St. Agnes Training School for Girls v. Erie County

124 N.Y.S. 984, 68 Misc. 648
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 124 N.Y.S. 984 (St. Agnes Training School for Girls v. Erie County) 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
St. Agnes Training School for Girls v. Erie County, 124 N.Y.S. 984, 68 Misc. 648 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

POUND, J.

This action is brought to obtain a judicial determination of the question as to which defendant, the county of Erie or the city of Buffalo, is liable for the care and maintenance of certain juvenile female delinquents, under, or apparently under, the age of 16 years, residents of the city of Buffalo, who have been duly committed-by the City Court, the Municipal Court, or the Police Court of the City of Buffalo to the St. Agnes Training School for Girls, a charitable reformatory located in said city, organized by and with the approval of the State Board of Charities.

It is conceded that persons so committed are public charges; but the county maintains that they are a city charge, as poor persons, while the city maintains that such delinquents are a county charge. So the bill remains unpaid.

Penal Law (Consol. Laws, c. 40) § 485, prohibiting certain employments of children, reads as follows:

“A person who employs or causes to be employed, or who exhibits, uses, or has in custody, or trains for the purpose of the exhibition, use or employment of, any child actually or apparently under the age of sixteen years; or who having the care, custody or control of such child as parent, relative, guardian, employer or otherwise, sells, lets out, gives away, so trains, or in any way procures or consents to the employment, or to such training, or use, or exhibition of such child; or who neglects or refuses to restrain such child from such training, or from engaging or acting:
“1. As a rope or wire walker, gymnast, wrestler, contortionist, rider or acrobat ; or upon any bicycle or similar mechanical vehicle or contrivance; or,
“2. In begging or receiving or soliciting alms in any manner or under any pretense, or in any mendicant occupation; or in gathering or picking rags, or collecting cigar stumps, bones or refuse from markets; or in peddling; or,
“3. In singing; or dancing; or playing upon a musical instrument; or in a theatrical exhibition; or, in any wandering occupation; or,
“4. In any illegal, indecent or immoral exhibition or practice; or in the exhibition of any such child when insane, idiotic, or when presenting the appearance of any deformity or unnatural physical formation or development ; or,
“5. In any practice or exhibition or place dangerous or injurious to the life, limb, health or morals of the child,
“Is guilty of a misdemeanor.
“But this section does not apply to the employment of any child as a singer or musician in a church, school or acadamy; or in teaching or learning the science or practice of music; or as a musician in any concert, or in a theatrical exhibition, with the written consent of the mayor of the city, or the president of the hoard of trustees of the village, where such concert or exhibition takes place. Such consent shall not be given unless forty-eight hours’ previous notice of the application shall have been served in writing upon the society mentioned in section four hundred and ninety-one, of this chapter, if there be one within the county, and a hearing had thereon if requested, and shall be revocable at the will of the authority giving it. It shall specify the name of the child, its age, the names and residence of its parents [986]*986or guardians, the nature, time, duration and number oí performances permitted, together with the place and character of the exhibition. But no such consent shall be deemed to authorize any violation of the first, second, fourth or fifth subdivisions of this section.”

Penal Law, § 486, reads in part as follows:

“Prohibited Acts—Destitute Children. Any child actually or apparently under the age of sixteen years who is found:
“1. Begging or receiving or soliciting alms, in any manner or under any pretense; or gathering or picking rags, or collecting cigar stumps," bones or refuse from markets; or,
“2. Not having any home or other place of abode or proper guardianship; or who has been abandoned or improperly exposed or neglected, by its parents or other person or persons having it in charge, or being in a state of want or suffering; or
“3. Destitute of means of support, being an orphan, or living or having lived with or in custody of a parent or guardian who has been sentenced to imprisonment for crime, or who has been convicted of a crime against the person of such child, or who has been adjudged an habitual criminal; or,
“4. Frequenting or being in the company of reputed thieves or prostitutes, or in a reputed house of prostitution or assignation, or living in such a house either with or without its parent or guardian, or being in concert saloons, dance houses, theaters, museums or other places of entertainment, or places where wines, malt or spirituous liquors are sold, without being in charge of its parent or guardian, or playing any game of chance or skill in any place wherein or adjacent to which any beer, ale, wine or liquor is sold, or given away, or being in any such place; or,
“5. Coming within any of the descriptions of children mentioned in section four hundred and eighty-five,
“Must bé arrested and brought before a proper court or magistrate, who may commit the child to any incorporated charitable reformatory, or other institution, and when practicable, to such as is governed by persons of the same religious faith as the parents of the child, or may make any disposition of the child such as now is, or hereafter may be authorized in the cases of vagrants, truants, paupers or disorderly persons, but such commitment shall, so far as practicable, be made to such charitable or reformatory institutions.”

The juvenile female delinquents for whose support and maintenance this suit is brought have been committed pursuant to the foregoing sections of the Penal Law. They are, by section 486, Penal Law, above quoted, classified with “vagrants, truants, paupers or disorderly persons.” The purpose of the statute evidently is to put the juvenile delinquent in a class by itself, to avoid classifying such persons in the more or less opprobriously styled group into which adults in like case would fall. But we have wholly separate and distinct provisions of law in the case of vagrants, truants, paupers, and disorderly persons, respectively. 0

Adult vagrants are committed pursuant to section 893, Code of Criminal Procedure, which reads as follows:

“TEe magistrate must immediately cause the certificate which constitutes the record of conviction, together with the testimony taken before him as to the residence of such vagrant, to be filed in the office of the clerk of the county, and must, by a warrant signed by him, with his name of office, commit the vagrant, if not a notorious offender and a proper object for such relief, to the county poorhouse, if there be one, or to the almshouse or poorhouse of the city, village or town, for not exceeding six months at hard labor, or if the vagrant be an improper person to be so committed, he must be committed for a like term to the county jail. In those counties of the state where the distinction between county poor and town poor is maintained, the expense of the [987]

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Related

People Ex Rel. Van Tassel v. Board of Supervisors
67 N.Y. 330 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
People ex rel. Clark v. New York State Reformatory for Women
38 Misc. 241 (New York Supreme Court, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 N.Y.S. 984, 68 Misc. 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-agnes-training-school-for-girls-v-erie-county-nysupct-1910.