DocketNumber: No. 1 CA-JUV 52
Citation Numbers: 116 Ariz. 359, 569 P.2d 301, 1977 Ariz. App. LEXIS 717
Judges: Haire, Proeb, Wren
Filed Date: 8/30/1977
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
OPINION
On this appeal the sole question raised is whether the state has a right of appeal to the juvenile judge from an order entered by a traffic referee disposing of a juvenile traffic offense. Here, after hearing, the juvenile referee had entered an order dismissing the charge against the juvenile. Within three days, the state filed a Notice of Appeal and Request for Rehearing before the juvenile judge. The juvenile then filed a motion requesting that the juvenile judge dismiss the motion for rehearing and the notice of appeal, contending that under the provisions of A.R.S. § 8-232 G, the state was not a party authorized to appeal or request a rehearing before the juvenile judge. The judge agreed, and dismissed the notice of appeal and request for rehearing.
The matter before the trial court arose out of a hearing on a traffic offense before a juvenile referee pursuant to the provisions of A.R.S. § 8-232. While in ordinary juvenile proceedings such as delinquency and dependency matters, a referee can only make “recommendations” for disposition to the judge of the juvenile court which are not final unless confirmed by the juvenile judge (see A.R.S. § 8-231; In the Matter of the Appeal in Maricopa County Juvenile Action No. J-79149, 25 Ariz.App. 78, 541 P.2d 404 (1975)), the provisions of A.R.S. § 8-232 authorize the referee or traffic hearing officer in juvenile traffic offense eases to enter “orders”, not mere recommendations. Under the provisions of A.R.S. § 8-232 D, the orders which the referee or traffic hearing officer (or judge) may enter in the juvenile traffic offense case are varied:
D. Upon a hearing conducted upon an admission by the child for the commission*360 of a traffic violation charged, or upon the finding that the child in fact did commit such violation, the judge, or referee, or traffic hearing officer may do any one or more of the following:
1. Reprimand the child and take no further action.
2. Direct the filing of a petition as provided for in this chapter.
3. Suspend the driving privileges of the child, or restrict such driving privileges for a period not to exceed ninety days.
4. Order the child to attend traffic school over a period not to exceed sixty days.
5. Order the child to pay a sum not to exceed fifty dollars to the clerk of the superior court who shall transmit the same to the treasurer of the county-
6. Transfer the matter to an adult court having jurisdiction.
There is no requirement in § 8-232 similar to § 8-231F requiring confirmation of the orders of the referee or hearing officer by the juvenile judge. Rather, the whole tenor of § 8-232 clearly contemplates the entry of presently effective orders by the hearing officer and referee, subject only to the discretionary rehearing provisions of § 8-232G:
G. Within three days after hearing by the referee or traffic hearing officer, upon the motion of the child or his parent or guardian, for good cause, or upon his own motion, the judge of the juvenile court may set aside or modify any order of a traffic hearing officer, or may order or himself conduct a rehearing.
The language of subsection G is clear— only “the child or his parent or guardian” is granted the right to request that the order of the referee or traffic hearing officer be modified or that a rehearing be had before the juvenile judge.
Notwithstanding the seeming clarity of the foregoing, the state contends that the provisions of A.R.S. § 8-231F give it the right to a rehearing of the referee’s order in this matter.
Summarizing, the legislature has enacted a statutory scheme which differentiates between the powers of referees in ordinary juvenile matters and their powers in traffic offense matters. On nontraffic matters, the. legislature has provided that the findings of a referee are to be recommendations only, and subject to approval and confirmation by the juvenile judge. On the other hand, in traffic matters the legislature obviously intended that all of the referee’s
As a final contention, the state urges that Rule 11, Rules of Procedure for the Juvenile Court, A.R.S. 17A, gives the state the right to appeal orders entered by the referee in juvenile traffic offense matters.
In conclusion, we point out that in practical effect, this limitation on the state’s right to appeal in traffic offense matters only has meaning when nothing is brought to the trial judge’s attention which causes him to disagree with the disposition made by the hearing officer or referee. Even under the special statute, the juvenile judge still retains the power, on his own motion, to set aside or modify any order of a traffic hearing officer or referee, or order or himself conduct a rehearing.
The order of the juvenile judge dismissing the state’s purported appeal is affirmed.
. A.R.S. § 8-231F provides:
F. A rehearing may be ordered by the juvenile judge at any time and shall be ordered if the parties file written request therefor within three days after receiving the notice required in subsection E of this section. Unless the rehearing is ordered the findings and recommendations become the findings and order of the juvenile court when confirmed.
. Rule 11, Rules of Procedure for the Juvenile Court, A.R.S. 17A, reads as follows:
No petition shall be required in traffic offenses, and the juvenile court may use the Arizona Traffic Ticket and Complaint in lieu of a petition. The court may authorize a referee to hear all phases of such matters, including transfer to another court. The parties shall have the right of appeal to the judge of the juvenile court from the recommendation of the referee.