In re the Presentment Made to the Superior Court

106 A.2d 537, 16 N.J. 142, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 28, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 106 A.2d 537 (In re the Presentment Made to the Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Presentment Made to the Superior Court, 106 A.2d 537, 16 N.J. 142, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 205 (N.J. 1954).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burling, J.

The appellant, Louis J. Messano, hereinafter called Messano, appealed from an order of the Assignment Judge of the Superior Court, Hudson County, filed on November 4, 1953, denying Messano’s motion to expunge from the record an entire presentment of an additional grand jury of Hudson County, reported to the assignment judge, and ordered by him to be filed, on May 5, 1953. The appeal, addressed to the Superior Court, Appellate Division, was certified on our own motion prior to hearing there. R. R. 1:10-1 (a).

Succinctly the chronology of events is as follows: On November 26, 1952 a grand jury list (150 names) was filed. A panel (35 names) for the grand jury was selected from this grand jury list. The grand jury for the second stated session of the September term 1952 was organized from that panel and was sworn on January 5, 1953.

About that time the Attorney-General assumed directly the responsibility of probing alleged waterfront criminality in Hudson County.

The Assignment Judge of the Superior Court, on January 9, 1953, on the motion of the Deputy Attorney-General by order fixed January 12, 1953, as the time for drawing a panel from the original grand jury list for an additional grand jury. See N. J. S. 2A 71-5, former Rule 2:4-l, now R. R. 3 :3-1. The panel (35 names) was drawn and the assignment judge designated January 22, 1953 as the date for organizing the additional grand jury from that panel. On January 22, 1953 the State on motion challenged the array before the [145]*145jurors were sworn. Former Rule 2:4-2, now R. R. 3:3-2 (a). Reasons for discharge of the panel (35 names) and of the balance of the .grand jury list were assigned. The assignment judge discharged the additional grand jury panel (35 names) and set aside the balance of the then existing grand jury list. The assignment judge thereupon ordered the jury commissioners to prepare a new grand jury list of 150 names and fixed January 28, 1953 as the day for drawing a panel (35 names) therefrom for the additional grand jury. He further ordered the sheriff to return the panel of jurors so drawn from the new list on February 6, 1953, on which day the additional grand jury so summoned was organized and sworn.

On May 5, 1953 indictments, not against Messano, found by the additional grand jury were returned in open court to the assignment judge. The additional grand jury also returned in open court a presentment to the assignment judge. The presentment was examined by the assignment judge, who thereupon ordered it filed. See In re Camden County Grand Jury, 10 N. J. 23, 26 (1952).

Messano, on May 6, 1953, filed a notice of motion, without supporting affidavits, to expunge the entire presentment of the additional grand jury from the record. On argument on the motion on May 8, 1953, the assignment judge ordered Messano to produce affidavits in support of charges of bias, prejudice and malice laid to the additional grand jury by Messano on his motion. No such affidavits were filed. And counsel for Messano stated at'the May 8, 1953 hearing that he had no proof that the grand jurors were politically motivated. At a hearing on the motion on June 5, 1953 counsel for Messano asserted “we are not going to file anything further. * * *” At a further hearing on June 26, 1953 counsel for Messano stated “* * * there wasn’t any investigation of any grand jury. It was never my intention that that happen. * * *” By order filed November 4, 1953 the assignment judge denied Messano’s motion to expunge the presentment, and this appeal ensued.

[146]*146Adjective as well as substantive questions were advanced by Messano on this appeal. Messano contended, inter alia, that N. J. Const. 1947, Art. I, par. 8, forbids the simultaneous existence of two grand juries in one county. We find no merit in this contention. The constitutional provision invoked contains no such limitation. The additional grand jury is expressly authorized by statute. N. J. S. 2A :71-5, supra. Additional grand juries were not unknown at common law. See I Chitty’s Criminal Law (3rd Am. from 2nd London ed., revised, 1836), pp. 157 (*157-158), 310 (*311); Reg. v. McGuire, 34 N. B. 430, 434-440, 4 Can. Crim. Cas. 12, 16 (New Brunswick Sup. Ct. 1898). The remaining procedural questions related to the entire personnel of the additional grand jury resulting from the discharge of the remaining personnel of the first grand jury list and the mode pursued to acquire the new grand jury list (150 names) and in the summoning of the new panel (35 names). These remaining adjective questions become academic by virtue of the following disposition of the case.

The substantive questions revolve about the determination whether a crime was charged against Messano in the presentment.

The presentment dealt with the grand jury’s investigation of waterfront activities and detailed at length alleged facts purported to have been found by the jury in connection with Messano (in fairness to the movant Messano and consistent with the action hereinafter taken these allegations are not set forth in this opinion). These factors the grand jury said were “neglect amounting to non-feasance” of his duties as Director of Public Safety of Jersey City but stated that “generally” such alleged acts of nonfeasance “were not indictable by reason of the intervention” of the two-year statute of limitations. The presentment also made various recommendations which do not relate to Messano.

It was held in the Camden County case, supra, that “the criminal presentment disappeared in practice 20 or 30 years before the Constitutional Convention of 1844” (10 N. J., at [147]*147page 44), although presentments as to public affairs with incidental reference to criminal activity had survived. Further, it was held that in drafting the New Jersey Constitution of 1947 the Convention members “knew that presentments in the criminal sense were obsolete” (10 N. J., at pages 6-4-65). Chief Justice Vanderbilt in the Camden County case, supra, stated (10 N. J., at page 66):

“There are many official acts and omissions that fall short of criminal misconduct and yet are not in the public interest. It is very much to the public advantage that such conduct be revealed in an effective, official way. No community desires to live a hairbreadth above the criminal level, which might well be the case if there were no official organ of public protest. Such presentments are a great deterrent to official wrongdoing. By exposing wrongdoing, moreover, such presentments inspire public confidence in the capacity of the body politic to purge itself of untoward conditions.”

A fair reading of the opinion in the Camden County ease, supra, discloses an obvious holding that a grand jury does not have the opportunity to elect to file a presentment rather than to find an indictment if it appears that a crime has been committed for which an indictment may be had. It was expressly held therein that “acceptance * * * of a presentment of public affairs is a judicial act. A reading of it may lead the court to give the grand jury further instructions with respect to the matters presented, which in turn may lead to further grand jury action. * * *” (10 N. J., at page 67).

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Bluebook (online)
106 A.2d 537, 16 N.J. 142, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-presentment-made-to-the-superior-court-nj-1954.