People ex rel. Aikins v. Superintendent & Board of Managers of the State Industrial School

33 Misc. 396, 15 N.Y. Crim. 278, 67 N.Y.S. 674
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Misc. 396 (People ex rel. Aikins v. Superintendent & Board of Managers of the State Industrial School) 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
People ex rel. Aikins v. Superintendent & Board of Managers of the State Industrial School, 33 Misc. 396, 15 N.Y. Crim. 278, 67 N.Y.S. 674 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Davy, J.

The sole question presented upon the return to the writ of certiorari granted herein is whether the relator, Roy Aikins, a boy thirteen years old, is lawfully detained by the board of managers of the State Industrial School at Rochester upon a warrant of commitment issued by the police justice of the city of Lockport.

Upon the presentation of a petition of the boy’s grandmother, a writ of certiorari was issued and served upon the superintendent [397]*397of said institution, requiring him to make return to this court of the time and cause of the imprisonment and detention of the said Boy Aikins. The superintendent, in his return to the writ-, states that the said Boy Aikins is detained in said Industrial School by virtue and authority of a mandate of I>. F. Stevens, a police justice of the city of Lockport, a copy of which is attached to the return.

The commitment recites that the said Boy Aikins, having been brought before D. F. Stevens, police justice of said city of Lock-port, county of Niagara, charged with being incorrigible, a truant and beyond the control of his parents and school teacher; -and the above-named Boy Aikins, having thereupon plead guilty, and upon such plea duly convicted, and he being proven to be of the age of thirteen years, February 9, 1899, it is adjudged that he be confined in the State Industrial School, in the city of Bochester, New York, under the provisions of the statute relating thereto, and he is hereby committed to the custody of the board of managers of said Industrial School until discharged by due course of law.

Subdivision 8 of section 887 of the Oode of Criminal Procedure is the only subdivision of that section to- which the charge against the boy has any relation, which provides that where any child, between- the age of five and fourteen, having sufficient bodily health and mental capacity to attend the public schools, is found wandering in the streets or lanes of any city or incorporated village, a truant without any lawful occupation, is under that section declared a vagrant.

Section 888 provides that when complaint is ni-ade to- any magistrate or peace officer -against any vagrant, under subdivision 8 of the last section, such magistrate must cause a peace officer to bring such child before him for examination, - and shall also cause the parent, guardian or master of such child, if the child has any, to be summoned to attend such examination. If thereon the complaint shall be satisfactorily established, the magistrate must require the parent, guardian or master to enter into an engagement in writing to the corporate authorities of the city or village that he will restrain such child from so wandering about, will keep him in his own premises or in some lawful occupation, and will cause him to be sent to school at least four months in each year until he becomes fourteen years old.

[398]*398Section 291 of the Penal Code provides that such child, when convicted, may be committed to any incorporated charitable reformatory or other institution, and, when practicable, to such as is governed by persons of the same religious faith as the parents of the child, or may make any disposition of the child such as now is or hereafter may be authorized in the cases of vagrants, truants, paupers or disorderly persons. This section also provides that, whenever it shall appear, from the warrant of commitment, that either parent or any guardian or custodian of such child was present at the examination before such court or magistrate, or had such notice thereof as was by such court or magistrate deemed and adjudged sufficient, no further or other notice required by any local or special statute in regard to the committal of children to such institutions shall be necessary, and such commitment shall in all respects be sufficient to authorize such institution to receive such child in its custody as therein directed.

The learned counsel for the petitioner contends that the commitment is void because it fails to show that any notice was given by the justice to the father or mother of the said child, .or that either of them was present at the examination.

It must be conceded that the language of the statute plainly contemplates that such notice must be given as a condition to a valid judgment of conviction. It lies at the very foundation of the jurisdiction of the magistrate, and when he omits such an essential requirement of the statute the conviction cannot be sustained. I do not, however, coincide with the views urged by the learned counsel, that the commitment is void even if notice had been given to the father or mother of the boy. Where a conviction is drawn in question collaterally upon certiorari or habeas corpus, it is the rule that the commitment should be so construed as to sustain the conviction, if possible.

I am inclined to think that the commitment is defective in not stating that the parent, guardian or custodian of the child was present at the examination before the police justice, or had such notice thereof as the magistrate deemed and adjudged sufficient, but it can hardly be treated as a fatal omission, especially in view of the saving clause in the statute, which provides whenever any commitment of a child shall for any reason be adjudged or found defective, a new commitment of the child may be made or directed by the court or magistrate, as the welfare of the child may require, [399]*399and no commitment of a child which shall recite therein the facts upon which it is based shall be deemed or held invalid by reason of any imperfection or defect in form. Penal Code, § 291; People ex rel. Kuhn v. P. E. House of Mercy, 133 N. Y. 207.

The police justice was not made a party to this proceeding, and the evidence taken before him, if any, has not been returned, and is not before me. I must assume, however, that the magistrate complied with all the requirements of the statute, and summoned the boy’s parent or guardian to appear before him on the examination. The warrant of commitment states the age of the boy, and describes the offense by name and the conviction and sentence, which is sufficient, upon its face, to give the court jurisdiction. The fact that the petitioner refused to traverse the return, and that the petition is not made by the father or mother of the boy, but by his grandmother, is important as bearing upon the question whether the police justice did not comply with all the requirements of the statute, and acquire jurisdiction to pronounce judgment of conviction.

The learned counsel for the petitioner admitted, upon the argument, that it appeared, from the docket kept by the police justice, that the parents of the boy received notice of the examination, but he contends that, notwithstanding the entry in the justice’s docket, no notice was actually given.

It is undoubtedly the rule that the proceedings upon which a judgment is rendered in a criminal case must conform strictly to the requirements of the statute, for the reason that the imprisonment is based on the judgment and not the warrant of commitment.

In People v. Johnson, 110 N. Y. 142, Chief Judge Huger says: “ There is nothing in the office which a commitment is designed to perform, requiring a detailed statement of the circumstances attending the commission of the crime. It is intended merely as a protection to the officer executing it, and as showing the authority upon which he restrains the accused person of his liberty.”

Allen, J., in the case of People ex rel. Tweed v. Liscomb, 60 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Misc. 396, 15 N.Y. Crim. 278, 67 N.Y.S. 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-aikins-v-superintendent-board-of-managers-of-the-state-nysupct-1900.