Defendant herein was arrested by a police officer of the city of New York and arraigned before a city magistrate *170charged with having on the 15th day of March, 1910, in this jurisdiction, unlawfully operated a motor vehicle along a public highway at a rate of speed in excess of 25 miles an hour in violation of section 291 of chapter 30 of the Laws of 1909 (Consol. Laws, c. 25). The papers returned by the magistrate and attached to the information as required by the statute (sections 221 and 743, Code Cr. Proc.), show that the defendant waived examination before the magistrate and was held for trial in this court. Thereafter, on March 18,1910, the district attorney of the county of New York filed an information in the action thus begun charging the defendant with the crime of “operating a motor vehicle at a greater rate of speed than is allowed by law as a second offense.” The pleading of the first, offense and the conviction therefor is proper in form, and the allegations of fact and "law in the information are sufficient to warrant a conviction for a second offense if sustained on trial.
It appears from the record that the defendant pleaded not guilty to this information on March 24, 1910. On being arraigned for trial on April 12, 1910, he appeared by counsel, was granted leave to withdraw his plea, and moved for a dismissal of the information in the action on the ground that he had not been accorded a preliminary examination before a magistrate on the charge set forth in the information ; that, not having been charged before the magistrate with unlawfully operating a motor vehicle as a “second offense” and the magistrate not having held him for this aggravated misdemeanor, the district attorney could, under the statute, only file an information charging the defendant with the particular misdemeanor which the magistrate certified he had held him to answer.
This court has already decided (People v. Zabor, 44 Misc. Rep. 633, 90 N. Y. Supp. 412) that “the defendant can only be tried on the charge for which the magistrate held him.” It is true that the Zabor Case arose under the practice which existed prior to September 1, 1904, when title 2 of part 5 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1903 went into effect. That title of the Code was drafted by the-justices of this court, and was intended to make provision for a formal and precise pleading in actions of which the court had jurisdiction, that pleading to be by information filed by the district attorney. Actions are now prdsecuted on such informations instead of on the often loosely drawn affidavits by which the magistrate is informed by a police officer or other complainant that a particular crime has been committed.
It must be remembered that a criminal action is begun as soon as information is laid before the magistrate, and in the case of misdemeanors the jurisdiction of this court then attaches, and the statute of limitations ceases to run. The information of the district attorney, unlike an indictment, does not initiate the action. Its filing is merely a step in the prosecution,. The magistrate still certifies that he holds the defendant to answer for a specific crime (section 208, Code Cr. Proc.), returns the papers in the case to the district attorney (section 221, supra), and this court is supposed to try the defendant for the offense for which he has been held as before the passage of the Law of 1904. The certificate of the magistrate in the case at bar states that the defendant is held to answer, “it appearing to me" by the within *171depositions that the crime therein mentioned has been committed, and that there is sufficient cause to believe the within-named defendant guilty thereof.” Notwithstanding that there is but one offense charged in the papers returned, and that it further appears that the defendant waived examination on this charge, the district attorney files an information alleging a prior conviction and charges the defendant with a more aggravated offense. It is quite apparent from the papers before the court that the defendant had no opportunity to answer this charge that he was a second offender before the magistrate, and it may be that it may have been evolved from a mass of statistical data on file in the office of the district attorney, as defendant alleges in his moving papers. The district attorney does not stand in the same relation to the information which he files as does the Attorney General of England to his. The latter official may file informations for certain misdemeanors where knowledge of their commission is privy to himself. The district attorney in the city of New York, however, has no similar function to perform. He contends in his brief that he is literally following the provisions of section 743 of the Code ,of Criminal Procedure in that a magistrate held the defendant for two separate offenses, and returned the papers in each case to the district attorney. He makes this claim although there has been a conviction on an information filed by him in the one case and the papers are no longer in his custody for the purpose of pleading. In making it, too, he does not take into consideration the fact that a first conviction in many cases might have been had in some other county of the state. There can be no special rule of law for this case. There has been no identification of the first offender with the defendant.
This court, since its opinion in the Zabor Case, supra, and under the provisions of the existing procedure act, has placed itself on record as to the right of the district attorney to plead in an information the commission of a crime which was not the subject-matter of investigation before a magistrate. In People v. Elias (not reported), the district attorney on December 15, 1908, moved the entry of an order nunc pro tunc, extending the time for filing an information and with his moving papers handed up a draft of an information he proposed to file, provided the order were granted. The prosecution was under section 317 of the Penal Code relative to obscene pictures. The new information was prepared as supplemental to one filed in November, 1907, as to which the district attorney admitted there would be a failure of proof. The court, in a memorandum opinion handed down December 23, 1908, denied the motion, and refused to permit the filing of the information, saying in part:
“It therefore cannot be said that the second picture which is set up in- the supplementary information was before the magistrate at any time, or that the action of the magistrate was in any way based upon the possession by the defendant of this particular picture.”
The court further asserted the right of the defendant to an examination before the magistrate in regard to his action in the matter alleged against him.
The defendant herein was not accorded his right to an examination before the magistrate as to whether he was the Walter Reppin who *172was, on June 3, 1909, convicted for unlawfully operating an automobile in the county of New York, and in that respect 'a substantial right has-been denied him. His case is analogous to that large class of cases-where indictments have been set aside or dismissed where found on-insufficient or improper evidence presented to a grand jury. Where a substantial right of a defendant has been invaded as in this instance, , the remedy by dismissal has been declared in unequivocal language by -the Court of Appeals. People v. Glen, 173 N. Y. 395, 66 N. E. 112. " Having reached the conclusion that the defendant is entitled to relief, the measure of relief should be considered. The district attorney being without power to file an information against the defendant as a second offense, it follows that the pleading of the so-called first offense, together with the designation of the offense as “second,” can be treated as surplusage. Section 285, Code Cr. Proc. Thus treating the information there remains sufficient matter alleged therein to put the defendant to his plea for a violation of the motor vehicle law (Laws-1904, c. 538) as a first offense.
All concur.