People v. Scannell

40 Misc. 297, 17 N.Y. Crim. 279, 82 N.Y.S. 362
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 Misc. 297 (People v. Scannell) 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. Scannell, 40 Misc. 297, 17 N.Y. Crim. 279, 82 N.Y.S. 362 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Scott, J.

The defendants Scannell and Marks are jointly indicted for a criminal conspiracy, ■ and the defendant Scannell is separately indicted for criminal neglect of duty. Both indictments are based upon alleged violations by Scannell, while fire commissioner, of section 419 of the first Greater New York charter (Laws of 1897, chap. 378), which prescribed the method to be adopted by heads of departments in letting contracts for public supplies. That section required that all contracts involving an expenditure of over $1,000 should be founded on sealed bids or proposals made in compliance with public notices, duly advertised. It was then made the duty of the head of a department, unless he should deem it to the interest of the city to reject all bids, to “ award the contract to the lowest bidder, unless the board of public improvements, by a vote of a majority of its members, of whom the mayor and comptroller shall be two, shall determine that a bid other than the lowest shall be accepted.” The offense charged is that divers contracts were let to another bidder than the lowest, without the requisite authority from'the board of public improvements. The section quoted contained other regulations respecting the letting of public contracts, providing among other things that all contracts should be made under regulations to be adopted by the municipal council. In 1901 the Legislature passed an act (chap. 466) amending the charter of 189'7, and in effect creating a complete new charter. By this act section 419 of the former charter was re-enacted in identical words, except that the “ board of aldermen ” was substituted for [299]*299the municipal council ” wherever the latter' words appeared, and “ board of estimate and apportionment ” was substituted for the “ board of public improvements ” in the clause providing for consent to the letting of a contract to other than the lowest bidder. The defendants urge that this amendment of the section has repealed the provision which the defendant Scannell is charged with violating, citing the familiar rule that a statute re-enacting a former statute and providing that certain sections thereof shall be amended so as to read as follows ” repeals, by implication, everything contained in the sections of the original act not re-enacted. The contention is that so much of the original section 419 as. forbade the letting of a contract to other than the lowest bidder, without the consent of the “ board of public improvements ” has thus been repealed. Upon this contention follows the second that this clause of the section, which is the one which the, defendants Scannell and Marks are charged with having conspired to violate, and Scannell is charged with having actually violated, having been repealed there is now no support in law for these indictments. This contention rests upon the well-established rule of the criminal law that whenever a statute creating a criminal offense is expressly repealed, or that portion of it which is essential to sustain an indictment drawn under its provisions is stricken out by a law subsequently enacted, • the former, unless a contrary intent upon the part of the lawmakers appears, will be held inoperative even as to offenses committed before the passage of the later act. That the particular provision which the defendant Scannell is charged with having violated has been repealed cannot, I think, be doubted. It would not now charge a violation of law to say, of a head of a department, that he had let a contract to other than the lowest bidder without the previous consent of the board of public improvements, because that body no longer exists and its consent is no longer required. It is true that a similar consent is, in like cases, required of the board of estimate and apportionment, but Scannell is not charged with having let a contract without the consent of that board. Unless therefore the Legislature has in some way indicated its intention that the repeal of this provision shall not have the effect, which it would have had at common law, of ending all prosecutions for violation of the repealed provision, these indictments must fall. The amended charter of 1901 does [300]*300not contain any saving clause, applicable to section 419 of the former charter, which in terms preserves and keeps alive prosecutions for violations committed prior to the passage ■ of the amendatory act. There is contained in the second section of the act such a saving clause, which is made applicable only to the sections expressly repealed and which are enumerated in a schedule attached to the act and denominated The First Schedule. Section 419 is not included in this schedule. The Statutory Construction Act (L. 1892, ch. 677), however, contains in its thirty-first section a general saving clause applicable to all actions or proceedings, civil or criminal, commenced under or by virtue of a repealed statute, and pending immediately • prior to such repeal. It has been distinctly held that this section applies to all future legislation enacted after its adoption. People ex rel. City of Buffalo v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 156 N. Y. 570. Its terms are sufficiently broad to save the present prosecution unless there is to be found in the amended charter of 1901 some expression or omission which serves to indicate a legislative intent, that it shall not apply to section 419' of the former charter. It is not contended that there is any expression indicating such intent, but it is urged that inasmuch as the Legislature ‘incorporated into the charter a special saving clause which it specifically made applicable to certain sections and not to others, it must be deemed to have intended that saving clause to be the only one applicable to that particular act, and hence that it intended that no saving clause at all should apply to the sections of the former charter which were amended, but were not included in the first schedule. The broad and general language of section 31 of the Statutory Construction Act, which, as it has been held, was intended to apply to all future legislation,- indicates an intention on the part of the Legislature to reverse the common-law rule as to the effect of a repealing statute upon prosecutions commenced before the repeal under the provisions of the repealed statute. Doubtless it is within the power of the Legislature to-again restore the former rule either as to all repealing statutes,, or as to any particular statute. If will not, however, be deemed to have done so by mere implication, unless the intent is made-very clearly to appear. I find no evidence of such an intention in the charter of 1901. There were many sections in that charter, and section 419 was one of them, which were re-enacted in [301]*301the precise form, or substantially in the same form, as the corresponding sections of the charter of 1897, except for the changes made necessary by the abolition of certain boards and officers, and the devolution of their duties upon others. As to these sections it was provided (§ 2).that, so far as they are substantially the same as those of laws existing on December 31, 1901 (which includes section 419 of the earlier charter), they shall be construed as a continuation of said laws, modified of amended according to the language employed in the new act, ¡and not as new enactments. This is a clear expression of the legislative will that sections, like 419 of the earlier charter, although to some extent modified by the new charter, should not be deemed to be repealed thereby, but on the contrary to have remained continuously in force.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Misc. 297, 17 N.Y. Crim. 279, 82 N.Y.S. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-scannell-nysupct-1903.