People v. Phillips

1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 386
CourtNew York Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 386 (People v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Phillips, 1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 386 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1847).

Opinion

The Circuit Judge:

I have been so frequently called upon to discharge • from the penitentiary, prisoners committed on [389]*389summary convictions for vagrancy, on the ground of some alleged defect or irregularity in the proceedings of the sitting .magistrate, that I have deemed it advisable, on this occasion, to give the subject a full examination, in the hope that the matter, being thoroughly understood, the corrective for the evil may once for all be applied.

Our Eevised Statute (vol. i. p. 633), declares that if a magistrate be satisfied, by the confession of the offender, or by competent testimony, that the'accused is a vagrant within the description of the statute, he shall make up and sign a record of conviction thereof, which shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the county, and shall by warrant under his hand, commit such vagrant, etc.

Under this law and one subsequently passed (Laws of 1833), somewhat enlarging the description of the offense and varying the punishment, the magistrates mainly proceed in the class of cases now under consideration.

And the mode of proceeding is not by a formal trial by a jury, but is by a summary conviction, which is described to be the examination and punishment of offenses in a summary manner by justices of the peace out of their sessions and without the intervention of a jury or an open trial. (Paley on Convictions, 1.)

The power thus exercised is not in conformity to, but is in derogation of, the common law, is derived solely from the statutes, and all the proceedings under the authority so created must be strictly conformable to the special law, in each instance, from which all their force is derived. (Cole's case, Sir W. Jones, 139, 170; 1 Showers, 14.)

The earliest statute upon which a summary conviction is on record, is that of 33 Henry VIII., eh. 6. This was in 1544. From that time tp the present, statutes have been enacted, extending the jurisdiction to other cases, and regulating its exercise. So great has been this extension, that in England and Wales, the number of summary convictions in one year (1842) was 71,725.

Immediately after the creation of this new judicatory, its [390]*390dangers became manifest. The earliest case reported (43 Eliz.) is that of a sheriff’s officer going to execute a writ against a justice of the peace for a debt, and taking with him a handgun from the apprehension of a rescue. The justice, instead of obeying the writ, apprehended, convicted, and imprisoned the officer till he paid a fine of £10, under the color of the act of parliament against carrying daggs or short guns.

The necessity of putting under some restraint a power so summary, so arbitrary, so materially affecting personal liberty, and so liable to be perverted to purposes of oppression and wrong, required from the courts great watchfulness and care. Hence, frequent decisions were made by the higher courts in regard to it, and a system of regulations and restrictions grew up and became incorporated into the common law. Those regulations and restrictions were a part of the common law at the adoption of our Constitution, which made the common law the law of our land, and when, by our statutes, we adopted this peculiar mode of trial, we necessarily subjected it to the principles already established in regard to it, and we must, therefore, in examining the question before us, go back to the law as it existed at the adoption of our Constitution, and be governed by the rules then established, unless, in the language of our Constitution, they have since been repealed or altered. And it is the more important that those rules should be well understood and rigidly enforced, because our Constitution, in securing to us the trial by jury, secures it only in those cases in which it had been heretofore used. (Art. 7, §2.)

The British statutes, alive to the dangers of this extraordinary jurisdiction, have, and principally since our Revolution, given an appeal to the accused, by which he can review the judgment which may deprive him of his property, his liberty, and his character. But our statute provides no such remedy; our Constitution deprives him of the protection of a trial by jury, and he has no other protection left to him against the arbitrary exercise or wanton abuse of this extraordinary power, than what he may find in “such parts of the [391]*391common law and of the acts of the legislature of the colony of Hew York, as together did form the law of said colony on the 19th April, 1795.” (Const, art. 7 § 13.)

It is by that common law that I shall examine the case now before me; mindful, throughout, that no member of this State can be deprived of any of the rights or privileges secured to any citizen thereof, unless by the law of the land or the judgment

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Bluebook (online)
1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-phillips-nycirct-1847.