107 N.Y.S. 1011 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1907
The undisputed facts in this case are these: On the 21st of Hovember, 1907, William Gow had been indicted by a grand jury in the County Court of Kings county, charged with the crimes of grand larceny and forgery. So far as appears, he had never before been accused nor even suspected of any crime. He appeared at the court-house •where the County Court was in session on the day named, and went to the office of the district attorney of the county, and there acknowledged his readiness to appear and plead to the said indictments and arrange for the giving of bail necessary' to secure his release from custody pending trial. While waiting in the district attorney’s office to permit arrangements between the district attorney and the County Court for his arraignment and release on bail to be perfected, one August Kuhne, a member of the police force of the city of Hew York, came into the office of the district attorney and notified the said Gow that he must accompany him to police headquarters in the borough of Brooklyn, which was in a building several blocks distant from the court-house. At.that place a record is kept of photographs, measurements and imprints, taken under the Bertillon system, of persons convicted of crime and also of some persons who are charged with criminal offenses, which record is familiarly known as the “ Bogues’ Gallery.” In obedience to the command of the said Kuhne, said Gow went to police headquarters and while there, in obedience to the command and under the authority of the police department, he submitted to having his photograph taken, and also certain measurements and imprints made under the system above referred to, which are now in the custody and control of the respondents, or some of them, as officers of the police department of the city of.Hew York. Thereafter, the said Gow was brought back by 'the said Kuhne to the district attorney’s office and shortly thereafter he was arraigned in the County Court, pleaded “ not guilty,” the amount of bail was fixed, bail given and accepted and the prisoner discharged.
This application is made for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the officials constituting the police department of the-city of Hew York and those persons having the
Two questions present themselves upon this application:
First. Was the act of the officers of the police department in compelling the petitioner to submit to having his photograph taken and those measurements and imprints made, a lawful or an unlawful act ?
Second. If unlawful, has the petitioner redress in this form of proceeding?
There -are certain rights pertaining to mankind, which have their origin independent of any express provision of law, and which are termed “ natural rights.” One of these is the right of personal liberty. This includes, not only absolute freedom to every one to go where and when he pleases, but the right to preserve his person inviolate from attack by any other person. This right to one’s person may be said to be a right of complete immunity; to be let alone. Cooley Torts (3d ed.), 33. The inviolability of the person is as much invaded by a compulsory stripping and exposure, as by a blow. Union Pacific R. R. Co. v. Bottsford, 141 U. S. 250; McQuigan v. D., L. & W. R. R. Co., 129 N. Y. 50. So sacred is this right in its character, that the People of the State, speaking in the most solemn form, namely, through the State Constitution, have declared that no person shall be deprived of any of his rights unless by the law of the land or the judgment of his peers. N. Y. State Const., art. 1, § 1. Bor shall he be deprived of his liberty without due process of law. Ibid., art. 1, § 6. These constitutional provisions are not the sources of the right; they are in the nature of a shield against any unwarrantable interference with such rights by any department of the government, executive, legislative or judicial. But, when one becomes a member of a community, this absolute right confirmed by constitutional provisions of necessity yields to another and higher right. The absolute freedom from restraint which the individual has as a natural right yields to the necessities of the public welfare, when such public welfare demands that, for its sake, this right be temporarily
The act of declaring what temporary invasions of the natural rights of liberty and personal immunity are necessary in the exercise of police power for the common welfare of the community is solely a legislative act. 1 Tied. State & Federal Control, § 2.
It is necessary, therefore, for the respondents in this case to show, in the first place, legislative authority for the. acts complained of. If such authority is shown, a further question will arise, whether that act was in violation of constitutional provisions, or a legitimate exercise of the police power. If no such authority is shown, -the latter inquiry need not be pursued. Ho statute has been found which, in express terms, authorizes any member of the police force of this city to deprive any person of his liberty of action or invade his right of personal immunity to the extent of requiring him to submit to having his photograph taken, and measurements and impressions of his body made, for the purpose of preserving them in the criminal records, of that department, simply because such person has been indicted, charged with
By section 272 of the charter, the police commissioner is required “ to make such rules, orders and regulations,’.’ as may be reasonably necessary to effect a prompt and efficient exercise of all powers conferred upon him by law. But if no power is conferred upon him by law in this regard, any rule which he may promulgate respecting the same is utterly void. The exercise of any such extreme police power as is here contended for is contrary to the spirit of Anglo-Saxon liberty. It is a principle of the common law which has been reinforced by statutory provisions (Code Crim. Pro., § 389), that every person is presumed to be innocent until the contrary be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. That presumption survives the finding of an indictment, arrest, arraignment and the impanelling of a petit jury for the trial of the issue. It continues dtiring the introduction of evidence upon the trial, the summing up of counsel, the charge of the court, and until the jury, by its verdict of “ guilty,” has said that the presumption is overcome, or by its verdict of “ not guilty,” that the presumption has become an established fact.
It is only when there is such manifest and total repugnance between the earlier and later statutes that the two enactments cannot stand together that such repeal will be inferred. Hot only does such repugnance not exist in this case, but the construction contended for by the police department is in direct conflict with the provisions of the charter itself, which makes it the duty of every member of the police force, under the penalty of a fine or dismissal from the force, immediately upon an arrest to convey the offender, not to police headquarters to be photographed and measured, but “ before the nearest sitting magistrate, that he may be dealt with according to law.” Laws of 1901, chap. 466, § 338.
The remaining statute above referred to, which has been cited in support of the contention of the respondents, provides that, “ upon the determination of a criminal action or proceeding against a person in favor of such person, every photograph of such person and photographic plate or proof taken or made of such person while such action or proceeding is pending, by direction or authority of any police officer, peace officer, or any member of any police department, and all duplicates and copies thereof, shall be returned on demand to such person by the police officer, peace officer, or member of any police department having any such photograph, photographic plate or duplicate in his possession or under his control.” Penal Code, § 379a; Laws of 1907, chap. 626.
The reason which induced the Legislature to pass this act may undoubtedly be found in the determination of the Court of Appeals in the Molineux case. Matter of Molineux v. Collins, 177 N. Y. 395. In that case the relator
It could hardly be deemed possible that the Legislature intended to make that which was unlawful when it was done a lawful act, by simply providing that the result of that unlawful act should under certain contingencies be destroyed.
In the case of persons actually convicted of crime and sentenced to the State prisons, or the penitentiaries of the State, or to the Hew York State Reformatory at Elmira, the Legislature has, in express and certain language, provided for the taking of such pictures and the making of such measurements.’ Laws of 1889, chap. 382, § 40; Laws of 1896, chap. 440.
It is not conceivable that the law making power, which proceeded so carefully and by express enactments with reference to the cases of persons convicted of crime, should have intended, by vague and indefinite provisions such as the one last above referred to, to affect the sacred rights of persons presumed to be entirely innocent of any crime. Ho
¡¡Notwithstanding this, after careful examination, I am convinced that the relator has mistaken his remedy. In the absence of special statutory authority, a writ of mandamus only lies to compel one to do what ought to be done in the discharge of a public duty, and not to undo what is improperly done, even though it may have been done under the color of performance of public duty. Merrill Mandamus, § 42; Ex parte Nash, 15 Q. B. 92; Matter of Dental Society v. Jacobs, 105 App. Div. 86; People ex rel. Joyce v. York, 27 Misc. Rep. 658.
In the ¡Nash case, it.appeared that the seal of a corporation had been improperly affixed to the register of shareholders, and an application was made for a writ of mandamus to compel the removal of said seal. Lord Campbell said: “We grant it (mandamus) when that has not been done which the statute orders to be done, but not for the purpose of undoing what has been done.” It might be urged that it was the duty of the police department to keep a correct record of persons convicted of crime and not to confuse and embarrass that record with the pictures and measurements of persons presumed to be innocent. The answer to
A register of deeds may be compelled to record a deed which has been properly executed and acknowledged, if he refuses so to do. I apprehend, however, that if through inadvertence or design he recorded a deed improperly acknowledged, or one upon which the signature was forged, he could not be compelled by mandamus to cancel such record, although the instrument was improperly recorded.
The case of Dental Society v. Jacobs, supra, seems to be precisely in point. In that case it appeared that, by the Public Health Law (Laws of 1893, chap. 661, §§ 161, 162, as amd. by Laws of 1895, chap. 626) it was the duty of every person practicing dentistry in this State to register in the office of the clerk of the county where his place of business was located. One- of the conditions which would entitle him to such registration was to present to the county clerk a license issued from the Regents of the University of the State of Hew York. Upon the presentation of such license, and an affidavit stating his name, age, birthplace, number of license, date of issue, and other particulars in the act specified, it was the duty of the county clerk to preserve such affidavit as part of the records of his office, and to issue to such licentiate a certificate of his registration, and a transcript thereof, which transcript and license were made presumptive evidence in all courts of the facts stated therein.
Subsequently to the passage of the act, and on the 19th of August, 1895, one William E. Walker presented an affidavit in which he stated that his legal authority for practicing dentistry within this State was conferred upon him by diploma from the Wisconsin Dental Oollege. It appeared that the Wisconsin Dental Oollege vas not a registered dental school, and it was claimed that the said college sold its
The fact that, in the Civil Service Law, the Legislature has deemed it necessary to-expressly provide that, in the provisions relating to the rights of preference to appointment conferred upon veterans and the provisions relating to the removal of veterans from positions in the public service, the injured party should have a remedy by mandamus for refusing to allow a preference, or to undo an unlawful act of removal (Laws of 1899, chap. 370, §§ 20, 21), would seem to indicate that, but for such express statutory authority, the right to this remedy would not exist.
Under the same law it was held, with regard to a person claiming a privilege against removal by reason of being an exempt fireman, at a time when the remedy by mandamus had not been extended to them, that such relief was unavailable. People ex rel. Cochran v. Tracy, 35 App. Div. 265.
The application must be denied, but without costs.
Application denied, without costs.