The People v. . Clews

77 N.Y. 39, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 735
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 77 N.Y. 39 (The People v. . Clews) 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
The People v. . Clews, 77 N.Y. 39, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 735 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Folger, J.

The statutes of the State make some provisions for the cases and the modes in which a prisoner may be let to bail. It is said, that the authority given by these provisions, extends to all cases in which bail may be taken at common law : (Champlain v. The People, infra)

*40 The defendant in error had been indicted, at the Chautauqua Oyer and Terminer, for an offence which, generally speaking, was bailable; and the indictment had been sent to the sessions of that county for trial. He was arrested hi New York city on a warrant duly issued. In such case, he was entitled to be released from custody, on giving satisfactory bail to an officer empowered to take it. He was taken before a justice of the. Supreme Court, of the first judicial, district, upon a writ of habeas corpus, and was let to bail. That judicial officer, had general power to let to bail, a person charged with crime and brought before him ; (2 R. S., 710, § 29) ; at least before indictment. He had power after indictment also, to let to bail, if the court having cognizance of the offence was not at the time sitting: (Id., 728, § 56.) The return shows that the Chautauqua Sessions, which was the court having cognizance of the offence, was not sitting, at the'time when the defendant in error was taken before the justice of the,Supreme Court, and that officer let him to bail. It appears, then, that the defendant in error was properly let to bail, unless there is some statute which conflicts with and overrides the provisions which we have cited.

It is to be noticed that the provision last cited is general in terms, and applicable to all officers of the judicial rank spoken of, and to all indicted persons in11 that category, in any part of the State, and wherever and however arrested. It is claimed, though, that no provision is made for the case of a person arrested in one county,. after indictment in another. True, such a case is not specified, but it is within the general words of the section. There are phrases too, in the section, which show that it was in the conception of the law-maker. It is to be borne in mind, that when the Eevised Statutes were adopted, the justices of the Supreme Court were few, and to be found in but few counties of the State. When th.e statute said that persons indicted, if the court having jurisdiction to try them was not sitting, might be let to bail by any justice of the Supreme Court, it seems that it was not meant to restrict the power, to a justice of that *41 court found in the county in which the indictment was presented, for it would have been impossible to have found one in more than three counties. The same section does too, convey more directly the purpose of the Legislature, in a single case, to impose a restriction ; for when the indictment is to be tried in the Court of Sessions of a county, and a judge of a county court is to' let to bail, it can be .such a judge, only of the county where the indictment was found. So that we may well conceive, that if the Legislature had meant to thus limit the power of a justice of the Supreme Court, it would have done so in terms ; and that the absence of restrictive words, was not because the case of a person arrested in a county other than that in which he was indicted escaped the attention of the law-maker. The distinction, between the general power given to a justice of the Supreme Court, and that to a judge of county courts, arose from the difference in the territorial jurisdiction of the two officers, that of one being as wide as the State, that of the other being narrowed to the bounds of his county. Section 57 too, indicates that the Legislature had the case in view ; for that provides, that the officer letting to bail, shall file the recognizance in the office of the clerk of the county in which the indictment was found; (id., § 57) ; the latter clause giving implication, that the Legislature had in mind, that bail might sometimes be taken by an officer of another county.

The claim above noticed, is based upon the fact that the Legislature did, in 1830, provide for the mode of issuing of warrants of arrest after indictment fonnd, and for proceedings upon them when served in a county other than that in which the indictment was presented. (Laws of 1830, chap. 320, p. 402, § 62.) There is nothing in that enactment, indicating a purpose to repeal or alter the fifty-sixth section above cited ; nor is there such repugnance between them, as will work a repeal by implication. On the other hand, there are indications in the title of the act, (viz. the phrase in addition thereto ”) and in some of the sections, which *42 show a purpose to retain that fifty-sixth section of the Revised Statutes in full force, and merely to add to it, rather than to alter or amend it. (Laws of 1830, p. 403, §§ 66, 67.)

The argument is, that the sixty-second section above cited; provides that on a warrant issued after indictment found, and served in another county, the same proceedings shall be had as on an indorsed warrant issued before the indictment, as prescribed in the second title of the chapter ; (2 R. S., 707, §§ 7, 8, 9, 10, 11) ; that proceedings on an indorsed warrant are, to take the prisoner before a justice of the peace of the county in which the arrest is made ; that that magistrate may take bail, if the offence charged is" not capital or punishable in State prison ; if it is of either of those grades, or the magistrate refuse to take bail, the arresting officer must take the prisoner to the county of the indictment; that the application of these provisions overrides the provisions of section 56 of the Revised Statutes. We are not of that mind. We think that the sixty-second section was meant to designate the officers to whom a warrant could issue, and to assimilate the proceedings by them, on a warrant after indictment, to those on a warrant before indictment, but not to repeal or limit general provisions for letting to bail. The sections wdiich are above cited, and which mark out what those proceedings are to be, were not meant to interfere with the power of a justice of the Supreme Court to let to bail. It will not be claimed, that the officer having the prisoner in charge, can resist the writ of habeas corpus, by reason of the sixty-second section above cited, and of the sections upon which it is based. The habeas corpus act, (2 R. S., 563, § 21) gives to every person detained or restrained of his liberty, (with some exceptions), a right to that writ. Application for it may be made to any justice of the Supreme Court; (§ 23) ; especially in the county in which the person is detained; (§ 24) ; and the writ shall be granted without delay; (§ 26); and obeyed (§§ 33, 34). It would bo no excuse for a "refusal-to obey, that the officer to whom it was directed, held his *43 prisoner by a warrant of arrest upon an indictment found against him, and that by force of statute he was bound in duty to take him to the county in which the indictment had been found. It is true, that both behests of the statutes cannot be obeyed at once ; but the statutes are not so repugnant, in the legal sense of that term, as that the one first passed must give way to the one last passed.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.Y. 39, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-clews-ny-1879.