People v. Lent

2 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 548
CourtNew York Court of General Session of the Peace
DecidedFebruary 15, 1819
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 548 (People v. Lent) 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. Lent, 2 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 548 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1819).

Opinion

By the Court.

The defendant is indicted for an assault and battery on James Dusenbury, a deputy sheriff, in the execution of his oflice. To this indictment the defendant has pleaded, that the offence, if any, was committe(* on Governors Island, and that this court has not jurisdiction of the offeuces committed on that Island, the same having been ceded by the state to the United States. To this plea the district attorney has demurred specially, and asssigned for cause, that the plea does not show any other court competent to try the case. The defendant has joined in demurrer, and the validity of the plea is now to be decided.

For our present purpose, it must be taken as concethat the offeftce charged in the indictment was committed in a part of the state of New York, which is with-in the bounds of the city and county of New York, and that this court would have cognizance of the case, if it [549]*549has not been deprived of its jurisdiction as to all crimes committed on Governor’s Island, by the constitution and laws of the United States, and by an act of the legislature of this state, passed 15th of February, 1800, (1. R. L. 189.) by which it is enacted, that “ all that island called Governor’s Island, on which Fort Jay is situated, bounded on all sides by the waters of the East River and Hudson River, shall hereafter be subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.” There is a proviso, reserving the right to serve process issuing under the authority of the state; but as a right to serve process, and criminal jurisdiction as to offences, are totally distinct, and the former does not embrace the latter, the proviso may, in this case, be laid entirely out of consideration. But it may be observed, that if this offence should have been committed on the officer, when he was attempting to serve process, the proviso would be absolutely nugatory ; so long as congress have not legislated on the subject, tins court cannot punish the offender..

By the constitution of the United States, (art. 1. s. 8.) congress have power to exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever, over such district as might become the seat of government of the United States, “ and to exercise like authority over places purchased by the consent of the legislature of the state in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dock yards, and other needful buildings, and to make all laws which shall be needful and necessary for carrying into execution the foregoing powers.”

The plea to exclude the jurisdiction of this court will not be good, unless it shows that Governor’s Island was a place purchased by the government of the United States, with the consent of the legislature of this state, for some-or one of the purposes mentioned in the before-mentioned article of the constitution of the United States; or, at least, it must appear to the court that Governor’s Island is such a place. The plea does not show it; on the contrary, it avers that Governor’s Island was under the jurisdiction of the United States. Now, this is not the fact, unless it can be shown that the United States has accepted the jurisdiction, which has not been done, and, I believe, cannot be done. The law of our legislature, above quoted, shows that neither terri[550]*550tory nor jurisdiction was absolutely ceded. The Island was merely made subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, if the United States pleased to exercise jurisdiction over it. No act of congress has been referred to by t*ie counsel f°r the defendant, nor can I find that any exists by which the United States can be considered as having exercised their exclusive right of legislation as to the place, in question ; or, indeed, any legislation whatever in respect to crimes committed on Governor’s Island, or in any other place ceded to the United States under the 8th article of the constitution, except as to the District of Columbia. The acts of congress organizing the Courts of the United States, make no provision on this subject, and do not give any United States Court cognizance of the crimes committed within the limits of the ceded places.

A law of congress, passed 20th March, 1794, (2 L. U. S. 381. last ed.) provides that certain harbours therein mentioned, of which New York is one, shall be fortified under the direction of the president of the United States. And the same act authorizes the president to receive from any state, in behalf of the United States, a session of the lands on which any of the fortifications, enumerated in the act, might be erected, or where such cessions should not be made, to purchase such lands on behalf of the United States. Provided, that no purchase should be made where such lands were the property of a state.

Under this act, (1 U. S. Laws, 688. new ed.) Ellis and Oyster Islands, situate in the bay of New York, having been private property, were bought by the government of the United States, and they, by the name of Bedlow’s and Oyster Islands, together with Governor’s Island, by the before mentioned act of our legislature of 1800, were declared thereafter subject to the jurisdiction of the United States; but Governor’s Island having been the property of the state, there was no other legislative or executive act, that I have been able to discover, respecting it, either of the state or general government, than those which have above noticed. The United States government seems to have considered the act of our legislature sufficient for its purpose, and to have thought it unnecessary to take any other step.

[551]*551Supposing, then, that the declaration by our state legislaturo be equivalent on their part to a transfer to the United States by purchase, yet there is in wanting some act on the part of the United States legislature or government to complete the purchase, or to show an acceptanee of the grant, if it may be so called, made by the state.

If the state legislature were to declare that the county of Richmond should be subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, could such a law supersede the state authorities, unless it appeared by some act of the general government, that they wanted and accepted the county of Richmond as a purchase, (I mean a purchase hi the technical sense of the word,) for the purpose for which, by the constitution of the United States, the general government has a right to make purchases or acquire territory, within the limits of the respective states 1

There is nothing to show that the United States or its government ever applied to have Governor’s Island made subject to its jurisdiction, or that they were willing to accept, or ever did accept it, as a place over which they would exercise their power of exclusive legislation.

Congress has shown that, in its opinion, an acceptance on the part of the United States was necessary, to give it power in a territory ceded by the states, under a provision in the same article of the constitution of the United States. After the District of Columbia was ceded by the States of Virginia and Maryland, congress passed an act declaring their acceptance of the session. ( 1 L. U. S. 132.)

By admitting that Governor’s Island is a place, as to which the United States has accquired the power to legislate exclusively, yet to exclude the state authority, I think it should have been shown by the plea, or at least it should otherwise appear, that they have exercised this power given to them by the constitution. And this, it must be conceded, they have not done.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lent-nygensess-1819.