In re Genet

3 Thomp. & Cook 734, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 292
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Thomp. & Cook 734 (In re Genet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Genet, 3 Thomp. & Cook 734, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 292 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Davis, J.

The applicant, Henry W. Genet, was convicted of felony at the last December term of the oyer and terminer, and, upon such conviction, was committed to custody, to await sentence pending an application for the settlement of a bill of exceptions. Before that application was disposed of, or sentence pronounced, he escaped from custody, and has since been a fugitive from the State. The bill of exceptions prepared on his behalf, with the amendments proposed thereto by the district attorney, was presented to the [735]*735court for settlement. The court declined to proceed with and complete the setlement of the proposed bill, on the ground that the defendant was, and is still, “ a fugitive at large and beyond the control and without the power of the authorities of this State, he having made his escape and absconded from their custody after his conviction, while awaiting the action of the court upon it.” The applicant now moves the general term for a writ of mandamus, directing the justice, who presided at the oyer and terminer on the trial of the indictment, to proceed with the settlement of the bill, and to sign and seal the same when settled. The reasons assigned by the learned judge, before whom the applicant was tried, for refusing to settle the bill, commend themselves to our judgment. He says: “ My conviction is, that, while the defendant is at large as a fugitive beyond the reach and control of the authorities of this State, public policy requires that he should not be allowed to carry on any proceedings in its courts, of the nature of that now proposed on his part by his counsel. Before that should be allowed, he should return and surrender himself to the custody of the proper authorities. Then he will be entitled to all the advantages provided by the laws of the State for the review of criminal convictions. But until that be done, the authorities he has defied by his escape should decline to interfere in his behalf, by the way of placing his case in a shape to have it examined or reviewed. If that course be not adopted, then some encouragement will be afforded by the proceeding which may be authorized, that will operate as an inducement to offenders, after conviction, to escape from custody; because they will then be able to defy the authorities, and, at the same time, require them to act in their behalf, so far as to afford them an opportunity of ■ judging whether they may most safely return or continue to remain away.”

It will be observed that the learned judge put his decision upon grounds of public policy. In this, he is sustained by authority. In a case reported in 31 Me. 592 (Anonymous), it is stated that the defendant had been tried and convicted upon an indictment for an aggravated offense. He excepted, and was committed for want of sureties to appear at the law term at which the exceptions were to be heard. Meanwhile he escaped. His counsel proposed to argue the exceptions, but the court declined to hear the case until the defendant should be again in custody.

In Commonwealth v. Andrews, 97 Mass. 543, the defendant was [736]*736found guilty, and alleged exceptions, which were allowed, and which he was held in jail to prosecute. The case being called in the supreme judicial court, the attorney-general suggested that the defendant had broken jail and was at large, and asked that he should be defaulted and the exceptions overruled, without argument. The' counsel for the defendant admitted the escape, but argued that he was entitled to a hearing on the exceptions, in defendant’s behalf; that the defendant’s status, at the time of the allowance of the exceptions, was alone to be considered by the court in passing on them; that by his escape he had committed a crime, for which he was liable in a separate proceeding; and that to deprive him of a hearing on exceptions, in another and different proceeding, would be to iúflict a punishment for his escape, in derogation of his constitutional rights. The eourt, Bigelow, C. J., pronouncing the opinion, overruled the several points taken by the defendant’s counsel, and held, that, so far as the defendant had any right to be heard under the constitution, he must be deemed to have waived it by escaping from custody and failing to appear and prosecute his exceptions in person, according to the order of the court under which he was committed. The defendant was, thereupon, defaulted, and his exceptions overruled. That case goes farther than we are called upon to go, in upholding the decision of the oyer and terminer; for the court defaulted the defendant, because of his escape, and overruled his exceptions, thus putting him in position where he could not be heard, as matter of right, upon his return to custody. In the case at bar, the judge has simply súspended proceedings till the return to custody of the defendant. He has adopted the suggestion of a learned writer on criminal procedure, who says: “ If, however, the prisoner has absconded, or is in a position analogous to what is termed being in contempt, it will be highly judicious for the court to decline hearing even a mere legal argument in his absence.” 1 Bish. on Or. Proced., § 277. It is well settled that a party may waive a statutory right,, and in some instances rights secured to him by the Constitution. Buel v. Trustees of Lockport, 3 N. Y. 197; Cancemi v. People, 16 id. 501. This he may do by his acts as well as by any formal solemnity. The statute gives to a party convicted of crime the right to have errors of law committed on his trial corrected on bill of exceptions. 2 R. S. 736, § 21. But such bill of exceptions is not to stay or delay the rendering of judgment, or the execution of-such judgment, except as specially provided by statute. 2 R. S. [737]*737736, § 22. Our system for the review of convictions and judgments in criminal cases was not known to the common law, but was created by statute, in relaxation of the rigors of the common law, and for the protection of persons accused of crime against illegal convictions. It is based altogether upon the idea that the party who alleges an erroneous conviction, which he seeks to correct, will hold himself amenable to the judgment of the court of review, to whose supervising justice he appeals. He is at liberty at all times to waive or abandon his proceedings, and this he may do by some formal step in the courts, or by acts which place him beyond the jurisdiction of the courts and out of the custody of the law. In all criminal cases where the judgment of imprisonment is to be pronounced, the defendant must be present in person to receive sentence. 1 Chitty’s Cr. Law, 163; Reg. v. Caudwill, 17 Q. B. 503. “Judgment cannot be given against any man in his absence for a corporal punishment.” e O. J. Holt, in Duke’s Case, Holt, 399. A Convict who escapes from custody before judgment, and flees the jurisdiction of the court, puts himself in a position to prevent judgment in a court of review, if adverse to him, and to render it nugatory if in his favor; for the court can pronounce no judgment of corporal punishment without his actual presence, nor can it order a new trial which will be effectual without his voluntary choosing to return and submit to it. We think no person who stands convicted of crime can thus, by committing another offense, make himself master of the situation, and, at the same time, command and defy the judgment of the courts. The true ground, as it seems to us, is to hold that his conduct has, for the time being, waived or suspended his rights, whatever they may be, and that the waiver or suspension can be avoided by him only by returning to the custody and judgment of the law.

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Related

Buel v. . the Trustees of Lockport
3 N.Y. 197 (New York Court of Appeals, 1849)
Brinkley v. . Brinkley
47 N.Y. 40 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)
Commonwealth v. Andrews
97 Mass. 543 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1867)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Thomp. & Cook 734, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-genet-nysupct-1874.