In re J.B. ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 2/18/22
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    In re J.B., a Person Coming Under the              H049130
    Juvenile Court Law.                               (Santa Cruz County
    Super. Ct. No. J22783C)
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    J.B.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    I.   INTRODUCTION
    Minor J.B. challenges the juvenile court’s order committing him to the California
    Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) 1 on the
    most recently sustained juvenile wardship petition, where minor admitted committing
    second degree murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)), an offense enumerated under
    Welfare and Institutions Code section 707, subdivision (b) (707(b)). 2 In order to commit
    minor to DJJ without violating section 733, subdivision (c) (section 733(c)), which
    1
    The DJJ is also known as the California Department of Corrections and
    Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Facilities (DJF). (In re N.C. (2019) 
    39 Cal.App.5th 81
    , 85, fn. 3.) DJJ and DJF are used interchangeably in case law. (Ibid.)
    2
    All further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code unless
    otherwise indicated.
    prohibits a DJJ commitment if “the most recent offense alleged in any petition and
    admitted or found to be true by the court is not described in subdivision (b) of Section
    707 or subdivision (c) of Section 290.008 of the Penal Code,” the juvenile court
    dismissed two adjudicated petitions involving more recent non-707(b) offenses. The
    court ordered the dismissals pursuant to section 782, which allows a juvenile court to
    dismiss a petition “if the court finds that the interests of justice and the welfare of the
    person who is the subject of the petition require that dismissal, or if it finds that he or she
    is not in need of treatment or rehabilitation.”
    Minor contends that the juvenile court lacked authority under section 782 to
    dismiss the adjudicated petitions for the sole purpose of committing him to DJJ because
    the DJJ commitment was barred by section 733(c). The Attorney General contends that
    the court acted within its broad discretion under section 782.
    Based on our de novo review of sections 733(c) and 782, the California Supreme
    Court’s guidance and reasoning in In re Greg F. (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 393
     (Greg F.), and the
    circumstances before us, we conclude that section 733(c) did not bar the juvenile court
    from exercising its discretion under section 782 and dismissing the adjudicated petitions
    in the interests of justice and in minor’s welfare in order to commit minor to DJJ.
    Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment. 3
    3
    We note that in 2020 the Legislature passed “juvenile justice realignment”
    through Senate Bill No. 823 (2019-2020 Reg. Sess.). (Stats. 2020, ch. 337.) “Effective
    July 1, 2021, newly enacted section 736.5 shifts responsibility for convicted youth
    offenders from DJJ to the county level. (§ 736.5, subd. (a).) All wards committed to
    DJJ prior to July 1, 2021 will remain in DJJ custody. (Id., subd. (d).) But pending final
    closure of DJJ in June 2023, a court may only make a DJJ commitment if the minor ‘is
    otherwise eligible to be committed under existing law and in whose case a motion to
    transfer the minor from juvenile court to a court of criminal jurisdiction was filed.’ (Id.,
    subds. (b), (c), (e); see also § 733.1, subds. (a)-(b).)” (In re Miguel C. (2021) 
    69 Cal.App.5th 899
    .)
    2
    II.    BACKGROUND
    A.     Factual Background
    The parties stipulated that the factual basis for minor’s plea were the facts adduced
    at the transfer hearing and the preliminary hearing. Neither hearing is part of the record
    on appeal. At the jurisdictional hearing, the prosecution summarized the facts as follows:
    “[O]n or about August 8th, 2012 [minor] and a number of other minors drove to the City
    of Santa Cruz from the City of Watsonville and sought and located the juvenile victim
    Joey M. [Minor] then shot and killed Joey M. in the County and City of Santa Cruz.”
    The prosecution stated that the offense occurred “in the context of gang activity.”
    Minor’s counsel added, “[T]he group of which [minor] was a part was not specifically
    looking for victim Joey M. but happened upon him.”
    B.     Procedural History
    1.     Prior 602 Petitions 4
    On August 20, 2012, in case No. J22783, minor admitted the allegation that on
    July 16, 2012, he committed misdemeanor resisting, delaying, or obstructing a peace
    officer (Pen. Code, § 148, subd. (a)(1)). An additional misdemeanor allegation against
    minor was dismissed. Minor was granted six months of probation without wardship.
    On November 6, 2012, in case No. J22783A, minor admitted the allegation that
    on October 11, 2012, he possessed a concealable pistol, revolver, or other firearm as a
    juvenile (Pen. Code, § 29610). An additional felony allegation and a misdemeanor
    allegation were dismissed. Minor was declared a ward of the court and placed on
    probation with more intensive supervision. The wardship terminated in October 2018
    when minor turned 21 years old.
    On January 4, 2013, in case No. J22783B, minor admitted the allegation that on
    December 15, 2012, he possessed a concealable pistol, revolver, or other firearm as a
    4
    The prior petitions are not part of the record on appeal. We rely on the probation
    officer’s report for this summary.
    3
    juvenile and admitted that he violated the terms of his probation. An additional
    misdemeanor allegation was dismissed. The juvenile court continued minor as a ward of
    the court, order him into 24-hour placement, and subsequently placed him at Tyler House
    in Watsonville. Minor was terminated unsuccessfully from the program in April 2013,
    which constituted a probation violation. The court ordered minor to remain a ward of the
    court, ordered him into 24-hour placement, and later placed him at Tahoe Turning Point
    Program. The wardship terminated in October 2018 when minor turned 21 years old.
    2.     Current 602 Petition & Admission
    In October 2013, minor was arrested for a homicide that occurred on August 8,
    2012, when minor was 14 years old. According to the prosecution, “[t]he thorough
    investigation of the homicide and the discovery of all participants resulted in a delay
    between the date of the homicide and the filing of charges of almost 14 months.” The
    probation report details law enforcement’s investigation of the homicide from August 8,
    2012 through September 19, 2013.
    The prosecution filed a complaint in adult court against minor on October 15,
    2013. 5 Minor was transferred to the county jail on October 27, 2015, after he turned 18.
    On December 16, 2016, after the passage of Proposition 57, which eliminated the ability
    of prosecutors to charge minors directly in adult court, the prosecution filed a petition in
    juvenile court alleging minor committed murder. 6 A transfer hearing was conducted, and
    the juvenile court determined that minor should be transferred to adult court.
    In March 2021, after extensive litigation, minor was transferred back to juvenile
    court based on the passage of Senate Bill No. 1391 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.), which
    amended Proposition 57 to prohibit the transfer to adult court of minors under age 16
    at the time of the offense. (See § 707, subd. (a)(1)-(2), as amended by Stats. 2018,
    ch. 1012, § 1.)
    5
    The complaint is not part of the record on appeal.
    6
    The petition is not part of the record on appeal.
    4
    On April 16, 2021, in case No. J22783C, the prosecution filed an amended
    602 petition alleging that minor committed murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)) on
    August 8, 2012. On April 21, 2021, minor admitted the murder allegation, which the
    parties stipulated was second degree. Minor was advised and understood that murder
    was a 707(b) offense.
    3.        Disposition Hearing on Current Petition
    The prosecution moved the juvenile court to exercise its discretion under
    section 782 to dismiss the petitions in case Nos. J22783A and J22783B in the interests
    of justice and for minor’s benefit. The prosecution argued that the dismissals were
    necessary “to circumvent [section] 733” to allow the court to commit minor to DJJ and
    that a DJJ commitment was necessary for the community’s safety and minor’s
    rehabilitation.
    Minor filed written opposition. Minor argued that the juvenile court was
    precluded from dismissing the prior petitions because the dismissals would occur post-
    disposition and because the court lost jurisdiction in those cases when the wardships
    terminated in 2018. 7
    At the May 4, 2021 disposition hearing, the juvenile court dismissed the
    previously adjudicated petitions in case Nos. J22738A and J22783B, declared minor a
    ward of the court, and committed him to DJJ.
    Citing Greg F., the court observed that in deciding whether to exercise its
    discretion under section 782 to dismiss a 602 petition in the interests of justice and in the
    minor’s welfare, it must consider all the circumstances relevant to the public’s need for
    safety and the juvenile’s need for rehabilitation. The court stated that its focus was
    “[g]iving [minor] the tools and therapies to give him the best possible chance of being a
    7
    At the disposition hearing minor added that he “object[ed] on constitutional
    grounds, due process grounds.” Minor did not specify the basis of his due process
    objection.
    5
    safe and productive member of our society” and found that “[i]f the Court were to make
    any order other than DJJ, [minor] would not be served.” The court also found that a DJJ
    commitment was necessary to hold minor responsible for Joey M.’s death, which was
    important to Joey M.’s family, minor’s coparticipants in the offense, and the community.
    The court noted that it would lose jurisdiction over minor unless it committed him to DJJ
    because minor was already over age 21.
    The court found that “[o]nly if [it] orders DJJ . . . is [minor] eligible to receive the
    help and assistance he still needs up to age 25 and transitional services by our local
    probation department three months before his release date.” The court explained that DJJ
    offers job training and certification programs as well as college classes, and that 90 days
    before a minor’s release, probation helps the minor transition back to society, connecting
    the minor with counseling, therapy, and career counseling. The court observed that
    minor had witnessed violence, experienced isolation, periodically lacked a father figure,
    and had “kill[ed] a stranger [his] own age by shooting them in the back twice and liv[ed]
    out critical formative teenage years behind bars as a teen and now as a young adult. . . .
    [¶] All of those events led him and has kept him involved in the gang lifestyle as a
    northerner believing he is safer with them than without them. He is in need of cognitive
    behavioral interventions and modalities intensively available to him only in DJJ.” The
    court noted minor’s diagnosis of PTSD and his use of controlled substances, gang
    identity, and violence as coping tools.
    The court found, “Releasing [minor] now without support only because he is over
    21 and has aged out of other dispositional options, [would] make[] all that he, his family,
    and the victim’s family have gone through these years without value.” The court
    observed that when minor was placed out of county during an earlier wardship, it “really
    helped [him]. And so I do believe that getting out of this lifestyle, out of the same
    connections to be able to go away and work on you will be really helpful and give you a
    break from the tension and the responsibilities that you feel to your gang lifestyle.” The
    6
    court found minor amenable to treatment and that minor had “a higher need than most for
    intensive trauma focused cognitive behavior individual counseling.”
    The court noted that minor had been in the county jail for the last three years
    where no programs were offered to him. The court stated, “I believe the encouragement
    and foundation for [minor’s] success will be through the hard work and [DJJ]
    programs. . . . [¶] The year and a half available to him for rehabilitation will give him
    an opportunity to gain understanding of his trauma, find his independence, find his gifts,
    and get the encouragement by the mental health professional team, educational coaches,
    and career technical educators. [¶] I see him obtaining college credits, engaging in
    apprentice and career readiness programs, so when he returns to our county he has a way
    to choose a productive and safe future for himself, his family, and the community.” The
    court concluded, “[Minor’s] mental and physical condition and qualifications render it
    probable that [he] will benefit from the reformatory discipline and other treatment
    provided by [DJJ].”
    The court entered “the specific reasons” stated above for its dismissal of the
    adjudicated petitions pursuant to section 782 in the court minutes. (Cal. Rules of Court,
    rule 5.790(a)(2)(A).) 8
    III.   DISCUSSION
    Minor contends that the juvenile court was without authority to dismiss the
    previously adjudicated petitions in order to commit him to DJJ because section 733(c)
    “specifically bars a DJ[J] commitment when the most recent offense alleged in any
    petition is not a serious felony.” The Attorney General counters that the court properly
    acted within its discretion to dismiss the petitions because “section 733 does not
    subjugate a juvenile court’s power to dismiss under section 782.” Both parties
    extensively discuss Greg F., where the California Supreme Court held that a juvenile
    8
    All further rule references are to the California Rules of Court.
    7
    court could “use its broad discretion under section 782 to dismiss [a] second petition so
    that the matter can be treated as a probation violation, allowing the ward to be committed
    to DJ[J].” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 400.)
    Although unlike Greg F. this case involves the dismissal of adjudicated petitions,
    for the reasons stated there and based on our de novo review of sections 733(c) and 782
    and the circumstances before us, we determine that the juvenile court had the discretion
    under section 782 to dismiss the prior petitions in the interests of justice and in minor’s
    welfare so that it could commit minor to DJJ.
    A.     Sections 733(c) and 782
    Enacted in 2007 as part of the realignment legislation, section 733 prohibits DJJ
    commitments in certain circumstances. (Sen. Bill No. 81 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.) ch. 175,
    § 22.) “One aspect of Senate Bill No. 81 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.) was to ‘stop the intake
    [to DJJ] of youthful offenders adjudicated for non-violent, non-serious offenses (non-
    707b offenses).’ ” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 409.) The legislation was based on
    budgetary concerns as well as “findings that better results could be obtained at the local
    level for nonviolent juvenile offenders. An argument in support of Senate Bill No. 81
    stated: ‘Quite simply most counties do it better and for less cost. The offenders that will
    be diverted are non-serious, non-violent, non[-]sex offender[ ] wards who likely can be
    better served in their communities closer to their existing support systems.’ [Citation.]”
    (Id. at pp. 409-410.)
    Subdivision (c) of section 733 bars a DJJ commitment if “[t]he ward has been or
    is adjudged a ward of the court pursuant to Section 602, and the most recent offense
    alleged in any petition and admitted or found to be true by the court is not described in
    subdivision (b) of Section 707 or subdivision (c) of Section 290.008 of the Penal Code.”
    Section 782 was enacted in 1971. (Stats. 1971, ch. 607, § 1.) “ ‘[T]he authority
    to dismiss juvenile matters at the disposition stage’ ” was “statutorily expressed between
    1915 and 1961,” but was repealed in 1961 “[w]hen the entire juvenile court law was
    8
    repealed and recodified.” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 405.) Section 782 was drafted
    after a 1971 Court of Appeal decision, which recognized the inherent power of juvenile
    courts to exercise discretion to dismiss juvenile matters, to “ ‘ “restor[e] to the juvenile
    law the clear power of the court to dismiss juvenile petitions in the interests of justice.”
    [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Greg F., supra, at p. 406.)
    Section 782 currently provides, “A judge of the juvenile court in which a petition
    was filed may dismiss the petition, or may set aside the findings and dismiss the petition,
    if the court finds that the interests of justice and the welfare of the person who is the
    subject of the petition require that dismissal, or if it finds that he or she is not in need of
    treatment or rehabilitation. The court has jurisdiction to order dismissal or setting aside
    of the findings and dismissal regardless of whether the person who is the subject of the
    petition is, at the time of the order, a ward or dependent child of the court. Nothing in
    this section shall be interpreted to require the court to maintain jurisdiction over a person
    who is the subject of a petition between the time the court’s jurisdiction over that person
    terminates and the point at which his or her petition is dismissed.”
    B.      Greg F.
    The minor in Greg F. was on probation for a 707(b) offense when he committed
    battery, a non-707(b) offense. (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 401, 405.) Rather than
    alleging a probation violation in a section 777 notice, which would have allowed for a
    DJJ commitment, “the prosecutor mistakenly brought the minor’s new offense before the
    court in a 602 petition.” (Greg F., supra, at p. 405.) The question before the California
    Supreme Court was “whether the [juvenile] court had discretion to dismiss the
    602 petition, after the minor had admitted the non-DJ[J]-eligible offense there alleged
    [but before disposition], and treat the matter as a probation violation.” (Ibid.)
    A divided court held that the juvenile court had the discretion under section 782
    to dismiss the second petition so that it could commit the minor to DJJ on the probation
    violation. (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 400; but see id. at pp. 420-427 (dis. opn. of
    9
    Cantil-Sakauye, C.J.).) “When a DJ[J] commitment for a section 707(b) offense for
    which probation was ordered serves the interests of justice and the welfare of the minor,
    the juvenile court has discretion to dismiss a new 602 petition to permit treatment of the
    matter as a probation violation.” (Id. at p. 412.)
    The court observed that “[f]or over 40 years, section 782 has given juvenile courts
    the power to dismiss a delinquency petition if doing so serves the interests of justice and
    the welfare of the minor” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 407) and that “[n]othing in the
    language of section 733 indicates that the Legislature intended this provision to override
    the juvenile court’s discretion to dismiss” (id. at p. 406). “Section 733(c) does not
    mention section 782, nor does it state that its provisions prevail over section 782, or any
    other law. When the Legislature intends for a statute to prevail over all contrary law, it
    typically signals this intent by using phrases like ‘notwithstanding any other law’ or
    ‘notwithstanding other provisions of law.’ [Citations.] The Legislature did not include
    this language in section 733(c), nor did it amend section 782 to prohibit dismissals to
    permit a DJ[J] commitment.” (Id. at pp. 406-407.) The court found “[t]he absence of
    such an express limitation on the juvenile court’s power under section 782 . . .
    significant.” (Id. at p. 407.) “ ‘ “The failure of the Legislature to change the law in a
    particular respect when the subject is generally before it and changes in other respects are
    made is indicative of an intent to leave the law as it stands in the aspects not amended.”
    [Citations.]’ ” (Ibid.)
    Although the court found it unnecessary “to resort to legislative history,” the court
    found nothing in section 733(c)’s legislative history “to suggest that the Legislature
    intended to deprive juvenile courts of their long-standing discretion to dismiss
    delinquency petitions when appropriate.” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 408-409,
    fn. omitted.) “Section 733(c)’s limitation on juvenile offenders eligible for a DJ[J]
    commitment was ‘motivated by a desire to reduce the cost and increase the effectiveness
    of juvenile confinement.’ [Citation.] The legislative history consistently stresses that
    10
    only wards who are not currently violent will be diverted from state to local
    responsibility.” (Id. at p. 410.) “[I]t is clear that the Legislature intended to preserve the
    possibility of DJ[J] commitments for violent offenders and sex offenders. In keeping
    with this clear legislative intent, it is not reasonable to interpret [section 733(c)] as
    restricting the juvenile court’s ability to order an appropriate disposition for such
    offenders. Nothing in the legislative history surrounding the enactment of section 733(c)
    suggests the Legislature intended to strip juvenile courts of their long-held discretion to
    dismiss a delinquency petition when dismissal is in the interests of justice and for the
    minor’s welfare. ‘We are not persuaded the Legislature would have silently, or at best
    obscurely, decided so important . . . a public policy matter and created a significant
    departure from the existing law.’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
    The court limited its holding to the dismissal of a second petition to allow a DJJ
    commitment on a probation violation on the minor’s previously sustained 602 petition
    (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp. 400, 420), and stated “no opinion” on whether a
    section 782 dismissal of “a 602 petition after disposition” “could ever be appropriate”
    as it “potentially raises a host of constitutional concerns” (Greg F., supra, at p. 415).
    C.     Standard of Review
    A section 782 dismissal is reviewed for abuse of discretion. (Greg F., supra,
    55 Cal.4th at p. 413.) However, the question of “whether the commitment limitation of
    section 733(c) prevails over the dismissal discretion granted by section 782” requires
    statutory interpretation, which we perform de novo. (Id. at p. 406; see People v. Prunty
    (2015) 
    62 Cal.4th 59
    , 71.) “We begin with the fundamental premise that the objective of
    statutory interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate legislative intent. [Citations.] To
    determine legislative intent, we turn first, to the words of the statute, giving them their
    usual and ordinary meaning. [Citations.] When the language of a statute is clear, we
    need go no further. However, when the language is susceptible of more than one
    reasonable interpretation, we look to a variety of extrinsic aids, including the ostensible
    11
    objects to be achieved, the evils to be remedied, the legislative history, public policy,
    contemporaneous administrative construction, and the statutory scheme of which the
    statute is a part. [Citations.]” (People v. Flores (2003) 
    30 Cal.4th 1059
    , 1063.)
    D.     Section 733(c) Did Not Bar the Dismissal of the Adjudicated Petitions
    Under These Circumstances
    As we stated above, the California Supreme Court in Greg F. upheld the juvenile
    court’s section 782 dismissal of a second sustained 602 petition alleging a more recent
    non-707(b) offense so that the court could commit the minor to DJJ on a probation
    violation. (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 400; see also In re J.L. (2008) 
    168 Cal.App.4th 43
     [same].) We understand that the holding in Greg F. was narrow and
    based on the unique circumstances before the court. (See Greg F., 
    supra,
     55 Cal.4th at
    pp. 400, 414.) Although the procedural posture differs here, as this case involves the
    dismissal of adjudicated petitions in order to commit minor to DJJ on the most recently
    sustained petition, based on the California Supreme Court’s reasoning in Greg F., our
    de novo review of sections 733(c) and 782, and the circumstances before us, we conclude
    that the juvenile court had the discretion under section 782 to dismiss the prior petitions
    in the interests of justice and in minor’s welfare. 9
    9
    The Greg F. court examined the juvenile court’s use of an earlier petition
    involving a 707(b) offense to commit the minor to DJJ despite the filing of a subsequent
    petition involving a more recent non-707(b) offense. (See, e.g., Greg F., 
    supra,
     55
    Cal.4th at pp. 410-411, 414.) When discussing “the unique context” before it, the court
    stated that “[d]ismissal of a 602 petition enables the court to order a DJ[J] commitment
    otherwise prohibited by section 733(c) only for a minor currently on probation for a
    DJ[J]-eligible offense. If the minor is not on probation, or is on probation for a
    nonqualifying offense, a section 782 dismissal can have no effect on DJF eligibility.
    Section 733(c)’s restrictions on DJ[J] eligibility thus have ‘meaningful[ ] operat[ion]’ in
    all delinquency cases involving a minor not on probation, or on probation for a
    nonqualifying offense.” (Greg F., supra, at p. 413.) The Greg F. court did not analyze
    the circumstances before us, involving a DJJ commitment on the most recently sustained
    petition, which alleged a 707(b) offense, and the dismissal of previously adjudicated
    (continued)
    12
    As the court observed in Greg F., “[n]othing in the language of section 733
    indicates that the Legislature intended this provision to override the juvenile court’s
    discretion [under section 782] to dismiss a petition when dismissal is in the interests of
    justice and for the welfare of the minor.” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 406.) Nor is
    there any indication in section 733’s legislative history that the Legislature intended the
    provision to foreclose the juvenile courts’ “long-standing discretion [under section 782]
    to dismiss delinquency petitions when appropriate.” (Greg F., 
    supra, at p. 409
    , fn.
    omitted.) In enacting section 733(c), “it is clear that the Legislature intended to preserve
    the possibility of DJ[J] commitments for violent offenders and sex offenders. In keeping
    with this clear legislative intent, it is not reasonable to interpret [section 733(c)] as
    restricting the juvenile court’s ability to order an appropriate disposition for such
    offenders.” (Greg F., 
    supra, at p. 410
    .)
    Indeed, section 782 affords the juvenile court broad “jurisdiction to order
    dismissal . . . regardless of whether the person who is the subject of the petition is, at the
    time of the order, a ward or dependent child of the court. Nothing in this section shall be
    interpreted to require the court to maintain jurisdiction over a person who is the subject
    of a petition between the time the court’s jurisdiction over that person terminates and the
    point at which his or her petition is dismissed.” (See also Greg F., 
    supra,
     55 Cal.4th at
    p. 419 [“section 782 extended the juvenile court’s power to dismiss petitions and set
    aside findings to minors who were not presently wards of the court” (italics omitted)].)
    “If the juvenile court exercises its discretion under section 782 to dismiss a
    602 petition, its decision does not nullify or abrogate section 733(c). It simply changes
    the ‘most recent offense alleged in any petition’ to which section 733(c) applies in that
    particular case.” (Greg F., 
    supra,
     55 Cal.4th at p. 408.) And the procedural safeguards
    petitions involving more recent, non-707(b) offenses. (See Greg F., 
    supra, at p. 415
    [“express[ing] no opinion on whether . . . dismissal [post-disposition] could ever be
    appropriate”].)
    13
    in place—appellate review of a section 782 dismissal for abuse of discretion and
    rule 5.790(a)(2)(A)’s requirement that the juvenile court provide a written statement of
    reasons for a section 782 dismissal—guard against arbitrary dismissals and dismissals
    that do not serve the interests of justice and the minor’s welfare. (See Greg F., 
    supra, at pp. 413-414
    ; In re Juan C. (1993) 
    20 Cal.App.4th 748
    , 753 [“The underlying purpose
    of [a statement of reasons] requirement is to protect the public interest against improper
    or corrupt dismissals, and to impose a purposeful restraint upon the exercise of judicial
    power”].)
    The Legislature has not amended section 782 to overturn the decision in Greg F.
    despite having 10 years to do so. (See People v. Williams (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 779
    , 788-
    789 [discussing legislative inaction after the California Supreme Court interpreted Penal
    Code section 240 as requiring only general criminal intent].) In fact, rather than
    narrowing section 782 after the court decided Greg F., the Legislature expanded the
    statute’s reach by eliminating the requirement that the dismissal occur before the minor
    reaches age 21 and by adding that the court is not required to maintain jurisdiction over a
    person who is the subject of a petition between the time the court’s jurisdiction over that
    person terminates and the point at which his or her petition is dismissed. (Sen. Bill
    No. 1038 (2013-2014 Reg. Sess.) ch. 249, § 1.) “ ‘ “The failure of the Legislature to
    change the law in a particular respect when the subject is generally before it and changes
    in other respects are made is indicative of an intent to leave the law as it stands in the
    aspects not amended.” [Citations.]’ [Citations.]” (Greg F., 
    supra,
     55 Cal.4th at p. 407;
    see also People v. Frahs (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 618
    , 634 [“we are mindful that the Legislature
    ‘is deemed to be aware of existing laws and judicial constructions in effect at the time
    legislation is enacted’ ”].) And the Legislature has made no amendments to section 733
    after Greg F.
    While the Greg F. court questioned whether a section 782 dismissal of “a
    602 petition after disposition” “could ever be appropriate” as it “potentially raises a host
    14
    of constitutional concerns” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 415), minor alleges no
    constitutional claim here. Moreover, the California Supreme Court made those
    statements while discussing V.C. v. Superior Court (2009) 
    173 Cal.App.4th 1455
    , 1467
    (V.C.), where the dismissal of a sustained petition “ ‘rescind[ed] a plea bargain that ha[d]
    been accepted and fully executed.’ ” (Greg F., 
    supra,
     55 Cal.4th at p. 415.) Here, there
    is no claim that the dismissal of the adjudicated petitions violated minor’s “constitutional
    right to the benefit of his completed plea bargain.” (Ibid.) And despite voicing concern
    over the dismissal of a 602 petition post-disposition, the California Supreme Court
    expressly “disagree[d] with the V.C. court’s holding that section 733(c) must always
    override the juvenile court’s ability to dismiss a delinquency petition under section 782.”
    (Greg F., 
    supra, at p. 415
    .)
    Based on the different procedural posture here, minor contends that Greg F. does
    not support the juvenile court’s dismissal of the adjudicated petitions and that In re A.O.
    (2017) 
    18 Cal.App.5th 390
     (A.O.) demonstrates that the juvenile court lacked the
    authority to dismiss. We find A.O. distinguishable.
    In A.O., the Court of Appeal reversed the juvenile court’s order dismissing a non-
    707(b) offense in a multicount petition and recommitting the minor to DJJ. (A.O., supra,
    18 Cal.App.5th at p. 392.) The dismissal was ordered for the sole purpose of rendering
    the minor DJJ-eligible and occurred after DJJ had rejected the court’s initial commitment
    order because the minor’s most recent offense was a non-707(b) offense. (A.O., supra,
    at pp. 392-393.) The Court of Appeal held that the commitment was barred by
    section 733(c). (A.O., supra, at p. 393.)
    Importantly, in dismissing the non-707(b) offense, the juvenile court in A.O.
    “never purported to invoke section 782.” (A.O., supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 394.) The
    Court of Appeal found that “[e]ven assuming” juvenile courts had “postdispositional
    authority to dismiss individual counts of a section 602 petition for the sole purpose of
    securing a DJ[J] commitment” (id. at p. 396), based on “the sparse record,” it would be
    15
    “impossible to determine whether the court’s decision to dismiss the . . . charge . . . for
    the sole purpose of securing a DJ[J] commitment was a proper exercise of discretion”
    (id. at p. 397).
    Thus, A.O. does not stand for the proposition that a juvenile court’s discretion to
    dismiss under section 782 is proscribed by section 733(c). And, unlike the juvenile court
    in A.O., the juvenile court here expressly stated that it was dismissing the prior petitions
    “under WI Section 782,” and made detailed findings regarding why the dismissals were
    in the interests of justice and in minor’s welfare.
    In his reply brief, minor relies on In re D.B. (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 941
     (D.B.) to urge
    this court to “enforc[e] the plain meaning of section 733(c).” In D.B., the California
    Supreme Court held that the plain language of section 733(c) bars a DJJ commitment
    when a 602 petition “alleges a minor has committed a series of criminal offenses,
    including serious or violent offenses, . . . [and] the last offense in the series is
    nonviolent.” (D.B., supra, at p. 944.) The court determined that “[t]he plain language
    of section 733(c) mandates that a minor may not be committed to DJ[J] unless the most
    recently committed offense that is alleged in any wardship petition, then admitted or
    found true, is listed in section 707(b) or Penal Code section 290.008(c).” (Ibid.)
    Unlike here, the juvenile court in D.B. did not exercise its discretion under
    section 782. (D.B., supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 945.) Nor did the juvenile court in D.B.
    dismiss a petition or any count therein. The multicount petition included allegations that
    the minor committed seven offenses on May 23, 2010, one of which was a 707(b)
    offense, and two offenses on May 30, 2010, neither of which was a 707(b) offense.
    (D.B., supra, at p. 945.) “The juvenile court found the allegations true and sustained the
    petition. It committed D.B. to DJ[J] for the maximum term of 11 years eight months.”
    (Ibid.) In determining that the commitment was unlawful under section 733(c), the
    California Supreme Court never considered, let alone mentioned section 782. Thus, D.B.
    16
    is inapposite here. (See People v. Baker (2021) 
    10 Cal.5th 1044
    , 1109 [“ ‘ “ ‘cases are
    not authority for propositions not considered’ ” ’ ”].)
    Minor contends “[t]here is no basis in this case for making an exception to the
    prohibition found in section 733[(c)]” as “[h]e is not among the ‘most dangerous
    offenders’ who should be committed to ‘costly state-level facilities.’ ” Minor describes
    the progress he made during his placement at Tahoe Turning Point and while in juvenile
    hall, his jail programming, and several experts’ opinions on his increased maturity, all of
    which were before the juvenile court. Minor argues that he has thus “demonstrated the
    legislative intent behind section 733, to reduce the DJ[J] population and limit it to only
    the most serious offenders, applied to his circumstances.”
    We commend minor’s progress and his amenability to treatment. However,
    minor’s assertion that based on his progress “[h]e is not among the ‘most dangerous
    offenders’ ” does not bear on the statutory issue at hand—whether section 733(c)
    forecloses a juvenile court from dismissing an adjudicated petition pursuant to
    section 782 in order to commit a minor to DJJ. (See Greg F., 
    supra,
     55 Cal.4th at
    p. 420.)
    As minor states, “the sole issue on appeal is a question of law: did the juvenile
    court have the power to dismiss eight-year-old petitions that rendered [him] ineligible
    for a DJ[J] commitment pursuant to section 733(c).” 10 And as the California Supreme
    Court observed in Greg F., “the realignment policies served by section 733 are not so
    unyielding they cannot tolerate occasional exceptions when the severity of a minor’s
    10
    Minor states in his reply brief that “[h]e never argued [in his opening brief that]
    the court abused its discretion in committing him to the DJ[J] because he was not the
    type of offender who belonged there. His argument, rather, was that the legislative intent
    behind section 733 supported his position this was not an exceptional case where the
    juvenile court should be permitted to dismiss eight-year-old petitions so that he could be
    committed to the DJ[J].”
    17
    offenses, and the minor’s own special needs, call for a disposition that includes DJ[J].”
    (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 417.)
    “Flexibility is the hallmark of juvenile court law.” (Greg F., 
    supra,
     55 Cal.4th at
    p. 411.) “The statutory scheme governing juvenile delinquency is designed to give the
    court ‘maximum flexibility to craft suitable orders aimed at rehabilitating the particular
    ward before it.’ ” (Ibid., italics added; see In re Aline D. (1975) 
    14 Cal.3d 557
    , 566-567
    [stating that if an assessment found that the minor “would not benefit from the treatment
    she would receive at [DJJ], and if no appropriate alternative placement exists at that time,
    then the proceedings should be dismissed” pursuant to section 782 because “[j]uvenile
    commitment proceedings are designed for the purpose of rehabilitation and treatment, not
    punishment”].) We find that flexibility includes the authority to dismiss adjudicated
    petitions pursuant to section 782 under certain circumstances that are in the interests of
    justice and in the minor’s welfare.
    Based on our de novo review of sections 733(c) and 782, the California Supreme
    Court’s guidance and reasoning in Greg F., and the circumstances before us, where the
    filing of the current murder petition was delayed due to law enforcement investigation
    and minor admitted the more recent non-707(b) offenses alleged in the adjudicated
    petitions while the homicide investigation was ongoing, where the juvenile court’s only
    options were to lose jurisdiction over minor or commit him to DJJ to receive
    rehabilitative services and the court made the requisite findings under section 782 that the
    dismissal was in the interests of justice and in minor’s welfare and provided a statement
    of reasons for the dismissal pursuant to rule 5.790(a)(2)(A), and where there is no
    contention that the dismissal of the adjudicated petitions violated minor’s constitutional
    rights or rescinded the terms of a plea agreement, we conclude that section 733(c) did not
    bar the juvenile court from exercising its discretion under section 782 and dismissing the
    adjudicated petitions in the interests of justice and in minor’s welfare in order to commit
    minor to DJJ.
    18
    IV.   DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    BAMATTRE-MANOUKIAN, J.
    I CONCUR:
    ELIA, ACTING P.J.
    In re J.B.
    H049130
    19
    Lie, J., Dissenting:
    Urged by the prosecution to “take a risk” and “remedy the absurdity” of Welfare and
    Institutions Code section 733, subdivision (c) 11 (section 733(c)), the juvenile court
    committed J.B. to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation’s Division of
    Juvenile Facilities (DJF). It did so under the auspices of section 782, by dismissing over
    J.B.’s jurisdictional and constitutional objections two wardship petitions adjudicated nine
    years earlier. The dismissed petitions barred DJF commitment under section 733(c)’s plain
    terms and accordingly would have required J.B.’s release, his having aged in custody from
    14 to 23 while the prosecution sought to charge him as an adult for the gang-related murder
    of a minor even younger than he. As with any statutory interpretation, reconciliation of
    sections 733(c) and 782 requires us to “presume[] every part of a statute has some meaning
    and effect,” and “to avoid, if possible, a construction that renders statutory language
    surplusage.” (In re Greg F. (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 393
    , 424 (Greg F.), dis. opn. of Cantil-
    Sakauye, C.J.) Because I believe the majority’s statutory interpretation exceeds the letter
    and spirit of the narrow rule announced by our Supreme Court in Greg F., I respectfully
    dissent.
    I.     Background of Section 733
    In November 2004, the State of California stipulated to the entry of a consent decree
    in Farrell v. Harper (Super. Ct. Alameda County, 2003, No. RG03079344), to reform “a
    [juvenile corrections] system plagued by unprecedented violence . . . that prevented
    education and counseling programs.” (Little Hoover Com., Juvenile Justice Reform:
    Realigning Responsibilities (July 2008) p. i
     [as of Feb. 18, 2022],
    archived at .) “[N]early four years and hundreds of millions of
    dollars later” and facing the prospect of receivership nonetheless, “policy-makers acted to
    11
    Unspecified statutory references are to the Welfare & Institutions Code.
    reduce the number of youth offenders housed in state facilities by . . . shift[ing]
    responsibility to the counties for all but the most serious youth offenders.” (Id. at pp. i-ii;
    see also Legislative Analyst’s Office, Analysis of the 2007-08 Budget Bill: Judicial and
    Criminal Justice  [as of
    Feb. 18, 2022], archived at  [projecting net savings of “$97
    million annually, from . . . proposed legislation and budgetary changes to shift certain
    juvenile offenders” from state facilities to counties].) The Legislature accordingly
    prohibited juvenile courts from committing a minor to DJF 12 when the minor’s “most recent
    offense alleged in any petition and admitted or found to be true by the court” is not an
    offense enumerated in section 707, subdivision (b) or Penal Code section 290.008,
    subdivision (c). (§ 733, subd. (c).)
    Seven years later, the Supreme Court concluded, “[a]lthough reasonable minds may
    debate the wisdom of the chosen approach, decisions about how to limit DJF commitments
    are the Legislature’s to make. [¶] . . . [¶] The language of section 733(c) is clear. It
    prohibits a DJF commitment unless the most recent offense alleged in any petition and
    admitted or found true is listed in section 707(b) or Penal Code section 290.008,
    [subdivision] (c). [Citation.] We are not free to rewrite the law simply because a literal
    interpretation may produce results of arguable utility.” (In re D.B. (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 941
    ,
    948 (D.B.).)
    B.     Application of Greg F.
    12
    On May 14, 2021, the Governor signed into law Senate Bill 92, which announced
    the closure of the Division of Juvenile Justice, encompassing DJF, and established as its
    successor the Office of Youth and Community Restoration, within the state’s Health and
    Human Services Agency. (Stats. 2021, ch. 18, § 12.) This development in juvenile justice
    realignment added section 875 et seq., which governs commitment to local “secure youth
    treatment facilities” in lieu of DJF. (Compare § 875, subd. (c)(1) with § 1769, subd. (d)(2).)
    2
    The persistence of argument over the utility of section 733(c) nonetheless led the
    juvenile court here to accept the prosecution’s invitation to “remedy the absurdity” of
    section 733(c), by dismissing the two petitions which under the statute would prevent J.B.’s
    commitment to DJF. The “risk” acknowledged by the prosecution lay in jettisoning the
    narrowly crafted rule of Greg F., where a divided court held—in “the unique context” of “a
    minor currently on probation for a DJF-eligible offense”—that a petition alleging wardship
    for a DJF-ineligible offense may be dismissed at or before disposition despite the minor’s
    prior admission of the offense. (Greg F., 
    supra,
     55 Cal.4th at p. 413.) In answer to the
    dissenters’ concern that its harmonization of section 733(c) and 782 permitted “ ‘a juvenile
    court [to] always avoid the DJF-ineligibility provisions of section 733(c),’ ” the Greg F.
    majority emphasized that “[i]f the minor is not on probation, or is on probation for a
    nonqualifying offense, a section 782 dismissal can have no effect on DJF eligibility.
    Section 733(c)’s restrictions on DJF eligibility thus have ‘meaningful[] operat[ion]’ in all
    delinquency cases involving a minor not on probation, or on probation for a nonqualifying
    offense. [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 413, italics added.) Because J.B. was not on probation for a
    DJF-eligible offense either when he shot 13-year-old Joseph Mendoza or when he admitted
    the more recent DJF-eligible offenses, the rule announced in Greg F. does not support the
    juvenile court’s dismissal here.
    Even assuming the interstitial opening Greg F. identified between sections 733(c)
    and 782 may legitimately be expanded to other contexts, I do not believe that the policy
    considerations by which the court reached its conclusion in Greg F. would support the
    dismissal orders here.
    1. Status of the DJF-Ineligible Petition at Dismissal
    Although the court in Greg F. “express[ed] no opinion on whether [a post-
    disposition] dismissal could ever be appropriate,” it cautioned that “[d]ismissing a 602
    petition after disposition potentially raises a host of constitutional concerns not presented in
    the case before us.” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 415.) In Greg F., the admission of a
    3
    DJF-ineligible offense had resulted in no material deprivation of the minor’s liberty in the
    few days between admission and the dismissal of the petition: the minor was already
    detained in juvenile hall awaiting placement when he committed the DJF-ineligible offense
    and during pendency of the ensuing petition. (Id. at p. 401.)
    But J.B., adjudged a ward of the court in 2012 only for DJF-ineligible offenses, was
    ordered to out-of-home placements, first in a local treatment facility, then in an out-of-
    county facility, for a period of approximately 10 months. Notwithstanding the record of
    their undisputed rehabilitative effect, the conditions of J.B.’s wardship and his submission to
    those conditions represented a restriction on his freedom. 13 Because J.B. was not then on
    probation for a DJF-eligible offense, these placements could not be discounted as a lenient
    alternative to the potentially more severe sanction available for a revocation of probation as
    to a more serious offense.
    The majority suggests that J.B.’s failure to allege a constitutional claim on appeal
    should allay Greg F.’s “host of constitutional concerns” (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at
    p. 415) implicated by postdisposition dismissal for the purpose of evading section 733(c).
    But our interpretation of statutes is typically informed by canons of interpretation, including
    the doctrine of constitutional avoidance, whether or not the claim of statutory error is
    coupled with a separate constitutional claim on appeal. To condition statutory interpretation
    on an appellant’s cognizable constitutional claim “would render every statute a chameleon,
    its meaning subject to change depending on the presence or absence of constitutional
    concerns in each individual case.” (Clark v. Suarez Martinez (2005) 
    543 U.S. 371
    , 382.)
    J.B. is therefore not required to have preserved a standalone constitutional claim for us to be
    13
    The restriction apparently included his freedom from compelled self-incrimination.
    During J.B.’s first out-of-home placement, he confided to a counselor that he was struggling
    with feelings of guilt for having shot and killed another boy he believed to be a Sureño. The
    treatment program then terminated J.B.’s participation and reported his confession as a basis
    for the termination. J.B.’s objection in the juvenile court to its consideration of this
    confession is not before us on appeal.
    4
    mindful that permitting the post hoc dismissal of an adjudicated, DJF-ineligible wardship
    petition would restore only the prosecution and the juvenile court to their pre-adjudication
    interests, not the ward who has thereby been denied the operation of section 733(c).
    The Legislature has amended section 782 to permit dismissals after the minor turns
    21 and wardship is thereby terminated. (§ 782, as amended by Stats. 2014, ch. 249 § 1, eff.
    Jan. 1, 2015.) But the legislative history of this amendment reflects a specific purpose
    wholly consonant with section 733(c)—to achieve the “even greater reductions” in prison
    population that the federal court overseeing “ongoing prison overcrowding litigation” was
    expected to order, by “better ensuring that juveniles have a clear pathway to clearing their
    records[]”when “many youth[s] are unaware of their right” to dismissal. (Sen. Com. on
    Public Safety, Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 1038 (2013-2014 Reg. Sess.) as amended Mar. 28,
    2014, pp. 6-7.) This feature of section 782 can therefore be harmonized with section
    733(c)—consistently with Greg F.’s narrow holding—to condition post-disposition, post-
    termination dismissals of adjudicated petitions either on the ward’s consent or on reduction
    of the prison population. Dismissal of J.B.’s adjudicated petitions of course had the
    opposite effect, by design.
    2. Conduct of the Wardship Proceedings
    In resolving the tension between sections 782 and 733(c) to permit dismissal after
    jurisdictional findings but before disposition, the majority in Greg F. considered the
    practical aspects of the juvenile court proceedings to justify granting the juvenile court and
    prosecution what it considered a modest margin of error. The relevant circumstances
    consisted of the inadvertence of the prosecution’s error in filing “a 602 petition rather than a
    777 notice” alleging a probation violation, “the unusually short deadlines in juvenile
    delinquency matters,” as well as the risk that foreclosing dismissal of a petition already
    admitted would “reward gamesmanship” by a minor who might tactically rush to admit later
    DJF-ineligible offenses “at the detention hearing, just one day after the petition was filed[]”
    5
    to capitalize on the prosecution’s inadvertent filing error. (Greg F., supra, 55 Cal.4th at pp.
    411-413.)
    Nothing in the litigation of the instant wardship petitions suggests a need for
    accommodation analogous to those animating Greg F.’s narrow holding. The record
    reflects neither haste nor inadvertence, but rather deliberate and consistent tactical choices
    over several years as the prosecution, as was its prerogative, exhausted every means of
    securing the maximum period of J.B.’s confinement. Having initially charged J.B. as an
    adult, the prosecution responded to the passage of Proposition 57 by seeking his transfer
    back to the criminal court. When J.B. sought dismissal of the DJF-ineligible petitions
    during the transfer litigation, the prosecution opposed the request as “ ‘not justice.’ ” Upon
    the passage of Senate Bill 1391 (Stats. 2018, ch. 1012, § 1), the prosecution challenged the
    constitutionality of the new prohibition on the transfer of juveniles accused of committing
    crimes at age 14 or 15 unless first apprehended after the end of juvenile court jurisdiction.
    (§ 707, subd. (a)(1)–(2), as amended by Stats. 2018, ch. 1012, § 1; O.G. v. Superior Court
    (2021) 
    11 Cal.5th 82
    , 89 (O.G.).) As a consequence of the stay of proceedings the
    prosecution obtained pending the Supreme Court’s decision in O.G., J.B. continued in adult
    jail for years, without the treatment by which he had previously achieved much of the
    progress now lauded by the majority, the prosecution, and the juvenile court.
    Accordingly, nothing in the practical exigencies of prosecuting the wardship petitions
    themselves would appear to necessitate any expansion of Greg F.
    3. Absurdity Doctrine
    Irrespective of the conduct of the wardship proceedings themselves, however, the
    record does support an inference that law enforcement would not have identified J.B. as a
    suspect in Mendoza’s death as early as November 6, 2012, or January 4, 2013, the dates that
    J.B admitted the first and second of the offenses that would make him ineligible for
    commitment to DJF by operation of section 733(c). It is not surprising that allegations of
    lesser, readily detectible, DJF-ineligible offenses proceed more promptly to petition and
    6
    disposition than homicides, thereby implicating section 733(c). But there is also no basis to
    conclude that the unavailability of a DJF commitment on a procedural history such as this
    would be at odds with the Legislature’s purpose in initially enacting section 733(c) in 2007.
    The evolution of juvenile justice realignment in the past two years underscores the
    legislative commitment to end state facility placements. (See, e.g., §§ 733.1 [ward shall not
    be committed to Division of Juvenile Justice on or after July 1, 2021], 736.5 [legislative
    intent to close Division of Juvenile Justice], 875 [setting maximum term of commitment in
    local “secure youth treatment”].) 14 “When statutory language is unambiguous, we must
    follow its plain meaning ‘ “ ‘whatever may be thought of the wisdom, expediency, or policy
    of the act, even if it appears probable that a different object was in the mind of the
    legislature.’ ” ’ ” (D.B., supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 948.)
    Although the majority concludes that D.B.’s silence as to section 782 makes it
    inapposite here, I respectfully disagree: in construing section 733(c), the court in D.B.
    applied the absurdity doctrine as an interpretive canon and nonetheless deferred to section
    733(c)’s plain language. (D.B., supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 947, citing People v. Mendoza (2000)
    
    23 Cal.4th 896
    , 908 [“We must . . . avoid a construction that would produce absurd
    consequences, which we presume the Legislature did not intend.”].) I believe we are bound
    by D.B.’s holding that not even the “certainly troubling” potential consequences the
    unanimous court foresaw flowing from its reading of section 733(c) entitled the juvenile
    courts to adopt their own ad hoc remedies. (D.B., supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 948.) This pure
    conclusion of law is what the juvenile court implicitly rejected below in its express
    consideration of the interests of J.B.’s coparticipants, Joseph Mendoza’s family, and the
    14
    In contrast, each of the minors in Greg F., In re J.L. (2008) 
    168 Cal.App.4th 43
    ,
    and V.C. v. Superior Court (2009) 
    173 Cal.App.4th 1455
    , had been the beneficiary of the
    juvenile court’s forbearance from an initial DJF commitment for an eligible offense, but had
    committed a DJF-ineligible offense in spite of that forbearance. In such contexts,
    precluding resort to section 782 would have the arguably absurd result of disincentivizing a
    juvenile court’s early efforts at less restrictive placements, thereby thwarting the very
    legislative mandate to limit DJF commitments.
    7
    public in extending J.B.’s confinement by dismissing his adjudicated DJF-ineligible
    petitions under section 782 and committing him to a state institution slated for closure.
    Had the Legislature been content to continue relying on the ad hoc discretion of the
    juvenile court when the most recent offense alleged in any petition was DJF-ineligible,
    section 733(c) and the limitation indicated by its plain terms would have been unnecessary.
    Because I believe the juvenile court erred in dismissing the DJF-ineligible petitions to
    commit J.B. to DJF, I would reverse the judgment.
    ______________________________
    LIE, J.
    People v. J.B.
    H049130
    8
    Trial Court:                             Santa Cruz County Superior Court
    Superior Court No.: J22783C
    Trial Judge:                             Hon. Denine J. Guy
    Attorneys for Defendant and Appellant:   Paul Couenhoven
    J.B.                                     Sixth District Appellate Program
    Attorney for Plaintiff and Respondent:   Rob Bonta
    The People                               Attorney General of California
    Lance E. Winters
    Chief Assistant Attorney General
    Jeffrey M. Laurence
    Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Rene A. Chacon
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General
    Bruce Ortega
    Deputy Attorney General
    In re J.B.
    H049130