40 N.Y.2d 763 | NY | 1976
In People v Levy (15 NY2d 159, cert den 381 US 938) we held that an abduction in connection with the commission of a robbery would not in all circumstances support a separate charge for kidnapping.
The merger doctrine was of judicial origin and was based on an aversion to prosecuting a defendant on a kidnapping charge in order to expose him to the heavier penalty thereby made available, where the period of abduction was brief, the criminal enterprise in its entirety appeared as no more than
True it is that the 12-hour durational requirement of section 135.25 effectively renders application of the merger doctrine unnecessary with respect to prosecution on charges of kidnapping in the first degree. We find nothing in the legislative history nor in reason, however, which compels the conclusion that such pro tanto solution of the underlying problem was intended by the Legislature to write off the merger doctrine entirely or to eliminate it with respect to prosecutions for kidnapping in the second degree under section 135.20 of the Penal Law. The mere fact that the Legislature elected to require an extended period of detention for the most serious degree of the crime of kidnapping gives rise to no conclusion that it thereby intended every shorter abduction to constitute kidnapping in the second degree, thus abolishing the merger doctrine. If such had been the legislative intent, appropriate words to accomplish such result were readily available. Absent employment of such language, however, we presume that the statute was to be given effect—as it easily may be— consistent with the then outstanding principle of merger previously enunciated in People v Levy (15 NY2d 159, supra).
We do not find it compelling that there is now no disparity between the penalties for kidnapping second and robbery or rape first. Although ballooning of the penalty may thereby be said to have been eliminated there remains the comparably
The merger doctrine is intended to preclude conviction for kidnapping based on acts which are so much the part of another substantive crime that the substantive crime could not have been committed without such acts and that independent criminal responsibility may not fairly be attributed to them. "It is this kind of factual merger with the ultimate crime of the preliminary, preparatory, or concurrent action that the rule is designed to recognize, and thus prevent unnatural elevation of the 'true’ crime to be charged. It is a merger suggestive of, but not quite like, the merger of the preparation and attempt with the consummated crime, a familiar concept in the criminal law.” (People v Miles, supra, at p 539; consider People v Richette, 33 NY2d 42, interpreting Penal Law, § 110.00.)
There is an exception to the doctrine, however, which in operation denies application of the rule in circumstances to which it would apply were it not for this qualification. This aspect invites attention to the manner or means employed in effectuating what would otherwise be the merged detention. "[T]he rule has no purpose of ignoring as independent crimes alternative or optional means used in committing another crime which, by the gravity and even horrendousness of the means used, constitute and should constitute a separately cognizable offense” (People v Miles, supra, at p 539). If such be found to be the circumstance, the kidnapping aspect aggravated by the particular means or manner of the abduction may then support a separate prosecution.
We turn then to the cases before us, in none of which was the means or manner of the detention such as to invoke the exception to the merger rule. In Cassidy a young woman was walking home in the early evening after having attended classes at Brooklyn College. Defendant grabbed her from the rear and dragged her at knifepoint some 70 feet into a garage where he sought to assault her sexually. After the victim lost consciousness, defendant left her. She did not regain con
We reach a similar conclusion in Dolan. There the victim was also walking home in Brooklyn, in this instance shortly before midnight. After asking directions defendant grabbed the victim and pulled her into an automobile at knifepoint. He then drove around stopping briefly several times to make sexual advances until finally the victim was dropped off a couple of blocks from her home about an hour and a half later. Again the "true” crime was the intermittent, continuing sexual assault and the confinement in the car was only the incidental means to the accomplishment of that assault.
Finally, in Usher, defendant grabbed a nurse as she was returning home from the hospital shortly after midnight. At knifepoint the nurse was pulled across the street to an abandoned building. Inside the vestibule defendant and an accomplice robbed their victim. The nurse was then taken through a courtyard into an adjoining building, up a flight of stairs and into a small room where she was raped at knifepoint. When defendant and his accomplice left, the nurse found her way out of the building, back onto the street and then to her home. In this instance there were two sequential but discrete crimes of violence, first robbery and then rape. As to each, however, the abduction here, too, was only the incidental means employed to facilitate the commission of the underlying crimes.
We hold therefore that the merger doctrine precludes conviction for kidnapping in the second degree in each of these cases.
It remains only to state with respect to defendant’s cross appeal in Cassidy that we do not find error in the trial court’s rulings with respect to the prospective use of his prior convictions for purpose of impeachment in the event that defendant took the witness stand. As to the claim that testimony of prior
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed in each of the three cases.
Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Wachtler, Fuchsberg and Cooke concur.
In each case: Order affirmed.
The criminological principle on which our decision in Levy was grounded had earlier found expression in the Model Penal Code adopted by the American Law Institute in 1962 (§ 212.1 and comments). The decision later found favor in California in People v Daniels (71 Cal 2d 1119).