124 Misc. 2d 168 | New York County Courts | 1984
OPINION OF THE COURT
The court conducted a hearing of this matter as scheduled pursuant to this court’s prior order, dated March 1, 1984. As to the issue of failure to accord the defendant an opportunity to appear before the Grand Jury to give evidence in his own behalf pursuant to CPL 190.50 (subd 5, par [a]), this court is compelled by the statute in question to dismiss the indictment, conditionally. The statute clearly states “[w]hen a criminal charge against a person is being or is about to be or has been submitted to a grand jury, such person has a right to appear before such grand jury as a witness in his own behalf if, prior to the filing of any indictment * * * he serves upon the district attorney of the county a written notice making such request”.
This court adheres to its original determination that the statute permits a defendant to testify even after a criminal charge has been submitted to a Grand Jury but prior to the filing of any indictment if the defendant promptly notifies the District Attorney of such a desire. That is precisely what occurred in the instant case. Therefore it is apparent
As to this court’s inquiry into a potential additional ground for dismissal pursuant to CPL 210.20 (subd 1, par [h]), that is, that there exists some other jurisdictional or legal impediment to conviction of the defendant for the offense charged, the court concludes the following. This court’s concern centers around CPL 170.20 (subd 2) which provides for removal from the local criminal court to a superior court of a pending case at the District Attorney’s instance, by proper application, upon the ground that he intends to present the misdemeanor charge in question to a Grand Jury for prosecution by indictment in the superior court.
“When a District Attorney applies for such an adjournment to present the misdemeanor charges, and perhaps felony charges arising from the same incident, to the Grand Jury, the local criminal court is mandated to grant the adjournment [citations omitted]” (People v Butor, 75 Misc 2d 558, 564). The hearing confirmed the following: The matter was originally pursued via felony complaints. At the August 19, 1983 felony examination date, the matters were reduced to misdemeanors and prosecuted as such in the First District Court, until the December 1,1983 indictment hand-up. At the last District Court appearance date, November 11, 1983, no notice of presentment to the Grand Jury was ever entertained before that court. No request pursuant to CPL 170.20 (subd 2) was ever requested in the local criminal court. The District Attorney argues that no such request is necessary, claiming legal authority to act as he did can be found in CPL 170.20 (subd 1). The People believe that the application of subdivision 2 of the statute is limited to matters in the local criminal court which are on the eve of trial or to forestall a defendant from pleading guilty to a charge in a misdemeanor complaint who seeks to take advantage of a fortuitous circumstance which resulted from an inadequate initial assessment, on the part of law enforcement officials, of the extent of defendant’s wrongdoing. (See People v Barkin, 49 NY2d 901.) The People allege such to be the practice by the
This court has found numerous decisions dealing with various other aspects of the operation of this statute but not one with the fact pattern as detailed above. For instance, in People v Nizza (92 Misc 2d 823), a misdemeanor complaint was dismissed as an exercise of the court’s calendar control function. It was then presented to the Grand Jury from which a prosecutor’s information was filed. The court held that (pp 826-827):
“Neither the District Attorney’s initial action under the constraint of the immediate situation, nor his failure to advise the defendant of his intent to present the case to the Grand Jury (cf. CPL 190.50, subd 5, par [e]), affected the prosecution’s legal power to proceed to the Grand Jury (see Matter of Krum v Hogan [69 Misc 2d 656]) * * *
“Since the misdemeanor complaint was dismissed before the defendant was placed in jeopardy, the prosecutor had the right to present the case to the Grand Jury without the permission of this court, which approval perhaps would have been required if that complaint had still been extant at the time (CPL 170.20; see People v Di Marco [19 AD2d 150]; People v Morgan [90 Misc 2d 416]).”
The above dicta in the Nizza decision is the issue before this court, i.e., is there a jurisdictional or legal impediment to this indictment due to the failure of the People to seek a CPL 170.20 adjournment — was the Grand Jury divested of power to indict?
This court agrees with the above, once the request for the adjournment is made in the lower court. This same rationale for requesting adjournments to present a felony charge to the Grand Jury has previously been followed by this District Attorney’s office in People v Morgan (90 Misc 2d 416).
Numerous cases, like the previous case involved a dismissal of the original charge and then a subsequent prosecution.
“[Cjourts have held that * * * the dismissal of an information does not prevent reinstatement of an information or even a new prosecution (Matter of Crum v Hogan, 69 Misc 2d 656; see People v Ackrish, 92 Misc 2d 431; see People v Bell, 95 Misc 2d 360). It follows that if a new information
However, the case before this court is not so simple. Here, the local criminal charge was not dismissed, it was still pending in said court when, without a request for a CPL 170.20 adjournment, the matter was presented to the Grand Jury.
This court notes that pursuant to CPL 210.20 (subd 4), if this court was to dismiss the indictment upon the grounds that there exists a jurisdictional or legal impediment to conviction (CPL 210.20, subd 1, par [h]), this court could not authorize a resubmission of the charge. Such a step is obviously too drastic and inequitable a remedy. It has been held that the prosecution should not be foreclosed when a defect is not “ ‘of an inherently fatal nature’ ”. (People v Maldanado, 97 Misc 2d 653, 655.)
The intent of the Legislature in enacting CPL 210.20 (subd 4) was to permit “a resubmission of the charges under court order upon dismissal in those cases where the defect should not result in foreclosure of further prosecution, but prohibits resubmission where the impediment is
The fact that this court has concurrently determined that the defendant was impermissibly denied an opportunity to testify before the Grand Jury does not negate the attempt by the People to provide notice of Grand Jury presentment. This is not a case where no notice was provided for at all. Although no request was made for an adjournment pursuant to CPL 170.20, notice of Grand Jury