Matter of Hogan v. Court of General Sessions

68 N.E.2d 849, 296 N.Y. 1, 1946 N.Y. LEXIS 790
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by128 cases

This text of 68 N.E.2d 849 (Matter of Hogan v. Court of General Sessions) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Hogan v. Court of General Sessions, 68 N.E.2d 849, 296 N.Y. 1, 1946 N.Y. LEXIS 790 (N.Y. 1946).

Opinion

*5 Thacher, J.

In this proceeding the District Attorney of New York County filed in the Supreme Court of that county a petition for an order prohibiting the Court of General Sessions from taking any further action with regard to two separate applications made to that court by Jacob Shapiro for separate orders vacating and setting aside two judgments of conviction against him, one rendered on October 6, 1915, convicting him of the crime of burglary in the third degree and the other rendered on April 4,1918, convicting him of the crime of attempted grand larceny in the second degree. The District Attorney, before petitioning for the order in prohibition, moved in the Court of General Sessions to dismiss each of these applications on the ground that the court had' no jurisdiction to entertain either of them or to grant any of the relief requested. These motions were denied. When the petition for the order in prohibition was presented to the Supreme Court it was dismissed by that court “ osa matter of law, and not in the exercise of discretion ”, with an opinion holding that the Court of General Sessions had general jurisdiction to inquire into the applications and to determine whether or not to entertain them and if so what disposition should be made. The Appellate Division affirmed without opinion, one justice dissenting.

This proceeding under article 78 of the Civil Practice Act being one in the nature of prohibition, we are confined in our consideration to a question of the jurisdiction of the Court of General Sessions to vacate and set aside either of its judgments of conviction against Shapiro. We are in no way concerned with the merits of intervener’s applications, which must be justified, if justified at all, as requiring an exercise of the court’s inherent power to set aside its own judgments within the limited and circumscribed field within which the common-law writ of coram nobis was employed (Matter of Lyons v. Goldstein, 290 N. Y. 19; Matter of Morhous v. N. Y. Supreme Court, 293 N. Y. 131; Matter of Hogan v. N. Y. Supreme Court, 295 N. Y. 92). In each of these cited cases the coram nobis application was predicated upon allegations that the judgment was procured by fraud. In People v. Gersewits (294 N. Y. 363) Chief Judge Lehman said (p. 167): “ We have sanctioned the exercise of such a power by a court to correct its own record or to set aside an order or judgment which was induced by *6 fraud or procured in violation of a constitutional right of a party. Perhaps that power can have no broader scope. No case has been presented to the court in which the court was called upon to define its exact limits, but in March, 1943, this court authoritatively decided (three judges dissenting) that a court of criminal jurisdiction has ‘ inherent ’ power to set aside a judgment procured by fraud and misrepresentation and to permit a defendant to withdraw a plea of guilty induced by violation of his constitutional rights [citing case]; and in Matter of Morhous v. N. Y. Supreme Court (293 N. Y. 131), we held that a motion to vacate a judgment procured by violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights is the corrective judicial process which is authorized by the law of the State to remedy the alleged wrong to the defendant and that it adequately meets the requirement o f due process ’.” This language of the late Chief Judge is certainly not to be understood as saying that any judgment procured as the result of a trial during the course of which rulings were made in violation of constitutional right may be vacated and set aside if there was a right to review such rulings on an appeal from the judgment. Similarly, matters not presented during the trial, if presentable upon a motion for a new trial, would not be ground for setting aside the judgment years after its. entry.

The first conviction — October 6, 1915 — was after a trial before a jury in which intervener was represented by counsel. He was convicted of burglary in the third degree and sentenced to the Elmira 'Reformatory. He was again convicted, on April 4, 1918, of the crime of attempted grand larceny in the second degree and sentenced to one year and two months in a State prison. In October, 1944, he made the two applications to the Court of General Sessions here involved seeking to set aside each of these judgments.

The application concerning the 1915 judgment was predicated upon the allegation that intervener was under the age of sixteen years at the time the judgment was rendered. His application concedes that at the time of his arraignment he gave his name as Morris Friedman and his age as twenty-one and that during the trial he testified that he was eighteen. His argument is that, since the jurisdiction- of .the Court of General Sessions at the time the judgment was rendered was *7 limited to criminal actions, and since he was in truth under sixteen years of age despite his statements to the contrary, he was without capacity to commit a crime (Penal Law, § 2186), so that the judgment convicting him of a crime was invalid and deprived him of his liberty without due process of law.

The application concerning the 1918 judgment was predicated upon the allegation that the intervener was not advised of his right to counsel at the time a plea of guilty was accepted. He asserts: “Before my arraignment, the police officer who arrested me told me that I should not get a lawyer — that I would be better off without one. At the arraignment I was not represented by counsel nor was I advised by the Clerk or the Magistrate presiding that I was entitled to such representation or that if I did not have the funds to employ counsel that the court would assign counsel to me. In any event, without the advice of counsel, when I was asked how T pleaded to the charge, I replied, ‘ Guilty.’ I was thereupon held for the grand jury.” Subsequently an indictment was found against intervener charging him with the crime of grand larceny in the second degree, to which he pleaded guilty. He states: ‘ ‘ At no time during any of the proceedings above set forth was I represented by counsel nor was I at any time advised that I was entitled to such representation. The only mention that was ever made of counsel during this proceeding was when the arresting officer told me before taking me before the Bench for arraignment in the Magistrates’ Court that I shouldn’t get a lawyer for I did not need one.” He alleges that, since his conviction, he has learned that the value of the merchandise which he is accused of stealing was no more than $46.20 and he therefore should have been charged with the crime of petit larceny instead of grand larceny, and that, “ If I had been cognizant of this fact at the time of my arraignment, or if I had benefit of counsel to so advise me, it is obvious that I would not have pleaded guilty to attempted grand larceny in the second degree.”

While we may not concern ourselves with the merits of these applications, we must, in view of the fact that the court has denied motions to dismiss them for lack of jurisdiction, consider the sufficiency of the allegations to sustain the court’s jurisdiction to vacate and set aside its judgment of conviction. *8

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.E.2d 849, 296 N.Y. 1, 1946 N.Y. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-hogan-v-court-of-general-sessions-ny-1946.