15 N.Y.2d 392 | NY | 1965
Lead Opinion
These three defendants, all under 21 years of age, were, so it is charged, surprised in an orchard at about 10:30 p.m. in the act of stealing a half bushel of apples “of the value”, according to the information filed by the owner of the orchard, of about $2. Sometime after midnight the three were brought before a Justice of the Peace. After brief proceedings at which none of them was represented by any attorney all of them pleaded guilty. None of them had been convicted before. Each was sentenced to. imprisonment for 30 days plus a fine of $25 which meant (since none of them had money to pay the fine) a sentence of 55 days’ imprisonment for each. All were taken to jail to serve their sentences. Later they retained a lawyer who took an appeal to the County Court which rejected all their contentions except as to excessiveness of sentence. The County Court modified the judgments of conviction by reducing the terms of imprisonment “ to the time already served ” which was about 7 days.
Each defendant asserts that in the proceedings before the Justice he was deprived of his constitutional and statutory right to counsel. In response, the People cite the trial court’s docket entry which in pertinent part says this as to each defendant:
“ Defendant brought into court, informed of the charge against him and immediately instructed as follows:
“ ‘ You are entitled to the aid of counsel in every .stage of these proceedings, and before any further proceedings are had. You are entitled to an adjournment for that purpose and upon your request I will send a message to any counsel you name within this jurisdiction. Do you desire counsel? ’ Defendant answered, ‘ no
Nothing was .said or suggested by the court to inform these youths that, if they had no money to pay attorneys, the court would assign attorneys to defend them. What the court told them about sending “ a message to any counsel you name within this jurisdiction ’ ’ had no tendency to alert the defendants to the availability of court-assigned lawyers. On the contrary, the court’s quoted .statement necessarily referred to the possibility that defendants themselves knew of and had access to
It is too late to argue in this court against the fundamental right of a defendant to counsel (People v. McLaughlin, 291 N. Y. 480) or to argue that this right is not available in Special Sessions Courts (People v. Marincic, 2 N Y 2d 181). Marincic (involving petit larceny guilty pleas by young girls in a local court) emphasized (p. 184) that in every criminal ease, large or small, the court “must make it clear” to defendant that these rights exist and that the opportunity to have the services of counsel must be real and reasonable, not a mere formulistic recital of ‘ ‘ law language ’ ’. The law as to the right to counsel must be made “meaningful and effective ” in criminal courts on every level (see People v. Banner, 5 N Y 2d 109, 110). The cited cases do not directly hold that as to criminal charges triable in Special Sessions Courts defendants must be informed as to the availability of assigned counsel but we now hold that such information must be provided. We approve the ruling in People v. Brantle (13 A D 2d 839) where a 16-year-old defendant was told he had a right to counsel and asked “ Can you get one or do you want to proceed without one ? ’ ’ but was not asked whether he wanted counsel assigned or told that the court would do so on request. The court in Brantle pointed out that a proffer of the aid of counsel “ should be made in clear and unequivocal terms ”.
The People would read the docket entries as showing that the defendants were sufficiently notified of their rights as to
The prosecutor reminds us that the statute applicable in Courts of Special Sessions (Code Crim. Pro., § 699) does not say that the court is required to inform a defendant on arraignment of the right to assignment of counsel, or offer to make such an assignment. Section 699 says that the Magistrate ‘ ‘ must immediately inform him of the charge against him and of his right to the aid of counsel in every stage of the proceedings, and before any further proceedings are had”, that he must allow the defendant a reasonable time to send for counsel, must adjourn the proceedings for that purpose and on request of defendant must send an officer with a message to any attorney designated by the defendant. To be sure, this language is different from that found in section 308 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which requires as to an arraignment on indictment that, if the defendant appear without counsel, “he must be asked if he desire the aid of counsel, and if he does the court must assign counsel.” The verbal differences between the two Criminal Code sections were discussed by us in People v. Marincic (2 N Y 2d 181, 184, 185, supra). We concluded that ‘ ‘ there is little real difference between the meanings of the two sections ”. This conclusion was amply justified by the 1940 Report, to which we referred in Marincic, of the Law Revision Commission (p. 95 et seq.) on whose study and recommendation present section 699 of the Code of Criminal Procedure was adopted.
In our discussions of New York statutes and of the modern constitutional constructions by the United States 'Supreme Court, we must not forget that in our State the right to counsel
The opinions just above cited discussed prosecutions by indictment but the “basic minimal right” to counsel (Rideau v. Louisiana, 373 U. S. 723, 726) cannot be and in this State is not restricted to prosecutions for major crimes. Just the opposite has been decided in People v. Marincic (2 N Y 2d 181, supra), People v. Banner (5 N Y 2d 109, supra), and People v. Shenandoah (9 N Y 2d 75). Shenandoah’s case was much like the present one — a teenager arrested in the wee hours and taken before a Justice of the Peace without a lawyer, with the predictable result of a confession and a guilty plea. We said (p. 77): “ This was so gross a violation of his fundamental rights as to require a reversal.” We should say no less here.
The dissenting opinion in this court suggests that a requires nt for assignment of counsel in Special Sessions Courts is
The judgments should be reversed and the informations dismissed.
Dissenting Opinion
If the return on appeal of the Court of Special Sessions to the County Court be accepted as conclusively showing the record of proceedings at Special Sessions, that court followed fully and exactly the statutory requirements governing the advice to be given an accused on the right to counsel (Code Crim. Pro., § 699; People v. Marincic, 2 N Y 2d 181; People v. Banner, 5 N Y 2d 109).
The court now for the first time is imposing on Special Sessions the duty of informing persons charged with misdemeanors not only that they have a right to aid of counsel but also “ as to the availability of assigned counsel”. This, of course, means that if the defendant desires assigned counsel the Special Sessions must assign a lawyer.
A change of this kind in the processes of the criminal law would be unworkable without extensive implementation which, in turn, ought to be in the form of statutory enactment, and perhaps also be accompanied by an appropriation of public money.
The assignment of counsel by a court implies a Bar practicing in that court. Courts of Special Sessions in large communities, of course, have lawyers who regularly practice before them, but in countless rural communities no Bar in the traditional sense appears before the Justices of the Peace who hold Special Sessions, and those Justices would be hard put to find and assign lawyers who would be responsive to their requests.
In most small communities the Special Sessions are held by Justices of the Peace and traditionally the court has been one in
In many rural towns in the Third and Fourth Departments there are no resident lawyers and in many there are no lawyers who practice in the local courts of the town.
If a Justice of the Peace in one of the remote towns of Clinton County, for example, undertook to assign a lawyer in Plattsburgh to defend in his court a misdemeanor ease, a number of practical obstacles to any effective result come readily to mind. Of all the lawyers in Clinton only two are listed as having offices outside of Plattsburgh in the current Legal Directory.
Perhaps Bar Associations may in due course provide this service, but they are certainly not now generally providing it in most rural areas. A change of this sort ought to be effected gradually and with full consultation with the Justices affected and with the Bar.
The defendants here assert that in fact they were not advised of their right to counsel. If on a constitutional right such as that asserted the return were not treated as conclusive (People v. Breslin, 4 N Y 2d 73) and there was a remission to determine what the fact was, a reversal for that purpose might be indicated. But we should not reverse on the basis of this newly announced departure in the procedural requirements at Special Sessions.
Judges Dye, Fuld and Burke concur with Chief Judge Desmond ; Judge Bergan dissents in an opinion in which Judges Van Voorhis and Scileppi concur.
Judgments reversed, etc.