
    Court of General Sessions—New York County.
    May, 1902.
    THE PEOPLE v. AUGUST PATTERSON
    (38 Misc. 79.)
    1. Jurisdiction—Misdemeanor—New York City—Code Ceim. Peoc., Sec. 56; Penal Code, Sec. 666—Speeding Automobile.
    A city magistrate of New York city has no jurisdiction to try a charge of misdemeanor under Penal Code, section 666, as amended by chapter 266, Laws 1902, making, driving or operating an automobile upon a city highway at more than eight miles an, hour a misdemeanor.
    2. Same—Laws 1901, Ch. 466, Sec. 1409.
    A city magistrate cannot try any charge of misdemeanor, as the Court of Special Sessions has exclusive jurisdiction of all misdemeanor committed within the city of New York, except charges of libel and except when jurisdiction shall have been divested by indictment or removal.
    Appeal from a judgment of a city magistrate.
    R. L. Pritchard, for appellant.
    William Travers Jerome, District Attorney (Henry G. Gray, of counsel), for respondent.
   Goff, Referee

For riding a motor cycle through the streets of Hew York at a higher rate of speed than eight miles an hour the appellant was convicted of a misdemeanor by a city magistrate. From the judgment and conviction appeal is taken on two grounds: First, that the magistrate did not have jurisdiction to try and determine a charge of misdemeanor, and, secondly, that the evidence was insufficient to warrant a conviction.

On the second ground the judgment of the magistrate should not be disturbed, and the only question that will be considered is that of jurisdiction.

The law under which the appellant was convicted is contained in section 666 of the Penal Code, as amended by chapter 266 of the laws of 1902, which provides that “ A person . . . who drives or operates an automobile upon any highway within any citw at a greater rate of speed than eight miles per hour . . . is guilty of a misdemeanor,” etc.

In his return on the appeal the magistrate states -that he “took jurisdiction of this misdemeanor under chapter 1, section 56, subdivision 37, of the Code of Criminal Procedure.” This section (56) reads: “Subject to the power of removal provided for in this chapter, courts of special sessions, except, in the city and county of Flew York and the city of Albany, have in the first instance exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine charges of misdemeanors committed within their respective counties, as follows:” Then are enumerated in thirty-six subdivisions the various misdemeanors of which jurisdiction is given, but mention is not made of the misdemeanor of which the appellant has been convicted. Subdivision 37, the last of the section and the one referred to by the magistrate, provides that: “ When a complaint is made to or a warrant is issued by a committing magistrate for any misdemeanor not included in the foregoing subdivisions of this section, if the accused shall elect to be tried by a court of special sessions as provided by section two hundred and eleven.”

This last named section prescribes how the accused may elect to be tried, and is not pertinent to the point under consideration. At the threshold we are confronted with the exception of the city and county of Hew York from the operation of the section, and clearly the thirty-seventh subdivision of the section—even if standing alone it was applicable—cannot he segregated from the body of the section, and, as a segment, be made to apply to the city and county of Hew York in contradiction to the explicit legislative mandate: Besides it has been held that the limitation declared in this section applies to cases where the complaint or charge is made, in the first instance, to the Court of Special Sessions (People v. Palmer, 43 Hun, 405), and since a magistrate in the city of Hew York cannot hold a Court of Special Sessions, nor can he acquire exclusive jurisdiction in the first instance- to hear and determine charges of misdemeanor unless power be expressly conferred, it follows, as an additional reason to that given by the exception referred to, that the law invoked by the magistrate has no application and did not confer jurisdiction.

But, even if the magistrate was in error as to the exact source of his jurisdiction, and he had, in fact, jurisdiction, it becomes the duty of this court to sustain the judgment. Had he jurisdiction? It is declared by section 74 of the Criminal Code that “ police justices have such jurisdiction, and such only, as is specially conferred upon them by statute,” etc. (Kolzem v. Broadway & Seventh Ave. R. R. Co., 1 Misc. Rep. 148; 48 N. Y. St. Rep. 657.) The police justices in the city of New York were abolished by section 1, chapter 601 of the Laws of 1895, and by section 3 of that act all the powers and jurisdiction of the police justices were conferred upon the city magistrates. The city magistrates, therefore, can exercise only the powers and jurisdiction of a police justice, and a police justice in the city of Hew York could not hold a Court of Special Sessions, nor acquire exclusive jurisdiction of a charge of misdemeanor in the first instance, and whatever authority was conferred upon him as such police justice giving him special jurisdiction in a criminal matter, with special directions as to mode of procedure, he acted as an officer and not as a Court of Special Sessions. (People v. Trumble, 1 N. Y. Crim. 446.) Section 64 of the Criminal Code conferred upon the Court of Special Sessions in the city and county of Yew York jurisdiction “ to try and determine according to law all complaints for misdemeanors, unless the defendant elects to be tried at the court of general sessions,” etc., and under this section it was decided in Kolzem v. Broadway & Seventh Ave. R. R. Co., supra,, that misdemeanors committed in the city and county of New York must be tried and determined in the Court of Special Sessions, unless the case is directed to be tried in the Court of General Sessions.

Section 1409 of chapter 466 of the Laws of 1901 (amended Greater New York charter), in defining the jurisdiction of the Court of Special Sessions, says that it shall have exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine all charges of misdemeanors committed within the city of Yew York, except charges of libel and except where jurisdiction shall have been divested by indictment or removal.

The offense of which the defendant was convicted is declared by the statute (sec. 666, supra) to be a misdemeanor. It is silent as to conferring jurisdiction specially upon any particular court or officer, and consequently under the general authority contained in the statute cited- jurisdiction vests in the Court of Special Sessions and not in the magistrate. My attention has not been called to any law under which the magistrate could summarily proceed. Suggestion has been made of the existence of an ordinance (chap. 531, ords. 1897) known as the rules of the road, which regulates the speed of vehicles, and includes motor wagons as vehicles. But it is manifest that the complaint and the conviction were not based upon the ordinance, for it is not mentioned in the return as having been proved before the magistrate, and the penalty imposed was the one prescribed by the statute.

With reluctance do I reach the conclusion that the magistrate had not jurisdiction to hear and determine this charge of'misdemeanor, for the safety of the public, imperiled by the reckless driving of motor vehicles through the crowded thoroughfares of this city would, in my opinion, be best protected by a prompt and salutary exercise of summary power vested in the magistrates.

Judgment and conviction reversed.

Judgment reversed.  