People v. Riedd

160 Misc. 2d 733
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 Misc. 2d 733 (People v. Riedd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Riedd, 160 Misc. 2d 733 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Dominic R. Massaro, J.

The captioned defendants have been charged in separate indictments with serious criminal offenses pursuant to various sections of the Penal Law. Respectively, each seeks to dismiss the indictment against him based upon improper venue. On this issue, the court consolidates their prayers.

The gravamen of these complaints is that said indictments incorrectly charge the commission of crimes in "the County of The Bronx” (emphasis added). Defendants present a novel question. They quite correctly maintain — following a spirited exchange with the People in moving and answering papers and the advancing of expert opinion — that there is no county designated by this name in New York State. Notwithstanding, venue lies and the motions are denied.

COUNTY VERSUS BOROUGH

The local governments of our State are comprised of counties, cities, towns and villages. Counties and towns, in contrast to cities and villages, have traditionally been regarded as subdivisions of the State. The power to erect a county and prescribe its boundary has been the exclusive province of the Legislature from the initiation of State government in 1777 (see, NY Const, art IX, § 1 [1963]; Municipal Home Rule Law § 1 et seq.).

Since 1914, New York has been divided into 62 counties. Bronx County is the sixty-second and last county to achieve this status (see, County Law § 900). Five of the 62 counties (that is, New York, Kings, Queens, Richmond and Bronx) are merged with the City of New York. Historical oddities aside— Marble Hill, located in the Borough of Manhattan but of the County of Bronx (see, People v Boyd, NYLJ, May 31, 1984 at 7, col 3 [Sup Ct, NY County]) — the five boroughs of the City are coterminous with the five counties.

Because this is so, the Legislature has delegated to the City of New York various responsibilities that generally are delegated to counties throughout the remainder of the State. It is [735]*735for this reason that these five contiguous counties are relatively insignificant as units of public administration — much to the chagrin of their respective borough presidents, who, it is advanced in some quarters, otherwise could more directly treat with a myriad of social problems affecting the citizenry as fully empowered county executives.1 The five counties within the City of New York are thus less than fully ennobled governmental entities, the prominent entity being the corporate City, which enjoys the peculiar public incident of "home rule”. Nevertheless, counties, even within the City, continue to have legal significance in a limited number of instances.

In the realm of the judiciary, for instance, the First Judicial District is coextensive with the County of New York; the Second Judicial District is comprised of the Counties of Kings and Richmond; the Eleventh Judicial District is coextensive with Queens County; and the Twelfth Judicial District, created in 1981, coincides with the County of Bronx (see, Judiciary Law § 140).

It follows that a defendant ordinarily must be prosecuted in the appropriate court of "the county” where the crime is alleged to have been committed (CPL 20.40). "In each county a [prosecuting] district attorney shall be chosen by the electors” (NY Const, art XIII, § 13 [a]). Respecting indictment for a crime by a Grand Jury, "prospective grand jurors shall be drawn * * * from the list * * * of persons qualified as jurors in the county” (Judiciary Law § 514).2 Respecting trial, a trial juror must be "a resident of the county” in which he serves (Judiciary Law § 510). The Justice presiding "shall be chosen by the electors of the judicial district”, that is, the county or counties in which he or she shall serve (NY Const, art VI, § 6 M).

THE COUNTIES OF NEW YORK

In 1683, the colonial authorities enacted that the province of New York be divided into 12 counties: to wit, Albany, [736]*736Cornwall, Dukes, Kings, New York, Orange, Queens, Richmond, Suffolk, Dutchess, Ulster and Westchester (Colonial Laws of NY, vol 1, at 121 [1891]).

Following the War of the Revolution, the new State Legislature passed "An Act for dividing this State into counties” (L 1788, ch 63), dividing the State into 16 counties. By 1801, the State had grown to 30 counties (L 1801, ch 123). The Revised Laws of 1813 expanded this number to 47 (L 1813, ch 39). By 1829, the number had grown to 56 (Rev Stat of NY, part I, ch II, tit I, § 1).

The geography that presently is known as "The Bronx”3 was originally a part of the County of Westchester.

On January 1, 1874, by an act of the Legislature, "[a]ll that territory now comprised within the limits of the towns of Morrisania, West Farms and Kings Bridge, in the county of Westchester * * * is hereby set off from the county of Westchester, and annexed to, merged in and made part of the city and county of New York” (L 1873, ch 613). That portion of the Bronx community annexed to the City in 1874 — lands west of the Bronx River — was designated as the 23rd and 24th Wards (see generally, 1 Wells et al., The Bronx and its People: A History 1609-1927, at 384 et seq. [1927]). In 1895, additional towns within the County of Westchester, the Town of Westchester and the lower parts of the Towns of Eastchester and Pelham — lands east of the Bronx River — were annexed to and made a part of the City and County of New York (L 1895, ch 934; see generally, Shonnard & Spooner, The History of Westchester County, New York 621 et seq. [1900]).

[737]*737In 1897, the Legislature passed an act "to unite into one municipality under the corporate name of The City of New York, the various communities lying in and about New York harbor” (L 1897, ch 378). Pursuant to this act, the territories embraced within the annexations to the City and County of New York in 1874 and 1895 became the "borough of The Bronx” on January 1, 1898. Thus, The Bronx was born!4

THE BRONX COMES OF AGE

Though The Bronx emerged as a borough in 1898, it still remained a part of New York County. Indeed, "[u]p to April 19, 1912, The Bronx was the only one of the five boroughs comprising the City of New York that was not a separate and distinct county. On that date an act was passed in the Legislature creating the County of Bronx, subject to a referendum to the voters of the Borough. The question 'Shall the territory within the Borough of The Bronx be erected into the County of Bronx?’ was accordingly submitted to the voters at the general election in November, 1912, and a majority of the votes cast were in favor of the creation of the county” (Cook, The Borough of The Bronx 1639-1913, at 32 [1913]).

This 1912 legislation, enacted "to erect the county of Bronx from the territory now comprised within the limits of the borough of [The] Bronx” (L 1912, ch 548) and the positive results of the referendum thereon brought about the creation of Bronx County as a separate and distinct county of the State on January 1, 1914 (see, County Law § 900 [2]).

A careful reading of the foregoing reveals the county name to be "Bronx” while the borough name is "The Bronx.”5 Thus is confronted the question of whether an indictment charging a crime in the "County of The Bronx [sic]”

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Related

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47 A.D.3d 215 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 Misc. 2d 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-riedd-nysupct-1993.