In re Osborne

68 Misc. 597, 125 N.Y.S. 313
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 68 Misc. 597 (In re Osborne) 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 Osborne, 68 Misc. 597, 125 N.Y.S. 313 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Goff, J.

The Governor of the State directed the Attorney-General to attend the grand jury, in person or by deputy, for the purpose of conducting an inquiry concerning a criminal charge against the American Ice Company. In pursuance of this direction, the Attorney-General, by his deputies, the petitioners herein, attended the grand jury and conducted such inquiry.. At its close, the grand jury presented to the court a writing which stated“ The Grand Jury, empaneled for the January, 1908, term of the Supreme Court, respectfully makes the following presentment.” Then followed a somewhat lengthy statement of the proceedings, which, epitomized, sets forth (a) that after taking a great deal of testimony, the Deputy Attorney-General stated he would withdraw the matter from further consideration for the reason that a quorum had not heard all the testimony, and that, if an indictment were found, it might he open to serious attack; (b) that the record showed that a quorum was present and heard. all the testimony given; (c) that the court was applied to for instructions [599]*599and that it directed that the inquiry continue, and (d) that after hearing all the testimony and the interpretation of the law from the Deputy Attorney-General it was “ voted to find no hill.” Then followed this statement: “ The Grand Jury deprecates that the representatives of the Attorney-General should have considered it their duty, under their oaths of office, to attempt to take the consideration of this case from it,- should attempt to mislead it as to the nature of the proceeding before it and should attempt to mislead it as to the reasons for the desire to discontinue the proceedings.” This presentment is assailed on the ground that it is untrue, that it is an unwarranted imputation on the integrity and professional conduct of the petitioners and that, in making it, the grand jury exceeded its powers and acted without authority.

From its ancient prestige, the deliverance of a grand jury, in the form of a presentment, is calculated to impress the public mind, and a person aggrieved, who has no opportunity to answer or defend, is justified in appealing to the court to rectify a wrong, if committed. The term presentment ” acquires force from its historic association with a legal proceeding which was tantamount to an indictment, and, because of that, it is commonly regarded as of legal significance. If so, it should have some force and effect and furnish a basis for some action. If it he not of legal significance, it is a mere brutum fulmen, without authority, and where it injuriously affects the individual it should not be accorded even the color of authority.

The petitioners, in support of their contention that this presentment is untrue, submit the minutes of the proceedings before the grand jury and in open court, as well as the charge of the learned justice presiding. But the question of its truth is not of prime importance, for, if that were inquired into, it would be conceding to it a legal character, as on a motion to quash an indictment for insufficient evidence. The question of prime importance is, was the paper filed with the court a presentment by the grand jury under authority of law, using the word “ presentment ” in its legal sense, without regard to the nomenclature of the paper.

[600]*600It is needless to enter upon' a consideration of the office of a presentment at common law, for it is now but of historical interest, or to discuss the relation between it and an indictment, for that would be academic. On these subjects many judicial opinions showing research and learning have been rendered, and the great weight of authority to-day is — making allowance for special exceptions in some jurisdictions — that, in practice, the office of a presentment is no longer of legal force and effect, and that its one time function is merged in the indictment. A concise definition is found in the American and English Encyclopedia of Law (Yol. 22, p. 1226): “A presentment is a notice taken by a grand jury of any offense from the knowledge or observation of the grand jurors, without any bill of indictment laid before them at the suit of the governmentand, again: It is an informal accusation, which is generally regarded in the light of an instruction upon which an indictment can be framed.” In Mack v. People, 82 N. Y. 235, a presentment is defined as an accusation by the (grand jury) without any bill before it, and afterwards re- . ced to a formal indictment.”

Conceding the correctness of these definitions, are they of practical use as applied to our system of procedure, where the Attorney-General or district attorney has a right to attend the grand jury and where, without their signatures, an indictment is not effective and, without an indictment, no criminal prosecution (except under the statute for misdemeanors) can be sustained ? It not infrequently happens that, in straining into the misty past for precedents, we are prone to overlook the changes and modifications in the law made necessary by modern conditions and requirements. In 1881, there was passed by the Legislature an act to establish a Code of Criminal Procedure, which was intended to make certain a system of practice and pleading' in criminal law. Chapter 2 of title 4, part 4, treats of the formation of the grand jury, its powers and duties, and chapter 1 of title 5, part 4, treats of the finding and presentation of the indictment. Throughout these two chapters, the word “ present ” or “ presentment ” is used to define [601]*601or prescribe the act to be done in relation to the indictment. In no place is the word “ presentment ” used as a substantive, except in one section (250), where it is provided that the clerk of the grand jury must keep the minutes of the proceedings “ (except of the votes of the individual members on a presentment or indictment).” From the absence of any provision for the making of a presentment and the particular provisions for the finding and presentment of the indictment, it is clear that the word “ presentment ” in section 250 is not used in the sense of differing from or being independent of indictment, but is used in a coordinate sense, or as synonymous with indictment. Hot only is this view sustained by the general scheme of the Code provisions, but it is emphasized by the language of section 268: When an indictment is found, it must be indorsed a true bill;” of section 269: If an indictment be not found, the deposition and statement must be returned indorsed to the effect that the charge is dismissed; of section 272: An indictment when found must be presented by the grand jury to the court; of section 273: All the forms of pleading in criminal actions heretofore existing are abolished; and hereafter the forms of pleading and the rules by which the sufficiency of the pleadings is to be determined, are those prescribed by this Code; and of section 274: “ The first pleading on the part of the people is the indictment.”

Thus the law, plainly expressed, is that a grand jury can act only in the manner prescribed by law, that when it so acts a certain definite legal result must follow, and that such result can be expressed only in either one of the two formulas : “A true bill found ” or

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Bluebook (online)
68 Misc. 597, 125 N.Y.S. 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-osborne-nysupct-1910.