12 Misc. 2d 279 | New York County Courts | 1958
Defendant, under an indictment for grand larceny first degree (automobile) has moved for its dismissal under the provisions of sections 8 and 668 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The motion is granted. There would be no occasion for further comment were it not for the fact that this appears to be a case of novel impression, involving a determination of the impact of the provisions of section 669-a of the Code of Criminal Procedure upon what has heretofore been the right of a defendant to move for a dismissal of an indictment under section 668. The facts are as follows:
On January 5, 1955, when the indictment was handed up and filed, defendant was confined at Elmira Reformatory serving a term of imprisonment to which he had been sentenced December 3,1954 — for attempted robbery first degree — by another Judge of this court. After its filing the District Attorney made the existence of the indictment known to the warden of Elmira Reformatory but did not move it for trial. On September 1, 1957, section 669-a of the Code of Criminal Procedure went into effect and on December 23, 1957 the District Attorney received a certificate of defendant’s inmate status and a notice and request for a final disposition of the indictment, pursuant to the
There is not so much as a suggestion that defendant procured, caused, consented to, acquiesced in or (apart from his notice and request) condoned the past delay. (Code Crim. Pro., § 668; People v. White, 2 N Y 2d 220, 223-225; People v. Godwin, 2 A D 2d 846, affd., 2 N Y 2d 891; People v. Prosser, 309 N. Y. 353, 359-360.) Nor has the District Attorney made any attempt to offer “ good cause ” for its occurrence. Defendant’s application for his discharge is timely, even by the view that the right to dismissal is waived if not asserted until the trial is “at hand ”. (State v. Nilnch, 131 Wash. 344, 345-346.) A dismissal is, there-' fore, required unless, as the District Attorney contends, defendant waived his right under section 668 by earlier resorting to the procedure established by section 669-a. That is the sole ground of opposition to defendant’s motion.
Otherwise stated, the District Attorney’s position is that defendant’s resort to the new procedure constitutes an expression of desire to stand trial and an election to do so, and that once having made his election the prisoner cannot reverse his field and request a dismissal under section 668. Logical support is lent to that position by the concept of waiver of delay— and of the right to a discharge on that account — by a defendant’s consent to or acquiescence in still further delay (People v. White, supra; People v. Prosser, supra; People v. Sadler, supra; 14 Am. Jur., Criminal Law, § 138, p. 863 ; 22 C. J. S., Criminal Law, § 469, p. 719), or by his withdrawal of a formal demand for his discharge for past delay, his announcement of readiness for trial and his application to have the case set for trial (State v. Moss, 92 Ore. 449, 451, 461). The principle would be brought to bear in this case by regarding defendant’s request under
To begin with, the language of section 669-a, taken literally, does not put a defendant in a posture of asserting a “ desire to be brought to trial upon the charge ” (see, e.g., Cal. Penal Code, § 1381), or of requesting the District Attorney to “ bring him to trial on the charge ” (see, e.g., Ore. Rev. Stat., § 134.510). By his use of the section 669-a procedure he is committed to a “ request for a final disposition ”
Acclaimed as a new and additional remedy in the hands of a defendant imprisoned on another charge (1957 Messages of the Governor) the new procedure is, of course, particularly concerned with such persons but the statutes which establish it do not assume to cut off the convict’s section 668 remedy if his case is otherwise under its coverage. (Cf. People v. Godlewski, 22 Cal. 2d 677, 683-684.) The stated and only apparent pur
Unmistakably evident in this new procedural plan is the accent given to the importance of the rigid to a speedy trial; — “a cardinal principle of our system of criminal justice.” (1957 Annual Report of N. Y. Joint Legis. Committee on Interstate Cooperation, p. 177.)
Specifically, it “ permits ” prosecutors to clear up outstanding charges while the evidence is fresh and, at the same time, gives the defendant the right to 1 ‘ precipitate ’ ’ a final disposition and thus resolve his prison status. Additionally, it makes for a fairer trial and a more adequate presentation of the evidence by both sides. The procedure by which this is achieved is such that the Commissioner of Correction is required to promptly inform the inmate, in writing, of the source and content of any indictment, etc., known to the commissioner, and of the prisoner’s “right to make a request for final disposition thereof ”, (Code Grim. Pro., § 669-a, subd. 1, par. [c].) Upon his part, the convict ‘ ‘ shall ’ ’ give or send to the commissioner and the latter is required to forward along with his own certificate (by registered or certified mail), to the appropriate District Attorney and court (§ 669-a, subd. 1, par. [b]) of the county in which the charge is pending, written notice of the inmate’s place of imprisonment and his request for a final disposition. The accused must be brought to trial thereon within 180 days after delivery of the notice, etc. (unless the court grant a necessary or reasonable continuance for good cause shown in open court) (§ 669-a, subd. 1, par. [a]). In the event that he is not, no court of the State any longer has jurisdiction thereof, the indictment, information or complaint is to be of no further force or effect and the court must enter an order dismissing it with prejudice (subd. 2). The order bars another prosecution for the same offense, even if a felony. (Code Crim. Pro., § 673, as amd. by L. 1957, ch. 440.) Section 669-b establishes an interstate procedure along the same lines adapted, of course, to the special needs of such situations.
Before section 669-b took effect, trial delay occasioned by the defendant’s imprisonment in another jurisdiction did not justify his demand for a discharge (People v. Brandfon, 4 A D 2d 679). As the Colorado court reasoned, one sovereign cannot be compelled to yield up its prisoner for trial by another. It may do so voluntarily, as a matter of comity, but in any event the local authority is under no obligation to apply to the foreign sov
Nothing in these new statutes expressly equates the service of a notice and request with an abandonment of the prisoner’s right to demand a discharge for past delay, either by election or by way of announcement of readiness for trial and request to have the case set for trial. No part of their content expressly affirms or denies the applicability, to the situations which they contemplate, of the principle — embedded in existing case law — of waiver of the right to request dismissal for past delay, by consent to or acquiescence in the further delay of 180 days which is one of the procedural incidents. Yet, in the interstate procedure, another area of waiver and consent is delineated. Thus, an abandonment by election or waiver by consent through the use of the procedures established by both sections is developed only by interpretation but the intent and purpose which these statutes were intended to carry out and the policy considerations which the intent and purposes were meant to serve challenge that interpretation. Even without the aid of a declaration of policy (§ 669-b, subd. 1, art. I) it is self-evident that the dominant purpose of the Legislature was to heighten the dignity of the right to a speedy trial by so further implementing it as to minimize the possibility of its future denial. No more visible than the king’s new raiment is any purpose to take away the defendant’s section 668 remedy indirectly, by making an abandonment or waiver of his right to invoke it against past delay, the subtle but destructive essence of the new procedure. If section 669-a has that effect it is not the 1 ‘ additional ’ ’ remedy which it has been supposed to be. It
As the defendant Segura has found out in this case, his service of a notice-and request may be the predicate of an abandonment or waiver of his right to request a dismissal for the past delay. But, on the other hand, the longer he neglected to serve it, the greater the possibility that his omission to do so might be made the predicate of a waiver of his right to discharge by sleeping on his right to demand an end to the delay. In other words, there was and is a possibility that these new laws may be considered as a denunciation of our Prosser alliance with the jurisdictions in which, as it is said, the law makes the demand for a speedy trial for the defendant (State ex rel. Roth-rock v. Haynes, 83 Okl. Cr. 387, 391; Randolph v. State, 234 Ind. 57, 64-65). The Prosser opinion leaves room for that conclusion (People v. Prosser, 309 N. Y. 353, 358, supra; n., supra). If that be so, a defendant’s new right to request a final disposition may be attended by an obligation to make a timely request therefor, along with a risk that his omission to do so will spell out an acquiescence in the more recent delay, a waiver of the past delay and loss of the right to demand a discharge for such past delay.
Thus, so far as his right to a dismissal for past delay is concerned, he is doomed if he does and he may be doomed if he
Order entered accordingly.
The Committee on Criminal Courts, Law and Procedure of the Bar of the City of New York, as quoted by the chief executive when he approved the bill (1957 Governor’s Messages), regards it as giving the defendant “ the right to request a trial”.
Unfortunately, the time when and the manner in which the codefendant Taranski raised the issue of delay in the Qodlewshi case (22 Cal. 2d 677, supra) does not appear from the opinion. It seems though, that he was not aware of the outstanding charge (no warrant served) and did not make the statutory demand. The California court held that his ease did not fall within section 1382 of the Penal Code (a counterpart of our Code Grim. Pro., § 668) since an untried “ complaint ” was involved. It came under the provisions of section 1381 but his contention was overruled, with this observation: “ We find nothing unreasonable in the requirement of a demand. It does not abrogate the constitutional guarantee. It is merely regulatory of it.” (Pp. 683-684.)
The original source has not been seen. The authors credit the quotation to Williams, Criminal. Law, General Part, 386, and he, in turn, attributes it to Judge Maulé (p. 433).