83 N.Y. 240 | NY | 1880
The relator, after an examination before the magistrate upon the charge of petit larceny and his decision that the offense had been committed by the relator, offered to give bail for his appearance at the next court having cognizance of the offense. This having been refused, and the relator having been held for trial by the officer for the offense *242 charged, he sued out a writ of habeas corpus before a justice of the Supreme Court, and after a hearing the justice decided that the relator be allowed to enter into a recognizance, and having done so discharged him from custody.
Upon these facts the question arises, whether the officer who issued the warrant had jurisdiction to try the accused. Such right is claimed by virtue of chapter 390 of the Laws of 1879, which provides that "courts of Special Sessions, except in the city of Albany and in the city and county of New York, shall, in addition to the powers possessed by them, have also exclusive jurisdiction in the first instance to hear and determine the following cases: 1. Charges for petit larceny not charged as a second offense." This enactment, on its face, is sufficiently broad to authorize any court of Special Sessions to try an offender for the crime charged against the relator, and unless there is some difficulty in the way, the right is clear and beyond any question.
It is claimed that the act cited is in conflict with section 2, article 1 of the Constitution, which declares that "the trial by jury, in all cases in which it has heretofore been used, shall remain inviolate forever." The trial by jury referred to evidently means a trial by a common-law jury of twelve men, within the principle laid down by the decisions of the courts of this State in Hill v. The People (
The counsel for the relator insists that the provision of the Constitution (§ 26, supra) must be construed to mean only such offenses as are created by statute after the adoption of the amendment. There is, we think, no ground for thus restricting its interpretation, and it is broad and comprehensive enough to include all misdemeanors existing by statute at the time of its adoption, as well as such as might afterward be created by law. It clearly comprehends all misdemeanors for which provision is made by law, including petit larceny, and the act of 1879 confers exclusive jurisdiction to try that class of offenses. The views we have expressed are supported by the decision of the Supreme Court in The People v. Rawson (61 Barb. 619). In that case the question now considered was presented under an act of the legislature giving courts of Special Sessions in the county of Monroe exclusive power to hear, try and determine cases of petit larceny; and it was held that petit larceny was within the meaning of section 26 of article 6 of the Constitution, and the act of the legislature was valid. The subject is discussed in an able opinion by JOHNSON, J., and but little if any thing can be added to the views expressed, which contain a sound exposition of the law.
In Devine v. The People (20 Hun, 98), the same question is considered and the same result reached by a majority of the court, although in that case the conviction was reversed upon another ground. In a dissenting opinion of one of the judges, it is held that where the Constitution permits jurisdiction of misdemeanors to be given to courts of Sessions, it must be construed so as not to take away the right of the accused in such courts to be tried by a common-law jury in cases where such trial was used at the adoption of the Constitution. We think the amendment cited, and the provision as to the right *244
to a jury trial are entirely harmonious, and when the Constitution conferred authority upon courts of Special Sessions to try misdemeanors, it meant the courts in question, as they were and might be constituted by the legislature, whether they authorized a jury of six or otherwise. The provision of the Constitution as to a jury trial can have full scope and force by applying it to cases where trials are had in a court of record, while the amendment can apply to cases of a lower grade where the offense is not a felony. Both provisions are thus made entirely harmonious, and if it was intended that the courts of Special Sessions to which jurisdiction was given should be such as had authority to summon and impanel a common-law jury, it is but reasonable to suppose that such a provision would have been inserted in the amendment. The evident purpose of the act was to relieve the higher courts from the burden of trying trivial offenses, and to leave this class of cases to local magistrates in the vicinity where the offense was committed. Prior to its adoption the accused party had a right to be tried before the officer holding the Special Sessions, and to a jury, if he desired, or to give bail for his appearance, according to the provisions of 2 R.S. 702, § 27, at the next sitting of a competent court in the county where the case might be presented to a grand jury, and an indictment found if authorized by the testimony upon which the accused might be tried before a jury in accordance with the Constitution. This is done away with by the amendment and the act of 1879, and the Special Sessions alone can now proceed and try the offender as already indicated. Besides what has been remarked as to the effect of the amendment, it should not be overlooked that it was held in the case of ThePeople ex rel. Murray v. Justices (
The order of the General Term must be reversed, and the proceedings remitted to the recorder with directions to proceed and try the prisoner.
All concur.
Order reversed, and ordered accordingly.