Appeal by defendant, as limited by his brief, from so much of a sentence of the Supreme Court, Queens County, rendered January 12, 1972, as fined him $1,000, payable within 30 days, upon a conviction of petit larceny, on a plea of guilty. Sentence modified, on the law and in the interests of justice, by extending the time within which defendant must pay the fine to six months
The Practice Commentary on this subdivision of section 420.10 in McKinney’s Consolidated Laws of Hew York (Book 11A, CPL 330-499, p. 165) states: “ Subdivision 4 permits the defendant to apply for resentence where he is unable to pay a fine imposed by the court. This provision goes further than the restriction laid down by the Court of Appeals in People v. Saffore, and the Supreme Court in Williams v. Illinois, supra, because those holdings are limited to cases where the term of imprisonment plus the period imposed for nonpayment of a fine exceeds the authorized maximum term of imprisonment. Subdivision 4 applies to any case where the defendant is unable to pay the fine. The merit of subdivision 4 is that it provides a method for reconsidering the entire sentence in the light of the fact that the defendant is unable to pay the fine. Upon such review the court might substitute a sentence of conditional or unconditional discharge, or impose a term of imprisonment as a substitute sanction. After enactment of the CPL the United States Supreme Court handed down another decision further restricting the power to jail persons for nonpayment of a fine.
