People v. Pinto

49 Misc. 2d 997, 269 N.Y.S.2d 1, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1973
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedApril 20, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 49 Misc. 2d 997 (People v. Pinto) 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. Pinto, 49 Misc. 2d 997, 269 N.Y.S.2d 1, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1973 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1966).

Opinion

Liston F. Coon,

Acting County Judge. The defendant herein has been indicted by the Grand Jury charged with committing third degree forgery in two counts, one count of unlawfully causing political literature to be reproduced and one count of failing to file an expenditure statement pursuant to the Election Law.

He now demurs to each count of the indictment alleging that it fails to comply with statutory requirements as to form and that the indictment fails to state a crime as to each count. A discretionary bill of particulars was granted and served prior to the argument of this demurrer.

The alleged state of facts upon which this indictment is grounded, and as developed upon argument, is essentially as follows: In advance of the 1965 general election there existed in the City of Ithaca a highly spirited and zealously fought three-way contest for the office of Mayor. In addition to the candidates of the two traditional parties, a former Mayor was again seeking the position as an independent candidate. Of perhaps greater ferment and excitability was added the issue of a Avater fluoridation referendum.

[998]*998Into this flushed atmosphere was introduced a postcard poll by the Ithaca, Journal-News, the local daily newspaper. Residents selected at random were invited to indicate upon a return postcard a preference for the office of Mayor, as well as certain other municipal posts, and whether for or against fluoridation. Nothing more appeared on the' card but a letter accompanied the card indicating that the newspaper was attempting to predict the outcome of the election.

Upon the incoming of the poll cards it was discovered that more cards were being returned from certain areas than had been sent out, that certain cards were reproductions and that as to the latter, all were .similarly marked. An investigation followed and defendant was ultimately accused by the subject indictment.

A demurrer is a creature of statute controlled by section 321 et seq. of the Code of Criminal Procedure. It is a trial upon issues of law. (People v. Bissert, 71 App. Div. 118.)

Section 323 of the code specifies five grounds for relief, of which the above-stated contentions of the defendant are two.

The first contention is that the several counts do not sufficiently set forth the essentials necessary to spell out the crime charged. Although indictments were at one time tested upon certain rigid concepts of construction, the more modern view is that the court should take a liberal approach and look to the realities of what the indictment alleges. (People v. Williams, 243 N. Y. 162.) Nevertheless while every element of the crime charged need not be set forth, every essential element is a necessity. (People v. Berkowitz, 14 Misc 2d 384, 391.) In other words, the court must look to the gravamen of the crime charged in order that a defendant be not convicted of a crime and under circumstances not charged in the indictment., (People v. Gold, 239 App. Div. 368.)

Defendant’s second contention is that assuming the facts of the indictment be true, as the court must in deciding a demurrer, the acts of the defendant constitute no crime under the law. This assertion is one of prime importance for should the defendant prevail here, all other claimed errors are rendered academic.

The real issue here is whether or not defendant’s alleged acts come within the purview of the evils which the statutes condemn. Was the legislative purpose behind these penal sections to deter and/or to punish what defendant is accused of doing f

As stated by Chancellor Keht: the legislative intent with which statutes are enacted “is to be collected from the context, [999]*999from the occasion and necessity of the law, from the mischief felt, and the objects and the remedy in view”. (1 Kent’s Comm. [14th ed.], p. 462). “ Statutes, directed against known and stated evils, are not to be stretched to cover situations having no real or reasonable relation to those evils ”. (Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Durkin, 301 N. Y. 376, 381.)

THE FORGERY COUNTS.

The first two counts of the indictment accuse the defendant, pursuant to section 889 (subd. 2, 3) of the Penal Law, of forgery in the third degree, alleging in substance that he caused to be forged and counterfeited copies of the postcard used in the Ithaca Journal-Neios poll and he then caused the same to be used in this forged condition; and that the effect of these actions was to injure the “ good name, standing, position or general reputation ” of the Ithaca Journal-News and also that the “ sentiments, opinions, prospects, interests and rights of other persons, were misrepresented and otherwise injured, damaged and affected ’ ’.

This aspect of third degree forgery was added to the laws of this State by chapter 378 of the Laws of 1884 and historically came about, we are told, as a result of alleged improprieties connected with the presidential election of 1880, in which James A. Garfield narrowly defeated Civil War hero, General Winfield Scott Hancock, by a popular plurality of less than 10,000 votes. There was attributed to one of the candidates a letter, asserted to be a forgery, which imputed to him the utterance of sentiments which were deemed to be injurious to his prospects of election, as a result of which he lost the votes of the Pacific States.

In order to avoid a possible repetition of the situation in the 1884 presidential election the statute was enacted. It included the use of any paper purporting to be a copy of an original.

Claims of election irregularities are not new. Seldom does an important election take place that complaints do not arise that bogus campaign literature, anonymous tracts and pamphlets and scurrilous statements have worked to the detriment of one or more candidates.

In the case of the subject forgery statute, it seems clear that the aim of the lawmakers was to proscribe the use of written instruments purportedly authored by some individual and setting forth that person’s stated sentiments which in fact were not only either false or nonexistent but of maledictory content as well,

[1000]*1000There is an analogy here with the criminal libel statute. Section 1340 of the Penal Law makes criminal a writing or printing which exposes a person to “ hatred, contempt or obloquy

Do the facts of this case viewed in the light of these standards create criminal liability in this case? The answer, to this court, is in the negative.

We have no writing signed by anyone. It expresses sentiments or opinions of no one. In its original printed state, it is merely a postcard upon which appear the names of various candidates and the referendum proposition. The fact that the cards were thereafter marked and returned with an expression of choice cannot be construed to be other than an expression of the sentiments of the unidentified marker. Had the marked cards carried the purported name or signature of some responsible person the matter could be viewed in a different light.

Such was the situation in People v. Thompson (170 Misc. 288), the only reported case relating the provisions of third degree forgery to an election case.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Misc. 2d 997, 269 N.Y.S.2d 1, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-pinto-nycountyct-1966.