54 Misc. 2d 687 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1967
The defendants are 10 individuals, the International Longshoremen’s Association and two locals of said union and 34 corporations which employ members of the union. The defendant Balsamo is alleged in the indictment to have been, prior to March 15, 1965, convicted of felonies in Michigan and New Jersey for which he has not been pardoned or received a certificate of good conduct from the Board of Parole. The indictment charges a violation of section 8 of
Section 8 (L. 1953, ch. 882, § 8, as amd. by L. 1961, ch. 211, § 3) provides: “ No person shall solicit, collect or receive any dues * * * within the state for or on behalf of any labor organization * * * if any officer, agent or employee of such labor organization * * * has been convicted by a court of the United States, or any state or territory thereof, of a felony * * # unless he has been subsequently pardoned therefor * * * or has received a certificate of good conduct from the board of parole * * * to remove the disability.” Neither section 8 nor any other provision of the act makes a violation of section 8 a crime. The People, however, attach criminality thereto by virtue of section 29 of the former Penal Law which states: ‘ ‘ Where the performance of any act is prohibited by a statute, and no penalty for the violation of such statute is imposed in any statute, the doing such act is a misdemeanor.” The new Penal Law, which became effective on September 1, 1967, omits therefrom, and thus repealed, section 29 of the former law. A violation of section 8 after September 1, 1967 would thus -concededly not be criminal, but the former law is applicable to this alleged offense committed prior thereto (new Penal Law, § 5:05).
The defendants have demurred to the indictment. It must therefore be determined whether the facts stated therein constitute a crime.
Section 29 of the former Penal Law has been applied in a number of cases. In none of these cases, however, has it been attacked as constitutionally vulnerable.
Generally, when the Legislature has made the violation of a statute criminal, it has said so in the statute itself, or in some other statute in the same article or chapter of the laws. This is required so that a person reading the statute shall be made aware of its criminal consequences. For, a penal statute must give fair warning as to its application and must not be so vague that persons of common intelligence must guess or differ as to its application (People v. Zanchelli, 8 Misc 2d 1069,1070; People v. Phyfe, 136 N. Y. 554; People v. Shakun, 251 N. Y. 107, 114 ; People v. Caswell-Massey Co., 6 N Y 2d 497, 501; People v. Vetri,
Section 29 on its face, and read literally, is broad and all-inclusive, and includes within its sweep, all acts prohibited by, and unpenalized in, a statute. If it were to be so universally applied, the question would arise whether its presence lurking in the Penal Law is a sufficient warning to one reading an unrelated statute that such hidden and unexpressed therein criminality is contained therein. Nevertheless, despite its broad language, section 29 has in fact not been applied by the courts to all such statutes, but has been applied to some (People v. Merolla, 18 Misc 2d 383, affd. 11 A D 2d 799, affd. 9 N Y 2d 62, cert. den. 365 U. S. 872; People v. Gardner, 62 N. Y. 299; People ex rel. Weatherwax v. Watt, 115 Misc. 120, 134; People v. Olcese, 41 Misc. 102; Matter of Vanderhoff, 15 Misc. 434) and held not to apply to others (People v. Freres, 5 A D 2d 868; People v. Luongo, 39 Misc 2d 905 ; People ex rel. Warren v. Beck, 144 N. Y. 225, 227; 1946 Atty. Gen. 149,155). In Be Vean v. Bmisted (5 A D 2d 603, 610, affd. 5 N Y 2d 236, affd. 363 U. S. 144), the Appellate Division of this Department specifically raised the question whether section 29 is applicable to a violation of section 8, the statute involved herein, but the court left the question open and undecided.
There is a profusion of prohibitory statutes scattered among the Consolidated and Unconsolidated Laws of New York in which no criminal penalty is provided. If section 29 is applicable to some and not to others without specifying which or specifying standards precise enough to determine to which it is to be applied, how can anyone know or determine at the time of committing an act proscribed by one of these statutes whether or not he is committing a crime 1 For example, section 14 of the Judiciary Law provides: “ A judge shall not sit as such in, or take part in the decision of, an action, claim, matter, motion or proceeding to which he is a party, or in which he has been attorney or counsel, or in which he is interested, or if he is related by consanguinity or affinity to any party to the controversy within the sixth degree ”. Any judgment or decision in such a case is void (Matter of Thoms, 24 A D 2d 536). Judges are presumed, in our society, to be most cognizant of the law, but scarcely one of them would not have been surprised or shocked to find that section 29 might be applicable to this statute so as to render the offending Judge a criminal. How do even Judges know at this time whether section 29 would, if such a Judge had been indicted, have been applied to section 14
Section 29 thus left the public uncertain as to which statutes it was applicable. Section 29 is thus vague and devoid of standards and is violative of due process of law. “ A law fails to' meet the requirements of the Due Process Clause if it is so vagu.e and standardless that it leaves the public uncertain as to the conduct it prohibits or leaves judges or jurors free to decide, without any legally fixed standards, what is prohibited and what is not in each particular case” (Giaccio v. Pennsylvania, 382 U. S. 399, 402-403; United States v. Mersky, 361 U. S. 431, 440; United States v. Gambling Devices, 346 U. S. 441; Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 U. S. 347, 350, 355). This, “ under these circumstances would be to send him to jail for a crime he could not with reasonable certainty know he was committing. This court has often held that fundamental fairness requires that such reasonable certainty exist ” (Scull v. Virginia, 359 U. S. 344, 353), “ The vice of vagueness in criminal statutes is the treachery they conceal either in determining what persons are included or what acts are prohibited” (United States v. Cardiff, 344 U. S. 174, 176). I hold, therefore, that section 29 is so infected with uncertainty as to which statutory prohibitions are included within its sweep as to render, it lacking in the requisite, due process of law to satisfy the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution and section 6 of article I of the New York State Constitution.
Even assuming section 29 to be constitutional and applicable to section 8, the defendants assert that section 8 as applied to them is repugnant to the Due Process Clauses of the Federal and State Constitutions because of the lack in section 8 of any requirement of scienter, so that they might be convicted thereunder even if they had no knowledge of Balsamo’s prior convictions. Attacks on the constitutionality of section 8 have previously been rejected (De Veau v. Braisted,, 363 U. S. 144, supra; People v. Merolla, 9 N Y 2d 62, supra; Bradley v. Waterfront Comm, of N. Y. Harbor, 12 N Y 2d 276; International Longshoremen’s Assn. v. Hogan, 3 Misc 2d 893). But these rejected ■ attacks were, made on other grounds and contentions. None of them was based on the due process question of scienter raised here.
In this case, the corporate employer defendants, by their contracts with the defendant union, are required to check off and collect union dues and as the indictment alleges “ pursuant to agreement deliver said dues so collected to defendant Local 1277 ”. Unless and until such corporate employer is informed of the criminal record of a union agent or employee, it would have the impossible burden of day to day investigation, since employees may change from day to day or an employee without a criminal record today may have one tomorrow. If the convicted employee concealed his prior conviction from the union and the employer, how could the employer uncover it? It must check in Federal and 50 State jurisdictions. These criminal records are not public records open to the employer, but are accessible only to law enforcement agencies. Even if the employer made every inquiry possible under these circumstances and such inquiry failed to turn up the existing conviction, the employer would still be criminally liable under this statute. The Waterfront Commission, which has the duty and function of policing the act, did not find out about Balsamo’s convictions
Even assuming the constitutionality of both section 29 and section 8, the question arises whether section 8 is one of the statutes to which section 29 was intended to be applicable. This is the question left open in De Veau v. Braisted (5 A D 2d 603, 609-610, supra). If the question is now required to be answered, that answer must be in the negative. Section 8 was enacted by chapter 882 of the Laws of 1953 as part of the Waterfront Commission Compact (Part I) and Waterfront Commission Act (Part III). Section 8 is included in Part III thereof applicable to New York State. New Jersey enacted kindred statutes. By section 4 violations of the compact for which no other penalty is prescribed are misdemeanors. In article XIV penalties are provided for general violations, in which section 8 is not included. In section 5-0 (L. 1953, ch. 882, as amd. by L. 1961, ch. 211, § 2), the misdemeanor penalty of section 4 is applied to certain supplementary violations, Avhich do no include section 8. By section 5-d (L. 1953, ch. 882, as amd. by L. 1954, ch. 220, § 2), false swearing before the commission is made a misdemeanor. By chapter 220 of the Laws of 1954, sections 5-e and 5-f Avere added providing for civil penalties for certain violations of the compact. New Jersey, in enacting section 8 (N. J. Stat. Ann., § 32:23.80) added a proAdsion at the end thereof, not found in New York section 8, making a violation thereof a misdemeanor.
Thus, when the Legislature intended to make a violation of any section of the act a misdemeanor, it specifically said so. Where it intended to apply civil penalties, it specifically said so. The fact that it did not include the criminal penalty in section 8 when New Jersey did, or in all the ensuing years, further points to the fact that the omission to make a violation of section 8 criminal was intentional. The misdemeanor provision in the New Jersey statute cannot be assimilated with New York section 8 by implication. There can be no crime by implication (People v. Adamkiewicz, 298 N. Y. 176,179, supra).
It is no answer to say that the Legislature did not include a misdemeanor in section 8 because it was deemed unnecessary in view of section 29. In 1958, the Appellate Division raised a
Section 29 can be construed as constitutional by ascribing to it a more limited application than has heretofore been given it, and this limited application was, I believe, always its intended application. Such limited application was never urged in prior cases which applied it generally, and which, it seems to me, thus lifted it out of its setting and context as part of the “ General Provisions ” of the former Penal Law. “It is the duty of the courts to assume the legislature did not intend to violate the Constitution, and to so construe this statute as to bring it within constitutional limitations, if possible ” .(Germania Sav. Bank v. Village of Suspension Bridge, 159 N. Y. 362, 369; Mater of Vanderbilt, 281 N. Y. 297, 313, affd. sub nom. Whitney v. Tax Comm. 309 U. S. 530; Matter of Roosevelt Raceway v. Monaghan, 9 N Y 2d 293, 303; Hotel Armstrong v. Temporary State Housing Rent Comm., 11 A D 2d 395, 401). “ It is always presumed in regard to a statute that no unjust or unreasonable result was intended by the Legislature and, if a particular application of a statute in accordance with its literal sense will produce or occasion injustice, another and more reasonable interpretation should be sought ” (Cluett, Peabody & Co. v. J. W. Mays, Inc., 5 AD 2d 140,149, affd. 6 N Y 2d 952).
Whenever the Legislature intended to make a violation of any of its statutes a misdemeanor, it said so in the statute itself or in an associated statute contained in the same article or chapter of the consolidated and unconsolidated laws. (For the many such statutes, see the enumeration in the Index to McKinney’s Cons. Laws of N. Y. under the heading of “ Misdemeanors ”.)
By chapter 1031 of the Laws of 1965, effective September 1, 1967, the Legislature, on recommendation of the commission, transferred from the old Penal Law to the various appropriate chapters of the consolidated and unconsolidated laws, 373 sections of the old Penal Law, each of which contained a misdemeanor provision as to a violation thereof (conforming and