143 N.Y.S. 401 | New York County Courts | 1913
This is an appeal from a judgment convicting the defendant of a violation of section 145 of the charter of the city of Little Falls, and the sentence imposed by the recorder on November 15, 1912.
Defendant was charged with a wilful violation of section 145 of the charter of the city of Little Falls, N. Y., committed in said city on the 15th day of October, 1912, “ in that, he did then and there publicly and in a public place alone and with
There was a strike on in the city of Little Falls by a large number of the textile mill- employees at the time of the alleged offense.
My inclination would be to affirm the judgment appealed from, for it seems to me that it was very unbecoming for this defendant, mayor of the city of Schenectady, to go, incognito or otherwise, to the sister city of Little Falls which then had all the trouble its mayor and officers could attend to and attempt to do something that would increase their trouble.
Section 145 of the charter of the city of Little Falls (Laws of 1895, chap: 565) is as follows:
“ Section 145. Disorderly persons.—In addition to the persons described in section eight hundred and ninety-nine of the code of criminal procedure, the following persons within the city of Little Falls shall be deemed disorderly persons, and may be proceeded against as such under the provisions of the code of criminal procedure, and punished according to the provisions of this act.” Then follows an enumeration of the persons included, followed by the concluding paragraph of the section as follows: “ Every person found guilty of being a disorderly person as aforesaid, and every person guilty of any act or acts making such person a disorderly person as herein, declared, on conviction thereof, shall be punished as for misdemeanor.”
The section says, “ the following persons within the city of Little Falls shall be deemed disorderly persons ® * * every person found guilty of any act or acts making such person a disorderly person as herein declared, on conviction thereof, shall be punished, etc.”
I am of the opinion that it cannot be held that the prohibited acts are declared by the section to be a misdemeanor, or that the person found guilty of doing any of the acts is guilty of a misdemeanor, or that the offense of being a disorderly person is declared to be a misdemeanor.
The words “ shall be punished ” are analogous to “ is punishable ” which are used in many sections of the Penal Law.
The words, “ as for misdemeanor ” relate and apply not to the disorderly person, nor to the prohibited acts, but solely to the punishment, that is, the kind and extent of punishment.
“ Shall be punished as for misdemeanor ” means the same as shall be punished like that for misdemeanor, or is punishable like that for misdemeanor.
The punishment for misdemeanors is as variable as the kind and number of misdemeanors. There being no uniform punishment for misdemeanors, how can it be determined which misdemeanor was intended?
Section 145 might just as well have said, shall be punished as for crime other than that punishable by death or confinement in state prison.
No specific punishment being prescribed, no punishment can beximposed.
Section 1937 of the Penal Law (formerly Penal Code, § 15) does not apply; that is applicable only to “ a person convicted
Section 1940 of the Penal Law (formerly Penal Law, § 689) is as follows:
“ Section 1940. Punishment for felony when person convicted has been previously convicted of a misdemeanor. A person, who, having been convicted within this state of a misdemeanor, afterwards commits and is convicted of a felony, must be sentenced to imprisonment for the longest term prescribed for the punishment upon a first conviction for the felony.”
Is it possible that if a person was convicted under section 145 of lounging and loitering about, standing on the sidewalk in front of premises not owned or occupied by such person, or of any of the other offenses therein named, and then convicted of a felony, that the court must under section 1940 sentence him to imprisonment for the longest term prescribed for the punishment upon a first conviction for the felony? I think not. But the court would be obliged to impose such a sentence if, as. claimed by the learned counsel for respondent, the defendant was convicted of a misdemeanor, and that “ shall be punished as for misdemeanor ” is equivalent to “ shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,” notwithstanding section 145 says, “ shall be deemed disorderly persons.”
In the case of People v. Schermerhorn, 59 Misc. Rep. 146, a like provision of the charter of the city of Kingston was construed (Laws of 1896, chap. 747, § 51) and the court held that, there was no provision in that charter for the punishment of the prohibited acts, and in that respect it was nugatory, that, there was no authority in the recorder to sentence the defendant to imprisonment in the Ulster county jail, and reversed the-judgment.
I have given the opinion in the Schermerhorn case much thought and attention and am convinced'that the reasoning is. sound and the conclusion correct.
The judgment is, therefore, reversed.
Judgment reversed.