Thе defendant, Hershey Farms, Inc., moves, under section 484 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, for a remission of the fines, or a portion thereof, imposed on February 27, 1940, by a city magistrate, sitting as a Court of Speciаl Sessions, at a Municipal Term, pursuant to sections 140 and 142 of the Inferior Criminal Courts Act, in three cases wherein the defendant pleaded guilty of possessing adulterated milk in violation of the Sanitary Code. The total fines amount to $400 These pleas and fines followed immediately the trial of another case against this corporation, involving a similar violation of law, wherein that court adjudged the defendant guilty and sentenсed it to pay a fine of $250, notwithstanding the recommendation of the corporation counsel that a fine of $150 should be “ considered adequate.” An appeal from such conviction resulted in a revеrsal thereof on the facts and the law. and the court ordered a remission of the latter fine. (People v. Hershey Farms, Inc.,
The legal limit of the punishments for such offenses prescribed by the statute as are here involved is $500 fine in each case. (New York City Charter, § 558, subd. D; Penal Law, § 1937.)
The adultеration of milk is a serious offense and its suppression is a matter of vital concern to the well-being of the public. Where it is sold or possessed for sale for human consumption, the offense, in my judgment, calls for а substantial punishment that is commensurate with the gravity of the offense as shown by the circumstances of the case in the light of the past record of the offender. In the case of People v. Kibler (
The imposition of excessive fines is prohibited by the Constitution of this State. (N. Y Const, art. I, § 5.) It is stated in 15 American Jurisprudence (Criminal Law, § 551) that “ What is an excessive fine, however, is a relative proposition dependent upon many factors,” and (that “In determining the excessiveness of a fine the courts may take into consideration the аbility of the defendant to pay.” It further states: “ A fine is excessive if it seriously impairs his ability to gain a livelihood. The Legislature has power to fix heavy penalties on corporations having great incomes and сontrolling vast properties although such penalties, if inflicted on individuals, might appear excessive. Whether a fine is excessive and unjust is a question of law, and the court will not adjudge a fine to be so disproportionate to the offense as to come within the constitutional prohibition unless there is a plain conflict between the supreme law and an enactment of the Legislature. A fine within the limit of a statute is within thе discretion of the trial judge, and is not the subject of review unless the jury is required by law to assess fines when of a certain amount or greater.”
The measure of proper punishment is always a serious problem; it is not bаsed on impractical theories. When a judge with a practical knowledge of affairs and an experience, taking into account all the facts of a case, gives careful consideration to the offense, its degree, whether the violation is one or many, and imposes a sentence that he holds to be a deterrent,, then truly is he exercising his discretion in the performance of his judicial duties. Chief
The magistrate, in the first instance, was cognizant of all the facts of these cases and had before him the record of this defendant as a prior violator of the Sanitary Code. He exercised his discretion in the matter of punishment; and it must stand upon review, unless a consideration of the particular circumstances justifies the claim that that punishment is arbitrary, unreasonable or excessive in fact or as a matter of law, and that it does not subserve but rather impedes or defeats the ends of justice. (See Bowers on Judicial Discretion of Trial Courts, chap. 2, p. 13, “ Definition and Range of Judicial Discretion,” and cases therein cited; 18 C. J. § 3, pp. 1134, 1135.)
Looking through cases of other jurisdictions, it is to be noted that their statutes are different from ours, and in most jurisdictions only the Governor has the authority to remit a fine by constitutional provision.
In People ex rel. Cropsey v. Court of Special Sessions (
In the case of People v. Kelly (
Motion denied, with leave to renew to the Court of Special Sessions.
