249 A.D. 310 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1936
The plaintiff has obtained a declaratory judgment to the effect that he is conducting a business not violative of the Penal Law.
The fundamental facts are that the plaintiff was engaged in racing dogs on the Mineóla Fair Grounds at Garden City in Nassau county. The district attorney and other public officials charged with the enforcement of the law had prosecuted plaintiff in Police Court for violation of section 986 of the Penal Law for gambling, poolselling, bookmaking, recording and registering bets or wagers in relation to this dog racing. Apparently the only serious prosecution was unsuccessful, for the acting police justice found that the evidence was insufficient to establish the commission of the crime charged. He wrote a long opinion in that case in an attempt to justify the claim of the then defendant that he was engaged in a legitimate business. Whatever was said therein, if it had any merit, was pure dictum, for the decision, whether right or wrong, was on the facts.
The district attorney threatened further prosecution. Then this action for a declaratory judgment was commenced. No doubt it has served at least one principal purpose, for the plaintiff has been left free during the past season to conduct his dog racing-without interference while the action was pending.
The plaintiff had devised a scheme whereby it is made to appear that these contests are not the racing of dogs, and the people who attend at a fee of twenty-five cents each are not betting on results,
It was said in the opinion of the court below: “ The plaintiff operates under an ingeniously devised scheme, deliberately contrived to avoid the pitfalls of the Penal Law.” The whole plan is a subterfuge, based on insincerity and sophistry. This court is asked to affirm or reverse a declaratory judgment in a civil action, advising the parties whether or not this scheme and business is. violative of the Penal Law; or, in other words, whether the plaintiff has been successful in this deliberately devised scheme “ to avoid the pitfalls of the Penal Law.” This responsibility the court declines to accept.
The courts of this State and those in other jurisdictions do not render advisory opinions where there is no justiciable issue presented. (Matter of State Industrial Comm., 224 N. Y. 13; New Jersey v. Sargent, 269 U. S. 328.) A civil action may not be the means of shifting the burden of duty and responsibility of prosecuting offenders charged with crime, where there is no real dispute between parties as to their legal or equitable rights but the question relates solely to the facts and the legal conclusion as to whether or not a 'crime has been committed.
Section 473 of the Civil Practice Act, which provides for a declaratory judgment, and rules 210-214 of the Rules of Civil Practice, governing the practice, deal with the jural relations of persons in respect to present or prospective obligations on contracts, or to
These provisions of statute and rules do not contemplate that the courts shall determine the precise rights existing between public officers and violators of the law, and determine in advance whether certain acts do or do not constitute a crime, and as to whether a cunningly devised scheme to evade the law is a sufficient defense to a charge of gambling or bookmaking. Such questions as to guilt or innocence are to be determined in the established courts of criminal jurisdiction.
Counsel have not been able to cite any authority to the effect that such an action may be maintained in courts of civil jurisdiction; and we hold that there is no such jurisdiction. Any decision which we might make in respect to the question would settle no rights and would be binding on no one. It would preclude neither further prosecution nor a defense. Courts will not be placed in such an equivocal position. The parties must seek some other tribunal.
The judgment should be reversed on the law, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
Lazansky, P. J., Hagarty, Carswell and Taylor, JJ., concur; Davis, J., not voting.
Judgment in action for declaratory judgment reversed on the law, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.