Schneider v. Aulisi

121 N.E.2d 375, 307 N.Y. 376, 1954 N.Y. LEXIS 967
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 121 N.E.2d 375 (Schneider v. Aulisi) 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
Schneider v. Aulisi, 121 N.E.2d 375, 307 N.Y. 376, 1954 N.Y. LEXIS 967 (N.Y. 1954).

Opinions

Fuld, J.

This appeal, here by our leave, poses questions concerning the jurisdiction of a justice of the Supreme Court to entertain a motion for inspection of grand jury minutes and for dismissal of the indictment, on the basis of such minutes, after transfer of the indictment for trial from the Supreme Court to a County Court.

John A. Nieoll and Irvan A. Fredericks were indicted by the grand jury of Herkimer County, drawn for a term of the Supreme Court, on charges of manslaughter and assault. By order of the Supreme Court, the indictment was transferred to the County Court of Herkimer County. The defendants pleaded 1 ‘ not guilty ’ ’ in that court, and a date was fixed for trial.

While the action was pending in the Herkimer County Court, the defendants, charging that the indictment rested on illegal [380]*380and insufficient evidence, moved, before Justice Aulisi in the Supreme Court in Montgomery County, for an inspection of the grand jury minutes, a dismissal of the indictment following such inspection and a stay of the trial in the County Court pending determination of the motion. Herkimer County is situated within the Fifth Judicial District; Montgomery County, adjoining Herkimer, is within the Fourth Judicial District. The district attorney of Herkimer County, appearing in opposition, challenged the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court justice to entertain the motion. The latter overruled the objection and, after hearing argument, directed that a copy of the grand jury minutes be furnished for his examination and stayed the trial pending decision of the motion.

The district attorney thereupon instituted this proceeding in the Appellate Division of the Fourth Department, pursuant to article 78 of the Civil Practice Act, for an order in the nature of prohibition directed to Justice Aulisi as well as to the defendants and their attorney. The application was unanimously denied by the Appellate Division.

That transfer to the County Court of an indictment found in the Supreme Court does not deprive that tribunal of jurisdiction to permit an inspection of the grand jury minutes is established by our decision in People ex rel. Hirschberg v. Supreme Ct. (269 N. Y. 392). As we held in that case, the order removing the indictment to the County Court ‘‘ did not remove to the County Court the record and minutes of the proceedings of the grand jury previously completed in the Supreme Court ”, and the Supreme Court “ remains in possession and control of the records of proceedings held there ” (269 N. Y., at pp. 395, 396). In point of fact, the County Court was entirely without power in such cases to entertain motions for inspection, until the legislature, some time after the Hirschberg decision, granted it concurrent jurisdiction, with the Supreme Court, to hear them. (Code Crim. Pro., § 39, subd. 2-a, as added by L. 1939, ch. 173.)

The issue which we are now called upon to decide, therefore, is whether a motion for inspection addressed to the Supreme Court may be made only at a term of that court in the same county in which the indictment was found. Pointing to language in the opinion in the Hirschberg case (supra, 269 N. Y. 392, 396), that the motion for inspection is properly to be made in the court [381]*381in which the proceedings were had and the testimony was taken ”, the district attorney urges that only the Supreme Court in the county or, at least, in the same judicial district in which the indictment was returned, meets that qualification.

Such a contention ignores the fact that the Supreme Court is a single great tribunal of general state-wide jurisdiction, rather than an aggregation of separate courts sitting in the several counties or judicial districts of the state. There is,” we have stated, but one Supreme Court in the state and the jurisdiction of its justices is coextensive with the state." (People ex rel. New York Central & H. R. R. R. Co. v. Priest, 169 N. Y. 432, 435; see, also, Mussen v. Ausable Granite Works, 63 Hun 367; Matter of Avon Dairies v. Du Mond, 280 App. Div. 116, 119.) That unity has been preserved throughout the court’s history, as local tribunals of civil and of criminal jurisdiction have been merged with it. (See People ex rel. Newton v. Special Term, Part 1, 193 App. Div. 463, 469; see, also, 2 Lincoln, Constitutional History of New York, p. 151; 3 id., p. 352.) Justices of the Supreme Court are, indeed, specifically authorized, with certain exceptions not here pertinent, to perform the duties of their office and to hold court in any county. (N. Y. Const., art. VI, § 1; see People v. Herrmann, 149 N. Y. 190.)

The legislature has in certain situations confined and limited the exercise of jurisdiction by the Supreme Court in criminal matters to particular terms, counties or judicial districts. Limitations of this kind thus regulate the term at which a motion involving a matter pending before an extraordinary term may be made (Judiciary Law, § 149, as amd. by L. 1953, ch. 890); the county in which an indictment is to be tried (Code Crim. Pro., § 355); and the term at which a motion may be made by a defendant for removal of the action from.the County Court to the Supreme Court or from the Supreme Court or the County Court to a term of the Supreme Court in another county (Code Crim. Pro., §§ 344, 346). There is, however, no similar restriction, either in constitution or statute, governing motions for inspection of grand jury minutes. The jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to hear and determine such an application, though in a county and judicial district other than that in which the indictment was found, may not, therefore, be doubted.

[382]*382Recognition of the court’s jurisdiction, however, is not to be taken as sanctioning the practice of moving for an inspection before a justice of the Supreme Court in a county other than that in which the indictment is pending. Such a practice, if generally adopted —as another court declared in a somewhat comparable situation (People ex rel. Newton v. Special Term, Part 1, supra, 193 App. Div. 463, 472) — “would tend to bring the administration of justice into disrepute and would seriously interfere with the orderly administration of judicial work”.1 But, as indicated, there is no want or lack of jurisdiction, and whether such jurisdiction shall be exercised in any particular case is a matter committed to the sound discretion of the court to which the motion is addressed.

We do not consider whether remedy in the nature of prohibition would be available upon a showing of abuse of discretion in entertaining such a motion. We simply observe that the Appellate Division, by analogy to the practice in civil cases (Rules Civ. Prac., rule 63, subd. 1), concluded that there was no such abuse on the part of Justice Aulisi, since the motion was made, though in a different judicial district, in a county adjoining that in which the indictment is pending. We find no basis for interfering with that position.

Nor is there basis for the contention — advanced by the district attorney as a further jurisdictional objection — that the affidavits, submitted in support of the motion for inspection, do not set forth sufficient facts to entitle the defendants to that relief.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.E.2d 375, 307 N.Y. 376, 1954 N.Y. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-aulisi-ny-1954.