In re Hoffman

Westbrook, J.

The prisoner must be discharged, because the magistrate had no power to impose a sentence in the disjunctive. Either a fine or an imprisonment, or both, should have been imposed, but the sentence should state whether it was one of the two, or both, which the prisoner was to suffer. By the language of the commitment, the prisoner is adjudged either to pay a fine of fifty dollars or to be imprisoned for three months, but it is not definitely and distinctly stated which one will satisfy the judgment. Undoubtedly, the magistrate could impose a fine and also adjudge the' length of imprisonment to be endured if such fine was not paid. This, however, is not the form of the judgment, but the sentence is simply in the disjunctive, without any declaration that by the payment of the fine the condemned will escape the imprisonment.

There is another- question which the sentence imposed involves, and it is this : Conceding that such sentence only imposes an imprisonment provided the fine is not paid, is not the power-to imprison for one year in case of non-payment- of the fine, conferred by chapter 18 of the laws of 1876, taken away by section 718 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which declares that the imprisonment to be endured in case a fine is *486not paid cannot exceed one day for every one dollar of the fine.” The former is a special statute and the latter a general one, but does not the policy of the law require judges to hold that a subsequent general statute prescribing the maximum of punishment for an offense is a repeal of a prior special statute authorizing a greater .penalty for the same offense ? This question, however, is not' decided (see Matter of'Wacher, 62 How. 352; People v. Coffee, Id. 445, and note, page 449 ; Matter of Bayard, 61 Id. 294; Matter of Coughlin, 62 Id. 34), as it has not been argued. It is sufficient to justify the prisoner’s discharge that the penalty imposed is not specific. In other words, the magistrate has not exercised the discretion conferred upon him by statute by specifying clearly the punishment he intended to inflict. The general principle of law which condemns the commitment as bad is expressly recognized in our Code (§ 718), which, in addition to the limitation upon the length of the imprisonment hereinbefore stated, also declares “ a judgment that the defendant pay a fine may also direct that he be imprisoned until the fine be satisfied.” In other words, both the general law and the Criminal Code require, if a fine is the punishment inflicted, that the sentence and commitment shall so state, and the right to imprison shall only exist if such fine is not paid.

For the reasons stated, the prisoner is entitled to his discharge. 1