Case of the Twelve Commitments

19 Abb. Pr. 394
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedOctober 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 19 Abb. Pr. 394 (Case of the Twelve Commitments) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case of the Twelve Commitments, 19 Abb. Pr. 394 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1865).

Opinion

Daly, F. J.

The parties in the above cases have been brought before me upon writs of habeas corpus, and the authority upon which they are held upon writs of certiorari. They have been severally committed by police justices for disorderly conduct, upon failing to give security for their good behavior, to the city prison, and from thence have been transferred to the workhouse upon Blackwell’s Island. Their discharge is sought upon the ground that the original commitments, in every case, are void, and upon the further ground, in some of the cases, that the transfers to the workhouse were not in. the mode prescribed by law.

As many laws have been passed in respect to those summary' convictions, and as a great deal of uncertainty prevails as to the correct mode of procedure under them, it will be necessary for me to review the various statutory enactments, that I may pass intelligibly upon the questions raised.

In that portion of the Revised Statutes relating to the internal police of the State (1 Rev. Stat., ch. 20, part I., titles 2 and 5), an enumeration is made of two classes of offenders: 1st, vagrants; 2d, disorderly persons. Under the head of vagrants are embraced: 1st, idle persons, living without employment, and having no visible, means of support; 2d, beggars ; 3d, persons wandering abroad, and sleeping in the open air, or other specified places. And disorderly persons are substantially designated—as: 1st, Those who abandon their wives and families; 2d, prostitutes; 3d, fortune-tellers; 4th, mountebanks; 5th, common showmen; 6th, gamblers; and 7th, keepers of bawdy-houses.

The first class, vagrants, upon conviction before a magistrate, may he committed to the poorhouse for six months, or, if improper persons to be sent there, may be sent to the county jail for sixty days. The second class, disorderly persons, upon conviction, may be required by the magistrate to give security for their good behavior for a year, and, failing to do so, may be committed to the common jail until they find such security, or are discharged by law. Upon the conviction of a vagrant, a record of the conviction must be made up by the magistrate, [396]*396and filed in the county clerk’s office; and on the commitment of a disorderly person, upon failing to give security, a record must also be made up in the same way and filed.

In 1833, an act was passed for the regulation of the criminal courts of this city (Laws of 1833, 9, ch. 11), which, among other things, embraced an enumeration of the class known as vagrants, which is more extensive than that contained in the Bevised Statutes, and an addition was made to the class known as disorderly persons. This act, which was limited to the city of New York, authorized the mayor, recorder, or any police justice of the city, to commit vagrants, who are- not notorious offenders, to the almshouse for six months at hard labor; or, if not fit persons to be sent there, then to the penitentiary for the same period. It provided for the commitment of disorderly persons in the same manner as in the Bevised Statutes, and in both cases required the filing of a record of the conviction.

This act made provision also for what is denominated in the act disorderly conduct, which by one section (§ 5) is the riding or driving of a horse through the public streets at a greater rate of speed than five miles an hour; and in another section (§ 8) is declared to be such disorderly conduct as, in the opinion of the magistrate, tends to a breach of the peace. For the of-fence of improper driving, the magistrate is authorized to impose a fine of $10, and if it is not paid, to commit the offender to the city prison until it is paid, but not for a longer period than ten days; and for the offence of disorderly conduct tending to a breach of the peace, he is empowered to require the offender to give security for his or her good behavior for a period not exceeding twelve months. The statute is silent as to what the magistrate is to do, if the security is not given; but though not expressed, the intention is manifestly implied that the offender is to be committed until he gives it, or until the expiration of the period for which he was required to give it; and such, since the passage of the act, has been the course of procedure under it.

The disorderly conduct here referred to is distinguishable and different from those acts which will constitue a disorderly person or a vagrant, as defined in this statute and by the Be-vised Statutes. In common parlance, a person guilty of disorderly conduct may be said to be a disorderly person; but [397]*397we have here to do with statutes that have carefully defined what is to be understood by the term “ a disorderly person,” and which have distinguished the offence of disorderly conduct as simply the offence of improper driving, or such conduct as, in the opinion of the magistrate, tends to a breach of the peace ; and it has been the failure to observe this distinction, and the confounding of one term with the other, that have led to a great deal of the practical difficulty attending the administration of this branch of our criminal law. The term disorderly conduct, as distinguishing an offence different from that which will constitute a disorderly person, was used in our statutes long before the passage of this local act of 1833, or the adoption of the Revised Statutes (Laws of 1816, 171, 172, § 2; 1 Rev. Laws of 1813, 114; 2 Ib., 354); and in addition to what has been above pointed out, there are other features which serve to distinguish the one from the other. The act of 1833 requires a record to be filed upon the commitment of a disorderly person who fails to give the requisite security (§ 7); but it makes no such provision in respect to disorderly conduct (§ 8). In the case of disorderly conduct, moreover, the magistrate may require security for the offender’s good behavior, for any period he may think proper to designate, not exceeding twelve months. He may take it for a week, or for a month, or for any time within the statutory limit; whereas, in the case of a disorderly person, he must take it for a year, and not for any lesser period. There are, therefore, under the statutes regulating their summary conviction before a magistrate without a jury, three classes: 1st, vagrants; 2d, disorderly persons; and 3d, persons guilty of disorderly conduct,—each of which is distinguishable from the other, and in each the course of procedure is different.. All the cases now before me are commitments for disorderly conduct; and in passing upon the questions that have been raised as to the validity of these commitments, I shall examine only such statutory provisions as, in my judgment, relate exclusively to this class of convictions.

The first objection is, that no record has been filed. It is not necessary. The fact that the statute of 1833 makes provision for the filing of a record upon the commitment of a vagrant or of a disorderly person, and makes no such provision in relation to convictions for disorderly conduct, must be taken [398]*398as an expression of the legislative intention, that this class of convictions were intended to be of a more summary character, in which the formality of a record was to be dispensed with. They have been uniformly so regarded; and during the thirty-two years that have elapsed since the passage of the act of 1833, it has never been the practice to make up and file records of conviction in such cases.

In 1859, an act was passed in relation to police justices in this city (Laws of 1859, 1129, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Abb. Pr. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-of-the-twelve-commitments-nyctcompl-1865.