Murtagh v. Leibowitz

101 N.E.2d 753, 303 N.Y. 311, 30 A.L.R. 2d 1259, 1951 N.Y. LEXIS 680
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 101 N.E.2d 753 (Murtagh v. Leibowitz) 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
Murtagh v. Leibowitz, 101 N.E.2d 753, 303 N.Y. 311, 30 A.L.R. 2d 1259, 1951 N.Y. LEXIS 680 (N.Y. 1951).

Opinion

Desmond, J.

The petition in this proceeding (brought under Civ. Prac. Act, art. 78), prayed for an order prohibiting respondent, individually and as a County Judge of Kings County presiding as a Magistrate in that county, from continuing to assume jurisdiction over a criminal information filed with [315]*315respondent against petitioner. Petitioner was, at the times mentioned in that information, a public officer of the City of New York, to wit, its Commissioner of Investigation. The lengthy information filed against appellant charges the latter with committing, in Kings County, the misdemeanor of neglect of duty (Penal Law, §§ 1841, 1857) in that, it is alleged, he failed to report to the Mayor of the City of New York, as required by law (New York City Charter, § 803; Administrative Code of City of New York, § 803-1.0) as to an investigation, which the Mayor had ordered appellant to make, and which, according to the information, appellant did make. That investigation, it is stated in the information, was directed toward finding out whether New York City police officers had been lax or inefficient in enforcing the gambling laws, and whether they had taken bribes from gamblers. The information asserts that the investigation made by appellant, on the Mayor’s order, did disclose much corruption and failure to enforce the gambling laws throughout New York City, including Kings County, but that appellant made no report thereof to the Mayor.

Appellant, in this prohibition proceeding, takes the position that the information charges against him a crime which by its nature can be committed in New York County only, and not in Kings County. It is undisputed that the office of appellant as Commissioner of Investigation and the office of the Mayor are both located in New York County, and so, argues appellant, any report by the commissioner to the Mayor was required to be made in New York County and any neglect of duty, such as the one alleged in this information, in failing to make such a report to the Mayor, could have occurred only in New York County. Appellant’s further contention has to do with section 134 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which reads as follows: “ When a crime is committed partly in one county and partly in another. When a crime is committed, partly in one county and partly in another, or the acts or effects thereof, constituting, or requisite to the consummation of the offense, occur in two or more counties, the jurisdiction is in either county.”

Appellant says that the alleged crime described in this information is not one covered by section 134, since it was not one which could be committed “ partly in one county and partly in another ”, and since, as he argues, there were no acts or effects [316]*316constituting ” or “ requisite to the consummation of ” this particular described offense, which were such as could be held to have occurred in two or more counties.

It seems clear -to us that the failure of a city commissioner to make a report to the Mayor, the offices of both officials being located in New York County only, is a fault of omission which cannot be committed elsewhere than in New York County. It follows, therefore (and so the Appellate Division unanimously held), that, without recourse to section 134, above quoted, there could not be any jurisdiction to deal with this information, in respondent, who is a County Judge elected in and for Kings County only, and qualified to sit as a committing Magistrate in that county alone. The majority of the Appellate Division, however, was of the opinion that, within the meaning of section 134, the prior act of making the investigation, in Kings County, was an “ act requisite to the consummation ” of the later offense of failing to make the report thereof in New York County, since, as the Appellate Division Per Curiam opinion puts it: “ there could have been no neglect of a duty to report unless an investigation had been made ”. (278 App. Div. 512, 514.) In effect, the court below, citing People v. Mitchell (49 App. Div. 531, affd. 168 N. Y. 604) and People v. Hudson Valley Constr. Co. (217 N. Y. 172) construed section 134 to mean that if, in order to convict a defendant, the People must prove not only a criminal act committed in one county but also an innocent act committed in another, the venue may be laid in either of the counties. We do not so construe or apply section 134.

It was the common-law rule that every offense had to be inquired into, as well as tried, in the county where the offense was committed (see authorities collected in People v. Hetenyi, 277 App. Div. 310, 314, affd. 301 N. Y. 757). So stringently was that rule applied, at common law, that where the alleged act was performed in part in one county and in part in another or others, venue was in neither county, and prosecution could not be had at all. To correct that weakness in the law, section 134 was passed in this State, as were its counterparts in other States. But that statute’s coverage and purpose are plain from its heading: “ When a crime is committed partly in one county and partly in another.” It is impossible, we think, to consider a failure to make a report to a public officer as an offense which can [317]*317be broken up into parts. Under respondent’s theory, a State official, ordered by the Governor to investigate certain conditions throughout the whole State, and, doing so but failing to report to the Governor the results of the inquiry, could lie indicted in each of the State’s sixty-two counties, as if his criminal failure to report had taken place in each of those counties. It seems to us that the crime of neglect of duty can be committed only where the duty is required to be performed, and that place, in this alleged instance, was New York County, the only place where appellant was in duty bound to make the report. We find no cases closely in point in this State or elsewhere, but conclude that such a failure to report is a single act of omission, and is not divisible into several parts.

We turn to respondent’s contention that this situation is one of those described in section 134 where the acts or effects * * * constituting, or requisite to the consummation of the offense, occur in two or more counties ”. As we have noted, the claimed offense here is a single neglect of duty, consisting of one failure to make one report to one superior officer. True, there would have been no neglect of that particular sort, had not there been an investigation, a report of which appellant was required to make. But, according to the information, appellant did conduct and complete his investigation, so he is charged with no neglect of duty up to that point. His next, and separate, duty, and the one he is said to have neglected, was to make a report. His investigation preceded in time that alleged neglect of duty, but the subsequent fault, although post, was not propter, the early investigation, and so the investigation in Kings County was not an act constituting or requisite to the subsequent omission to report. Stating the same thing in another way, we hold that the lawful investigation was no part of the subsequent crime of neglect of duty, under sections 1841 and 1857 of the Penal Law.

We do not think either People v. Mitchell (supra) or People v. Hudson Valley Constr. Co. (supra) compels or suggests an affirmance here.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E.2d 753, 303 N.Y. 311, 30 A.L.R. 2d 1259, 1951 N.Y. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murtagh-v-leibowitz-ny-1951.