
    (77 Misc. Rep. 611.)
    PEOPLE v. BROWN.
    (Kings County Court.
    September, 1912.)
    Criminal Law (§ 254*)—Magistrate’s Court—Judgment of Conviction.
    A conviction before a magistrate is not illegal, though he was not the one who presided when, the deposition was taken and the defendant arraigned and his plea entered.
    [Ed. Note.—For other cases, see Criminal Law, Cent. Dig. §§ 537, 538, 543; Dec. Dig. § 254.*]
    ♦For other cases see same topic & § nijmber in Dec. & Am. Digs. 1907 to date, & Rep’r Indexes
    May Brown was convicted of disorderly conduct, and applies for an allowance of an appeal. Application denied.
    James C. Cropsey, Dist. Atty., of Brooklyn, for the People.
    Charles E. Russell, of Brooklyn, for defendant.
   DIKE, J.

The defendant, who was convicted of disorderly con-

duct on September 13> 1912, in a City Magistrate’s Court in this county, asks that the judgment of conviction be reviewed by the County Court. The procedure for appeals from the Magistrates’ Courts to the County Court, is contained in sections 749-755 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The attorney for the defendant submits an affidavit wherein he sets forth that it is the intention of the defendant to appeal from the judgment of conviction upon the ground that the conviction was illegal, stating three reasons for such illegal conviction. The appeal should be disallowed, unless there was a jurisdictional defect in the proceedings before the magistrate, as set forth in the third point by counsel for the defendant.

It is contended that the Magistrate’s Court, being a court not of record, lost jurisdiction to try the defendant, or to convict her of any crime, for the reason that at the time of the arraignment and at the time the deposition was signed the court was fully constituted, and that the magistrate presiding therein was not the magistrate who afterward presided at the trial at which the defendant was convicted and thereafter duly' sentenced. In every criminal case there must be a plea, either to the indictment or to the charge, entered either by or for the accused—in the case of a felony the defendant being present— since without a plea there is no issue, and without an issue there can be no valid trial, there being nothing to try. But in my judgment there is no such continuity of action, if I might so phrase it, as to necessitate the magistrate who records, the plea of \ a defendant being of necessity the one who shall try the defendant. In the mass of business in a great city like New York this would lead to endless complications. The death of a magistrate before whom a plea was taken, or his removal from office or other incapacity to • act, would be the reason advanced for setting at liberty the defendant, under counsel’s argument.

The case of People ex rel. Lotz v. Norton, 76 Hun, 7, 27 N. Y. Supp. 851, is not in point. In that case the relator demanded a trial by jury, and the situation there was entirely different from the one under examination; but, if there existed any objection to the chief magistrate hearing the testimony in this case, I am of the opinion that the same was waived by the defendant’s failure to raise any objection to such action by the magistrate through her attorney who represented her at the trial. People v. Tower, 17 N. Y. Supp. 395. After carefully considering all the points, I am of the opinion that the application for an allowance of the appeal herein must be denied.

Application denied. 
      
       Reported in full in the New York Supplement; reported as a memorandum decision without opinion in 63 Hun, 624.
     