127 Misc. 141 | New York City Magistrates' Court | 1926
City Magistrate. On Saturday afternoon, April 24, 1926, the defendant drove an automobile, and collided with a pedestrian. He was arrested, and is charged with felonious assault, a felony. He was taken to a police precinct station house that afternoon, and arraigned in the night court that evening, where he applied for bail. The magistrate refused to fix bail for lack of power. The defendant was remanded to the police. He was returned to the police station, where he remained over night. He was again arraigned in the Magistrates’ Court having jurisdiction of the crime the following morning, Sunday, April 25, 1926. No finger-print or other record of the defendant was then produced. The defendant Was again remanded to the police for arraignment upon production of previous record and finger-prints.' Later in the day (Sunday), upon certain records then produced, he was admitted to bail by a County Court judge for arraignment to-day in this court. There was another bond, on a charge for reckless driving, which is not now involved. The defendant is again arraigned by the police before me this Monday, April 26, 1926. No previous or finger-print records are produced.
It should be noted that no finger-print records are kept in any of the police precinct station houses in the city of New York; that there are there no facilities for comparison and verification of finger-prints. So, too, there are no complete finger-print records or other records of crime commission in any of the several Magistrates’ Courts of the city of New York, except partial records of disorderly conduct, disorderly persons, vagrants and intoxicants. Police headquarters (Center and Grand streets) is the only placé where complete finger-print records are maintained.
In response to an asserted necessity for more stringent penal laws, the Legislature of the State of New York enacted chapter 419 of the Laws of 1926, which, in material particulars, amends sections 552, 553, 554, 557 and 558 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and enacts a new section 552-a. Whether this amendment is repugnant to the State and Federal Constitutions is a question pressing for immediate solution in the Magistrates’ Court. These amendments introduce a new practice into the administration of the criminal law of the State, and involve a serious invasion upon the liberty of our people.
The novelty of the legislation does not, of itself, militate against its validity. The new law works two radical changes, the one procedural, and the other substantive. First, it divests the city magistrate of his previous power to allow bail in all cases of felonies, specified misdemeanors, and one species of disorderly conduct, .where a defendant (a) has previously been convicted within the State of a felony, or an attempt to commit a felony, or a crime under the laws of another State or country, which, if committed within this State, would be a felony, or (b) has been twice convicted of such classified misdemeanors or specified disorderly conduct. Bail in such cases can be allowed only by a justice of the Supreme Court or by a judge of the Court of General Sessions or a judge of the County Court where the defendant is charged. (Code Crim. Proe. § 552, as amd. by Laws of 1926, chap. 419.) Since the magistrate in such cases cannot allow bail, he may not continue it. Bail allowed in a case pending in the Magistrates’ Court must be renewed or continued each time the case is adjourned, and pending the renewal the defendant must in each instance be reimprisoned.
The expressed design of the finger-print is to facilitate the inquiry into the past criminal record of the defendant, for the purpose of determining where the power to fix bail rests, and primarily, that the amount of bail may be in proper relationship not only to the crime charged, but to the defendant’s previous criminal career.
“No person charged with a felony or with any of the misdemeanors or offenses specified in the preceding section shall be admitted to bail until his finger-prints shall be taken to ascertain whether he has previously been convicted of crime. Upon the arrest of a person so charged it shall be the duty of the peace officer having him in custody to forthwith ascertain his previous record, if any, from the files and records kept in the place in which he is arrested and report immediately thereon. Nor shall he be admitted to bail until his previous record, if any, shall be submitted to the judge, justice, magistrate or other person empowered to admit to bail.” (Code Grim. Proc. § 552-a, as added by Laws of 1926, chap. 419.)
Whilst, in express terms, there is no provision to compel a defendant who refuses to be finger-printed, there is little doubt that such power is necessarily implied from the context of the law, its design and the machinery devised for the fixing of bail.. There is even less doubt that in practice finger-printing will follow as of course upon arrest.
It is important to note that whilst the expressed design of the finger-print is to determine questions of bail, the defendant may be subjected to the process, regardless of any application by him for bail. A defendant who seeks no bail, or even expressly disclaims it, and is content to await in jail his trial in court, may still be submitted to the treatment. It is noteworthy that Whilst the seeming purpose of the law is to reform bail practice as a curb to crime, no remedial change is made.-. No different, higher or other bail is required. All crimes which in the past were bailable are still bailable. The past criminal records of persons arraigned for crime have always in the past been presented to the court by the arresting officer and been considered in the fixing of bail. There has been no difficulty in identifying old offenders. Those with long criminal records have been kept in prison pending trial by bail so high as to be unobtainable. The number of forfeited recognizances for non-appearance in the Magistrates’ Court is
The two aspects of the new law will be cons' dered separately. The Magistrates’ Court is the creature of the Legislature which has fixed its jurisdiction and powers and may enlarge and limit them, so long as “ due process of law ” is insured. That the new law may be impractical and unfeasible in operation does not destroy its validity. The Magistrates’ Court has threefold jurisdiction:
(a) It investigates felonies and misdemeanors, and holds defendants for the grand jury or trial in the Court of Special Sessions. In such cases the magistrate may not acquit, however meritorious the defense, once a prima facie case is established. The offense, even though a felony, may be but malum prohibitum and without opprobrium. A defendant arraigned in the Magistrates’ Court as a second offender upon a felony charge may not have bail in the court where he is held and examined, and must either remain in prison or seek one of the enumerated judges of courts of record.
(b) It has jurisdiction to hear and determine complaints for specified misdemeanors upon defendant’s consent.
(c) It has exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine charges of offenses of a grade less than a misdemeanor, principally disorderly conduct, vagrancy, disorderly person and intoxication. These cases begin and end in the Magistrates’ Court, yet with respect to certain of them (Penal Law, § 722, subd. 6) the magistrate, in the contingencies specified in the new law, may not release on bail. It may 'well be argued that the regulation of bail by a court invested with full jurisdiction to entertain, hear and determine, is an integral part of the “ due process of law,” which article 1, section 6, of the State Constitution, and section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution, guarantee, particularly since the magistrate sits on Saturday and Sunday, while the Supreme, General Sessions and County Courts are not then in session. But there is a graver objection to this circumscription of the right to bail.
Article 1, section 5, of the Constitution of the State of New York '
As already indicated, I am impressed that the new law, particularly in respect to cases where the Magistrates’ Court has plenary jurisdiction, is seriously open to the objection that it involves a denial of due process of law. But I prefer to rest my conclusions on broader grounds. A defendant who refuses to be finger-printed may not be bailed. It is assumed for the moment that he has a choice. Very probably his refusal will be futile. A fair reading of the new law imposes upon the officials the duty to finger-print the classified defendants.
Mere arrest upon a charge of crime presupposes no guilt. It is one of society’s risks. To escape it, one must find the wilderness. A charge of crime needs only a complaint from anybody. A defendant is arraigned, in fact innocent, and refuses to submit to fingerprinting. A recoilment from it is not unnatural. It cannot be said that the refusal is unreasonable or unjustified. Yet he is denied bail. The requirement for finger-printing is oppressive and unreasonable. It contravenes article 1, section 5, of the Constitution of the State of New York, and in my judgment is unconstitutional.
There are other grounds upon which the unconstitutionality of the law must be declared. Article 1, section 6, of the Constitution of the State of New York provides: “ No person shall * * * be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself; nor be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.”
The clause first quoted is also a prohibition in precise words, in section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution, against the action of any State. Finger-printing is an encroachment on liberty of person. ' It is justifiable, as is imprisonment, upon conviction for crime, in the exercise of the police powers of the State for the purpose of facilitating ’ future crime detection and punishment. What can be its justification when imposed before conviction? What constitutes “ due process of law ” is ordinarily for the determination of the Legislature, but it may not act without limit. From the beginning of time it has been recognized that notwithstanding the- presumption of innocence and in order to make effective punishment for crime, it is not an improper invasion of personal liberty to arrest a defendant on a charge of crime and to keep him detained until trial. The purpose of the arrest and detention is to insure the defendant’s appearance and to prevent escape. -Recent tendencies of our laws have been in the direction
It is urged in support of the law that the finger-print is in use •as a means of identification in various departments of government unrelated to criminal law enforcement, such as license and permit bureaus and immigration agencies; that there is a growing movement to introduce it among our children in the public schools and elsewhere for better vital statistics; in fine, that finger-printing is losing in the public mind its association with criminal guilt. Time may be when this system of identification becomes so universal that it is no longer connected in thought with crime. The mores of people constantly change. But the innocuity of a practice must be tested in the light of its prevailing and not possible future significance. To charge that one’s finger-print records have been taken would ordinarily convey an imputation of crime and very probably support a complaint for libel per se. In my judgment compulsory finger-printing before conviction is an unlawful encroachment upon person in violation of the State and Federal Constitutions.
Lastly, finger-printing before conviction involves prohibited compulsory self-incrimination. It is no argument that proof of prior conviction may not be offered in chief in a criminal prosecution. It is evidence for impeachment. The Constitution prohibits its compulsion from a defendant. The cases of People v. Defore (242 N. Y. 13); People v. Van Wormer (175 id. 188) and People v. Gardner (144 id. 119) are not decisive. There is a marked difference between talcing a defendant’s shoes and placing them in foot-marks leading to a house where a murder was committed, or forcibly taking a murderer before his dying victim for identification, or forcibly taking stolen property from a thief or examining him for bruises — all of which have, by adjudication, been held not to be violative of the constitutional prohibition against compulsory self-incrimination — and the involuntary subjection of a defendant to finger-printing, a practice heretofore regarded solely as one of the incidents of conviction for crime. Concededly, there may not be a compulsory written examination of a defendant as to his past career, and in my judgment he may not be compelled to make disclosure of his past life by the nod or nay of the head or the lines of his hands. Those cases to
Whilst ordinarily it is the better practice for the courts of first resort to presume the constitutionality of statutes and leave them for critical analysis and condemnation to appellate courts, the present situation involves fundamental rights of liberty requiring immediate definition. A more effective enforcement of the criminal law and the holding of known criminals in restraint prompted this legislation, and however beneficent and necessary the remedy, and however laudable the purpose of the Legislature may be, they cannot be a just excuse for annulling and destroying constitutional safeguards and guaranties.
In my judgment chapter 419 of the Laws of 1926 is unconstitutional because it contravenes the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and article 1, sections 5 and 6, of the Constitution of the State of New York.
I accordingly fix and allow bail in the sum of $1,000.