2 N.Y.S. 609 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
Prior to 1845, all warrants issued by a justice of the peace must require the offender tobe brought before the justice issuing them, (Rev. St. pt. 4, e. 2, tit. 2, § 3;) and the accused, when arrested, must be taken before such justice, except in two instances,—one when arrested in another county for a crime less than a felony, (sections 7 and 8;) and the other, in case the justice was absent, or his office vacant, the accused must be taken before the nearest magistrate in the same county, (section 12.) Thus, whether the offense was committed in the town where the justice resided or not, under the Revised Statutes the warrant must be made returnable before the one who issued it, and the proceedings thereon must be conducted before that one. Under such statute, also, the fees of magistrates for such proceedings were a charge upon the town in which they lived, notwithstanding the offense may have been committed in some other town. By the Laws of 1845, c. 180, § 26, it was enacted that the fees of magistrates in such proceedings shall be paid by the several towns wherein the offense shall have been committed, and all accounts rendered for such proceedings shall state where the offense was committed. The section also further provides that, where any magistrate residing out of the town where the offense shall have been committed shall issue a warrant, it shall authorize the officer to take the offender before some magistrate residing in such town, to be further proceeded against; “and the magistrate issuing such warrant shall not' be allowed any compensation for any further proceedings in any such case, beyond issuing the warrant. ” By chapter 455, Laws 1847, such section was amended, among other things, by providing that the magistrate issuing the warrant should not lose jurisdiction over the trial and proceedings against any such person. The other amendments were not important to this question, and in both acts cases of felonies were excepted. By the Revised Statutes, any fines imposed in such proceedings, if paid to the magistrate before commitment, were to be by him applied, first, to paying the expenses of the proceedings, and the balance to the county treasurer for the county. If paid to the sheriff, after commitment, he was to pay the whole fine to the county treasurer. Part 4, c. 2, tit. 3, art. 4, §§ 45, 46. By the above cited statutes, (1845, 1847,) all fines imposed by the magistrate in such cases shall be credited to the town where the offense was committed. It will be seen that by these statutes a decided change was made in such proceedings, both as to issuing the warrant and the payment of the expenses incurred; and, if the statute of 1847 is still in force, it is
It seems clear that the provisions of the act of 1847, so far as requiring a warrant to be returnable before some magistrate in the town where the offense was committed, and giving such magistrate jurisdiction to proceed with the case, are inconsistent with and repugnant to the provisions of the Code. It can hardly be supposed that the legislature intended the provisions of these sections to apply only to cases occurring in the magistrate’s own town, and to leave the provisions of the act of 1847 to stand as authority in cases where the crime was committed in another town. The Code is general in its nature, and purports to apply to all criminal proceedings. It is .entitled “An act to establish a Code of Criminal Procedure, ” and was passed for the purpose of blending into one intelligent and consistent act all the various proceedings necessary in administering the criminal law. It covers the whole subject-matter of the statute of 1847, so far as the mode of arresting and examining a person charged with crime is concerned; and, to that extent, seems to have deliberately returned to the procedure adopted by the Revised Statutes, and to have repudiated the change made by the acts of 1845 and 1847. To this extent I am not able to reconcile the provisions of the two acts, and therefore I conclude that those of 1847 are repealed. Bowen v. Lease, 5 Hill, 225; People v. Supervisors, 73 N. Y. 173; People v. Supervisors, 85 N. Y. 323, 330. Assuming that the authority of the justice to issue a warrant returnable before a magistrate of the town where the offense was committed is repealed, does it follow that so much of the act that prohibits his receiving fees for proceedings, after issuing the warrant, is repealed? I am inclined to think that-it does. The plan of the statute of 1847 was that a magistrate of the town in which the offense was committed should perform all the services after the arrest was made, and a method was provided by which he could obtain jurisdiction of the case, viz.fby authorizing the warrant to be made returnable before him. But still, such act recognized the duty of every magistrate to issue a warrant of arrest upon proper application made to him, and therefore retained for him compensation for such services as he must necessarily perform. But the Code of Procedure has deprived the magistrate of another town from sending the ease to a magistrate of the town where the offense was committed, and from thus relieving himself from the duty of further proceeding with it. ■ Under the Code, he must not only order the arrest, but he must proceed with the examination or trial; and if this provision of the act of 1847 is to stand, in connection with the requirements of the Code, the justice is compelled to, render official duties for which he can obtain no compensation. So, also, the Revised Statutes, and the many subsequent acts which give a justice fixed-fees for such services, must, so far as these cases are concerned, be deemed.