People v. Hall

23 Misc. 479, 49 N.Y.S. 158
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 Misc. 479 (People v. Hall) 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. Hall, 23 Misc. 479, 49 N.Y.S. 158 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Titus, J.

This is an application by the-defendant for a certificate that there is reasonable .doubt whether the judgment should stand, as provided' in section 527 of the Code of 'Criminar Procedure.

' When the application was made to me, without very much consideration I consented to hear it, which I should not have done had I given the question any serious thought. Ordinarily applications of this kind should be made to a justice of the' Supreme Court of the district where the -action is pending, and attorneys should not he encouraged to go outside the district to get orders of this character, when- they can be quite as well or better considered by a justice of the locality where the proceeding is pending.

Several questions are raised by the counsel for the defendant which he-claims entitle him to a certificate of reasonable doubt, hut I have considered hut one question-as being of sufficient importance to warrant me in acting in this' case.

The defendant was indicted, with others-, for the crime of extortion, which, under the provisions of. the Penal ,C'ode, is a felony. On the trial before the County Court of Monroe county, after the jury was selected, the judge made the following announcement:

“ The court will take this -occasion to- say that, on account of the character of the testimony which it is reasonable to expect from this case, the persons who ¡have no business before the court, or any connection with this case, will be excluded from the courtroom. I make no exceptions, to. this rule. The witnesses who) are called here for this case, and the parties and. their attorneys are the only ones wtid. will remain.

“Mr. Williams: Does that include the representatives of the press?

[481]*481“ The Court: I see no reason why the accounts of this case should be published.

“Mr. Williams: The defendant excepts to the order of the court, and the defendant asks to be tried as prescribed by the Constitution, the Bill of Bights and the Code, which says that the trial shall be conducted publicly, and the defendant asks that any citizen who desires to attend the trial shall do so, so long as there is room for him in the courtroom.

“ The Court: ■ If your client has. some special friend that he wishes to have sit by Mm during tHs trial, I have no objection to such a person remaining in the courtroom; but the disgusting and revolting character of 'the testimony wMch was brought out on the last trial is such that the public good requires the exclusion of all spectators during the course of the trial; and the court takes the responsibility of keeping out the crowd. If there is anyone you wish to have here as company for your client, that person may remain.

“Mr. Williams: I quite agree with your honor as to the crowd; but as to the press, it seems to me they should be admitted. I know of no provision wMch gives the court authority to make the order.

“ The Court: I will assume the responsibility for the order: the sheriff will see that it is executed. Exception taken by the defendant.

“ The Court: I hope there will be no misunderstanding about the intention of the court, or the right of the defendant to a public trial. If there is any person, any particular individual, you 'desire to have in the courtroom, for the protection of your client’s right, the court has no intention of excluding any such person, but the indiscriminate multitude.

Mr. Williams: I think I understand the order of the court. The defendant asks to be tried as prescribed by the Constitution and the various acts of the Legislature,- and publicly, and that no evidence be taken except the public be admitted and the representatives of the press be admitted so long as there is room.”

This presents the question whether the defendant had a public trial, and whether the court erred in excluding the general public pending the trial.

It appears from the affidavits presented to me that the order was' enforced, and that all persons, including citizens, attorneys and [482]*482others, were excluded, from the court, and were not permitted to enter the courtroom and listen to the trial of the indictment.

As I understand the provisions of section 527 ¡of the Criminal Code, it is not necessary for me, in determining whether the defendant is entitled to a certificate, to decide that error was committed by the court, but only the question, does this order, made by the county judge, raise a reasonable doubt as to bis .authority in making it, and, if it does, then it becomes my duty to grant this certificate.

So far as I have been able to learn, no court or judge in this country has ever intimated that a defendant accused of crime is not entitled to a public trial, and it is not 'pretended in this case ¡that such is the law, but that the order of the court, excluding the public during its sittings, was not a deprivation of the defendant’s right to a public trial. Indeed, such a position would be untenable, and could not for a moment be sustained by any court, because it is one .of the fundamental principles of this country, and •embodied in the Constitution of the Hnited States, that “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a spqedy and public trial, by an impartial jury.” (Constitution of the United States, 6th Amendment.) . '

It- seems to me that this is an important personal , right of one accused of crime; indeed, in most of the Constitutions of the states of this .country, this, of a similar provision, has been 'enacted, showing the importance which the people of the country attach to the "personal rights of parties accused of crime, and so much so asi to make it a part of the fundamental law.

By section 8 of the Code of Criminal Procedure it is provided: “In a criminal action the defendant is entitled to a speedy and "public trial,”-: and, by section 5 of the Code of Civil Procedure, "that “ the sittings of court shall be public, and any citizen may "freely attend the same; ” so that, if the defendant did not have a public trial, it was clearly a violation of his right to exclude the public. This being a criminal action, it. is not competent for a person charged with crime to waive any of his constitutional "rights during such a trial. In one case it was held that a defendant charged with a felony could not consent to be tried by a jury -of eleven men, the court holding that he could not Waive a right "to be tried by the mode provided by the Constitution and laws of the state. Cancemi v. People, 18 N. Y. 128.

[483]*483„ If this was a civil case, a different question might arise. The defendant then might waive his legal and constitutional rights, and submit his case to a tribunal not constituted according] to law, and, in .fact, to one unknown to the law.

There is no case that I can find where the courts of this state have passed upon this question, and I assume that if this was not a public trial, then the court was in error.

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Related

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77 Misc. 387 (New York Supreme Court, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
23 Misc. 479, 49 N.Y.S. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hall-nysupct-1898.