Appeal by defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Westchester County, rendered September 25, 1973, convicting him of petit larceny, upon a guilty plea, and imposing sentence. Judgment affirmed. The case is remitted to the Supreme Court, Westchester County, for proceedings to direct appellant to surrender himself to said court in order that execution of the judgment be commenced or resumed (CPL 460.50, subd. 5). The facts of this case are accurately stated in the dissenting memorandum. On these facts the sentencing of defendant to one year in jail, upon his plea of guilty to a misdemeanor in full satisfaction of 19 indictments against him, was not an abuse of discretion. Nor did it violate any promise made by the County Judge to sentence him to probation, since the uneontroverted evidence at the hearing established that the County Judge had made no commitment whatever. Here, defendant waived immunity and testified before the Brand Jury and before petit juries, having obtained the written promise of the then District Attorney (1) that upon completion of all testimony contemplated by the agreement he might plead guilty to a single misdemeanor to cover all criminal charges against him and (2) that the prosecutor’s office would recommend to any Judge sentencing him on such misdemeanor that he be sentenced to probation rather than to imprisonment. Both these promises were kept. Whether, in addition to these written promises, the then District Attorney tricked defendant into believing that he would in fact be placed on probation depends upon whether we are to believe defense counsel’s testimony that the prosecutor told him that the County Judge had promised that, if defendant kept his end of the bargain and if the prosecutor so recommended, he (the County Judge) would “ accept it that way”. That the Justice at Criminal Term characterized defendant’s counsel as a highly reputable attorney of Orange County does not mean he accepted defense counsel’s version of his conversation with the prosecutor, who was frank enough to admit he had no recollection of their conversation one way or the other. As noted, the record affirmatively shows that the County Judge made no commitment whatever, and the Justice at Criminal Term so found. In these circumstances, the Justice’s refusal to sentence defendant to probation clearly shows he rejected the defense version of the conversation. We do not deem this error. Indeed, to accept the defense version of the conversation is to find the former District Attorney guilty of reprehensibly and fraudulently misrepresenting that he spoke to and obtained a promise from the County Judge, a finding which the Justice at Criminal Term properly rejected and which in our
