People v. Heath

Citation77 Misc.2d 215,352 N.Y.S.2d 863
PartiesThe PEOPLE of the State of New York, v. David Paul HEATH and Francis Eugene Elliott, Defendants-Appellants.
Decision Date27 February 1974
CourtNew York County Court
Hoover & Balok, Elmira (J. R. Hoover, Elmira, of counsel), for defendants-appellants

LISTON F. COON, Judge.

The defendants-appellants were arrested without a warrant on January 10, 1974 and charged with the taking of a deer out of season in violation of subdivision 10 of section 11--0901 of the Fish and Wildlife Law which is part of the Environmental Conservation Law. They were arrested in the Town of Orange, Schuyler County, by an officer of the Department of Environmental Conservation.

Arraignment and the filing of the required accusatory instrument did not take place in the Town Court of the Town of Orange, rather in the Town of Dix, Schuyler County, an adjoining town. At that arraignment the defendants waived any adjournment or counsel and pleaded guilty. Each was fined $1000. and committed to jail until the fines were paid. This appeal was taken on the grounds that the convictions and ensuing judgments were illegal and that the punishment was excessive.

Two principal jurisdictional grounds are advanced for reversal, first that a town court has no jurisdiction over the violation and, second, that the procedure in arraigning the defendants was improper.

The court is immediately confronted with the conflicting provisions of the Environmental Conservation Law (ECL), the Criminal Procedure Law (CPL) and the Uniform Justice Court Act (UJCA). Each of these acts is of recent vintage and the ECL was enacted last. One must grapple, then, with the issue of legislative intent and interpretation where, as here, we have general statutes conflicting with specific ones. It is appropriate that some legislative history be set forth.

A number of provisions of the ECL would seem to support the jurisdictional issue.

Subdivision 1 of ECL, section 71--0513 grants jurisdiction to local criminal courts over offenses committed under certain titles of that chapter but subdivision 2 then provides that the section does not apply to offenses committed under article 11, which is the case here.

ECL section 71--0905 provides that the provisions of the Penal Law, the Criminal Procedure Law or any other law are not affected, 'except to the extent that such provision or language is expressly stated to be applicable notwithstanding such law, or notwithstanding any other law.' It further provides that nothing in the law shall be construed to extend jurisdiction of 'courts of special sessions and police courts' 1 to impose punishment involving the taking of a deer before the first day or after the last day of open season.

ECL 71--0919, which lists the possible punishments for violations of the Fish and Wildlife Law, specifically provides that penalties provided for in subdivisions 4 and 5 of ECL, section 71--0921 may be imposed only by a court of record. Concededly, a town court is not a court of record. Subdivision 4 again refers to the taking of deer out of season.

All of these provisions had their counterparts in the former Conservation Law, substantial portions of which were repealed by Chapter 664 of the Laws of 1972 which created the ECL (see e.g. former Conservation Law, sections 162, 386, 387, 1--0907). The ECL represented a recodification of the Fish and Game Law article of the Conservation Law which was enacted pursuant to Chapter 630 of the Laws of 1955 and added interim amendments. In sum, similar language had prevailed in the applicable statutes for an extended period of time.

Prior to 1966 the local criminal courts at the town level had limited jurisdiction over misdemeanors. Control rested with sections 56, 56--a and 56--b of the former Code of Criminal Procedure. Section 56--b dealt specifically with violations of the Fish and Game Law and was in tune with the Conservation Law excluding jurisdiction over charges of taking deer out of season. Such offenses were euphemistically referred to as 'indictable misdemeanors'.

In 1966 the Legislature enacted the Uniform Justice Court Act (Chapter 898), effective September 1, 1967. Section 2001 thereof provided that a court of special sessions (i.e. a town court) should have original jurisdiction of all misdemeanors and lesser offenses. Pursuant to Chapter 681 of the Laws of 1967, sections 56, 56--a and 56--b of the Code of Criminal Procedure were repealed.

In 1970 the Code of Criminal Procedure was replaced by the Criminal Procedure Law (Chap. 996) creating two classes of courts, 'superior' courts and 'local criminal courts', the latter category including a town court. This law became effective on September 1, 1971. Section 10.30 of that law provides for trial jurisdiction in local criminal courts over all offenses other than felonies. At the 1971 legislative session, UJCA, section 2001 was repealed (Chap. 1097) and rewritten to provide that 'the court shall have such jurisdiction of criminal matters as is prescribed by the criminal procedure law.'

The inconsistency of the ECL and these other laws is patent. One is confronted with the issue of a general law impliedly repealing a specific law as in the cases of the UJCA and the CPL post-dating the Conservation Law, to be followed by a specific law impliedly repealing a general law as is the case of subsequent passage of the ECL.

It is a settled rule that a general statute will not repeal a more specific one unless there is a patent inconsistency and the two cannot stand together, so that the Legislature is clearly shown to have intended such a result (Cimo v. State of New York, 306 N.Y. 143, 116 N.E.2d 290). Likewise, unless there is clear evidence of a legislative design to repeal or modify an earlier piece of legislation, full effect must be given to both an earlier and a later statute, if possible (People v. Newman, 32 N.Y.2d 379, 345 N.Y.S.2d 502, 298 N.E.2d 651). But it has likewise been held under the rules of statutory construction that where irreconcilable conflict exists so that a later enactment impliedly repeals prior legislative provisions, the last expression of legislative will is controlling (Abate v. Mundt, 25 N.Y.2d 309, 305 N.Y.S.2d 465, 253 N.E.2d 189; McKinney's Cons.Laws of N.Y., Book 1, Statutes, section 398).

The issue of jurisdiction under the Conservation Law was decided in People v. Mann, 31 N.Y.2d 253, 336 N.Y.S.2d 633, 288 N.E.2d 595, which involved the illegal taking of deer. The case arose in 1969 and the defendant was convicted in a town court. On appeal he challenged the jurisdiction of the local court, relying on the provisions of sections 386 and 387 of the Conservation Law to the extent those sections purported to limit jurisdiction of the court.

The position of the prosecution was that the Uniform Justice Court Act had impliedly repealed the limiting provisions of the Conservation Law because jurisdiction over all misdemeanors had been given to town courts (UJCA, sec. 2001).

After considering the conflicting statutes, the Court of Appeals held that the legislative intent was that the UJCA should repeal the Conservation Law provision to the extent they were inconsistent. The later enacted statute was thus controlling.

Logically, then, it would seem that, the UJCA and the CPL, having antedated the ECL, the provisions of the latter should now prevail based upon the same principles enunciated in Mann. An even stronger case might be argued since the ECL contains the specific provisions as opposed to the general provisions of the CPL.

Such is not the case here. The ECL, with respect to the Fish and Wildlife Law, is substantially a reenactment of the Conservation Law. It is therefore to be construed as simply a continuation of prior provisions and not as a new enactment (McKinney's Cons.Laws of N.Y., Book 1, Statutes, section 373). To the same effect is section 95 of the General Construction Law.

Where there is a reenactment of a statute in language substantially similar to that embodied in predecessor statutes, its provisions do not prevail over inconsistent general statutes merely because of the later reenactment (People v. Messinger, 43 A.D.2d 15, 349 N.Y.S.2d 834).

Therefore, inasmuch as the Court of Appeals has held in People v. Mann (supra) that the provisions of the UJCA (and perforce the CPL) are controlling over inconsistent provisions of the former Conservation Law, that holding is likewise binding in the case of statutory reenactment in the form of the ECL.

It might also be pointed out that Chapter 664 of the Laws of 1972, creating the ECL, was approved on May 31, 1972, effective September 1, 1972. The Court of Appeals decided People v. Mann (supra) on September 28, 1972. Although not germane to the case for determination, the Court was presumably aware of the ECL.

It is the holding here that a town court has jurisdiction over the offense for which the defendants were convicted and, in fact, has jurisdiction over all misdemeanors and lesser violations of the Fish and Wildlife Law embodied in the ECL.

The second jurisdictional basis for this appeal is that when defenda...

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