Eighmy v. . the People

78 N.Y. 330 | NY | 1879

Upon the case before us the plaintiff in error has no standing in this court. He was indicted for *332 perjury under the statute, at a term of the Saratoga Oyer and Terminer, and after a plea of not guilty, the indictment was sent to the Court of Sessions, where he was convicted and sent to a State prison. By writ of error the judgment was taken to the Supreme Court and at a General Term thereof held in Albany county in January, 1879, it was affirmed. The error book shows an order of affirmance by that court, but the order although filed does not appear to have been entered in Saratoga county nor has any judgment been rendered thereon. The writ on which the plaintiff in error asks for a review of the proceedings is addressed to the Court of Sessions of Saratoga county and the return is made by that court. No writ appears to have gone to the Supreme Court nor has any return been made by it. This probably was from inadvertence (2 R.S., p. 740, § 17). But assuming the regularity of the other proceedings we cannot examine the record to discover error because there is no judgment of the Supreme Court. (Weed v. People, 31 N.Y., 465.) The learned counsel for the plaintiff in error contends however that the order of the General Term may be reviewed under the provisions of chapter 449 of the Laws of 1879. We think not. That statute is an amendment of section 15, article 2, title 6, chapter 2, part 4 of the Revised Statutes, and applies only to cases where after conviction sentence has been suspended or stayed and such conviction had been affirmed by a General Term of the Supreme Court. Such an order may be reviewed by this court on writ of error. The one in question is not such an order. The plaintiff in error was not only convicted but sentenced, and after judgment shall have been entered in pursuance of the order of the General Term he will be entitled to a writ of error as of right, under the statute as it stood before amendment. If the district attorney fails to enter judgment the defendant may require it to be done. In Jackson v. Walker (6 Hill, 261), the court on motion of the defeated party made an order requiring the prevailing party to perfect a judgment of reversal in the Supreme Court in order *333 that a writ of error might be brought to the Court of Errors, for there was needed for that purpose a judgment as well as an order, and in that respect the practice in criminal and civil cases is the same, although in the former the common law judgment roll may be dispensed with in certain cases, so long as the return complies with the statute, and contains a transcript of the judgment. (Manke v. The People, 74 N.Y., 415.)

The district attorney puts this motion upon the further ground that the plaintiff in error has received a pardon from the executive — but this cannot prevail. The pardon issued because he was deemed a fit object of mercy, and in consequence of it the sentence is not enforced; but from the judgment until reversed injury may be presumed. The defendant may not be punished according to its terms, but the infamy and discredit to which by it he is subjected will remain (1 Gr. Ev., § 378, note 1, page 425 [12th ed.]), and although by the law of this State he is now a competent witness the weight of his testimony in any legal proceeding would be affected by the fact of his conviction (§ 832 of the Code). The plaintiff in error does not interpose the pardon, and whether in case the judgment is affirmed by reason of proceedings on his part he will be deemed to have waived the benefit of it we are not now called upon to determine. But upon the ground first considered the motion to dismiss the writ of error must be granted.

All concur.

Motion granted. *334