92 N.Y.S. 275 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
Lead Opinion
If we regard the term “ presentment ” in its stricter meaning as an. accusation of the'" grand jury sua aponte, or as Judge ..Story puts it, “an accusation made ex aero motu” as'distinguished from an indictment which was a written accusation preferred to the grand jury and presented upon oath at the instance of government, then I agree that it is not ,a final accusation •—■ the alternative, so to speak, of an indictment. For a presentment was regarded as the basis of an indictment. The distinetionyloes not now often practically appear, inasmuch as the grand jury is rarely the origin of fic'cnsatiou, as ■ was its prototype under the Assize of Clarendon (Tháy. Ev, 81; 1 Creen'History English People, 111;
But our Code of Criminal Procedure vests the grand jury with certain inquisitorial or visitorial powers. Section 260. provides as follows: ■“ The grand jury must inquire.: 1. Into the case .of every person imprisoned in the jail of the county, on a, criminal charge, and not indicted; 2. Into the condition and management of the
As the position of the appellants is that- this presentment is illegal and without"authority in law, regardless,of the merits which indeed are not presented, I feel constrained to affirm the order which deals only with a presentment made in the exercise of inquisitorial powers. ....
Hirschberg, P. J.,and Hooker, J., concurred; Woodward, J,, read for reversal; Bartlett, J., voted to dismiss the appeal on the ground of want of jurisdiction to entertain it. ■
See Burt’s ed., p; 175.— [Bee. -
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
The grand jury of Nassau county, in December, 1903, made a presentment to the Supreme Court, in which the 'board of supervisors, and two men who had acted as clerks of the board, were censured for not performing the duties of their respective offices in a manner to meet the approval of the grand jury. The individuals thus censured, with no opportunity offered • them to be heard in their own defense, petitioned the County Court of Nassau county, asking that the presentment be set aside and quashed, on the ground that such presentment was without authority of law. The prayer of the petitioners was denied, and the petitioners appeal to this court.
An exhaustive.research on the part of the learned counsel for the appellants, supplemented by the labors of counsel for the respondent, fails to bring to this court any controlling authority upon the question presented by this record, which involves the legal right of the grand jury to bring in a presentment against individuals where the evidence adduced does not disclose that any crime has been committed. In other words, we are asked to determine whether the grand jury, acting under the laws of this State, is authorized to make a public record (Code Grim. Proc. §§ 271, 272) censuring individuals for alleged misconduct, where the conduct alleged does not constitute a crime; whether the State of New York has established an inquisition in which the conduct of citizens may be reviewed and officially criticized and censured, according to the standards of ethics or morals of such a body rather than by those standards which have been fixed and determined by the law of the land. . The rule is supported by high authority that the validity of a statute is not to be determined by what has been done in any particular instance, but by what may be done under it (City of Rochester v. West, 164 N. Y. 510, 514, and authorities there cited), and in determining the powers of the grand jury, under the laws of this State, whether regulated by statute or usage constituting the common law, we have a right to consider what that body might do under this indefinite power of making presentments, if that power be conceded. If it has the right to censure the petitioners in the matter now before ns, it is difficult to conceive of any limitation upon the powers of the grand jury; it may establish its own standards of right and wrong,.
There are two great purposes, one to bring to trial those who are properly charged with crime, the other to protect the citizen against unfounded accusation of crime. When the grand jury goes beyond this and attempts to set up its own standards, and to administer punishment in the way of public censure, it is defeating the very purposes it was intended to conserve, and its action cannot, therefore, be lawful. Section 6 of. article 1 of the State Constitution provides that “ no person shall be held to answer for a capital or' otherwise infamous crime * * * unless on presentment or indictment of a grand jury, and in any trial in any court whatever the party accused shall be allowed to appeal- and defend in person and with counsel as in civil actions.” The inhibition that the citizen shall not be held to answer unless upon a presentment or indictment, must be understood as guaranteeing the right to answer when such a presentment or indictment is found, and “ the party accused shall be allowed to appear and defend in person and with counsel as in civil actions; ” while by section 2 of the same article this right is further protected by the provision that “ the trial by jury in all cases in which it has been heretofore used shall remain inviolate forever.” In other words,' a “presentment or indictment,” as applied to the citizen by our Constitution, contemplates in substance the same thing; it contemplates an accusation of crime, to be followed by an answer on the part of the person thus formally accused, with an opportunity to be heard in his own defense before a jury of his peers. The terms are, in their relation to the individual, synonymous. Ho one would contend that a citizen could be indicted for anything less than a crime, or that, if indicted, he could be denied an opportunity to answer and to appear in his own defense before a jury, and it seems to me equally clear that there is no con
All of the old forms of criminal pleading being, abolished, the People being limited to an indictment which shall charge the commission of a definite crime and state the acts constituting such crime, and a presentment being the equivalent of an indictment in the common law as it was understood at the time of making our State Constitution, it follows that any other action on the part of a grand jury, in dealing with .a citizen,, is without authority in law; and the petitioners being subjected to a wrong in the form of law, it becomes the duty of this court to deprive this so-called presentment of an official character, and thus to remedy, so far as-possible,, the wrong which has been done them. The petitioners are not charged with a crime; the facts stated do not constitute a crime and the paper presented to the court and which assumes to criticise and censure the board of supervisors and its clerks is without, any authority whatever and should be quashed and set aside, not alone because of the wrong sought to be perpetrated upon the petitioners, but for the protection of citizens in their right to their good names and reputations against all unauthorized attacks.
The order denying the petitioners’ prayer should be reversed and /the so-called presentment should be; set aside and quashed, with costs to thé appellants.
Orders of the County Court of Nassau county affirmed.