105 A.D. 147 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The defendant has been charged by indictment with the felonious abduction of one Lottie Peters, an infant under the age of eighteen years, to wit, of the age of sixteen years. Upon motion the court directed the district attorney to deliver to the defendant’s attorney the evidence taken before the grand jury upon which the indictment was found. This the district attorney was unable to do because the evidence was not preserved. Upon the indictment appear the names of the witnesses, Lottie Peters and Gertie Bennett. The defendant
The motion should be granted. In People v. Bissert (71 App. Div. 118) it is held that the Code of Criminal Procedure prescribed the procedure* which must be followed in all criminal cases. In People v. Trezza (128 N. Y. 529) it is held that the right of appeal in criminal cases is statutory only, and in the absence of a statute authorizing it in a given case no appeal can be taken. This rule is reiterated in People v. Mayhew (151 N. T. 610, 611). (See, also, People v. Rutherford, 47 App. Div. 209.) It is not claimed that there is any statutory provision authorizing the appeal. The right of the defendant to appeal- to the Appellate Division is found in section 517 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. This section grants no authority to take the appeal which has been here attempted.
It is urged by the defendant’s counsel that the appellate courts have assumed the right of review in cases not within the provisions of section 517 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. There may be cases where jurisdiction has been wrongfully assumed or denied where public policy will lead an appellate court to entertain an appeal to which no right is given to a party under the statute, to the end that a bad precedent may not be established., (See People ex rel. Robinson v. Ferris, 36 N. T. 219.) There can be no public interest which requires us to consider this appeal.
The motion should, therefore, be granted.
All concurred.
Motion granted.