106 N.E. 67 | NY | 1914
The order of reversal in this case is based on an error of law only, the Appellate Division "having reviewed the facts herein and being satisfied with the judgment in that respect." The People have the right to appeal from such an order and they are not required to give a stipulation for judgment absolute. (Code Crim. Proc. § 519; People v. Miller,
At the outset of the trial the defendant interposed a challenge to the panel of special jurors. Although no formal exception to the challenge (which would be equivalent to a demurrer) was entered by the district attorney, as prescribed in section 364 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, it is evident that the court proceeded with the assent of the parties precisely as though the district attorney had duly excepted, and the challenge was disallowed. This ruling constitutes the error for which the judgment has been reversed.
The challenge was based on two grounds: (1) That the *259 panel of special jurors drawn pursuant to an order of the Supreme Court made on the 16th day of January, 1913, was not drawn in accordance with section 5 of chapter 602 of the Laws of 1901, as amended by chapter 458 of the Laws of 1904, in that the day specified in said order and on which the said jurors were required to attend court was less than five days after the day specified in said order for the drawing of said special jury; and (2) that said jurors were not drawn as provided in the aforesaid order of January 16, 1913, in that they were drawn at 9 o'clock A.M. on January 18, 1913, instead of being drawn at 10 o'clock A.M. as commanded by said order.
The Appellate Division deemed the first ground untenable, but thought that the challenge should have been allowed on the second ground.
In the dissenting opinion below a doubt is suggested as to whether there is any statutory basis for such a challenge to the panel as was here interposed. The Code of Criminal Procedure (§ 362) provided: "A challenge to the panel can be founded only on a material departure, to the prejudice of the defendant, from the forms prescribed by the Code of Civil Procedure and the Judiciary Law in respect to the drawing and return of the jury, or on the intentional omission of the sheriff to summon one or more of the jurors drawn." The variances alleged and admitted to have occurred in the present case were departures from statutes other than the Code of Civil Procedure and the Judiciary Law. Similar challenges to the panel, founded upon other statutes than those specified in section 362, have been treated as properly interposed, however, in cases which have come to this court (People v. Hall,
In order clearly to understand the disposition of the case by the Appellate Division it is necessary to trace the progress of legislation affecting special jurors in Kings county from the enactment of chapter 602 of the Laws of 1901. That statute was a general law entitled "An Act to provide for the appointment of a commissioner of jurors and to provide for a special jury in civil and criminal actions in each county of the State having a population of one million or more, according to the last preceding Federal census." The first section provided for the appointment of a commissioner of jurors in each such county by the justices of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the department in which the county was situated. The second section provided that the commissioner of jurors in each such county should select from the persons qualified to serve as trial jurors such number of persons to serve as special jurors as the justices of the Appellate Division should from time to time direct. Further on in the statute provision was made for ascertaining the qualifications of special jurors; and section 5 prescribed the conditions under which application might be made to the court for a special jury to try a civil or criminal case, and the form of order if the application was granted. "The order must specify the time when the drawing of such special jury shall take place and the number of special jurors to be then drawn, the term of the court and the particular day in the term when such special jury must attend."
The attempt to confer the power of appointing the commissioner of jurors for Kings county (who had been a county officer since 1858) upon the justices of the Appellate Division was speedily assailed as unconstitutional, and with success. In Matter ofBrenner (
In 1909, on an appeal in a civil action from an order denying a motion for a special jury, the Appellate Division of the second department was called upon to determine what law regulated the selection and summoning of special jurors in Kings county. (Coler v. Brooklyn Daily Eagle,
This decision in Coler v. Brooklyn Daily Eagle (supra) must have escaped the attention of the Appellate Division on the present appeal, for we can hardly suppose that it was the intention of the judges to overrule it without mentioning it, yet they have adopted a directly contrary view, both in the prevailing and dissenting opinions, holding that the law concerning special jurors in Kings county is to be found in chapter 564 of the Laws of 1902 and not in chapter 602 of the Laws of 1901 as amended by chapter 458 of the Laws of 1904.
I agree with the conclusion reached in the earlier case. There is no pretense that the act of 1902 was reported to the legislature by commissioners to revise the statutes and so without the constitutional prohibition against the passage of local bills relative to the selection of jurors.
If this view is correct, the order for a special jury in the present case should have provided for an interval of at least five days between the day when the special jurors were to be drawn and the day upon which they were required to attend. (Laws of 1904, ch. 458.) I think the courts below were right, however, in holding that the challenge to the panel on this ground was properly disallowed. The requirement was not for the benefit of the defendant, and the omission to observe it could not have prejudiced him in any way. It was solely for the convenience of the special jurors.
As to the other ground of the challenge, namely, the drawing of the special jury before the hour designated therefor in the order, the case is very different. The command of the statute is that the order must specify the time when the drawing of such special jury shall take place. This is clearly designed for the benefit of the defendant. Without notice of the actual time of the *263
drawing he is deprived of any means of knowing whether it is properly conducted or not, or indeed whether there has in fact been any drawing at all. "It is plain," said ANDREWS, J., inPeople v. McQuade (
For these reasons I think that the order of the Appellate Division reversing the judgment and directing a new trial should be affirmed.
WERNER, CHASE, COLLIN and HOGAN, JJ., concur; CUDDEBACK, J., not voting; CARDOZO, J., dissents.
Order affirmed. *264