Jaehne v. New York
This text of 128 U.S. 189 (Jaehne v. New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit' Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York denying appellant’s petition for the writs of habeas corpus and certiorari.
The petition alleges that petitioner was convicted in the Court of Oyer and Terminer of the city and county of New York, in May, 1886, of the crime of bribery, committed as:a member of the common council of the city of New York, and . was sentenced, May 20th, 1886, .'to- be imprisoned in the state prison for the term of nine years and ten months, and-.entered upon such imprisonment May 21st; that “ the only authority of law'for said sentence upon said conviction is a statute of ,the State of New York, passed July 1,1882, and known as the * Consolidation Act,’ and especially the 2143d section thereof, by force of which the ‘ Penal Code,’ otherwise inapplicable, is made to apply to said offence, and thereby the offence is made punishable, although committed before the ‘ Consolidation Act ’ took effect, as well as when committed after, indifferently and indistinguishably, by a maximum imprisonment of ten years in *191 state prison; whereas, before that act took effect, said offence was punishable by a maximum imprisonment in the penitentiary of two years;” that said law is expost facto ; and thai petitioner, having served the full term of imprisonment which could lawfully be imposed, is entitled to be discharged.
The Penal Code of the State of New York took effect as a law December 1st, 1882, and, under its 72d section, 1 the maximum punishment for the crime of bribery committed by any person who executes any of the functions of a public office was fixed at ten years imprisonment, or $5000 fine, or both.
The City Consolidation Act was passed July 1,1882 to take effect March 1, 1883, and by § 2143 2 it was provided that the Penal Code should have the same effect as if passed after “ this act.”
By § 100 of the New York charter 3 of 1873, (c. 335, Laws *192 1873,) tbe crime of bribery committed by a member of the common council subjected him upon conviction to imprisonment not exceeding two years, ór fine, or both.
By § 58 of the Consolidation Act this § 100 of the act of 1873 was re-enacted.
By § 725 of the Penal Code 1 “ all acts incorporating municipal corporations, and acts amending acts of incorporation or charters of such corporation,” were, inter alia, declared not to be affected by it, and recognized as continuing in force, *193 notwithstanding the Code, except so far as repealed by subsequent laws.
It is claimed that § 100 of the act of 1873 was not repealed by the Penal Code, but was excepted from its operation by § 725, and continued in force for the four months- between December 1st, 1882, when the Penal Code went into operation, and March 1st, 1883, when the Consolidation Act took effect, and that § 58 of the latter act then replaced it, and was not superseded by § 72 of the Penal Code, under § 2143 off the • Consolidation Act, but kept in force by .§ 725 'of the- Penal Code. Or, in other words, it is argued that § 100, being a. section of the city charter, was saved from repeal by the. Penal Code by § 725 of the latter, and was not repealed until by the subsequent law known as the City Consolidation Act, which took effect March 1,1883, and was even then continued in force as § 58 of the Consolidation Act, which is identical with said § 100; and that at all events the measure of punishment from December 1st, 1882, to March 1st, 1883, is that prescribed by '§ 100 of the old charter and repeated in § 58 of the new.'
And it is insisted that § 72 of the Penal Code, with the force and effect given - it by § 2143 of the Consolidation Act, under the decisions of the New York Court of Appeals, is ex post facto, and therefore void, in that thereby the maximum punishment by imprisonment of the crime of bribery committed before as well as after the Consolidation Act went into effect was changed from two to ten years.
In The People v. O'Neill, 109 N. Y. 251, 261, and People v. Jaehne, 103 N. Y. 182, it was held by- the Court of Appeals that § 100 of chapter 335. of the-Act of 1873 was not within the saving clause of § 725 of the Penal Code, but on the contrary, was repealed by that Code as soon as it-went into operation, December 1st, 1882, and that § 58 of the Consolidation Act, which is but a transcript of said § 100, was not kept 'in force by said’ § 725, and was superseded by § 72 of the Penal Code, which latter section was prospective merely, and could only operate upon the crime of bribery committed by a member of the common coun *194 oil after the Penal Code took effect. . Accepting- the conclusions of the highest court of the State óf New York as to the operation of the acts in question in substituting, under § 72, .a longer term of imprisonment for that which had theretofore existed, it is clear that § 72 governed' future cases only; but, even if taken in connection with all the other statutory provisions referred to, it could be construed as also retroactive, as it was admitted upon the argument that the crime, upon conviction of which the petitioner was sentenced to the imprisonment he is now undergoing, was charged to have been committed in 1884, long after the Penal -Code and the Consolidation Act went into effect, we perceive no reason for the discharge of the prisoner upon, the ground that § 72 might •be held invalid in respect to a crime committed between December 1st, 1882, and-April 1st, 1883, if drawn in question in a proper case. The rule upon this subject, which we consider applicable, is that “ a legislative act may be entirely valid as to some classes of cases and clearly void as to others. A general law for the punishment of offences, which should endeavor to reach by its retroactive operation acts before committed,- as well as to' prescribe a rule of conduct for the citizen in futurej would be void so far as it’ was retrospective; but such invalidity would not affect the operation of the law in regard to the cases which were within the legislative control.” -Cooley, Const. Lim., 5th ed., 215.
The order of the Circuit Court refusing the writ's was right, and it is
Affirmed..
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
128 U.S. 189, 9 S. Ct. 70, 32 L. Ed. 398, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2210, 6 N.Y. Crim. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaehne-v-new-york-scotus-1888.