Steinman v. Nadjari
Decision Date | 01 December 1975 |
Citation | 49 A.D.2d 456,375 N.Y.S.2d 622 |
Parties | William STEINMAN, Appellant, v. Maurice H. NADJARI, etc., et al., Respondents. |
Court | New York Supreme Court — Appellate Division |
Hervey & Legum, Brooklyn (Aaron Nussbaum, Brooklyn, of counsel), for appellant.
Maurice H. Nadjari, Deputy Atty. Gen., New York City (Allen G. Swan and Bennett L. Gershman, New York City, of counsel), respondent pro se.
Louis J. Lefkowitz, Atty. Gen., New York City (Burton Herman and Samuel A. Hirshowitz, New York City, of counsel), respondent pro se, and for John M. Murtagh and Malcolm Wilson, respondents.
Before HOPKINS, Acting P.J., and MARTUSCELLO, COHALAN, CHRIST and MUNDER, JJ.
The plaintiff was indicted in 1973 by the Extraordinary and Special Grand Jury of Kings County for the crimes of conspiracy in the third degree, attempted bribery in the second degree and grand larceny in the second degree. He has previously unsuccessfully attacked the indictment in both State and Federal courts of original and appellate jurisdiction on the grounds of alleged (1) prosecutorial misconduct of the special prosecutor, (2) bias on the part of the Justice presiding at the Extraordinary Special and Trial Term and (3) violation of the plaintiff's civil rights.
The plaintiff's present thrust is a claim of unconstitutionali of not only two statutes (Judiciary Law, § 149; Executive Law, § 63 (subd. 2)) but also of a provision of the State Constitution (art. VI, § 27), which he claims is violative of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Federal Constitution.
The plaintiff is aware that all the arguments he has advanced are available to him in the trial court upon the trial of the indictment and it is upon this theory of an adequate remedy at law that the Special Term dismissed the complaint. He contends, however, that it is futile to expect to obtain relief from the very Justice before whom he is to be tried. We do not agree, but, under the particular circumstances of this case, including the nature of the constitutional claim raised and the absence of disputed facts, a decision upon the merits is appropriate.
As pertinent to his challenge we quote the cited items (the italicized portions are the direct subjects of his attack). Section 27 of article VI of the New York State Constitution reads:
Section 149 of the Judiciary Law provides:
Section 63 of the Executive Law provides, in pertinent part:
'The attorney-general shall:
The plaintiff objects to the power of termination reposed in the Governor, not the power initially to appoint. His argument reduces itself to the postulate that the power to 'terminate the assignment of the justice named by him' and to name another in his place denigrates the independence of the judiciary and thus is abhorrent to the constitutional theory of separation of powers.
The obvious situations that would impel a termination are a protracted illness of the Justice presiding or his unwillingness to continue in the role. Presumably, in either event, the Governor would relieve him of his assignment. The suggestion made by the plaintiff, however, goes far beyond those examples. He asserts that irrespective of whether or not the executive would prostitute his office by terminating a justice's assignment (because he does not approve of the results of the trials conducted in his court), the very fact that he can do so renders the above-quoted provisions of the Judiciary Law and of the State Constitution unconstitutional. Beyond the mere inclusion of the statement of that proposition in the cases cited by him, they are otherwise inapposite.
The plaintiff's argument is answered in People v. Davis, 67 Misc.2d 14, 16, 322 N.Y.S.2d 927, 930. (There the attack was directed to the portion of section 149 of the Judiciary Law that permits the initial appointment by the...
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