176 Misc. 627 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1941
The petitioner claims he is illegally restrained without due process of law in that his plea of guilty upon which he was sentenced to State’s prison took place in the chambers of the judge and not in the court room. In other words, the plea was not taken in “ open court.”
The facts (apparently undisputed) are as follows: The petitioner was indicted by the grand jury of Bronx county on September 19, 1932, for the crime of grand larceny in the first degree, having stolen an automobile which was found in his possession. The indictment proceeded to trial on October 17, 1939, before the county judge at a regularly designated session of the court. On
In December following, his present attorney made a motion for a new trial in the County Court of Bronx county on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. This motion was denied.
In January of this year the petitioner procured a writ of habeas corpus returnable in Westchester county, where the sole point raised was that no.mistrial had been declared at the time Franco entered his plea of guilty, and, therefore, all the proceedings were a nullity. Upon the argument of the writ, the district attorney produced a photostatic copy of the court calendar which showed that a mistrial had been declared, whereupon the petitioner’s attorney withdrew the writ.
Neither upon the motion made to withdraw the plea of guilty, nor upon the motion for a new trial, nor upon the hearing of a writ of habeas corpus, was it ever contended that the plea of guilty was a nullity . .
Now, almost a year and a half after the entry of the plea of guilty, the petitioner seeks to have the plea set aside on the ground it was taken in chambers and not in open court in accordance with the provisions of section 335 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
“ Open court ” contemplates the presence of the judge and clerk and the clerk’s docket, a regular opening and clos ng of court and the entry upon the docket at that time of all steps taken.
It is well settled that a defendant can waive, not only the statutory provisions which are designed for his benefit, but even a constitutional provision as well. In any event, it appears little short of ridiculous to me that the defendant should now be permitted, at this late date, to take advantage of a situation that he himself brought about. He should be held to the position which he has assumed and upon which he requested and secured a personal advantage.
A person may waive a trial by jury and plead guilty. He may waive or withdraw a challenge to a juror. He may waive his right to have a challenge to a juror for favor tried by triers and consent that it be tried by a court. He may waive a challenge to an array of jurors by a challenge to the polls. He may consent to the separation of the jury during the trial when such separation without such consent would be a ground of error. Having all this power, can it be contended that he cannot consent to something less? He may waive any manner or form or substance except only that which may relate to the jurisdiction of the court.
To permit the petitioner now to claim' that his p’ea was not taken in open court because it was taken in a room adjacent thereto and to which he consented would be inconsistent with the good faith and dealing which should characterize the administration of justice. (See Pierson v. People, 79 N. Y. 424; People ex rel. Prince v. Brophy, 273 id. 90; People v. Toledo, 150 App. Div. 403.)
The relator relies largely upon the authority of Cancemi v. People (18 N. Y. 128). In the first place, that is an old case, decided in 1858. We have come a long way since then even where the rights of a defendant are involved. We now look for the substance of the invasion of these rights rather than a mere nebulous theory thereof. The court there held in substance that a prisoner could not consent to a trial by less than twelve jurors because a legal jury consisted of twelve persons and the right to a trial by jury shall remain inviolate forever; hence, a trial by a jury of less than twelve is not a trial by jury. Here public interest was directly involved. The court there said: “ That the consent of the plaintiff * * * to the withdrawal of one juror, and that
I do not think that section 335 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which provides that pleas be taken in open court intended to prescribe a specific mode of procedure based upon fundamental rights in the public, but rather a personal privilege of the defendant.
I see no fundamental right involved and I see no public injury which would result.
If the privilege to refuse to testify on the ground of self-incrimination, or the right of the accused to be confronted with the witnesses against him, or tire right to be represented by counsel are personal privileges and it has been so held, and, hence, may be waived, then by what logic can it be said that the right to offer a plea in open court is not equally a personal right or privilege and cannot likewise be waived.
In Matter of Rudd v. Hazard (266 N. Y. 302), cited by petitioner, the acceptance of the plea and the pronouncement of judgment by the court was not at a regular or stated term of the court and it was held, and properly so, to be a matter of jurisdiction and could not be waived. Here, the court was concededly duly constituted and the proceedings were held at a regular stated session thereof
It is my conclusion that the writ should be dismissed and the petitioner remanded to the custody of the warden of Sing Sing Prison.