229 A.D. 378 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1930
On March 4, 1927, defendant was sentenced to five years imprisonment as punishment for the crime of attempted grand larceny in the second degree after a plea of guilty. The punishment prescribed by the Penal Law for this crime is imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years and six months. (Penal Law, §§ 1297 and 261.) For a first offender the punishment for the crime is an indeterminate sentence of imprisonment, the minimum of which is from oné year to one year and three months, and the maximum two years and six months. (Penal Law, § 2189, as amd. by Laws of 1919, chap. 411.) On July 29, 1929, while the defendant was still imprisoned under the five-year sentence, the district attorney of the county where he had been previously sentenced pursuant to the provisions of section 1943 of the Penal Law (as added by Laws of 1926, chap. 457) filed an information accusing the defendant of having been convicted of two other felonies prior to the conviction of March 4, 1927. When brought before the court to answer to this information, the defendant remained silent and this was entered of record and a jury was impaneled to inquire whether the offender was the same person convicted previously as alleged in the information. This was in accordance with the procedure laid down by section 1943 of the Penal Law. (People v. Gowasky, 244 N. Y. 451.) In submitting the question of identity to the jury, the learned county judge instructed the jury that this was a civil proceeding, and that the People were entitled to a verdict, if the identity of the defendant with the person previously convicted was established by a fair preponderance of the evidence. The court also refused to charge that the defendant’s -failure to take the witness stand was not to be construed as evidence of his guilt and that the jury was to draw no inference therefrom. Exceptions were taken to the instructions and to the refusal to charge as stated.
In our opinion this proceeding beginning with the information, though in a sense collateral to the original trial (People v. Schaller, 224 App. Div. 3), is rather to be considered as supplemental thereto. It is as clearly criminal in its nature as was the original trial. Its ■ purpose was to determine whether the defendant was a second or other multiple offender so as to be subject to aggravated punishment. It is argued on behalf of the People that the only question before the jury being the identity of the defendant with the persons formerly convicted, the proceeding is not one to determine guilt
It makes no difference that the question of identity is tried separately by another jury. The fundamental question is the same and the rights of the defendant are entitled to the same protection in the one case as in the other. (People v. Gowasky, supra.) The conclusion follows that it was error to deny the defendant such rights in the instant proceeding.
Nothing in People v. Schaller (supra) is in conflict with this view. The determination there to the effect that the defendant was not entitled to peremptory challenges rested on the construction of section 373 of the Code of Criminal Procedure in the light of former common-law practice. No such question is involved here.
It is asserted in the briefs that at the time the information in this case was filed, the maximum permissible sentence for the crime of attempted grand larceny, second degree, as a first offense, had been served by the defendant. Assuming this to be so, although the record does not show it, the information was not in our judgment
The judgment of conviction rendered November 29, 1929, should be reversed on the law, the. facts having been examined and no error found therein, and a new trial upon the information granted.
All concur. Present — Sears, P. J., Crouch, Edgcomb, Thompson and Crosby, JJ.
Judgment of conviction rendered November 29, 1929, reversed and a new trial upon the information granted; the said reversal is solely for errors of law and not for errors of fact or as a matter of discretion, this court having reviewed all questions of fact and found no error therein.