131 N.Y.S. 500 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Defendants have been convicted of a misdemeanor in that while acting as inspectors of a primary election they made a false statement of the result of the canvass of the ballots cast thereat. " (Penal Oode, §'41, subd. 12; now Penal Law, § 751, subd. 12.) They appeal from the judgment of conviction and seek to review thereupon, among other things, the judgment rendered on the verdict for the People on the trial of a plea of former acquittal,, the denial of a motion to dismiss the indictment on the same ground, and an order made August 23, 1909, directing the resubmission of the charges herein to another grand jury. The principal question now to be determined is the validity of the order last referred to. On April 10, 1908, the defendants were first indicted for the commission of the offense in question. The indictment contained two counts, both charging the commission of the crime of making a false statement of the result of the canvass of the ballots cast at an election while defendants were inspectors of election, and both • based on the same state of facts, to wit, that defendants being inspectors of election at a primary election of thé República,n party held in the city of New York on September 24, 1907, for the fifth and sixth election districts of the first Assembly district, had falsely and fraudulently .made a statement of the canvass of the ballots whereby they gave, in the fifth district, G-eorge Husch, a candidate for member of the executive com-' mittee of said' party, fifteen votes instead, of sixty which he
This motion having been referred to Part 1 of the same court,' was there heard by Judge Bosalsky, who. granted the application against defendants’ opposition, and finally made the order dated August 23, 1909, directing the submission to the grand jury of the county of New York of the violation, of section 41, subdivision 12, of the Penal Code, alleged to have been committed by defendants, and acting under that order the indict
The sections of the Code of Criminal Procedure regulating the proceedings upon the allowance of a demurrer are as follows:
“ § 326. The court must give judgment upon the demurrer either, allowing or disallowing it, and an order to that effect must be entered' upon the minutes.
“ § 321. If the demurrer be allowed, the judgment is final upon the indictment demurred to, and is a bar to another prosecution for the same offense, unless the court, being, of opinion that the objection on which the demurrer is allowed may he avoided in a new indictment, direct the case to be resubmitted to the sainé or another grand jury.
“ § 328. If the court do not direct the case to be resubmitted, .the defendant, if in custody, must be discharged, or if admitted to bail, his bail is exonerated, or if he have deposited money instead of bail, the money must be refunded to him. ”
We are of the opinion that the plain intent and meaning of section 321 call for action in directing resubmission by the same judge who sustains the demurrer, the court which is to decide the advisability of a new submission being the court which has deemed the demurrer good, and thereby calling for the judicial
It seems clear, therefore, that what the Code of Criminal Procedure contemplates is that unless the judge allowing the demurrer, at the same time directs a resubmission to another grand jury, the defendant is freed, and no .further action of another judge can reinstate his liability to punishment for the same offense. That the proper procedure is as indicated was recognized in People v. Krivitzky (60 App. Div. 307; affd., 168 N. Y. 182). Section 327 was concededly enacted so as to change the prior state of the law under which successive resubmissions and reindictments could take place by action upon the part of the prosecuting attorney without any necessity of the intervention of the court, the only result being that a subsequent indictment superseded a former one.
The first reported case in which the question of its application arose was People v. Clements (5 N. Y. Cr. Rep. 288), and there it was clearly held that the court passing on the demurrer must direct the resubmission. In that cáse at the May, 1886, term, an indictment was found, a demurrer to which having been sustained by the court at the same term, it at the same time directed that the facts be resubmitted to the grand jury. It was so resubmitted to the May grand, jury, which found ah indictment. But the district attorney again presented the matter to the October grand jury, which found a second indictment, and thereafter a third indictment wás found in January, 1887. All three indictments were for the same offense. In its discussion of the question raised the court recognized the rule that it was the court passing on the demurrer, and that court alone (that is the judge so acting), who had the right to direct a resubmission, and that, such direction should be made at the time when the prior indictment was disposed of.
It follows, therefore, that the judgment of conviction appealed from must be reversed on the ground that defendants were
, Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Miller, JJ., concurred.
. Judgment reversed'and defendants discharged. Order to be settled on notice. ■