OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant has been charged with violating section 6513 (1) and section 7302 of the Education Law. Section 6513 (1) states: “Anyone not authorized to use a professional title regulated by this title, and who uses such professional title, shall be guilty of a class A misdemeanor.” Section 7302 states: "Only a
Section 15.10 of the Penal Law states: "The minimal requirement for criminal liability is the performance by a person of conduct which includes a voluntary act or the omission to perform an act which he is physically capable of performing. If such conduct is all that is required for commission of a particular offense, or if an offense or some material element thereof does not require a culpable mental state on the part of the actor, such offense is one of 'strict liability.’ If a. culpable mental state on the part of the actor is required with respect to every material element of an offense, such offense is one of 'mental culpability.’ ”
Clearly no culpable mental state has been specifically enunciated by the statutes.
Section 15.05 of the Penal Law defines the culpable mental state utilized in this State’s criminal statutory scheme.
The People contend that section 6513 (1) and section 7302 are strict liability statutes. Defendant contends that the People must not only prove the scienter requirement but that the failure to state the culpable mental state renders the information deficient.
Section 15.15 (2) of the Penal Law states: "Although no culpable mental state is expressly designated in a statute defining an offense, a culpable mental state may nevertheless be required for the commission of such offense, or with respect to some or all of the material elements thereof, if the proscribed conduct necessarily involves such culpable mental state. A statute defining a crime, unless clearly indicating a legislative intent to impose strict liability, should be construed as defining a crime of mental culpability. This subdivision applies to offenses defined both in and outside this chapter.” However, this section has not precluded the imposition of a strict liability standard for certain proscribed activity, both within (People v Davis,
"While the absence of any requirement of mens rea is usually met within statutes punishing minor or police offenses (for which fines, at least in the first instance, are ordinarily the penalties), we think that interpretation of legislative intent as dispensing with the knowledge and wilfulness as elements of specified crimes is not to be restricted to offenses differentiable upon their relative lack of turpitude. Where the offenses prohibited and made punishable are capable of inflicting widespread injury, and where the requirement of proof of the offender’s guilty knowledge and wrongful intent would render enforcement of the prohibition difficult if not impossible (i.e., in effect tend to nullify the statute), the legislative intent to dispense with mens rea as an element of the offense has justifiable basis.” (United States v Greenbaum, 138 F2d 437, 438.)
Initially, the court rejects the proposition by counsel that it should impose the standard of culpability of a similar crime for which a mental state is statutorily mandated. The prosecutor would impose, if any, a mental state of intent to create reliance upon a misrepresentation as required in section 190.25 of the Penal Law. Defense counsel, contending that the charge at hand closely resembles one for perjury, would have this court rule that the State must demonstrate that this defendant intentionally made a false statement of his credentials, citing Morissette v United States (
"The factual circumstances of the act involved in the offense of being a subscribing witness to a nominating petition that contains a false statement were unknown to the common law. However, the underlying criminal conduct that is the essence of this offense is perjurious in nature. Perjury is one of the notorious crimes recognized by the common law (People v Teal,
In determining whether or not a particular criminal statute, silent upon the issue of mental culpability, is in fact one of strict liability, the court is bound to examine several factors to establish a nonexpressed intention on the part of the enacting Legislature, including the nature of the act itself and the purpose for which it is proscribed, enforcement and historical precedent (People v Daniels, 118 Cal App 2d 403,
In People v Miller (
The traditional distinction between those activities which are malum in se as opposed to malum prohibitum, examined by the Morissette and Miller courts, has been examined in other contexts as well.
In People v Northrop (
In Stern, Henry & Co. v McDermott (
"The fact that there may have been no intent on the plaintiff’s part to commit a misdemeanor is of course immaterial. An act malum prohibitum is not excused by good faith.
"A guilty mind or corrupt purpose is not an essential element of a misdemeanor created by statute under the police power. All that is required for its commission is the intentional doing of the prohibited act itself, regardless of whether the doer intended to commit the crime resulting from the intentional act. When one deliberately violates a positive law which he is presumed to know, he cannot be excused on the ground that he intended no wrong, or that his animating desire was essentially praiseworthy. (22 C.J.S., Criminal Law, § 30.)” (Supra, at 55-56.)
Similarly, the promulgation of section 6513 (1) and section 7302 of the Education Law was part of a reorganization of previously scattered statutory regulations. In establishing a section of the Education Law to deal solely with the "professions” the Legislature created a pervasive regulatory' scheme to provide for licensing and administration of those careers which have a wide and potentially harmful effect upon the health and welfare of the citizens of this State. Thus, the subject of the statute is within the scope of prior legislative
A further consideration is the practical necessity of enforcement. In People v Ortiz (
Based upon the foregoing, the court finds that section 6513 (1) imposes a strict liability upon a defendant who has been found to have acted in the manner proscribed by sections 6513 and 7302 of the Education Law. This being so, defendant’s motion to dismiss is denied.
