Court Opinion

ID: 8164617
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 20:56:49.898711+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:38.632014
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Frankfurter,
concurring.
The New York Constitution requires that prosecution for an “infamous crime” be upon indictment by grand jury. The New York Court of Appeals has held that this constitutional requirement does not nullify the acceptance by a trial court of a plea of guilty to the offense of attempted grand larceny, second degree, upon an indictment for knowingly receiving stolen goods. Since, so far as the United States Constitution is concerned, the States may dispense with accusations by grand juries, it is for New York and not for us to decide when the procedural requirements of New York law, not touching those fundamental safeguards which the United States Constitution protects, are satisfied. What is here challenged is New York’s determination that the knowing receipt of stolen goods is sufficiently related to larceny so as to permit acceptance of a plea of guilty of the latter on the assumption that an indictment for one affords adequate notice of the other. Surely this does not rise to the dignity of a substantial federal question. In the early days of the Fourteenth Amendment, this Court deemed it appropriate to remind that that Amendment had not made this Court an appellate tribunal to supervise the administration of the criminal law of the States. It is not irrelevant to recall this admonition.
*323Thus, I agree with the Court’s opinion, but draw from it the conclusion that the writ of certiorari should be dismissed for want of a substantial federal question.