Yes, the doctype must be first thing in the document (except for comments). You should avoid inserting scripts before the doctype; compliant parsers are not required to accept that. (They should accept scripts appended after the rest of the document, if that is an alternative.)
From the HTML 5 specification:
This section only applies to documents, authoring tools, and markup > generators. In particular, it does not apply to conformance checkers; > conformance checkers must use the requirements given in the next section > ("parsing HTML documents").
Documents must consist of the following parts, in the given order:
- Optionally, a single "BOM" (U+FEFF) character.
- Any number of comments and space characters.
- A DOCTYPE.
- Any number of comments and space characters.
- The root element, in the form of an html element.
- Any number of comments and space characters.
- The various types of content mentioned above are described in the next few sections.
From HTML 4.01 Specification:
An HTML 4 document is composed of three parts:
- a line containing HTML version information,
- a declarative header section (delimited by the HEAD element),
- a body, which contains the document's actual content. The body may be implemented by the BODY element or the FRAMESET element.
[...]
White space (spaces, newlines, tabs, and comments) may appear before or after each section.
[...]
A valid HTML document declares what version of HTML is used in the document. The document type declaration names the document type definition (DTD) in use for the document (see [ISO8879]).