Cuvillier v. State

225 A.D. 707
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1928
DocketClaim No. 18514
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 225 A.D. 707 (Cuvillier v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuvillier v. State, 225 A.D. 707 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Hasbrouck, J.

(dissenting): Louis A. Cuvillier, the claimant, was a member of the Assembly of the State of New York in 1923. There was a session of the Assembly from January until the fourth of May. On April 9, 1923, claimant introduced in the Assembly a bill providing for a legislative investigation of the police department of the city of New York. On April twenty-second, on his way to the train during a recess of the Legislature, claimant sent a telegram to Magistrate Joseph E. Corrigan, of New York city, which contained an alleged criminal libel of one Enright, chief of police of the city of New York. On May ninth Enright laid an information before Justice Crain sitting as a magistrate in the city of New York, charging Cuvillier with that crime. To the Attorney-General thereupon Cuvillier applied to take up his defense against such charge and the Attorney-General refused. A hearing was had upon the charge and over the objections of Cuvillier, Magistrate Crain held him to await the action of the grand jury, admitting him to bail. Thereafter Cuvillier sued out a writ of habeas corpus returnable before Mr. Justice Cohalan who sustained the writ and discharged Cuvillier from imprisonment upon the ground that the New York court had no jurisdiction of the crime. Thereafter chapter 711 of the Laws of 1927 was enacted conferring jurisdiction upon the Court of Claims to hear, try and determine the claim of Cuvillier for counsel fees. The trial has been had in the Court of Claims and among other things the court has found as a conclusion of law that the claim does not constitute a moral obligation against the State of New York. The act of the Legislature (Laws of 1927, chap. 711) provides, among other things: “ If the court finds that ” a, Cuvillier was a member of the Legislature and in attendance thereat at the time the telegram was sent; b, that he was charged with criminal libel and was detained and restrained of his liberty because of such charge; c, that [708]*708he successfully defended himself against such charge, etc., such facts “ shall constitute a legal and valid claim against the State.” The bill evidently was drawn in the similar phraseology to bills heretofore considered in the cases of Munro v. State (223 N. Y. 208) and Farrington v. State (248 id. 112). The effect of the bill is that when the facts are proved and found to be established and to constitute an obligation legal, equitable or moral, there remains no function in the Court of Claims but to assess damages justly and equitably. (Williamsburgh Savings Bank v. State, 243 N. Y. 231.) The trial court found that there was no evidence that Cuvillier had successfully defended himself against the charge of criminal libel because it never came to a hearing upon the merits. The vice in that finding is that the claim act only deals with the charge under which he was restrained. When that charge, the particular one lodged before the magistrate, Justice Crain, was held illegal in the habeas corpus proceeding and the relator discharged, the legal and actual effect was that the charge had fallen by the effort of the defendant; that he had successfully defended himself from it. The claim act contemplated no other charge than that for which Cuvillier had been prosecuted in the county of New York. That his defense was successful appears from the fact that the grand jury of the county of New York even if it retained the power to consider the charge in the face of the determination of the habeas corpus proceeding (Swartwout v. Dickelman, 12 Hun, 358; Hinds v. Parker, 11 App. Div. 327) has failed to exercise it. The crime, if any, was committed April 22, 1923. It was a misdemeanor and for a misdemeanor an indictment must be found against persons residing in the State within two years after the commission of such misdemeanor. (Code Grim. Proc. § 142.) The next contention made by the State against the claim is that to indemnify the claimant against expenses sustained by him in defending himself would constitute the making of a gift. (Babcock v. State, 231 N. Y. 560; Lehigh Valley R. R. Co. v. Canal Board, 204 id. 471; People v. Westchester County Nat. Bank, 231 id. 465.) But the contention that the act provided for a gift falls if there rests uf on the State any legal or moral obligation to indemnify the claimant. The moral obligation is sought to be established by the appellant that the privilege of the Assemblyman was violated by his imprisonment. The privilege claimed is against criminal prosecution and is founded upon section 12 of article 3 of the Constitution of the State which reads: “ For any speech or debate in either house of the Legislature, the members shall not be questioned in any other place.” The fact that Cuvillier was a member of Assembly affords him no privilege on a charge of criminal libel against being questioned in another place unless the libel was uttered in speech or debate in either house. While the provision requires a liberal construction there is no authority for extending it outside of the house; beyond “sitting in committee, executing the commission of the house” or “in drafting a report” or “in a convention of both houses, although the convention should be holden in the Senate chamber.” (Coffin v. Coffin, 4 Mass. 1, 28.) The reason for the privilege should be looked for in its nature. It is the privilege of the Legislature and of the member. It is not granted to him for his benefit. It is for the benefit of the people represented by him. They are entitled to the use of his knowledge and convictions upon public matters involved in legislation, and, therefore, the legislator should be required and suffered to express himself with freedom in debate and speech in the house of which he is a member. The privilege [709]*709is limited by the Constitution and may not be extended beyond the language of the Constitution and the reasons upon which it is based. When the legislator leaves the house and is out of it the privilege falls. He has no protection against the perpetration of crime when he communicates by speech or writing with his constituents or the public. Speeches and writings upon legislative problems may be vastly beneficial to the public and on the other hand unrestrained, libelous and vituperative speech attacking the character of and defaming individuals made out of the house, could result in vice and oppression. The lawmakers must be held to have sought the welfare not the oppression of the people in adopting the Constitution. Lord Ellenborough, Ch. J., writing for the Court of Kings Bench upon this subject has said of a member of the Commons House of Parliament: “A member of that house, has spoken what he thought material, and what he was at liberty to speak in his character as a member of that house. So far he was privileged; but he has not stopped there; but, unauthorized by the house, has chosen to publish an account of that speech in what he has pleased to call a more corrected form; and in that publication has thrown out reflections injurious to the character of an individual. * * * Has he a right to reiterate these reflections to the public; and to address them as an oratio ad populum, in order to explain his conduct to his constituents? There is no case in practice, nor, I believe, any proposition laid down by the best text writers upon the subject, that tends to such a conclusion.” (The King v. Creevey, 1 Maulé & Sel. 273, 278.) Privilege is for the member doing the work of legislation in the house. When he is out of the house, out of its committee,'ungoverned by its rules, his privilege no longer obtains. (2 Cooley Const. Lim.

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Related

Cuvillier v. State of New York
165 N.E. 284 (New York Court of Appeals, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
225 A.D. 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuvillier-v-state-nyappdiv-1928.