Court Opinion

ID: 3614326
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:57:47.586276+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:07:33.626537
License: Public Domain

In a memorandum handed down by the court in this case it was stated that had it appeared in the order then before us that the reversal was made solely on the law and not on the facts, the order would be appealable. Since the rendition of that decision, the order of the Appellate Division has been amended in the respect referred to, and we can now deal with the appeal on its merits.
In February, 1909, at a Trial Term of the Supreme Court held in Oneida county, the grand jury was investigating the criminal misconduct of certain of the officers of said county. The relator Drake was an under sheriff of the county, and on February 16th was given for service a subpoena duces tecum directed to one Cox, requiring him to appear before the grand jury and give evidence on the complaints then pending before it, and also to produce all books, papers and records of the said witness, or the late firm of which he had been a partner, showing sales of property of any kind to the county of Oneida, and payments made by the said county for such property during the years 1894, 1895 and 1896. The relator served the subpoena on said Cox, but as found by the trial court, at the time of the service and in subsequent interviews, he advised Cox that he must not produce the books and papers called for in the subpoena, and sought to induce Cox to destroy them. Cox, however, did appear before the grand jury with the books. The trial court held that the acts of *Page 56 
the relator constituted a criminal contempt tending to interfere with the proceedings of the grand jury, to impair the respect due to the court's authority, and was a willful disobedience to the lawful mandate of the court and resistance willfully offered thereto. For this the relator was sentenced to a fine of $250 and imprisonment for 30 days.
The learned Appellate Division, by a divided court, has reversed this conviction, not because the trial court erred in its determination of the facts, but on the ground that the acts which the relator had committed did not constitute a criminal contempt, and this is the sole question presented on this appeal. By section 619 of the Code of Criminal Procedure it is provided that disobedience of a subpoena may be punished by the court or magistrate as for a criminal contempt. Hence, had Cox failed to obey the subpoena, unquestionably he would have been subject to summary punishment by the court. But it is contended that as Cox complied with the requirements of the subpoena, authority to punish the relator for his conduct must be found in some other statutory provision. Assuming, for the discussion, this claim to be correct, we are relegated to section 8 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which defines criminal contempts. That section enacts: "A court of record has power to punish for a criminal contempt, a person guilty of either of the following acts, and no others: * * *
"3. Willful disobedience to its lawful mandate.
"4. Resistance willfully offered to its lawful mandate."
If the subpoena which the relator sought to have the witness disobey was a lawful mandate of the court the relator was properly convicted of contempt, for one who aids, procures or advises the disobedience of a lawful mandate of the court is equally guilty with him who actually disobeys it. (King v.Barnes, 113 N.Y. 476.) Nor was the relator guiltless of contempt and exempt from punishment because his efforts to have Cox disobey the subpoena were abortive, for while by subdivision 3 of the section cited willful disobedience to its mandate is a criminal contempt of the court, by *Page 57 
subdivision 4 resistance to that mandate is equally a contempt, and under this subdivision it is not necessary that the resistance should be successful. The Appellate Division, however, was of opinion that the subpoena issued by a district attorney for the appearance of a witness before the grand jury was not a mandate of the court within the sections defining criminal contempts, and in support of that position reliance was placed on the decision of this court in Sherwin v. People (100 N.Y. 351). While that case was decided by this court in 1885, the offense of which the appellant was convicted was committed in 1874, and the indictment found in the same year, long anterior to the enactment of either of the present Codes of Civil and Criminal Procedure. The case was controlled by the provisions of the Revised Statutes. The plaintiff was convicted of a misdemeanor in having committed a criminal contempt of the court in failing to obey a subpoena to attend before the grand jury. All that case is authority for is that the defendant was not subject to prosecution by indictment, but it is conceded in the opinion that he could have been punished by the court as for a contempt. (P. 364.) It is true that in the opinion there is a discussion whether the subpoena was to be treated as a mandate within section 10 (2 R.S. 278), defining criminal contempts, and the court held it was not, but the decision was rested on the proposition that the Revised Statutes had prescribed a penalty for disobedience to a district attorney's subpoena. This is clear from the following excerpt from the opinion of the court: "In the face of an express statute providing in clear and unmistakable language for the penalty to be incurred, there is no valid ground for holding that other penalties are to be inflicted which are, at least, of doubtful application, and for which the statute itself, under which they are sought to be enforced, does not clearly and directly provide." (p. 361.) Since the enactment of section 619 of the Code of Criminal Procedure the ground on which the decision in the Sherwin case proceded no longer exists. Instead of the provision of the Revised Statutes that disobedience of the district attorney's *Page 58 
subpoena should be punished in the same manner as the disobedience of a subpoena in a civil suit, i.e., as a civil contempt, it is now enacted that such disobedience may be punished as a criminal contempt. In addition to this we have an express definition of the term "mandate" in section 3343 of the Code of Civil Procedure: "2. The word, `mandate,' includes a writ, process, or other written direction, issued pursuant to law, out of a court, or made pursuant to law, by a court, or a judge, or a person acting as a judicial officer, and commanding a court, board, or other body, or an officer, or other person, named or otherwise designated therein, to do, or to refrain from doing, an act therein specified." This definition is certainly broad enough to include the subpoena under discussion, but we do not place our decision on that ground alone, nor is it necessary to say that the disobedience of a subpoena in a civil suit would not constitute a criminal contempt. We think it clear, however, that as to subpoenas issued by the district attorney in criminal cases when the law prescribed that disobedience thereto should be punishable as a criminal contempt, the necessary result was to place such subpoenas within the provisions of section 8 as mandates of the court.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that of the Trial Term affirmed and relator remanded to custody.
EDWARD T. BARTLETT, HAIGHT, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc.