121 Misc. 286 | New York County Courts | 1923
It appears upon the arugment of this appeal that on July 2, 1923, information was laid before the police justice charging the defendant with the larceny of a motor truck which was the property of the Clayville Knitting Company. The defendant was arrested upon the charge, and it is claimed pleaded guilty and thereupon received a sentence of six months in the county jail, from which sentence he appealed. Several alleged errors are cited in the appeal papers, but I only regard two as of any controlling importance. The first is this: It appears that the person who made the complaint instituting the criminal proceedings, one George Coffee, and the police justice who presided in the case and passed the sentence, were both employees of the Clayville Knitting Company, the owner of the truck in question. Thus, Coffee, the complaining witness, was coemployee with the magistrate, and both- were employees of the corporation whose truck it was alleged defendant had stolen. The claim is made that under such circumstances the magistrate was actually disqualified and his proceedings, therefore, void. The matter is governed by section 15 of the Judiciary Law which provides that “ a judge shall not sit as such in, or take any part in the decision of a cause or matter * * * in which he is interested,” etc. The question is as to whether the police justice was under the circumstances indicated, “ interested ” in this case. The section quoted was formerly section 46 of the old Code of Civil Procedure. It has been held that that section applies to civil and criminal cases. (People v. Haas, 105 App. Div. 119; People v. Connor, 142 N. Y. 130.)
It was formerly held that “interested ” meant financially interested, and that to disqualify a judge he must have some direct pecuniary interest in the case. The decisions of late have got away from the theory. See both the cases cited above. Also Wilcox v. Royal Arcanum, 210 N. Y. 370. It was said
That this case comes within the definitions above, and that the magistrate was disqualified, I think is established by Hub-bell v. Harbeck, 54 Hun, 147. In that case, the magistrate, a justice of the peace, was also a lawyer. A suit was brought before him, and two days later the plaintiff in that action retained him to bring another action in the Supreme Court. It was held that by accepting this retainer and employment he had disqualified himself to act as a magistrate in the Justice Court action theretofore brought before him. It seems to me that the circucstances are practically identical. The principle-involved is the very correct one that a magistrate should be unbiased and free from all influence or suspicion of influence, and that he should pass upon the matter before him impartially. That one could do this when the rights of his employer are involved, and when the complaining witness is a coemployee, is much to be doubted. That there was no question of fact to try, due to a plea of the defendant, does not signify because the very important matter of the size and extent of the sentence-was in the hands of this magistrate. . I think he must be held to have been “interested.”
The second important error claimed, and I think established, is that neither the information nor the supporting affidavits set forth any crime with sufficient directness and certainty to form the basis of a legal action. An inspection of the original information which is a part of the return, shows rather clearly that the draftsman originally intended to charge the crime of “ malicious msicliief.” Later he seems to have had a change of mind and erased the words “ malicious mischief ” and with a different ink wrote in “ grand larceny, first degree.” I am compelled to doubt if the draftsman had made out a sufficient.
The other assignments of error do not impress me greatly. I have heard the story recited by this defendant too often before. About every defendant who appeals in a criminal case claims that he did not plead guilty, or did not mean to, and that he was not informed of his “ rights.” I am willing to take the word of the -magistrate that the defendant did plead guilty, and that he was informed of his rights, but I think the magistrate should not have acted; first, because he was not disinterested as required by law, and, second, because the moving papers were not adequate upon which to found a criminal action.
The judgment of conviction must, therefore, be reversed.
Judgment reversed.