OPINION OF THE COURT
CPL 450.10, as amended by the Laws of 1984 (ch 671), purports to disallow an appeal as of right to the Appellate Division where the sole issue raised is the excessiveness of a negotiated sentence imposed by a judgment rendered upon a guilty plea.
Section 4 (k) of article VI prohibits legislative curtailment of Appellate Division jurisdiction over appeals from final judgments. On its effective date, the Appellate Division was obliged to entertain all appeals from final judgments in criminal cases, including those rendered upon guilty pleas imposing negotiated sentences (see, e.g., People v Thompson,
The People attempt to avoid the consequence of the constitutional command by ascribing to the term jurisdiction a narrow definition: that it relates only to the power of a court to decide a case properly before it, not to the duty of a court to hear a particular case. Our precedents are to the contrary, however, indicating that "[¡jurisdiction is a word of elastic, diverse, and disparate meanings” (Lacks v Lacks,
In People v Kevlon (
The text of the controlling constitutional provision itself supports such a position. Fairly read, it permits the Legislature to expand the jurisdiction of the Appellate Division but not contract it, except with regard to appeals from nonfinal orders. In those cases, the Legislature is authorized to limit or condition Appellate Division jurisdiction, implying that it may not so limit or condition the taking and deciding of appeals in any other instance (see, Patrolmen’s Benevolent Assn. v City of New York,
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Meyer, Simons, Kaye, Alexander and Hancock, Jr., concur in Per Curiam opinion; Judge Titone taking no part.
In each case: Order reversed and case remitted to the Appellate Division, Second Department, for determination of the appeal.
Notes
. In pertinent part, the statute provides:
"§450.10 Appeal by defendant to intermediate appellate court; in what cases authorized as of right.
"An appeal to an intermediate appellate court may be taken as of right by the defendant from the following judgment, sentence and order of a criminal court:
"1. A judgment other than one including a sentence of death, unless the appeal is based solely upon the ground that a sentence was harsh or excessive when such sentence was predicated upon entry of a plea of guilty
. That section provides: "k. The appellate divisions of the supreme court shall have all the jurisdiction possessed by them on the effective date of this article and such additional jurisdiction as may be prescribed by law, provided, however, that the right to appeal to the appellate divisions from a judgment or order which does not finally determine an action or special proceeding may be limited or conditioned by law.” The effective date of that provision was September 1, 1982 (see, NY Const, art VI, § 37).
. Our disposition on this ground obviates the need to determine whether, as both defendants claim, they also have a due process right to Appellate Division review of their sentences under NY Constitution, article I, § 6. We also need not consider defendant Pollenz’s claim that CPL 450.10 (1) by its terms does not apply his situation.
