People v. Darling

81 Misc. 2d 487, 366 N.Y.S.2d 982, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2410
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 81 Misc. 2d 487 (People v. Darling) 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 v. Darling, 81 Misc. 2d 487, 366 N.Y.S.2d 982, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2410 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

William R Murray, J.

Defendants Darling are brothers, one of whom is presently serving in the United States Navy. Pursuant to the request of another brother, an attorney acting as their counsel, they were brought before me at four o’clock of a Sunday morning for arraignment. For the convenience of the parties and with the concurrence of the Police Department of the City of Troy and of the defendants, the proceedings were held in the basement of my residence.

Defendants were charged by two officers of the Troy Police Force with various offenses, arising out of an apparent "evening on the town” in view of leave granted to Theodore Darling from his naval duties. Theodore was accused by the arresting officers of violations of section 1192 of the Vehicle [488]*488and Traffic Law pertaining to driving while under the influence of alcohol. William Darling was accused of public intoxication, lewdness and violation of an ordinance of the City of Troy concerning open containers.

Attorney Darling advised the court that the office of the Rensselaer County District Attorney had been informed of the proceedings but no representative of that office appeared. Defendants were accorded all the statutory warnings and then arraigned. Since defendant Theodore Darling had orders to report to his naval base in Brooklyn the following day, the court granted counsel’s request for immediate disposition of the matter, fully aware that CPL 170.15 (subd 2) requires remission of the action to an inferior criminal court but considering the provision to be in defiance and derogation of the Constitution of the State of New York.

The Constitution of the State of New York, last passed by the Legislature and approved by the people, provides that the Supreme Court "shall have general original jurisdiction in law and equity” (N.Y. Const, of 1938, art 6, § 7, subd a). This mandate of power is not new but is a reaffirmation of the inherited authority of the Supreme Court, established by statute in 1691, to apply and perpetuate the English common law for the establishment of justice, order and stability in the struggling young colony. The enactment was repassed from time to time1 and its provision, almost in identical words, were adopted in the first Constitution of 1777 and continued, without meaningful or substantial change, in all Constitutions through the one of 1938 now in force. (See Matter of Steinway, 159 NY 250, 255-258; People ex rel. Folk v McNulty, 256 App Div 82, 89-91.)

Quoting from Fowler’s treatise on the Supreme Court (Fowler’s Organization of the Supreme Court, 19 ALJ 211), Judge Vann notes in the case first cited (p 256): " 'Not only did this act erect the tribunal which still continues the great law court of the state, but it vested in it a jurisdiction which change of government and constant reforms and revolutions in procedure have been powerless to abridge in any material respect, for while its jurisdiction has been enlarged by its union with the Court of Chancery, its ancient jurisdiction still remains unimpaired.’ ”

[489]*489Thus, first by statute and later by Constitution, the Supreme Court was endowed with all the authority and powers of the Court of King’s Bench and the Court of Chancery in England: jurisdiction to hear and determine any justiciable question of which the common law or chancery courts of England would have had cognizance, and all causes of action, both civil and criminal. (Matter of Stein way, supra, p 258; Matter of Niagara Falls Power Co. v Halpin, 267 App Div 236, 241, affd 292 NY 705; People ex rel. Folk v McNulty, supra, pp 91-92.)

The criminal jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is inherited from the Court of King’s Bench which had "general superintendency over all courts of inferior jurisdiction and might remove to itself by certiorari all proceedings from any of them. (1 Chitty Cr. Law, 374.) The court took cognizance both of criminal and civil causes. (1 Holdsworth’s History of English Law, pp 212-213.)” (People ex rel. Folk v McNulty, supra, p 91; see, also, People v Washor, 196 NY 104, 107; Smith v People, Al NY 330; People ex rel. Newton v Special Term, Part I, 193 App Div 463, 468-471; People v Humphrey, 122 Mise 303, 305.)

The circumstance that another court has been given additional or similar jurisdiction, of course, cannot deprive the Supreme Court of its general constitutional jurisdiction. (Barone v Aetna Life Ins. Co., 260 NY 410, 414; Klein v City of New York, 234 App Div 455.) Indeed, as a tribunal of general jurisdiction, the Supreme Court is presumed to have authority to hear and determine any cause unless the contrary plainly appears. (Condon v Associated Hosp. Serv., 287 NY 411, 414-415; Jones v McNeill, 51 Misc 2d 527, 529 [Cooke, J.].) Such jurisdiction is "inalienable, and carries with it the corresponding duty on the part of those courts to exercise it.” (Alexander v Bennett, 60 NY 204, 207.)

Possessed of immense and inherent power (Kagen v Kagen, 2l NY2d 532;2 Matter of Schneider v Aulisi, 307 NY 376), the Supreme Court may award a party appropriate and complete relief, in accord with the exigencies of the case, to do justice and to promote equity (Leader v Durst, 26 AD2d 705, 706; Kaminsky v Kahn, 23 AD2d 231, 236).

The permanent "sweep of the power granted to the Su[490]*490preme Court by the People” (Vazquez v Vazquez, 26 AD2d 701, 703), "is constitutionally unlimited and illimitable” authority (1136 East Corp. v New York State Liq. Auth., 58 Misc 2d 217, 222) which renders it "competent to entertain all causes of actions” (Thrasher v United States Liab. Ins. Co., 19 NY2d 159, 166) may not be abridged, abrogated, curbed, limited, qualified or whittled away to any degree or in any respect by a transient legislative body and an attempt to do so is patently void and of no effect (People v Allen, 301 NY 287, 290; Busch Jewelry Co. v United Retail Employees’ Union, 281 NY 150, 156; People ex rel. Swift v Luce, 204 NY 478, 487-488; Matter of Stilwell, 139 NY 337, 341; People ex rel. Mayor of City of N. Y. v Nichols, 79 NY 582, 589-590; Matter of Niagara Falls Power Co. v Halpin, 267 App Div 236, 241, affd 292 NY 705, supra; United Baking Co. v Bakery & Confectionery Workers’ Union, 257 App Div 501, 505, 507; People ex rel. Folk v McNulty, 256 App Div 82, 89, supra; Decker v Canzoneri, 256 App Div 68, 71, 72).

In Matter of Malloy (278 NY 429, 432), the Court of Appeals dispelled any doubt as to the unfettered and unalterable power of the Supreme Court, saying: "The Legislature cannot by statute deprive it of one particle of its jurisdiction, derived from the Constitution”.

By statute, as well as by virtue of its broad constitutional criminal powers, the Supreme Court may arraign a defendant upon an information (CPL 170.15, subd 2). After, albeit unnecessarily and redundantly, bestowing this already existing constitutional authority on the Supreme Court, the Legislature, in this same subdivision, attempts to tinker with and to thwart the fundamental law of the State by directing a remission to a local criminal court for further action and disposition in such a case (CPL 170.15, subd 2), thus depriving this great court of one of its primary powers: the right to try criminal offenses constituting misdemeanors.

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Related

People v. Cirillo
100 Misc. 2d 527 (New York Supreme Court, 1979)
People v. Darling
50 A.D.2d 1038 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
81 Misc. 2d 487, 366 N.Y.S.2d 982, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-darling-nysupct-1975.