People v. Ostrosky

34 N.Y. Crim. 396, 95 Misc. 104
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedApril 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 34 N.Y. Crim. 396 (People v. Ostrosky) 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. Ostrosky, 34 N.Y. Crim. 396, 95 Misc. 104 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Niemann, J.:

On January 5, 1916, about five o-clock p. m., William it. Meyer, the complaining witness, locked up his chickens in the coop, and closed and locked the door of the chicken yard. About nine o’clock that evening a noise was heard coming from the chicken yard. Two young ladies who were in the house opened a window and looked down in the chicken yard and saw a man going out of the chicken yard, over the fence. A man named Seel also looked out of the window and these persons saw the man and identified him as the defendant. The complainant ran out of the house into the chicken yard and saw several of his chickens in the yard dead, or dying, with their necks wrung. The doors of the chicken yard and coop were open. He saw a man in the chicken yard and this man ran toward the back fence of the yard. Meyer ran out of the yard into the street and was joined by Seel and they both ran after the man, who was the defendant. Two other persons came up the street and saw the defendant. One of them saw him as he was jumping the fence and the other saw him just after he had jumped over the fence and was starting to run from the other side. They all gave chase—others joining in the pursuit. The defendant was seen to stop and wash his hands at a little brook back of the fence. He was finally caught and held by the witness Seel and others until an officer came. He was taken [398]*398back to Meyer’s yard, and from there to the lockup and kept there over night. The following morning he was taken before Justice Jones who took the information and deposition of the complaining witness Meyer, and the deposition of the witness Seel, under oath. The justice read the information and depositions to the defendant, arraigned him, and informed him. of his rights as required by the statute. The defendant plead not guilty and was remanded for trial. His trial and conviction followed.

A reading of the record satisfies me that the evidence was sufficient to establish the commission of the offense by the defendant, but the defendant attacks the validity of the judgment upon several grounds which I will consider in the order in which they are stated.

First, the defendant claims that his arrest was illegal because he was arrested by an officer without a warrant for a misdemeanor not committed in his presence ; second, that it was illegal, also, because no warrant for his arrest was issued; third, that the justice acquired no jurisdiction, because at the time the defendant was taken before the justice no information had been made or filed; fourth, that the information which was taken by the justice when the defendant was arraigned before him is fatally defective because it fails to charge that the taking was “ with the intent to deprive or defraud the true owner of his property; ” and fifth, that the information does not charge, and the evidence does not establish, the commission of the crime of larceny.

(1) There is no right to arrest without a warrant for a past misdemeanor. People v. Adler, 3 Park, 249; People ex rel. Kingsley v. Pratt, 22 Hun, 300. But the complainant Meyer and the witness Seel had a'lawful right to arrest the defendant under the circumstances shown by the evidence. Section 183 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides that “ A private person may arrest another: • For a crime committed or [399]*399attempted in his presence.” The police officer had the right to receive the defendant from the hands of said persons who had arrested him.

Section 185 of the said Pode provides that “ A private person, who has arrested another for the commission of a crime, must, without unnecessary delay, take him before a magistrate, or deliver him to a peace officer.”

The latter part of said section was complied with by the delivery of the person of the defendant to the peace officer. The officer had a right to take the defendant into his custod)1' then and there without a warrant. In fact, it was the duty of said officer to take the defendant into his custody in order to prevent his escape. The defendant was caught as he was attempting to escape and the private persons who had arrested him had a right to relieve themselves of the further custody of the prisoner either by taking him before a magistrate or by delivering him to a peace officer. It was the duty of the peace officer to take him out of their custody into his custody. If he had refused to do so the defendant could have carried out his attempt to escape and public justice might have been frustrated. The officer would have been derelict in his duty if under the circumstances he had refused to take the defendant into his custody. He did not require the authority of a warrant, because the statute above quoted expressly provides for the transfer of a person who has been arrested without a warrant by a private person to a peace officer. The right of the officer to receive and take the prisoner without a warrant was a continuation and part of the original right to arrest him without a warrant.

(2) As the defendant was brought before the magistrate upon an arrest the circumstances of which made a warrant unnecessary and took the place of a warrant, it was unnecessary that the justice make out or issue a formal warrant against the defendant. The office of a warrant is to authorize and direct [400]*400the arrest of a person who has committed a crime. But the requirement of a warrant falls away entirely when the crime is committed in the presence of a person who makes the arrest; so also when the person arrested is received by a peace officer from the person who made such arrest. People ex rel. Gunn v. Webster, 75 Hun, 278; People v. Mulkins, 25 Misc. Rep. 599; People v. Burns, 19 id. 681.

(3) The existence of an information at the time the defendant was brought before the justice was not necessary to give the justice jurisdiction of the defendant. From the very nature of the matter, no preliminary information can be in existence in a case where a man is arrested in the act of committing a crime and is then brought before a magistrate. To require an information under such circumstances would be to nullify the statutory power to arrest criminals when caught in the act, because the absence of an information would prevent the justice from taking any cognizance of the matter, and the defendant would have to be allowed to go free. There is no more reason for requiring in advance an information in order to give the justice jurisdiction in such a case than the preliminary issuance of a warrant. People ex rel. Gunn v. Webster, supra. The object of an information is to inform the defendant of the specific charge against him. That was done in this case. An information was duly prepared by the justice and the defendant was thereupon arraigned and interposed a plea of not guilty. That is, the defendant was legally charged with the commission of a crime, which he put in issue by his plea of not guilty. Thereupon he had a trial.

The office of an information, i. e., to inform him of the specific charge against him, was fully performed. The information was necessary to support the charge upon which he was tried, but it was not necessary to support or warrant his arrest. He was as fully protected in his rights, so far as the trial of the issue as to his guilt or innocence was concerned, by the filing of [401]*401the information at the time he was first brought before the justice as if the information had been in existence before his arrest. People v. Angie, 74 App. Div. 539; People, ex rel. Farley v. Crane, 94 id. 397.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.Y. Crim. 396, 95 Misc. 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ostrosky-nycountyct-1916.