Summary
In Williams v. People (24 N.Y. 405) an act (Laws of 1860, chap. 508) entitled "An act in relation to police and courts in the city of New York," contained a provision (§ 33) that whenever any larceny was committed in the city and county of New York by theft from the person of another, the offender might be punished as for grand larceny, although the value of the property taken was less than twenty-five dollars.
Summary of this case from Hermitage Co. v. GoldfogleOpinion
June Term, 1862
Henry L. Clinton, for the plaintiff in error.
A. Oakey Hall, District Attorney, for the People.
The counsel for the plaintiff in error maintains that the statutory provision under which this conviction was had is a violation of the clause of the Constitution which declares that "no local or private bill which may be passed by the legislature shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be embraced in its title." (Art. 3, § 16.) But let us suppose an act which is local in many of its provisions, and yet contains an enactment which is neither local nor private, but which relates to every part of the State, and is essentially public in its motives and objects: Would such an enactment be void on account of its connection with the local provisions? That precise question came before the court in The People v. McCann ( 16 N.Y., 58). An act, passed in the year 1855, provided that where a conviction should be had in any Court of Oyer and Terminer in the State, for an offence punishable with death or imprisonment for life, the conviction might be reviewed in the Supreme Court and in the Court of Appeals, upon questions of fact, and decided according to the weight of the evidence, and also upon the law, whether any exceptions were taken upon the trial or not. There were other provisions of the act which related to courts in the city, and which were assumed to be local in their character. The court held that the constitutional provision did not apply, and reversed the judgment of affirmance which had been rendered in the Supreme Court, on the ground of an erroneous ruling at the trial, which had not been excepted to. We held, also, that no constitutional objection arose out of the consideration that the provision in question was not referred to in the title of the act. The provisions of the act under direct consideration, which relate to police justices and courts and their clerks, may be considered local; but I am of opinion that the thirty-third section, which provides for an increased punishment for petit larceny, when committed by stealing from the person, in the city of New York, is not local within the meaning of the Constitution. It has, no doubt, features which savor of locality, for it punishes a well-known common-law offence more severely, if committed under peculiar circumstances within the limits of that city, than if committed elsewhere. But it prescribes the rule of conduct for all persons, whether residents of the city or of any other part of the State, and its increased penalties are intended to protect residents of other localities equally with inhabitants of the city; and it was probably intended especially for the security of strangers and sojourners, who are apt to lack the habitual caution of permanent citizens of large towns. Offenders when convicted are to be imprisoned in one of the prisons of the State out of the city, and to be provided for at the expense of the State at large; and the disqualification which attaches to a convict under the act affects him wherever he may be in this State. I cannot think that a statute having such consequences is to be classed with special provisions making appropriations for particular roads, public buildings, or the like, situated in particular local divisions. Upon this point, I concur with the views expressed in the opinion given in the Supreme Court.
The plaintiff in error relies upon another point, which is not adverted to in the opinion of the Supreme Court, and seems to have been made for the first time here. It is, that the court charged the jury that they might render a general verdict of guilty; which instruction is alleged to be erroneous, because by it the jury were permitted to find the defendant guilty of stealing all the money described in the indictment, which, being above the value of twenty-five dollars, obliged the court to impose the penalty annexed to the offence of grand larceny, whereas if the verdict had been for stealing to the amount of seven dollars only, though it was from the prosecutrix's person, she might, in the discretion of the court, have been punished by fine and imprisonment only. This is based upon the idea that the word may, as used in the section, is not intended to be imperative, but enabling only, thus committing to the court a discretion in such a case to inflict the punishment appropriate to petit larceny, or the higher penalty of imprisonment in a state prison according to its view of the nature and aggravation of the offence. There are many cases in which the sense of a statute requires that this word should be construed like shall, and this would be clearly the meaning in this case if it was a newly created offence to which the legislature was affixing the punishment; for then if the prescribed punishment could not be inflicted the offence would not be punished at all, which would be plainly contrary to the intention of the statute. But here the crime of petit larceny which, by the general law of the State is punished by fine and imprisonment in a county jail or both, is made punishable, when committed under a special circumstance of aggravation, by imprisonment in the state prison. There is nothing a priori unreasonable in leaving it to the court to determine in such a case whether the mitigated or the higher punishment shall be visited on the offender. There are examples of confiding such a discretion to the courts, as in the case of cheating by false pretences, and in arson in the fourth degree, and perhaps in some other cases. The primary and most common use of the word may certainly is that contended for, namely, the giving permission to perform the act referred to; and where there is nothing requiring it, in the connection of the language, or in the sense and policy of the provision, I do not think we should be warranted in giving the word an unusual or even a secondary meaning.
It is a little difficult to perceive the drift of the prayer for instructions interposed by the defendant's counsel on the trial. In terms, it was that the jury should be charged that under the evidence the defendant could only be convicted of petit larceny. If by this was meant that she could only be convicted of the simple offence of stealing an amount less than twenty-five dollars, it was, of course, inadmissible, as it was proved that the theft was from the person of the owner of the money. But if the object was to obtain a direction that the verdict should indicate the amount stolen under the circumstances charged, or that it was less than twenty-five dollars, so as to exonerate her from the consequence of having stolen an amount which would constitute grand larceny, so that the court would not be compelled to sentence her to the state prison, she was clearly entitled to that direction. I am inclined to think that the latter may have been the meaning of the request to charge. But however this may be, the actual charge given, which was duly excepted to, was, that if the defendant was shown to have stolen from the person of the prosecutrix to the amount of seven dollars they might render a general verdict of guilty. Under this charge a general verdict was given, and, upon the record formed by the indictment and by that verdict, the court could not possibly have given any other judgment than one for imprisonment in a state prison; whereas, if the amount stolen had been truly stated in the verdict, the judgment might, notwithstanding the statute, have been that annexed by law to a simple petit larceny. As the judge who tried the issue was also to pronounce the sentence, it is altogether improbable that the error in form, which I suppose to have been committed, has at all prejudiced the defendant. But it is very plain to my mind that an accused person has an absolute right to have such instructions on matters of law given to the jury as will shield him from a verdict for a different and higher offence from that of which he is proved guilty. Hence, I am for reversing the judgment, and awarding a new trial in the Court of General Sessions.
All the judges concurred, except that SUTHERLAND, J., thought the provisions of section 33 local within the meaning of the Constitution, and the court did not pass upon that point.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.