People v. Upson

29 N.Y.S. 615, 79 Hun 87, 9 N.Y. Crim. 295, 61 St. Rep. 158, 86 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 87, 61 N.Y. St. Rep. 158
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 29 N.Y.S. 615 (People v. Upson) 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. Upson, 29 N.Y.S. 615, 79 Hun 87, 9 N.Y. Crim. 295, 61 St. Rep. 158, 86 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 87, 61 N.Y. St. Rep. 158 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

DWIGHT, P. J.

The question in the case is of the jurisdiction of the police justice of Rochester, sitting as a court of special sessions, to try, and render judgment in, the case of a complaint under section 322 of the Penal Code. The offenses there defined are not among those enumerated in section 56 of the Code of Criminal Procedure as being within the jurisdiction of courts of special sessions; so that by virtue, merely, of an authority to hold courts of special sessions, with all the jurisdiction belonging to those courts in general, the police justice of Rochester was not empowered to hear and determine the charge against the defendant, upon which he was convicted in this case. If he had.the authority at all, ■ it must have been by virtue of some special provision of law, such as we might expect to find embodied in the charter of the city of Rochester; and so we do find, in several successive enactments of the legislature relating to the organization and government of that city, several provisions purporting to confer jurisdiction upon that office. Those provisions it becomes our duty to examine, and to determine their effect and bearing- upon the questions here involved.

The act of 1861 (chapter 143) was entitled “An act to amend and consolidate the several acts in relation to the charter of the «city of Rochester.” By section 245 of that act, it was provided as -follows:

“The police justice of said city shall have jurisdiction in suits brought for the violation of any of the city ordinances, or of the laws concerning the infernal police of the state.'1 He shall not have nor exercise any other civil jurisdiction, but shall have sole and exclusive jurisdiction in preference to any other justice, to hear all complaints an"d to conduct all examinations in •criminal cases except in case of his absence from the city, or inability.”

This provision, it will be seen, does not empower the police justice to hold courts of special sessions, and gives him no jurisdiction to try and determine any charges of misdemeanor, but only, it would seem, to entertain complaints and conduct examinations with a view to holding the parties charged for the action of the grand jury.

The act of 1880 (chapter 14) was entitled “An act to further amend chapter 143, Laws of 1861, entitled [as above], and to consolidate therewith the several acts in relation to the charter of said city.” By its first section, it was provided that “chapter 143 [617]*617of the Laws of 3861, entitled [as before], is hereby amended so ns to read as follows.” And then follows a complete resume and ■consolidation of all the acts then in force pertaining to the subject in hand, including a re-enactment of most of the provisions of the act of 1861, supra, generally without change of language or arrangement, but incorporating with it some provisions of law enacted in the interval, and some which were altogether new. And, by subdivision 2 of section 290, it was. provided that:

“All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with or repugnant to this act or to "the charter as hereby amended are hereby repealed or declared inapplicable to said city; but the repeal hereby of any statutory provision shall not affect any action,” etc., “commenced prior to the time when this act takes effect.”

It is very apparent that- the statute of 1880, thus described, was intended to be, and was, in all respects, substituted for and in place of the statute of 1861, and that by virtue of the enactment of the former the latter statute was wholly superseded and repealed by implication. Heckmann v. Pinkney, 81 N. Y. 211; In re New York Inst, for the Deaf and Dumb, 129 N. Y. 234, 24 N. E. 378.

By section 265 of the act of 1880, it-was provided that:

“The police justice of said city shall have jurisdiction in suits brought for the violation of any of the city ordinances, or of the laws concerning the internal police of the state, and is hereby empowered to hold courts of special ■sessions for the trial of all offenses triable in a court of special sessions.”

Since the passage of this act there has been no question of the power of the police justice to hold courts of special sessions, with the jurisdiction of those courts in respect to all those classes of offenses which are enumerated in section 56 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.

The act of 1887 (chapter 384) consists of a single section, which purports to amend only section 265 of the act of 1880, supra. This it attempts to do by providing that the courts of special sessions held by the police justice of Rochester shall have—

4‘In the first instance, exclusive jurisdiction to hear, try and determine all •charges of misdemeanors committed within the county of Monroe, as is now -or may be hereafter provided for in relation to courts of special sessions bisection 56 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and shall also have exclusive jurisdiction, in like manner, * * * to hear, try and determine all other charges of misdemeanors and other offenses and crimes punishable as such, as are now defined to be misdemeanors by sections 5 and 6 of the Penal Code or other statute now or hereafter passed.”

The definitions of sections 5 and 6 of the Penal Code include in the class of misdemeanors all crimes not felonies, and are broad enough to include the offense of which the defendant was convicted; and here, as will be seen, was the first enactment which assumed to give to the police justice of Rochester, sitting as a court of special sessions, jurisdiction of that offense. But the provision was clearly unconstitutional, because it assumed to give to the police justice of Rochester a territorial jurisdiction throughout the county of Monroe. The office in question finds its only warrant for being in that provision of the constitution of the state which provides for the establishment by the legislature of “inferior local courts [618]*618of civil and criminal jurisdiction.” Const, art. 6, § 19. The meaning of the term “local courts” is well established by the authorities. It means courts possessing a jurisdiction localized within the territorial limits of the city or village for which each is created, and by the electors of which its incumbent is chosen. Such is the plain doctrine of such cases as Brandon v. Avery, 22 N. Y. 469; Waters v. Langdon, 40 Barb. 408; Geraty v. Reid, 78 N. Y. 64; People v. Terry, 108 N. Y. 1, 14 N. E. 815; Curtin v. Barton, 139 N. Y. 505, 34 N. E. 1093. In the two cases last cited the constitutionality of the enactments assailed was upheld only because, by a just construction of their terms, it was apparent that the jurisdiction of the courts created thereby was intended to be limited, iff the one case, to the city (of Syracuse), and, in the other, to the village (of Canton), in which the courts were, respectively, constituted. The suggestion of the learned court of sessions that the words-“within the county of Monroe” were inadvertently employed in place of “within the city of Rochester,” as intended by the legislature, can hardly be accepted as an answer to the objection to the act in question.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.Y.S. 615, 79 Hun 87, 9 N.Y. Crim. 295, 61 St. Rep. 158, 86 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 87, 61 N.Y. St. Rep. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-upson-nysupct-1894.