juvenile justice guiding principles

Princeton University The Early History of the Court Author(syf 6 D Q I R U G - ) R x Source: The Future of Children, Vol. 6, No. 3, The Juvenile Court (Winter, 1996yf S S 9 Published by: Princeton University Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1602591 Accessed: 23-05-2017 18:10 UTC JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://about.jstor.org/terms Princeton University is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Future of Children This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 29 The Early History of the Court Sanford J. Fox Abstract The history of the juvenile court precedes its formal beginnings in the Illinois Juvenile Court Act of 1899. This article traces key trends in the early history of the court, begin- ning with the founding of separate penal institutions for children in the 1820s and end- ing with the development of critical analyses of court practice in the 1930s. The Illinois statute distinguished between delinquent and dependent youths. However, early nineteenth-century intervention typically did not make such a distinction: children convicted of crimes and children who were abandoned, abused, or simply very poor were often housed in the same institutions. Both criminal behavior and poverty were viewed as threats to the social order. In the second half of the nineteenth century, efforts were made to treat dependent and delinquent children differently. Private sectarian agencies were founded to remove noncriminal youths from their homes or the almshouses and "place them out," often either with families in other states or in indus- trial schools. The reform efforts behind the passage of the Illinois statute were intended to create improvements in the institutions that intervened on behalf of children. Reformers showed little concern for the procedures used in these interventions, and the resulting statutory language provides few procedural guidelines. Nineteenth-century practice had focused on assessing the children who came before the court for their fitness for reha- bilitation and de-emphasized the adjudication of the offense itself. This practice con- tinued after the development of the juvenile court at the turn of the century. The model for ideal juvenile court judicial practice-epitomized by Judge Ben Lindsey of the Denver, Colorado, court--called for a rapport between judge and child and the personal involvement of the judge in the child's reformation. This personal treatment, though popular, came at the expense of the child's due process rights. The movement in the early twentieth century to involve mental health professionals in this rehabilitation diminished the court's direct involvement but did nothing to address procedural inade- quacies. These were finally resolved in the due process cases of the 1960s and 1970s. he origins of the juvenile court have been subject to a number of his- torical interpretations. For example, the juvenile court has tradition- ally been viewed as originating with the Illinois Juvenile Court Act of 1899,1 the statute that first formalized the creation of the court and defined itsjurisdiction. However, an alternative view portrays thejuvenile court as the result of the evolution during the nineteenth century and before of a variety of systems for handling juvenile justice and child welfare matters. The Future of Children THE JUVENILE COURT Vol. 6 * No. 3 - Winter 1996 Sanford J Fox, LL.B., is a professor of law at the Boston College Law School and chair of the Committee on the Rights of Children in the American Bar Association's section of individual rights and responsibilities. This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 30 THE FUTURE OF CHILDREN - WINTER 1996 The traditional view of juvenile court origins has already been chal- lenged to some extent.2 This article goes further than extant revisionist writing in arguing that the traditional portrayal ofjuvenile court history is inaccurate. To do so, it first reviews key precourt trends in the handling of juvenile justice and child welfare matters, analyzing early forms of inter- vention and some of the institutions that served as placement options. It -also reviews nineteenth-century statutes and case law that defined the lim- its of this intervention. Second, this article examines the founding principles of the Illinois court and compares Chicago court practice with that of the early Denver, Colorado, juvenile court. It then traces court history through the adoption of the court model by the states in the early twentieth century to the begin- ning of critical analyses of court practices in the 1930s. Finally, the article presents an alternative interpretation of early histori- cal events in an effort to provide a better basis for understanding subsequent juvenile court developments. The Nineteenth Century As part of the postrevolutionary movement to differentiate the -new country from the old, early American reformers sought to dis- card the widespread use of capital punish- ment, which they saw as one of the worst aspects of their British inheritance. In both Pennsylvania and NewYork, Quaker reform- ers succeeded in sharply reducing the num- ber of offenses that warranted the death penalty and introduced as an alternative periods of long-term incarceration in newly established penitentiaries. The reformers hoped that stays in these institutions would also provide the opportunity for using reli- gious penitence as a means of rehabilitating the inhabitants.3 Soon, however, miscalculations of the effectiveness of this philosophy became manifest. For example, the solitary confine- ment thought necessary to accomplish the penitence led to riots by the prisoners. Among the most serious charges leveled against the new penitentiaries was the absence of any system for classifying prison- ers. As a result, the youngest offenders were mingled indiscriminately with older and more experienced ones, turning what was to be a rehabilitative experience into a class- room for crime.4 Juvenile Corrections Institutions New York reformers developed the idea of establishing a separate institution for juve- nile offenders in which the rehabilitative enterprise could proceed without the per- ceived "contamination of incorrigible adults." In 1824, the New York legislature passed a law authorizing the opening of a House of Refuge for young offenders deemed still to be reformable.5 The citizen-managers of the house were to provide these children such instruction and employment "as in theirjudgment will be most for the reforma- tion and amendment, and the future bene- fit and advantage of such children."6 Similar institutions soon began to appear in major cities in other states. The Phila- delphia House of Refuge opened in 1828. By 1850, eight cities had houses of refuge, with many more being founded in other cities throughout the 1850s.7 They all shared the following basic principles of operation: (1yf the segregation of youthful from adult offenders; (2yf W K H F H Q W U D O L W \ R I U H K D E L O L W D W L R n as a goal in the treatment of those in the seg- regated juvenile justice system; and (3yf W K e restriction of this system to children who were deemed amenable to treatment.8 The earliest institutions resembled the New York House of Refuge prototype--a small building at the edge of the city hous- ing a small number of children in a relative- ly intimate atmosphere. But by the 1850s, as the number of incarcerated children swelled and the seriousness of their offenses escalated, these institutions were replaced by bigger ones well-removed from the urban environment. For example, in New York the number of inmates expanded from This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms The Early History of the Court 31 9 at the outset to more than 1,000 housed on an island in the East River in an insti- tution indistinguishable from an adult prison.9 The inability of such places to do more than maintain order within their walls led to a brief return to small cottages and farms. The larger institutions then reemerged, this time in the form of indus- trial and reform schools. The succession of institutions was influ- enced by conflicting views as to how child offenders should be treated. These children were seen as needing not only kindly care with rehabilitative goals, but also stern disci- pline to remind them that laws had been broken. Fear of offenders created an impe- tus to punish that never gave way complete- ly to rehabilitative purposes. This ambiva- lence manifested itself in at least two distinct ways. The first was in the rigid sternness in the institutions for children. The second was the fact that, from the very beginning of juvenile corrections, the adult penal institu- tion was never completely off-limits for children. It remained available and was used as a sentencing option in children's cases, both before and after the advent of the juve- nile court.10 Criminal Trials Thejudicial component ofjuvenilejustice in the first quarter of the nineteenth century was little different from an adult criminal trial. Beyond recognition of the common law's substantive infancy defense, which relieved minors below a certain age of cul- pability, neither statute nor court decision provided for treating children charged with crimes differently from adults, substantively or procedurally.11 But with the advent of the houses of refuge, a new element was considered in children's cases, that is, their amenability to the reform program offered by these juve- nile institutions. For a child to be commit- ted to the New York House of Refuge, the court had to determine that he or she was a "proper object." Strict conformity with legal principles should have required that this determination be made by the court or the jury only after there had been a factual determination that the child had engaged in the prohibited conduct that brought him to official notice in the first place. Unfortunately, no historical research has shown the extent to which such judicial decision making in the first half of the century included a factual determination of guilt. However, there is some evidence to show that, by the second half of the century, at least in Illinois, judicial decision making regarding juvenile offenders was dominated by a determination of the juvenile's fitness for treatment, to the near exclusion of a con- cern for adjudicating innocence or guilt. Legislation in 1857 and 1863 restricted placement in the Chicago Reform School (established in 1856yf W R W K R V H Z K R L Q W K e opinion of the court, would be a fit and Courts considered what was best for the welfare of the children and made orders to thathfect often with no.fo l chwge agait these childm. proper subject for commitment to said reform school."12 In addition, very few chil- dren at the school-about one in ten-had committed offenses serious enough for them to have been tried in a court of gener- al criminal jurisdiction where formal adjudi- cation of the offense would more likely pre- cede sentencing.'l Finally, the testimony of a Chicago Reform School superintendent reveals that courts considered what was best for the welfare of the children and made orders to that effect, often with no formal charge against these children and regardless of the severity of the crimes for which they had been arrested.14 By the late 1860s, this system was prov- ing unworkable. In 1870, the Illinois Supreme Court held it to be unconstitu- tional to confine to the Chicago Reform School a child who had not been charged with criminal conduct and not accorded due process at trial.15 In 1872, the Chicago Reform School closed. Juveniles convicted of criminal offenses were committed to the reformatory in Pontiac, Illinois, a prison in all but name. Thus, for the last quarter of the nine- teenth century Illinois had no judicial component of a juvenile justice system at all. This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 32 THE FUTURE OF CHILDREN - WINTER 1996 Jurisdiction over Noncriminal Youths As mentioned above, many of these same nineteenth-century institutions also housed noncriminal youths. For example, the New York House of Refuge was intended as "an asylum, in which boys under a certain age, who become subject to the notice of the Police, either as vagrants, or houseless or charged with petty crimes, may be re- ceived."16 It was also authorized by state statute to receive children who had been res- idents of the almshouses.17 In addition to the houses of refuge creat- ed with public funds, "placing-out" agencies and orphan asylums were established, large- ly under private auspices, to provide alterna- tive placements for destitute and neglected children.18 In the early 1850s, New York reformers began finding the houses of refuge inadequate as a placement for both delinquent and neglected children. In 1853, the ypicd pracice ofthis era was to tt at poor and/or neglected chiken and young criminals as a homogmneous group. the New York Children's Aid Society was established by Reverend Charles Loring Brace to place vagrant, homeless, and abused children in foster care-like settings in the farms and rural communities of the west- ern states. In 1854, the publicly funded New York Juvenile Asylum opened its doors to neglected children. From that point on, only delinquent children were sent to the New York houses of refuge.19 Despite this separation of delinquent and neglected children in the New York institutions, the typical practice of this era was to treat poor and/or neglected children and young criminals as a homogeneous group. It was believed that all of these chil- dren needed to be controlled and reformed to prevent them from eroding the social order as adult criminals. Criminal behavior and poverty were seen as synonymous in terms of the threat they posed. Nineteenth- century reformers considered parental shortcomings to be one of the leading caus- es of the deviancy that brought children to the institutions. They removed poor and neglected children who were not yet crimi- nals from the harmful influences of their depraved home environments so that they would not become criminals.2? Throughout the country state legislation authorizing the commitment of children to institutions reflected this belief that delin- quent juveniles, minor offenders, and abused and neglected children could all benefit from similar institutional place- ments. For example, in 1875, the Wisconsin legislature authorized commitment to its industrial schools of any boy under age 12 and any girl under age 16 who begged or received alms, wandered the streets without a home or "proper" guardianship, was an orphan or had one or both parents in prison, frequented the company of thieves, resided in a poor house (with or without par- entsyf R U Z D V D E D Q G R Q H G E \ W K H S D U H Q W V 1 The institutional placement of children who had committed no crimes did not go unchallenged. The leading case upholding the involuntary commitment of these chil- dren to institutions, without the formal pro- ceedings of a criminal trial, was Ex parte Crouse decided in Pennsylvania in 1838.22 The court relied on the parens patriae doc- trine, allowing the state to intervene when deemed necessary to fill the role of parent of a minor.23 (For more on the parens patriae doctrine, see the article by Ainsworth in this journal issue.yf 7 K L V F D V H E H F D P H W K H S U H F H - dent for twentieth-century cases holding that the juvenile court could similarly com- mit children without the traditional legal formalities.24 When the states acted in this parens patriae capacity, however, the custody deci- sions relied on ad hoc placements because there was no official child protection agency responsible for moving children from their homes and into placements. In 1875, the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children was organized to seek out and rescue neglected and abused chil- dren.25 Agents of the society were given the power to remove children from their homes and arrest anyone who interfered with their work. They also assisted the court in making placement decisions. By 1890, the society controlled the intake and disposition of an annual average of 15,000 poor and neglect- ed children. Similar societies were estab- This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms The Early History of the Court 33 lished in other cities during the last quarter of the century. Some of these societies rejected New York's law enforcement approach and relied on the emerging pro- fession of social work and its efforts to keep families intact.26 In the second half of the nineteenth cen- tury, noncriminal Illinois youths could also be committed to institutional care, primarily industrial schools run by private sectarian child welfare agencies. Some private soci- eties like the Illinois Visitation and Aid Society served as child placement brokers, maintaining custody of children only long enough to find foster families for them. A commissioner oversaw these commit- ment proceedings until 1867, when this function was transferred to judges.14 How- ever, in 1870 in O'Connell v. Turner, the Illinois Supreme Court held that the state could interfere with parental custody only upon proof of "gross misconduct or almost total unfitness on the part of the parent."27 In 1873, the legislature repealed all jurisdic- tion over noncriminal misconduct.28 In 1888, the Illinois Supreme Court decided that the county court had no authority to commit children to private agencies like the Visitation and Aid Society which did not operate their own institutions. The Chicago Juvenile Court The Chicago Juvenile Court, established by the "Act to regulate the treatment and con- trol of dependent, neglected and delin- quent children,"29 cleared the legislature in 1899 as the result of a long and determined campaign by reformers. Their efforts focused primarily on improving the variety and quality of court commitment options by securing institutional reform.3 In addition to concerns about the condi- tions in the publicly funded institutions,31 criticisms were raised regarding the privately run, gender-specific, and religiously segre- gated industrial schools. Many believed that the state should have a monopoly when it came to caring for and finding homes for needy children and that private enterprise had no place in such a system. The crusade for change was thus formed around several issues: the role of private enterprise in the care of needy children, reli- gious institutional segregation, the legitima- cy of private child placement brokers, and the amelioration of institutional conditions. There is little, if anything, in the literature to indicate that the agenda the reformers developed in the 1890s included a signifi- cant concern for improving court proce- dures and practices. The Content of the 1899 Act The IllinoisJuvenile Court Act did not create a new court in the sense of providing for a new entity in the judicial structure of the state. Instead, it articulated rules to be fol- lowed by the county court when it was con- sidering children's cases, at which time, as the legislation put it, "[the court] may, for conve- nience, be called the 'Juvenile Court.'"32 The substance of these rules settled some of the placement issues raised by the reform campaign. The act validated the role of pri- vate agencies in the care of children. It accepted the brokerage function of private organizations like the Visitation and Aid Society and religious institutional segrega- tion. It also proscribed detention of children As an effort to obtain significant change in intiuiona l conditio for llinois childe. ; thejuvenile Court Act was a failure. in local jails or police stations but provided for no alternative facilities. It did not include any provision to prohibit placing children in the almshouses. As an effort to obtain signif- icant change in institutional conditions for Illinois children, the Juvenile Court Act was a failure. Procedural Changes With little evidence that the reformers who brought about the Chicago juvenile court were concerned with changing judicial pro- cedures, one must turn to the text of the 1899 act to determine whether any such changes were, nonetheless, mandated by the legisla- ture. In the only part of the law that address- es the issue, the act provides: "the court shall proceed to hear and dispose of the case in a summary manner."32 If the 1899 legislature intended to make radical changes in juvenile trial arrangements, it did not choose very powerful language for its purpose. This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 34 THE FUTURE OF CHILDREN - WINTER 1996 Examination of the practices adopted by the early juvenile court judges in Chicago suggests that they may have interpreted their mandate to act in a "summary manner" to require a reinstatement of the pre-1872 Illinois inquiry into character and fitness for rehabilitation. During the first year after the passage of the Illinois Juvenile Court Act, the presiding judge, Judge Richard S. Tuthill, sent 37 boys to the grand jury as not fit subjects for juvenile court treatment33 More significantly, Judge Tuthill engaged in a kind of interpersonal exchange with the children who came before the court. The initial part of the hearing had little, if any- thing, to do with adjudicating the facts. Instead it was a game of gaining the trust of the child. Once the trust had been won, Judge Tuthill would ask the child directly about the alleged offenses. Witnesses were seldom called into court." Judge Tuthill's successor on the Chicago bench, Julian W Mack, also interpreted the mandate to proceed in a "summary manner" as requiring character assessments of the The respoiiiy for rerfrming chikdren that had been given to the houses of refuge became, neauct an oenwy lateor; the quinte sentialfimdion ofjuvemlke wws. children not unlike the focus on fitness of pre-O'Connellprocedures. LikeJudge Tuthill, Judge Mack made these determinations by cultivating an intimacy with the child.m5 Though the assessment of fitness for treat- ment was similar to pre-O'Connel practice, the cultivation of intimacy and trust between judge and child was a new phenomenon. This aspect of court practice may have origi- nated with this court or it may have been the result of the influence of the court practice of Judge Ben B. Lindsey in Denver, Colorado. The Denver Juvenile Court Shortly after the reform movement in Illinois produced the 1899 Juvenile Court Act, Ben B. Lindsey was appointed to the county court bench in Denver, a position he was to hold from 1901 to 1927. His pre- judicial experience had included no con- nections with the activities in Illinois leading to its juvenile court law, and he had played no role in any efforts to reform the Colorado juvenile corrections system. Lindsey's attentions soon focused on the plight of the young offenders he was required by law to sentence to the Colorado reform schools. Within a year of his appoint- ment, Lindsey came across an 1899 Colorado compulsory school statute designed to deal with children who had become school disci- plinary problems. This statute permitted the courts to classify such children as 'Juvenile disorderly persons" without making a reform school commitment. He convinced the dis- trict attorney to proceed against all children under this law, a development which led him later to say: "Thus our 'juvenile court' was begun informally, anonymously, so to speak, but effectively."36 In 1903, after examining the laws in Illinois and Massachusetts, Judge Lindsey succeeded in having passed "An Act Concerning Delinquent Children" which contained several provisions based on parts of the Illinois 1899 Juvenile Court Act and other provisions that codified his use of the Coloradojuvenile disorderly persons statute. The Colorado juvenile court statute was broader than the 1899 Illinois act in sever- al important aspects. It included jurisdic- tion over adults who "contributed" to the delinquency of minors, and it permitted county courts to place convicted youths between the ages of 16 and 21 on the same probation terms as those applied to younger children." Under Judge Lindsey's aegis, the Denver court uniquely embodied a deeply personal judicial involvement in the lives of the juvenile court children. His juvenile court was a vigorous machine for social engineering, reaching out to reform every- thing that adversely affected children, from the corruption of the police to the need for playgrounds. But reaching out to foster a close relationship with each individual child was the quintessence of Lindsey's juvenile court. Judge Lindsey's "methods were irregular, but they were practical and produced hun- dreds of picturesque episodes which greatly aided the popularity of the juvenile court This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms The Early History of the Court 35 C C 0, E 0 U ? movement."" Children who came to the Denver court were "his boys" and were seen by him as fundamentally good human beings whose going astray was largely attrib- utable to their social and psychological envi- ronment. According to Lindsey, the role of the juvenile court judge was to strengthen the child's belief in himself and make avail- able to him all of the support and encour- agement from outside the court that the judge could harness on his behalf. In pursuing these methods, Lindsey had no specific statutory authority to adopt his social worker-friend approach to the chil- dren who came before the court. In his scheme of things, formal adjudication of the charges was of minimal importance, and rehabilitation was everything. Whereas the judges in Chicago saw the philosophy and practices of the criminal courts as merely irrelevant to their work, Judge Lindsey con- demned the whole criminal justice system, which he saw operating as a "medieval tor- ture chamber" that victimized children. He called for a juvenile court completely sev- ered conceptually and operationally from the criminal law.39 It is unclear whether thisjudicial role was developed by Judge Lindsey and then fol- lowed by Judge Tuthill and others, was initi- ated in Chicago, or derived from mutual interactions between Chicago and Denver. What is clear is that the leading juvenile court judges of the times proclaimed the newjudicial role the standard to be emulat- ed. The social responsibility for reforming children that had been given to the houses of refuge became, nearly a century later, the quintessential function ofjuvenile courts. In discharging that responsibility, Ben Lindsey set the standard. Though few could reach Ben Lindsey's level of achievement in the matter of an intimate relationship with the children, the striving for it persisted. As late as 1945, a Pittsburgh juvenile court judge wrote: "Often it is only necessary to say to a child who seems to be withholding the truth: 'When you are sick and therefore see your doctor, you don't fool him, do you?' He quickly replies, 'Of course not.' I then point out, 'Well, it's the same with us. If you tell us all you know and don't try to fool us, we can help you more than if you attempt to get around the truth.' He looks me over care- fully. Can he trust me? If I pass the test, if he really believes in me, there is imminent one of the most humbling experiences vouch- safed to man: to have a child open his heart and put out what has been troubling him, what he has hesitated to reveal to anyone, even to his mother and father."4 This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 36 THE FUTURE OF CHILDREN - WINTER 1996 This practice, so finely developed and epitomized by Judge Lindsey, had obvious legal flaws. O'Connell had suggested decades earlier that deprivations of liberty without legal formalities fell short of providing the due process of law required by state consti- tutions. After surveying the state juvenile court laws that had been enacted by 1909, a Pennsylvania lawyer noted that "there is much less that is entirely new about them than is generally supposed."41 What did appear to be novel to this attorney was "the What was truy new in thejumenile w was the detopment 1ofa peff Wrap ort bebren theiwude and cild befoe tie wur entire disregard, as far as the statutes them- selves go, of established legal principles and the absence from them of any limitations on the arbitrary powers of the court, which always involves dangerous possibilities." He also took note of the "dangerous possibili- ties" in the Ben Lindsey approach tojuvenile court practice--having the effectiveness of the court depend so much on the personal- ity of the judge.41 These kinds of legal caveats largely fell on deaf ears, and the substitution of person- al judicial involvement for formal trial pro- cedures injuvenile courts was upheld by one appellate court after another.42,43 Despite these potential shortcomings in the juvenile court model, it soon gained widespread acceptance. By 1905, some 10 states had enacted some sort of juvenile court law. By 1915, a total of 46 states, 3 ter- ritories, and the District of Columbia had done so.44 This enthusiasm for enacting juvenile court statutes far outstripped changes in actual adjudication of the cases. In 1920, a U.S. Children's Bureau survey found that only 16yb R I W K H V H Q H Z F R X U W V K H O G V H S D U D W e calendars or hearings for children's cases, had an officially established probation ser- vice, and recorded social information about the children coming through the court.45 In 1926, it was reported that five out of six of these courts in the United States failed to meet the minimum standards of the Children's Bureau and were declared by one observer to be juvenile courts in name only.6 This failure to incorporate important change was due, in part, to the fact that the statutes themselves contained few, if any, procedural requirements. The Shift Away from the Undsey Model Mostjuvenile courtjudges could rely only on the existing institutional programs to change the children who came before the court. This was particularly true for the judges who could not follow Judge Lindsey's standard of using personal charis- ma to engage and change the youths who came before him. In addition to the institu- tions already in place, community-based intervention began through the use of pro- bation. Even Lindsey relied to some extent on his probation staff to carry on his work of shepherding the court's children along the right path. In the other juvenile courts, pro- bation officers were seen from the outset as critical to the success of the juvenile court's reformative enterprise.47 Securing funding for a paid probation staff became a top pri- ority for courts.48 However, expanding caseloads and the increasing severity of the offenses commit- ted by the juveniles made clear the limita- tions of relying on untrained probation officers.8 For example, Jane Addams in Chicago recalled that it was becoming apparent that "many of these children were psychopathic cases and they and other bor- derline cases needed more skilled care than the most devoted probation officer could give them."49 In 1908, the women's volun- teer organization in Chicago raised funds to hire Dr. William A. Healy to undertake a sci- entific investigation of individual delin- quents. Healy became director of the newly established Juvenile Psychopathic Institute in Chicago. There was much hope that the work of the institute would be the key to the court's success.49 With this development in Chicago, the reform of delinquents that was the core of the juvenile court moved a large step farther away from the judge and into the hands of other professionals. Volunteer probation offi- cers evolved into college-trained personnel and graduate social workers. Over time, to This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms The Early History of the Court 37 this basic staff were added professional psy- chologists and psychiatric consultants. As a result, it became more and more difficult for judges to participate in the individual reform of the children who came before the court. Healy's work at first supported the re- form responsibilities taken on by the initial cohort of juvenile court judges. To Healy, institutions and their rehabilitative programs had little significance compared with a psy- chological understanding of each particular child's development. To the extent that such goals of individualized understanding had been generally adopted by judges, Healy's emphasis on the individual psychological life of children fell on fertile soil. His work gave rise to a child guidance movement that promised to raise considerably the efficiency of juvenile courts in their rehabilitation efforts. Dr. Healy and his wife and colleague, Dr. Augusta Bronner, were soon recruited to direct a child guidance clinic attached to the Bostonjuvenile court. Individualized disposi- tions, based on a scientific understanding of each child, would be the key. Faith in the help from child guidance clinics was not to last. In 1934, criminolo- gists Sheldon and Eleanor Glueck pub- lished the results of a follow-up study of delinquents from the Boston juvenile court who had had the benefit of clinic proce- dures. This study revealed a recidivism rate of nearly 90yb & R X U W F O L Q L F V F R Q W L Q X H G W o exist following the Gluecks' disclosures, but belief in the ability of the clinics to rehabili- tate diminished. Conclusion What was unique about the juvenile court and set it apart from other courts that had tried children's cases in earlier periods of American history was not its philosophy of protecting children from the rigors of the criminal justice system. That philosophy had long been adopted by earlier institutions, if not fully implemented. And, as unfair and impersonal as the criminal justice process was for children in the inferior criminal courts, the available historical evidence does not support the view that the juvenile court acts were directed at curing that evil. Similarly, the focus ofjuvenile court pro- cedures on an assessment of character to the detriment of adjudicating the facts of delin- quent behavior was not a novelty introduced by the juvenile court. It had been common practice in the nineteenth century in Illinois and other states where a commitment to a juvenile facility was conditioned on ajudicial determination of fitness and character, rather than guilt or innocence. The parens patriae justification for juve- nile court procedures that ignored legal for- malities was early recognized to be weak and fragile. Arguments to support this theory failed to acknowledge that parens patriae had never been applied to enforce penal law. Furthermore, it was used as ajustification for state power without implying anything about the procedures to be followed in exercising that power. What was truly new in the juvenile court was the development of a personal rapport between the judge and child before the court. This innovation of the juvenile court faded when Ben B. Lindsey's tenure on the Denver juvenile court bench concluded. It diminished further as the responsibility for rehabilitating the children who came before the court passed from the judiciary into the hands of mental health professionals. From then on, the juvenile court became purely a court of law. Inevitably, later statutes and case law would demand that it act like a court of law. 1. Illinois Juvenile Court Act (1899yf , O O / D Z V . 2. See, for example, Platt, A. The child savers. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1968; Fox, S. The reform ofjuvenile justice: An historical perspective. Stanford Law Review (1970yf 22:1187-1239. 3. Lewis, O. The development ofAmerican prisons and prison customs, 1776-1845. Criminology, law enforcement and social problems series. Publication No. 1. Montclair, NJ: Patterson Smith, 1967, pp. 14-15; see also Morris, N., and Rothman, D., eds. The Oxford history of the prison: The practice of punishment in western society. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995, pp. 95-97. 4. The critique was accepted by the reformers. In 1821, Mayor Cadwallader D. Colden of New York wrote: "Shall it in future times be said of New York, that she has educated a portion of This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms 38 THE FUTURE OF CHILDREN - WINTER 1996 her native youth with a gang of felons in the penitentiary; and this, too, because these youths have in their infancy been abandoned by the hand that should have protected them? Under the present state of things, the penitentiary cannot but be a fruitful source of pauperism, a nursery of new vices and crimes, a college for the perfection of adepts to guilt." Quoted in Peirce, B. A half-century with juvenile delinquents. Reprint. Montclair, NJ: Patterson Smith, 1969, p. 40. 5. The law authorized the commitment of convicted youths "as may in the judgment of the Court of General Sessions of the Peace, or the Court of Oyer and Terminer, ... or of the Jury before whom any such offender shall be tried, or of the Police Magistrates or of the Commissioners of the Alms-House and Bridewell ... be proper objects." See Acts of Mar. 29, 1824, ch. 126 ? 4 (1824yf 1 < / D Z V . 6. Pickett, R. House of refuge: Origins ofjuvenile reform in New York State 1815-1857. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1969. 7. See note no. 6, Pickett, pp. 100-102. 8. See note no. 2, Fox, pp. 1193-95. 9. See note no. 2, Fox, p. 1191, note 29. 10. See note no. 2, Fox, p. 1213. 11. See Fox, S. Responsibility in the juvenile court. William and Mary Law Review (1970yf 11:659-84. 12. See note no. 2, Fox, p. 1214. 13. Act of Feb. 22, 1861, Ill. Private Laws 149. 14. Laws of Mar. 5, 1867, ? 4, 3 Ill. Private Laws 32. 15. People ex re. O'Connell v. Turner, 55 Ill. 280 (1870yf . 16. See note no. 6, Pickett, p. 55. 17. Almshouses housed the poor, adults and children alike, who failed to qualify for public assis- tance in the home. By the beginning of the nineteenth century, the poor-law system of child care relied primarily on almshouses, "outdoor relief" (public assistance in the homeyf R r apprenticeships, whichever made the least demands on public funds. See Mason, T. Child abuse and neglect. Part I: Historical overview, legal matrix, and social perspectives. North Carolina Law Review (1972yf V H H D O V R ) R O N V + 7 K H F D U H R I G H V W L W X W H Q H J O H F W H G D Q G G H O L Q - quent children. Albany, NY:J.B. Lyons, 1900, pp. 11-18. 18. Thurston, H. The dependent child New York: Columbia University Press, 1930, p. 87. 19. Hawes, J. Children in urban society. New York: Oxford University Press, 1971, p. 134. 20. See, for example, note no. 6, Pickett, p. 191. 21. Ch. 325, ? 5 (1875yf : L V F / D Z V T X R W H G L Q 0 L O Z D X N H H , Q G X V W U L D O 6 F K R R O Y 6 X S H U Y L V R U V R f Milwaukee County, 40 Wis. 328, 334-35 (1876yf . 22. See 4 Whart. 9 (PA 1838yf . 23. Chancellor Kent states that, in the exercise of the state's parens patriae power, "the courts of justice may, in their sound discretion, and when the morals, or safety, or interests of the chil- dren strongly require it, withdraw the infants from the custody of the father or mother, and place the care and custody of them elsewhere." Kent, J. Commentaries on American law 203-205. 11th ed. Boston: Little, Brown, 1867. Quoted in note no. 17, Mason, p. 300. 24. See Commonwealth v. Fisher, 213 Pa. 48, 62 Atl. 198 (1905yf . 25. See note no. 17, Mason, p. 310. 26. See note no. 17, Mason, p. 312. 27. See 55 Ill. 280 (1870yf . 28. Act of May 3, 1873, ?? 12, 17 (1873yf , O O / D Z V . 29. This is the actual title of the legislation, not the Juvenile Court Act. 30. See note no. 2, Fox, p. 1221. 31. In Illinois conditions in juvenile corrections institutions had deteriorated following the closing of the Chicago Reform School. Institutions were grossly underfinanced, and overcrowded. 32. IllinoisJuvenile Court Act ? 5 (1899yf , O O / D Z V . 33. See note no. 2, Fox, p. 1191, note 29. This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms The Early History of the Court 39 34. Tuthill, R History of the children's court in Chicago. In Children's courts in the United States: Their origin, development, and rsults. International Penal and Prison Commission. New York: AMS Press, 1973, p. 3. 35. Mack, J. The juvenile court. Harvard Law Review (1909yf . 36. Larsen, C. The good fight: The life and times of Ben B. Lindsey. Chicago, IL: Quadrangle Books, 1972, p. 29. 37. See note no. 36, Larsen, p. 37. 38. See note no. 19, Hawes, p. 245. 39. See Colomy, P., and Frutzmann, M. Projects and institution building: Judge Ben B. Lindsey and the juvenile court movement. Social Problems (1995yf . 40. Schramm, G. The judge meets the boy and his family. In 1945 Yearbook National Probation Association. New York: National Probation Association, 1945, p. 192. 41. Lindsey, E. The juvenile court movement from a lawyer's standpoint. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (1914yf . 42. See, for example, note no. 24, Commonwealth v. Fisher; see also Ex parte Sharpe, 15 Idaho 120, 90 Pac. 565 (1908yf . 43. The parens patriae doctrine was the justification given in these cases for the court's powers, using as precedent Ex parte Cmuse. See note no. 18, Kent. 44. Lenroot, K., and Lundberg, E. Juvenile courts at work United States Children's Bureau Publication No. 141. Washington, DC: United States Children's Bureau, 1925, p. 1. 45. President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration ofJustice. Task force report:Juvenile delinquency and youth crime. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967, p. 3. 46. Glueck, S., and Glueck, E. Crime andjustice. Boston: Little, Brown, 1936, p. 289, note no. 24. 47. Schulz, J.L. The cycle ofjuvenile court history. Crime & Delinquency (October 1973yf 19:457-76. 48. See note no. 47, Schulz, pp. 463-66. 49. See note no. 19, Hawes, p. 248. 50. Glueck, S., and Glueck, E. One thousand juvenile delinquents. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1934, p. 151. This content downloaded from 129.137.5.42 on Tue, 23 May 2017 18:10:02 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms