150 N.Y.S. 24 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1914
The relator is before the court on a writ of habeas corpus, to ascertain the cause of his imprisonment. The warden makes return that he holds the relator under a commitment of the county judge of Kings county, made at a term of the County Court, on October 16, 1914. It appears that on October 15, 1914, the grand jury of the county of Kings returned an indictment against the relator, charging him with the crime of murder in the first degree. The relator upon arraignment refused to plead to the indictment thus returned, and thereupon a plea of not guilty was entered for him by order of the County Court. He was then committed to await trial. The relator traverses the return, alleging that his imprisonment under said indictment is illegal, for the reason that he cannot be tried for murder in the first degree, or upon the indictment so returned, because such trial would he in violation of his constitutional rights, referring especially to article 1, section 6, of the state Constitution which provides that “ No person shall be subject to he twice put in jeopardy for the same offense.”
The “ offense” charged against the relator in the indictment is homicide. The grand jury charges him with murder in the first degree, in that on April 13, 1914, in the county of Kings, he wilfully, feloniously and of malice aforethought shot and killed Gertrude Bullock, said death occurring on April 15, 1914. It appears that on April 23, 1914, he was indicted by the grand jury in Kings county for the same homicide, but charged in the earlier indictment, .as manslaughter in the first degree. He pleaded not guilty to that indictment and was thereafter brought to trial upon that indictment in the County Court. A jury was impaneled and sworn. The prosecution presented its evidence and rested. The defendant relator presented his defense. Counsel for the relator, and the district
The situation presented is unusual, d the legal questions involved are important and interesting. I have reached the conclusion that the relator is not entitled to his discharge upon habéas corpus, by a justice of the Supreme Court, although I think his objection to trial on the second indictment is sound in law. But that objection must be presented to the County Court to which the indictment was returned, and in which it is pending. There is no question of the jurisdiction of that court, over the subject matter and the person of the defendant. It seems to me, that the orderly procedure requires the defendant to apply to the County Court to quash the indictment now pending against him, and for his discharge from imprisonment. The decision of a justice of the Supreme Court discharging the relator upon habeas corpus is not made in the criminal action against him pending in the County Court. That prosecution might go on, and we would have the anomaly of an indictment brought on for trial, for murder in the first degree, with the defendant at large. In People ex rel. Burke v. McLaughlin, 77 Misc. Rep. 13, where the relator applied for his discharge upon habeas corpus asserting that his indictment was unlawful because found without
But in no statute that I have ever read, in no case reported in the books, or ever heard of, as far as I know, is it suggested that the state, with all its powerful criminal machinery, can charge a citizen with a given crime — with the right to find superseding indictments, or even after trial commenced to procure from the trial judg’e an order terminating the trial, and resubmitting the matter to a new grand jury for indictment for a higher degree of crime or perhaps for a new crime — and with all these means at its disposal elect to put him on trial for manslaughter, and then having presented its case, having deliberately tendered this issue to him, having forced Mm in his own defense to introduce evidence to meet the charge — having listened to his plea to the jury and the law laid down by the court governing the charge — that in such case, a jury having failed to agree, the district attorney instead of retrying the defendant may present the same
The writ is dismissed, and the defendant remanded to the custody of the warden.
Writ dismissed.