People v. . Rosenheimer

102 N.E. 530, 209 N.Y. 115, 30 N.Y. Crim. 52, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 806
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by115 cases

This text of 102 N.E. 530 (People v. . Rosenheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Rosenheimer, 102 N.E. 530, 209 N.Y. 115, 30 N.Y. Crim. 52, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 806 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinions

Cullen, Ch. J.

The defendant was indicted for violating subdivision 3 of section 290 of the Highway Law, being chapter 374, Laws of 1910, which enacts: “3. Punishment * * * for going away without stopping after accident and making himself known. * * * Any person operating a motor vehicle who, knowing that injury has been caused to a person or property, due t.o the culpability of the said operator, or to accident, leaves the place of said injury or accident, without stopping and giving his name, residence, including street and street number, and operator’s license number to the injured party, or to a police officer, or in case no police officer is in the vicinity of the place of said injury or accident, then reporting the same to the nearest police station, or judicial officer, shall be guilty of a felony punishable by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars or by0 imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or by both such fine and imprisonment.” The demurrer was sustained by the courts below (in the Appellate Division by a divided court) on the ground that the statute was unconstitutional as in violation of section 6, article 1 of the Constitution of the state, which provides that no person shall “be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself,” and this is the only question presented by this appeal.

Similar statutes have been passed in other states and it has been literally reproduced in the laws of the state of Missouri. The theory on which the learned trial judge proceeded was that the statute in effect required the person operating the motor to furnish evidence tending to prove him guilty of a crime, for if the injury to a person was the result of the culpable negligence of the operator, the latter was guilty either of an assault *56 or of a homicide, depending on whether the injuries inflicted were fatal or not. The indictment contained two counts, the first charging the injury to persons named therein to be due to the defendant’s culpability; the second, that it was due to accident. A demurrer must lie, if at all, to the whole of an ■indictment. The second count negatives any criminality on the part of the defendant, thus charging a case in which the defendant would not be liable for any criminal prosecution. However, in my opinion, the statute does not provide for two offenses, or provide for an offense being committed in two different ways. The object of the provision, “ Knowing that injury has been caused to a person or property due to the culpability of said operator or to an accident,” is to make the statute more clearly applicable to all cases however caused than would be apparent if these words were omitted. The question then is whether a statute which requires a person to report the happening of an occurrence which may, though not necessarily must, involve a crime on his part is a violation of the constitutional provision referred to.

The statute does not require the operator of the motor vehicle to state the circumstances of the occurrence tending to show his responsibility, but merely to stop and identify himself. Undoubtedly it does not require him to make known a fact which will be a link in the chain of evidence to convict him of crime, if in fact he has been guilty of one. Whether the compulsory furnishing of such a link is a constitutional violation may be questioned. The learned judge who wrote for the minority of the Appellate Division has presented in his opinion a very strong argument in support of the proposition that the statute is a valid exercise of the police power apart from considerations of the peculiar character of a motor car. Since the decision of this case in the Appellate Division the question has been presented to the Supreme Court of Missouri which, in a very forceful opinion, adopted the view entertained *57 by the judges who dissented in this case in preference to that of the majority. Ex parte Kneedler, 243 Mo. 632; 40 L. R. A. [N. S.] 622.) In the opinion of the learned court of Missouri reference is made to statutory enactments, at least partially similar in principle to that before us, the validity of which has either been upheld by the courts or has never been questioned. As to motor vehicles, laws requiring the registry of the names of their owners and chauffeurs and the display of the numbers of the vehicles in a conspicuous place thereon for the very purpose of identifying the car and the person operating it have been upheld. (People v. Schneider, 139 Mich. 673. See Frankford & P. P. Ry. Co. v. City of Philadelphia, 58 Penn. St. 119; City of St. Louis v. Williams, 235 Mo. 503.) Physicians are required to report deaths and their causes, druggists the sale of poisons, and failure to comply with these requirements is made a misdemeanor. (Penal Law, sec. 1743; Pub. Health Law, sec. 235.) The Labor Law (Section 87) requires a person in charge of any factory to report to the commissioner of labor all deaths, accidents or injuries and the details thereof. Compliance with any of these statutory regulations may, in the case of the commission of a crime by the person who is required to make the certificate or registry, prove an important factor in leading to his detection, but this is not sufficient to render the legislation invalid. Whether, as claimed by the respondent’s counsel, the statute before us goes so much further in the way of self-incrimination as to render the illustrations referred to inapplicable, it is not necessary to definitely determine.

There is one ground upon which, in my opinion, the validity of the statute can be safely placed. The legislature might prohibit altogether the use of motor vehicles upon the highways or streets of the state. It has been so held in State of Maine v. Mayo (106 Me. 62), and Commonwealth v. Kingsbury (199 Mass. 542). Doubtless the legislature could not prevent *58 citizens from using the highways in the ordinary manner, nor would the mere fact that the machine used for the movement of persons or things along the highway was novel justify its exclusion. But the right to use the highway by any person must be exercised in a mode consistent with the equal rights of others to use the highway. That the motor vehicle on account of its size and weight, of its great power and of the great speed which it is capable of attaining, creates, unless managed by careful and competent operators, a most serious danger, both to other travelers on the highway and to the occupants of the vehicles themselves, is too clearly a matter of common knowlledge to justify discussion. The fatalities caused by them are so numerous as to permit the legislature, if it deemed it wise, to wholly forbid their use. (Otis v. Parker, 187 U. S. 606; People v. Persce, 204 N. Y. 397, 27 N. Y. Crim. 41.) If the legislature may declare it a crime to use a motor vehicle on the highway under any circumstances, I do not see why it may not equally declare it a crime to so use such a vehicle as to injure any one in person or property. That, in effect, is a diminution, not an increase, of the criminality it had the power to attribute to the use of a motor vehicle. The provision now before us is but still a further diminution of the statutory inhibition the legislature would be authorized to enact.

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.E. 530, 209 N.Y. 115, 30 N.Y. Crim. 52, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rosenheimer-ny-1913.