People ex rel. Craige v. Fox

Gildersleeve, J.

This is a writ of habeas corpus to review the commitment by a city magistrate of one Elizabeth Craige, charged with being a .vagrant, by reason of having committed prostitution in a tenement house, in this city, to the workhouse on Blackwell’s Island for six months, unless sooner discharged by due course of law.”

It is well settled that a woman violates the Tenement House Act (Laws of 1901, chap. 334, § 141), and shall be deemed a vagrant, if she commits prostitution in her apartment or room in a tenement house, in the city of Hew York; and that where a magistrate of the city has found the fact of her prostitution in such tenement house, his commitment of her will not be reviewed on writs of habeas corpus and certiorari, where he had jurisdiction of the charge .and authority to impose the sentence (see People ex rel. Eisen v. Flynn, 37 Misc. Rep. 90, and cases there cited). The charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466, § 707) confers upon the magistrate the power of committing such vagrant to the workhouse on Blackwell’s Island. '

'There is no pretense that the magistrate did not have jurisdiction of the charge in the case at bar and authority to impose the sentence. In the commitment, however, the magistrate stated that it was “ pursuant to title III, section 141, of the Greater Hew York Charter,” whereas, in point of fact, it was pursuant to title HI, section 141, of the Tenement House Law, supplemented as to the form of punishment by section 707 of the charter. I do not think that this misquotation is of sufficient importance to invalidate the commitment, for, as we have seen, the magistrate was unquestionably clothed with power to commit the .relator to the workhouse, upon finding her guilty of the charge above stated. Laws of 1901, chap. 334, § 141; Laws of 1901, chap. 466, § 707; People ex rel. Eisen v. Flynn, supra.

The counsel for the relator refers me to section 710 of the charter, which requires the commissioner of corrections, within three days after the commitment of the vagrant, to ascertain from the records whether or not it is a' first conviction after January 1, 1902, and within two years next preceding the date of such commitment;” and, if no previous convictions appear, to make an order directing that the vagrant be discharged at the expiration of five days from the date of the commitment, which order, however, is not effective without the written consent, indorsed thereon, of *593the committing court or magistrate. There is nothing before me in this case to indicate whether or not the commissioner has made any such order, nor even whether the facts would warrant the making of such an order, assuming that the commissioner has made an examination to ascertain whether or not this relator has been previously convicted.

As was well stated by Mr. Justice Greenbaum, in the case of People ex rel. Edwards v. Warden, 37 Misc. Rep. 641, “If the relator claims that she is illegally detained because she is entitled to the benefit of section 710 aforesaid, it would be incumbent upon her to traverse the return by alleging a state of facts warranting her discharge under the provisions of section 710, and if on a hearing upon the issue thus raised, it was found that she was illegally detained she would be discharged from the custody of the warden.”

No such issue is here presented. We have merely a question of the validity of the commitment to be determined in the case at bar.

The writ is dismissed and the prisoner remanded.

Writ dismissed and prisoner remanded.