People ex rel. Walker v. Court of Special Sessions
This text of 11 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 441 (People ex rel. Walker v. Court of Special Sessions) 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.
Opinion
Complaint on oath was made before a police justice on the 18th of May, 1874, charging the relator with a misdemeanor under the several acts for the prevention of cruelty to animals. The particular offense charged was the cruel treatment of a dog used by the relator on what is called a treadmill in the complaint. t The relator was arrested, and on being arraigned before the police justice and on being informed' of his rights, he demanded in writing a trial by jury of the complaint, and a trial at the Court of General Sessions of the Peace. The proceedings were thereupon sent to the General Sessions. On the thirtieth of May following, the relator was indicted in that court, and on being arraigned on the [443]*4432d day of June, 1874, pleaded not guilty. Afterward the relator and his counsel appeared in the General Sessions held by and before the recorder, and with the assent of the district attorney made application that the complaint be sent back to the Special Sessions for trial. The application was granted, and an entry to that effect was made by the clerk of the court on the back of the indictment. The return states that “ subsequently, on the 8th of June, 1874, the said complaint was sent by the Court of General Sessions aforesaid, to the Court of Special Sessions in said city and county, for trial by the said last named court, as appears by an indorsement upon the said complaint in these words, to wit: ‘ Sent to Court of Special Sessions, by request of counsel, June 8th, 1874.’” On the eighth of October following, the.Court of Special Sessions organized for the trial of misdemeanors, and caused the relator, as the return states, “ to be brought before them for trial on the • said complaint,” and the charge in said complaint was distinctly read to the relator, and he pleaded thereto “ not guilty,” which plea was duly entered in the minutes. The court thereupon proceeded to try the issue. No objection whatever seems to have been made at this stage, to the jurisdiction of the court, or to the regularity of the proceedings ; and none seems to have been suggested till after the close of the case for the prosecution; and no question of jurisdiction was distinctly raised till the evidence on both sides was closed. At that point the defendant’s counsel said to the court: “ If the case was tried on the complaint he would ask for an arrest of judgment ; if on the indictment he would claim that the court had no power to try it by consent or otherwise.” The court said it had nothing to do with the indictment; and after the court found the defendant “ guilty on the evidence,” the “ defendant’s counsel moved in arrest of judgment, on the ground that if the finding is upon the complaint, the complaint has been superseded by the indictment.” The motion was denied and exception taken; and the relator was sentenced upon the conviction to pay a fine of twenty-five dollars. A record of the conviction and judgment was made in due form, and is annexed to the return. It cannot be doubted that the proceedings in the General Sessions, to send the complaint back to the Special Sessions for trial, were informal and irregular. But they were taken with the consent and at the request of the [444]*444relator and as matter of favor to "him. Whether the relator could not, at any time before going to trial on the complaint at the Special Sessions, have insisted upon his right to be tried by a jury at the General Sessions on the indictment, notwithstanding all that had taken place in respect to remanding the complaint, is not the question here before us. He appeared before the Special Sessions, to which court at his request the complaint had been sent, and joined issue upon the complaint, and went to trial according to the legal course of procedure in that tribunal, ignoring and waiving for that purpose his former demand of trial in the higher court and the indictment therein, and in effect consenting to all the jurisdiction over the complaint that the Special Sessions could have had if he had originally elected to be tried by that tribunal. By the act of 1855
This case is disposed of, we think, when we determine that the relator has not been tried upon the indictment at all, and so has not been deprived of any constitutional right guaranteed to him upon such a trial; and that he has been tried upon a complaint only by his own consent before a tribunal having jurisdiction of such complaints, and according to its legal forms of procedure; and that he failed on such trial to plead the pendency of the indictment, or to raise any question at such time and in such manner, that he can now be heard to allege error notwithstanding his own consent and submission to the jurisdiction. On the merits of this case there appear to be no reasons for interfering with the judgment. Although a dog is not a “ beast of burden ” yet it is not cruelty to train and subject him to any useful purpose. His use upon a “ treadmill ” or an “ inclined plane,” or in any mode by which his strength or docility may be. made serviceable to man, is commendable and not criminal; but his abuse while so employed, whenever it amounts to cruelty, is a crime and punishable precisely under the same circumstances as the cruel usage of the higher animals.
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11 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-walker-v-court-of-special-sessions-nysupct-1875.