168 N.Y. 549 | NY | 1901
The single question presented upon this appeal is whether the grand jury had jurisdiction to prefer the indictment herein, or whether its jurisdiction was dependent upon a complaint having been previously made to a magistrate or to a Court of Special Sessions. The defendant contends that although the court in which the indictment was found was a court of general jurisdiction, it had no authority to inquire into the offense alleged and present an indictment therefor because there was no charge or complaint pending before the Court of Special Sessions. *551
This claim is based upon the provisions of section 1406 of the charter of the city of New York, which defines the jurisdiction of Courts of Special Sessions. (Laws of 1897, ch. 378.) That section, so far as it relates to this question, provides: "The said courts of special sessions shall have jurisdiction as follows: 1. Except as otherwise provided in this title, the said courts of special sessions of The City of New York shall have in the first instance exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine all charges of misdemeanors committed within The City of New York, except charges of libel. * * * The said courts shall, however, be divested of jurisdiction to proceed with the hearing and determination of any charge of misdemeanor in either of the following cases: First: If, before the commencement of the trial in said court of any person accused of a misdemeanor, a grand jury shall present an indictment against the same person for the same offense; or Second: If, before the commencement of any such trial," one of the judicial officers mentioned therein shall certify that it is reasonable that such charge shall be prosecuted by indictment. The last subdivision then provides the procedure for obtaining such certificate, and that the proceedings shall be stayed and the charge presented to a grand jury.
The material portions of that section disclose that criminal prosecutions for misdemeanors are, in the first instance, within the exclusive jurisdiction of Courts of Special Sessions, except as otherwise provided in title three of chapter 378. Obviously, under that statute, the general rule is that Courts of Special Sessions in the first instance have exclusive jurisdiction of all misdemeanors, except libel, committed in the city of New York. But to that general rule as to jurisdiction there are certain statutory reservations or exceptions, one of which is that that court shall be divested of its jurisdiction to hear and determine charges of misdemeanors if, at any time, before trial a grand jury shall present an indictment for the same offense. The only express limitation to the right of a grand jury to present an indictment in any such case is that it must be presented before the commencement of the trial. Therefore, *552 unless some other prohibition is to be implied from the statute, it is evident that the grand jury had authority to find and present the indictment in this case, and when found its effect was to divest the Court of Special Sessions of any jurisdiction to try the defendant for the offense charged.
The defendant, however, contends that in construing the provision of the statute divesting Courts of Sessions of jurisdiction when an indictment has been found we should also consider the other exception where one of the judicial officers mentioned certifies that it is reasonable that the charge should be prosecuted by indictment. Upon that premise it is then argued that as in the latter case the proceedings are stayed they must also be stayed where an indictment has been found, and as there is a stay of proceedings the conclusion follows that both of these exceptions apply only to a proceeding already pending in a Court of Special Sessions. One of the infirmities of this reasoning is that no stay of proceedings is required or is necessary where an indictment has been found as provided in the first exception, and hence the defendant's argument is based upon an assumption which is wholly unwarranted. If it be admitted that the second exception was intended to apply only to cases that were pending, and that the certificate operated to stay proceedings therein, still it by no means follows that it was the intent of the legislature to deprive courts of record of jurisdiction by a grand jury to present an indictment for a misdemeanor, although no prosecution therefor was pending in the Court of Special Sessions. We think the construction contended for by the defendant is not justified.
It is further insisted that the words "in the first instance" indicate that the proceeding must have been instituted in a Court of Special Sessions before an indictment could be preferred by a grand jury. We do not think that claim can be upheld. The words "in the first instance" may well be regarded as words of limitation and as disclosing an intent that the exclusive jurisdiction conferred upon Courts of Special Sessions exists only where no other authorized proceeding *553 is pending. Obviously the principal purpose of that language was to so define the jurisdiction of that court as to exclude the power to review the action of any other tribunal or officer. Under the statute Courts of Special Sessions, doubtless, have exclusive and original jurisdiction to hear and determine all misdemeanors, except as otherwise provided. Hence, where there is no other prosecution pending or subsequently instituted which is permitted by that statute, the Court of Sessions not only has original and continued jurisdiction but it continues to be exclusive. But that jurisdiction is, by the statute, made expressly subject to other provisions which make exceptions and provide conditions under which such jurisdiction is divested. If either of those conditions arises, the jurisdiction thus conferred is terminated and the offense must be tried upon indictment. In this case one of the exceptions or conditions provided by the statute arose upon the presentment by a grand jury of an indictment against the defendant, although the offense was one of which the Court of Special Sessions would have had jurisdiction in the first instance if no indictment had been found.
Again, it is urged that the provision that "The said courts shall, however, be divested of jurisdiction to proceed with the hearing and determination of any charge of misdemeanor" in the cases specified, indicates that the Court of Sessions cannot be divested of jurisdiction unless a proceeding is already pending therein. It is said, "The language (to proceed with the hearing and determination) has no application and is meaningless unless there is a charge already before the court with the hearing and determination of which the court is about to proceed." In this argument it is plainly assumed that the words "to proceed" are to be regarded as applicable only in the sense of continuing a proceeding already begun. We think those words were used in their broader sense, and should be construed as having a more extended signification than is attributed to them by the defendant. Where matters of procedure in courts or actions are involved, lexicographers give as the usual definition of "to proceed" to *554 conduct, to begin and carry on an action or proceeding. (Webster's Dictionary; Century Dictionary.) Thus, the force of this argument is hardly apparent in view of the fact that the court might in future proceed in a case not pending as well as in a case already commenced. That provision in the statute clearly relates to the future, and the language employed was evidently intended to be sufficiently broad to cover all cases, whether pending or not. Moreover, one of the cases to which that general provision applied was where proceedings were necessarily pending, and, hence, language sufficiently broad to cover both was used.
It is also contended by the appellant that our decision inPeople v. Knatt (
The judgment of conviction should be affirmed.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, BARTLETT, VANN, LANDON and CULLEN, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed. *555