People v. Borges

6 Abb. Pr. 132
CourtNew York Court of General Session of the Peace
DecidedMarch 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 Abb. Pr. 132 (People v. Borges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of General Session of the Peace primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Borges, 6 Abb. Pr. 132 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

Barnard, Recorder.

The indictment in this case was found under the law passed in 1851 (Laws of 1851, 943), and amended in 1855 (Laws of 1855, 323), entitled “ An act more effectually to suppress Gambling.”

The motion to quash the indictment was made before me on the last day of the February term of this court. I had intended within a few days thereafter to have announced the decision, but have-been delayed up to the present time in consequence of the numerous pressing duties incidental to the office of a judge of this court. The motion was founded on the following grounds:

I. That the act of 1851, as amended, is inoperative, because that portion of the punishment prescribed by it, which consists of imprisonment in the penitentiary, cannot be carried out in all [133]*133the counties of this State, inasmuch as there are not penitentiaries in each of the counties.

II. That the offence charged being a misdemeanor, belongs to ■the jurisdiction of the Special Sessions, unless the Court of General Sessions acquires it, as pointed out by the act of 1851 as amended. •

III. That the statute is null, because it does not define what a lottery policy'is.

IY. That the indictment is bad, in that it alleges a single act of selling.

Y. That the indictment is bad for not showing what kind of a lottery was meant by the policy in question.

YI. Either the ticket should plainly show on its face its meaning, or it should be explained by explanatory averments in the indictment.

As to the first ground, an act may be inoperative, though not void. If the legislature had directed the punishment to be by imprisonment in some place of confinement which had no existence in the State, the act might be inoperative until such place of confinement should be provided (unless it were by. section 55 of the statute, 2 Rev. Stats., 881, § 55, 4th ed.), but it would not be void. It would be inoperative simply because no punishment could be inflicted; and the moment the cause of the act being inoperative was removed, vitality would be infused into it. Under such circumstances as these, it would seem that the law may be operative in some counties and inoperative in others. The case in hand, however, differs from the one above put, for the acts in question prescribe a punishment in the discretion of the court, which shall be by confinement in either the penitentiary or state prison, and by a fine not exceeding $1000. There is, therefore, a punishment which can be inflicted throughout the state, namely, imprisonment in the state prison, and a fine; ■such being the case, I think the law neither void nor inoperative.

It has been suggested that the prisoner is entitled to have the benefit of all the various grades of punishment which the act mentions; so that if his offence is of such a character as to require less than imprisonment in the state prison, he might be sent to the penitentiary. The degree of the punishment to be inflicted rests, however, entirely in the discretion of the court; ;and a case may never occur in which the court will deem the [134]*134proper punishment to be imprisonment in the penitentiary; and, at the time when such case does arise, there may be a penitentiary or penitentiaries provided, to which offenders may be sent from every county, as there is one now provided for the city and! county of Hew York. If, indeed, such a case should occur before such general provision is made, then it would become a question whether the- prisoner could not, as a matter of right, demand a suspension of judgment in all counties, or at least in those counties with respect to which no penitentiary had in any manner been provided. The suggestion could, at all events, be very properly urged, and would, doubtless, have a controlling effect in inducing the court, in such case, to suspend judgment in those counties from which the offender could not be sent to a penitentiary; and in those counties from which he could be sent to a penitentiary, either to suspend judgment, or greatly to reduce the term of imprisonment.

The conclusion I have arrived at is, that the point is not well taken.

As to the second ground, the question is whether the offence, charged is a felony or a misdemeanor.

If a felony, it is conceded that this court has original jurisdiction. A felony is a crime which may be punished either by death or imprisonment in a state prison (Barb. Cr. Law, 18; The People v. Hall (Ms.), decided by Judge Capron while city judge, 2 Rev. Stats., p. 102, § 30). It follows that where a statute creating an offence provides, as a punishment therefor, imprisonment in a state prison, although in the discretion of the magistrate lesser punishment may be inflicted, then that offence becomes a felony, unless its grade of crime is specifically declared in the statute. Thus, if in a statute a crime is declared to be a misdemeanor, that would be its grade, although the punishment should be imprisonment in a state prison; but this declaration must be clear and explicit in the statute, and not drawn, by way of argument, from general expressions used. How, the statute in question does prescribe as a punishment such, imprisonment in a state prison, and does not declare in specific and express terms the grade of crime to which the offenceshould belong.

In my judgment, therefore, the offence is a felony, unless the-words “ shall be taken and held to be a common gambler” ares [135]*135sufficient to mark it as a misdemeanor. Upon this point, it has been urged by the counsel for the defendant, in another case, that the Metropolitan Police Act (laws of 1857, 204, § 9) has declared common gambling to be a misdemeanor, and, by argument, transferring that declaration to the act of 1851, as amended, proclaims that the last-mentioned act should be read as if the word misdemeanor was substituted in the place of the words “ taken and held as a common gambler.” This, I think, cannot be done, for the reasons above mentioned. And again, I do not understand the provisions of the Metropolitan Police Act to go to the extent claimed. Those provisions are directed against “ a common gaming-house or cock-pit,” and direct that, if there should be probable cause for believing that any of the persons who might be found in any house kept for such purposes were so in such house for the purposes of gaming, then the magistrate should order such persons, when brought before him, to find bail to appear at a proper criminal court, having jurisdiction to try misdemeanors, to answer any indictment that may be found, charging them with being common gamblers. That if the jury should be satisfied that the premises in which such persons were arrested were kept for the purposes of gaming, and that such persons were present for the purposes of gaming, then such persons might be convicted as common gamblers; and if convicted as such common gamblers, then the court should forthwith sentence them as for misdemeanors. These provisions apply only to persons found in a common gaming-house or cockpit. The statute declares expressly that the offence therein contained shall be a misdemeanor, although they had previously said that the person should be convicted as a common gambler.

The sense of the legislature was necessary to fix the grade in the scale of crime to which that offence should belong.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Abb. Pr. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-borges-nygensess-1858.