People v. Levy

41 N.Y. Crim. 517, 123 Misc. 845
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedOctober 3, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 N.Y. Crim. 517 (People v. Levy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Levy, 41 N.Y. Crim. 517, 123 Misc. 845 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Hazard, J.:

The indictment in this case charges the defendants with the crime of “ misdemeanor, conspiracy under and in violation of subdivision 4 of section 580 of the Penal Law of the State of New York,” alleging a conspiracy on the part of the four defendants, acting in concert at the city of New York to defraud the Dairymen’s League Co-operative Association of the sum of $54,458.35, by means of certain false and fraudulent reports claimed to have been made with the intent to cheat and defraud by certain false and fraudulent reports or statements concerning the use to which milk sold by the said Dairymen’s League Co-operative Association had been put, viz., that it had been used for the manufacture of butter and cheese when in fact it had been sold in liquid form. It is alleged that the difference in price growing out of the alleged use in solid form amounted to the figures indicated, and that the false statements with reference to such use had been mailed in the city of New York to the Dairymen’s League Co-operative Association at the city of Utica in Oneida county. The demurrer is upon three grounds, the first of which is “ that the alleged crime set-forth in the indictment is not within the local jurisdiction of the court, it having been committed, if at all, in the county of New York and not in the county of Oneida.” We will consider this specification first.

It is fundamental that the crime of conspiracy as charged here must consist not alone of an agreement to do some criminal act, but also of an overt act performed by the conspirators, or some of them in pursuance of their illegal agreement, tending to carry out or perform their scheme or plan. It is also fundamental that the crime can be prosecuted only in that county in which either the conspiracy was made or some “ overt act ” done in pursuance thereof was performed. [519]*519The demurrants insist with great earnestness that on the- statements as contained in the indictment, the grand jury of the county of Oneida had no jurisdiction, and that whatever was done, if anything, was done in the county of Hew York. It is doubtless true that the alleged conspirators were not at the time of the alleged agreement within the county of Oneida; nor were any of the alleged fraudulent reports which were sent to the complainant by mail delivered by any of the defendants within the county of Oneida, at least not personally. They were, however, mailed to the complainant at Utica, which is in the county of Oneida, and we are thus brought squarely to what is the principal question in this case, viz., whether the mailing of such reports in the county of Hew York, addressed to the complainants at Utica, N. Y., constitutes an “ overt act ” within the county of Oneida. Very numerous cases have been cited by the defendants’ counsel in support of their contention, some of which will be considered in detail later, and very extended argument made on the proposition; but after mature deliberation and the examination of the very numerous cases, I am convinced that their contention .is untenable, and that the jurisdiction to find an indictment in this case does not lie wholly in Hew York county. I can explain my reason for this opinion in a few words: The depositing of the alleged false and fraudulent reports in the mail in the city of Hew York was in itself inchoate, incomplete and ineffectual and had no- effect and did the complainant no harm unless or until those reports were delivered to the complainants at Utica in Oneida county. The harm arose when these reports were delivered, and not until then. The act of the defendants did not take effect in Hew York county and produced no harm there, but it did take effect and did produce harm in Oneida county; and I thus reach the conclusion that the conspirators may be indicted for conspiring [520]*520and sending false reports in the county to which those reports are sent and where they are received and acted upon. Nor do I have to make this decision upon my own judgment. There is abundant authority for it, some of which is in the highest court of the United States. See Matter of Palliser, 136 U. S. 257, 266, where the court said: “ But it does not follow that he is not punishable at the place where the letter is received by the person to- whom it is addressed; and it is settled by an overwhelmning weight of authority that he may be tried and punished at that place, * * The court in that case cites as .an illustration the case of a shot fired in one jurisdiction, striking a person in another jurisdiction, and says (p. 256) : “ The offender may be tried where the shot takes effect, and the only doubt is whether he can be tried where the shot is fired.” The Court of Appeals of this state has decided what amounts to the same proposition in Adams v. People, 1 N. Y. 173, where a fictitious receipt was sent from the state of Ohio by an innocent messenger to- the city of New York, and an indictment in the latter city was upheld. It will be noted that in that case what the defendants’ counsel here calls the only “ overt act ” was performed outside the state of N"ew York; but the Court of Appeals held that the receipt of the letter at its destination constituted the overt act in this state. See also, the same case (People v. Adams) in 3 Denio, 190, a case which very clearly disposes of defendants’ contention that they must have been personally present in Oneida county to give the grand jury here jurisdiction. See also, Hyde v. United States, 225 U. S. 347, 349, where an indictment in the District of Columbia was upheld in a case where certain matter was mailed at Vancouver to Washington; and certain other documents were sent by messenger to the same destination.

NTor do I find anything in the cases cited by defendants’ attorneys which can be said to establish a contrary view. For instance, People v. Fowler, 152 N. Y. Supp. 672, relied upon [521]*521by the defense, was a case of a political contribution extorted from complainant in Cortland county, in the form of a check drawn upon a Cortland bank, and which was taken by one of the conspirators to Hew York city and there cashed. It was held that the grand jury in Hew York county had no> jurisdiction; but the reason is, obviously, that the defendant had no direct connection with the check’s being delivered in Hew York city. The check was taken there by the extortionist on his own motion; and he might just as well have taken it to any of the other sixty-odd counties in the state. The court very properly held that the act of collecting the money from the victim took place in Cortland county, and the crime was completed in Cortland county. People v. Summerfield, 48 Misc. Rep. 242, would be an authority for prosecuting this indictment in Hew York county, but the question of whether that ease might! have also been prosecuted in Paris, France, which would be the analogy of our case, was not there discussed. Heither do I think it is held, as claimed that the physical presence in the county where the plot is executed is necessary. People v. Arnstein, 157 App. Div. 766, was a case where a conspiracy was alleged in Hew York State and certain false representations in letters and telegrams were sent from Hew York to Springfield, Mass., pursuant to which money was feloniously obtained in the states of Pennsylvania and Connecticut. It was held that under paragraph 1 of section 1930 of the Penal Law a crime was committed in Hew York; but the case does not discuss or decide whether prosecution might not have been had in Springfield, Mass; In People v. Bihler, 154 App. Div.

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51 Misc. 2d 843 (New York Court of Special Session, 1966)
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Bluebook (online)
41 N.Y. Crim. 517, 123 Misc. 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-levy-nycountyct-1924.