People ex rel. Medina v. Slattery

178 Misc. 741, 36 N.Y.S.2d 255, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1771
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 178 Misc. 741 (People ex rel. Medina v. Slattery) 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. Medina v. Slattery, 178 Misc. 741, 36 N.Y.S.2d 255, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1771 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Eder, J.

Habeas corpus proceeding. On September 28, 1939, the relator pleaded guilty before the County Court of Kings County to a charge of conspiring to commit the crime of receiving stolen property, and on November 3, 1939, he was sentenced to an indeterminate term in the reformatory known as the New York City Penitentiary, Rikers Island, New York.

[742]*742Immediately after his said plea he appeared before the Court of Special Sessions, Kings County, and after trial was convicted of impairing the morals of a minor. No sentence was imposed at -the time, but on November 8, 1939, five days after the imposition of sentence by the County Court, the Court .of Special Sessions caused a warrant to be lodged with the warden against the relator. This status continued until March 13, 1941, when the relator was paroled by the parole commission of the city of New York. On the same day he was brought before the Court of Special Sessions pursuant to the aforementioned warrant. On March 31, 1941, the Court of Special Sessions sentenced the relator to an indeterminate, term in the said penitentiary where he is now imprisoned. Upon this second conviction the parole commission set a period of thirty months as the time of sentence to be served by the relator. In imposing upon the relator an indeterminate sentence the court acted pursuant to section 203 of article 7-A of the Correction Law. Subdivision (b) thereof provides: The court in imposing sentence shall not fix or limit the term of imprisonment of any person sentenced to any such penitentiary. The term of such imprisonment shall be terminated in the manner prescribed in section two hundred four of this article and not otherwise, and shall not exceed three years.”

Section 204 empowers the parole commission" to parole, conditionally release, discharge, retake or reimprison any inmate of any workhouse or reformatory under the jurisdiction of the department of correction of a city of the first class, committed thereto under an indeterminate sentence.

The relator, it is to be observed, was released by the Parole Commission after he had served sixteen months under the sentence imposed by the County Court.

It is provided by section 1937 of the Penal Law that “A person convicted of a crime declared to be a misdemeanor, for which no other punishment is specially prescribed by this chapter, or by any other statutory provision in force at the time of the conviction and sentence, is punishable by imprisonment in a penitentiary, or county jail, for not more than one year, or by a fine not more than five hundred dollars, or by both.”

It is the contention of the relator that the Court of Special Sessions was without power to impose an indeterminate sentence upon him and that section 1937 (supra) was the only provision of law which was applicable and that his confinement and detention under the indeterminate sentence are illegal.

It has been said that “ The apparent purpose of the statutes regulating confinement in the reformatory institutions of the state is to impose punishment for crime aind at the same time to effect [743]*743reformation of their inmates and to equip them for lives of usefulness and to become law-abiding citizens.” (People ex rel. Haupt v. Lasch, 122 Misc. 223.) In Henderson v. People (165 Ill. 607; 46 N. E. 711) the court said: “The main object and purpose of the reformatory, although confinement there is a punishment for crime, are the reformation of those who * * * are presumably proper objects of efforts at reformation.”

It has been said that by reformatories are meant those institutions “ which come in half-way between the state prison or penitentiaries and institutions for juveniles. They are designed for the care of the younger and less hardened offenders * * *.” (Dow, “ Crime and Its Prevention ” [1927] p. 171.) This is a constricted view; it is now fully recognized that the system of reformation is as well applicable to adult prisoners who are supposed to have been selected because of their fitness for reformation. “ The idea back of the reformatory theory is to send the offender back to society a better man than when he was received by the reformatory so that he will be better able to function as a citizen than before he was convicted.” (Dow, supra, p. 173.) “ Unfortunately the actual practice has fallen far short of what was intended.” (Dow, supra, p. 175.)

Relator’s premise is that when a sentence is imposed which commits the offender to a reformatory institution it is so imposed because the court is of the opinion that the offender is capable of being reformed and that when a misdemeanant has been so sentenced and is later released, it follows that the Parole Commission has granted him his liberty because it is satisfied he has reformed and that thereafter if he offends again and is to be sentenced he must be sentenced to an institution other than a reformatory, since by Ms deviation from the path of rectitude he has demonstrated he is beyond or incapable of reformation. Hence, in. the case at bar, it is claimed he should have been given a determinate sentence of one year as fixed by section 1937 of the Penal Law. The net effect and result of such a sentence would, obviously, lessen Ms term of imprisonment by two years; and in that event he would be entitled to discharge since on the second sentence imposed by the Court of Special Sessions relator has already served fifteen months.

It is further claimed by the relator that the Court of Special Sessions erred in sentencing Mm to an indeterminate term in the reformatory contending that commitment for consecutive terms in the reformatory offends the spirit of the statute and that such commitment- inflicts cruel and excessive pumshment not contemplated by the Legislature, asserting: “ Obviously the court has [744]*744no power to render consecutive terms under the Parole Commission Act, for by so doing, it would defeat the very purpose and theory-of the Act.”

I am not in accord with this contention. Section 203 of the Correction Law places no limitation whatever on the sentencing court in respect to committing an inmate or former inmate of a reformatory for another indeterminate term in such institution. It may very well be that the sentencing court may feel that in spite of the failure of the offender to reform under a previous commitment that there is still hope he may be benefited by a further commitment under section 203 of the Correction Law rather than by a determinate sentence under section 1937 of the Penal Law, and when he is thus sentenced there follows therefrom the necessary implication that the sentencing court or judge has duly considered that element and has arrived at the conclusion and judgment that correctional treatment will prove of benefit to the offender with ultimate reformation. (People v. Thompson, 251 N. Y. 428.)

Relator in his brief states: There is no dispute that the trial court has the power to impose upon a misdemeanant consecutive terms, but only where such imposition is under the Penal Law, to be inflicted as punishment rather than for reformatory purposes.”

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Bluebook (online)
178 Misc. 741, 36 N.Y.S.2d 255, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-medina-v-slattery-nysupct-1942.