implications of our juvenile-justice system are significant. In 2021, the
    maintenance of juvenile facilities throughout the state cost Hoosier taxpayers nearly $37
    million. Ind. Dep’t of Correction, Annual Report: Changing Lives 19 (2021). And that figure
    reflected an increase of nearly $780,000 from the previous fiscal year. See Ind. Dep’t of
    Correction, Annual Report: Moving Forward 30 (2020).
    4Generally, DCS is responsible for paying the costs of “services provided by or through” DCS
    for any child. I.C. § 31-40-1-2(a). These “services” include “education, provision of necessary
    clothing and supplies, medical and dental care, counseling and remediation, or any other
    services or programs included in a dispositional decree or case plan ordered or approved by
    the juvenile court for the benefit of a delinquent child.” I.C. § 31-40-1-1.5(c).
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024                        Page 9 of 12
    expenses incurred for the juvenile’s “out-of-home placement” pending the
    appeal, unless the juvenile court “made written findings that the
    placement is an emergency required to protect the health and welfare of
    the child.” I.C. § 31-37-18-9(e).
    In short, the procedure set forth above ensures compliance with the
    logic of our juvenile code, preserves the distinct roles played by our trial
    courts and appellate courts, and (in some cases) justifies the cost of
    juvenile detention.
    Our final task is to dispose of the case before us.
    B. To resolve this case, we deviate from our jurisdictional
    rules and remand to the juvenile court for entry of its
    amended dispositional order.
    Under our Rules of Appellate Procedure, an appellate court “acquires
    jurisdiction on the date the Notice of Completion of Clerk’s Record is
    noted in the Chronological Case Summary.” App. R. 8. The trial court, in
    turn, loses its jurisdiction over the case, and any judgment it renders at
    that point is void. Jernigan v. State, 
    894 N.E.2d 1044
    , 1046 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2008). This jurisdictional rule enables the “efficient presentation and
    disposition of the appeal” and prevents “simultaneous review” of a
    judgment by two courts. 
    Id.
    Here, the juvenile court noted the Notice of Completion of Clerk’s
    Record on December 28, 2022, thus vesting jurisdiction in the Court of
    Appeals (and divesting the juvenile court of its jurisdiction). See 
    id.
     On
    May 16, 2023, the Court of Appeals issued its memorandum decision. The
    following month—on June 27, 2023—the juvenile court issued its
    amended dispositional order in an effort to comply with the Disposition
    Statute. State’s Ex. C, p. 3. The Court of Appeals, however, had not yet
    certified its decision, so the juvenile court still lacked jurisdiction. See
    App. R. 65(E) (prohibiting a trial court from taking “any action in reliance
    upon the opinion or memorandum decision” of an appellate court until
    after certification of that opinion or memorandum decision).
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024        Page 10 of 12
    Arguably, the juvenile court retained the authority to correct the record
    after jurisdiction had vested in the Court of Appeals. See Clark v. State, 
    727 N.E.2d 18
    , 21 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000) (setting forth limited circumstances in
    which the trial court retains jurisdiction after perfection of an appeal). But
    the amended dispositional order “was not merely a matter of correction of
    a scrivener’s error, nor was it independent of the matters presented” in the
    appeal. See Crider v. Crider, 
    15 N.E.3d 1042
    , 1065 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).
    Rather, the modified order directly implicated the issue raised on
    appeal—whether the juvenile court abused its discretion by committing
    G.W. to the DOC. Such action runs contrary to the policy underlying the
    jurisdictional rule—enabling the efficient presentation and disposition of
    the appeal and preventing the simultaneous review of a judgment by two
    courts.5 See Jernigan, 
    894 N.E.2d at 1046
    .
    In short, the juvenile court acted prematurely, rendering its amended
    dispositional order void under our appellate rules. However, those same
    rules “permit deviation” from their strict application. App. R. 1. Given
    G.W.’s acknowledgment—and the State’s agreement—that the amended
    dispositional order would suffice to resolve the case before us, see OA at
    12:20–12:35, 22:55–23:02, we exercise our discretion under Appellate Rule
    1 and remand to the juvenile court for entry of that order, without holding
    this appeal in abeyance.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons above, we remand this case to the juvenile court for
    entry of its amended dispositional order.
    5After a child becomes a ward of the DOC, the juvenile court may, on its own motion,
    reacquire jurisdiction to modify its original dispositional decree, but only after receiving
    notice from the DOC of the child’s pending release from custody and within 30 days of
    receiving that notice. I.C. § 31-30-2-3. Here, even if the juvenile court retained its jurisdictional
    authority while the case was pending appeal, there’s nothing in the record to suggest that the
    amended dispositional order was in response to a notice from the DOC of G.W.’s pending
    release.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024                            Page 11 of 12
    Rush, C.J., and Massa and Molter, JJ., concur.
    Slaughter, J., dissents with separate opinion.
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
    Joel C. Wieneke
    Brooklyn, Indiana
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Theodore E. Rokita
    Attorney General of Indiana
    Andrew A. Kobe
    Section Chief, Criminal Appeals
    Office of the Indiana Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024   Page 12 of 12
    Slaughter, J., dissenting.
    I respectfully dissent from the Court’s opinion for two reasons.
    A
    First, the Court rightly observes this case is moot, but it nevertheless
    decides the case’s merits under our public-interest exception to the
    mootness doctrine. Under our judge-made exception, we empower
    ourselves to adjudicate an otherwise moot case if the legal question is
    important and likely to recur. As I have explained previously, our
    mootness exception cannot be squared with our state constitution’s
    structural limits on judicial power, properly understood. See Seo v. State,
    
    148 N.E.3d 952
    , 968–71 (Ind. 2020) (Slaughter, J., dissenting). These limits,
    reflected in our constitution’s separation-of-powers provision, Ind. Const.
    art. 3, § 1, mean that we are confined to deciding “actual disputes between
    adverse parties by issuing binding decrees that pronounce the parties’
    rights and responsibilities and afford meaningful relief to the prevailing
    party.” Seo, 148 N.E.3d at 969. The only mootness standard consistent with
    separation of powers requires “an actual, ongoing controversy between
    adverse parties.” Id. at 970. After all, “judges are not counselors or
    academics; they are not free to take up hypothetical questions that pique a
    party’s curiosity or their own.” Fed. Bureau of Investigation v. Fikre, 
    144 S. Ct. 771
    , 777 (2024).
    Today’s judgment exceeds the judicial power because it provides G.W.
    with no meaningful relief. After the court of appeals affirmed the trial
    court’s judgment, the department of correction released G.W. without
    supervision. G.W. thus “manage[d] to secure outside of litigation all the
    relief he might have won in it.” 
    Ibid.
     Because he is no longer in the
    department’s custody, our award of relief is pointless and our opinion
    purely advisory—the antithesis of an actual case or controversy implicitly
    required by article 3, section 1. See Pence v. State, 
    652 N.E.2d 486
    , 488 (Ind.
    1995) (observing that “our explicit separation of powers clause fulfills a
    similar function” to article III of the federal constitution). To avoid
    dismissal in our Court, G.W. needed to show that an actual controversy
    remains despite his release from the department of correction, but he
    failed to do so on this record. He did not show that he faces specific
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024           Page 1 of 3
    adverse consequences in the future due to his commitment to the
    department.
    B
    Second, on the merits, I disagree that the trial judge’s legal error
    demands our review at all, much less does it warrant the relief the Court
    prescribes today. Yes, the judge erred by ignoring the governing statute.
    By its terms, the statute says a juvenile court “shall accompany [its]
    dispositional decree with written findings and conclusions”. 
    Ind. Code § 31-37-18-9
    (a). Yet, despite this requirement, the court made no such
    findings and conclusions. Thus, its omission amounts to error.
    But that does not end our inquiry. Not all errors are prejudicial and
    thus reversible. If the error is harmless, the judgment below stands despite
    the error. The Court holds, though, that any violations of this statute will
    necessarily require remanding to the trial court and “holding the appeal in
    abeyance”, rather than allowing an appellate panel to resolve the merits of
    a juvenile’s placement. Ante, at 7. This conclusion goes too far. Requiring
    an automatic remand in these circumstances strikes me as busywork. It
    prevents an appellate court from reviewing the trial record independently
    to determine whether the juvenile court abused its discretion in placing a
    juvenile with the department of correction. Here, given G.W.’s extensive
    history of delinquent behavior and his failure to respond to prior attempts
    at rehabilitation, the appellate court was entitled to affirm the juvenile
    court’s judgment.
    Unlike the panel below, some appellate panels have opted not to scour
    the record for evidence that either confirms or refutes a juvenile court’s
    judgment. E.g., X.D. v. State, No. 19A-JV-896, at *10–11 (Ind. Ct. App. Sept.
    30, 2019) (mem.); D.R. v. State, No. 84A05-0804-JV-233, 
    2008 WL 4408269
    ,
    at *1 (Ind. Ct. App. Sept. 30, 2008) (mem.). That, of course, is a panel’s
    prerogative. Without deciding the merits, a panel can simply remand with
    instructions directing the juvenile court to make the findings and
    conclusions the statute demands. One reason for requiring such detail and
    specificity is to facilitate appellate review. As the Seventh Circuit observed
    in a different context, “[j]udges are not like pigs, hunting for truffles
    buried in briefs.” United States v. Dunkel, 
    927 F.2d 955
    , 956 (7th Cir. 1991).
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024         Page 2 of 3
    Busy appellate judges can insist that juvenile courts do what the statute
    requires of them. But if an appellate panel opts to do the juvenile court’s
    legwork for it, I would not hold that the panel’s undertaking is necessarily
    inadequate.
    *        *       *
    I have serious concerns with the Court’s resolution of the merits. But
    because this case is moot, I would grant the State’s motion to dismiss and
    not reach the merits.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-246 | April 10, 2024        Page 3 of 3
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 23S-JV-00246

Filed Date: 4/10/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/10/2024