Lead Opinion
Defendant appeals from a unanimous Appellate Division affirmance of an order of the Supreme Court denying after a hearing in the former Court of General Sessions defendant’s motion to suppress certain evidence. The challenged evidence was in the form of stolen diamonds which had been seized on August 30, 1960 by New York City police officers acting with agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The officers had no search warrant or warrant of arrest. The gems were part of the loot of a burglary on June 25, 1960 of the Cartier jewelry store in New York City. Defendant-appellant Joseph Coffey was arrested at the time of the seizing of the precious stones and was convicted of burglary, third degree (affirmed by the Appellate Division, 13 A D 2d 410).
Although Coffey’s conviction came before the Supreme Court’s decision in Mapp v. Ohio (367 U. S. 643) his trial counsel had by proper motion preserved for review the question of the constitutionality of the search and seizure which turned up this stolen property. After his appeal had been argued before us we withheld determination thereof so that a motion to suppress might be made. Our opinion (11 N Y 2d 142, 147) included this statement: “If it should turn out to be the fact that the search of this car and of its occupants was incident to a lawful arrest the evidence would apparently be receivable (see People v. Loria, 10 N Y 2d 368, supra, and cases cited therein). There was presented to the Appellate Division and to us an affidavit by one of the F. B. I. agents containing statements which if found to be true might be the basis for holding that this search and seizure were incidental to a lawful arrest.”
The testimony taken at the hearing on the motion to suppress will now be summarized.
The principal witness was Henry Gfilhofer, an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the person who made the affidavit referred to in our opinion on the earlier appeal in this case. He testified that on August 29, 1960 an informer (name not given) with whom he had previously done business telephoned him to tell him that two men named Coffey and ‘ ‘ Patsy ’ ’ were the Cartier burglars and were trying to dispose of the jewelry stolen from the store and that another man named Kingdon or “Bill” De Normand was also associated in this effort. Gfilhofer said that he made inquiries of other F. B. I. agents who suggested to him that “ Patsy ” was probably one Pasquale Fuca who was known to associate with Joseph Coffey in the neighborhood mentioned by the informer. According to Gfilhofer, he, before talking again to the accuser, learned that Joseph Coffey frequently drove his brother’s 1955 Oldsmobile car and learned also that the Cartier store watchman, Nilsson, had reported to the police that the burglars drove away from the store in a blue and white Oldsmobile about five years old. Gfilhofer, according to his testimony, found from F. B. I. records that a man named De Normand had many years earlier been known to drive a car belonging to a brother of defendant Coffey, that De Normand, Joseph Coffey and Fuca all had criminal records and that the latter two had been arrested together on bur alar v charges.
We turn to the testimony of New York City detectives Kenney and Egner and we summarize the testimony of both as one, because of similarity. The detectives said that on August 30,
Assistant District Attorney Roberts swore at this hearing that during the Coffey criminal trial Gilhofer gave Roberts the informant’s name and Roberts talked to the informant and that later, during the De Normand trial, Roberts talked to the informant and tried, without success, to persuade him to testify for the People. Roberts testified that the informer’s statements to him tallied with Gilhofer’s account.
Several times during this hearing defense counsel by questioning the witnesses and by application to the Justice presiding tried unsuccessfully to get the informant’s name, arguing that he needed this name to check Gilhofer’s testimony and especially in order to prove an alibi as against the story that the informer had seen the jewels before he gave his information. The People asserted a privilege to keep secret the informer’s name on the ground that disclosure might endanger his life.
The first law question is: did this proof support the affirmed finding below that this search and seizure was incident to a lawful arrest? Put differently, the query is whether in arresting
The defense argues that all of this proof should, however, be held insufficient because the informer’s name was kept secret from the defense with the result that neither he nor his story could be investigated. Of course, hearsay including material obtained from informers is admissible on a hearing like this and under proper circumstances may be received even when the informer himself does not testify (Draper v. United States, 358 U. S. 307). It must be kept in mind that the present inquiry is not as to defendant’s guilt but as to the sufficiency for arrest purposes of the grounds for the arresting officer’s belief that he was guilty. Simple, untested rumor is not ground enough nor, we will assume, is untested information from a person of no established reliability (Rodgers v. United States, 267 F. 79, 85) or suspicion alone (Henry v. United States, 361 U. S. 98). Substantiation of information can come either from the informer’s own character and reputation or from the separate, objective checking of the tale he tells. (Willson v. Superior Ct., 46 Cal. 2d 291). We are left in the dark as to who this informer was but the fact of his existence and of his informing was fully testified to, fully corroborated by the prosecuting attorneys and found by the courts below. Before the arrest the principal elements of his story were checked out and found plausible. At that point — and regardless of who or what the informer was — enough had been presented to agent Grilhofer to induce in him a rational belief that Coffey was one of the burglars.
Since the showing of probable cause was thus adequate, the People’s refusal, approved by the trial court, to name the informer was not error unless by making a fair hearing impossible it seriously prejudiced the defense. Defendant argues that nondisclosure prevented cross-examination of the informer or proof that he never existed or never saw the jewels or was merely selling gossip or tavern rumors. The People as their reasons for concealment cite Grilhofer’s promise to the informant, the danger to the informer of publicizing his name and the full corroboration of the information supplied to the F. B. I. agent. As the Supreme Court Justice described it: “The
Appellant argues that his arrest was illegal in that there was no compliance by any of the officers with the requirement of section 180 of the Code of Criminal Procedure that when arresting a person without a warrant the officer must inform the arrested person of the cause of the arrest. No such information was given Coffey, at least explicitly, although the circumstances including the presence of the diamonds suggest that Coffey must have known why the car was stopped and why he and De Normand were taken into custody. There is some doubt as to whether failure to obey the command of section 180 voids an arrest (see discussion in Squadrito v. Griebsch, 1 N Y 2d 471) to the extent of making seized evidence inadmissible. We need not now announce that failure of an arresting officer to inform as to cause will never make an arrest illegal (see discussions in People v. Cohan, 44 Cal. 2d 434, fn. p. 442; in State v. Smith, 37 N. J. 481, 491, and in Squadrito v. Griebsch, 1 N Y 2d 471, 479, supra). It is enough in this case to hold that on the whole picture Coffey had for our present purposes sufficient notice as to the cause for his capture and detention (see, also, Code Grim. Pro., § 813-e, as to a person ‘ ‘ claiming to be aggrieved by an unlawful search and seizure ”).
The People would have us say that Coffey lacks standing to complain of the search since it was De Normand’s pockets that
Other points briefed by defendant need no discussion.
The order now on appeal should be affirmed. On the former appeal (from the judgment) as to which we withheld decision (11 N Y 2d 142) there should be an affirmance.
Dissenting Opinion
It was error, in my judgment, for the trial court to refuse to require the People to divulge the identity of the informer. As the Supreme Court observed in Roviaro v. United States (353 U. S. 53, 60-61), “Where the disclosure of an informer’s identity, or of the contents of his communication, is relevant and helpful to the defense of an accused, or is essential to a fair determination of a cause, the privilege [of nondisclosure] must give way.”
Where the informant’s information does no more than trigger or initiate the investigation and such investigation uncovers sufficient evidence, separate and apart from the informer’s communication, to establish probable cause for the arrest and search, the informer’s identity need not be divulged. (See, e.g., Roviaro v. United States, 353 U. S. 53, 61, supra; Scher v. United States, 305 U. S. 251; see, also, Note, 76 A. L. R. 2d 262, 331-338.) Where, however, testimony of communications from an informer is necessary to establish the legality of an arrest and search, his identity must be disclosed. (See, e.g., Roviaro v. United States, 353 U. S. 53, 60-61, supra; Costello v. United States, 298 F. 2d 99, 101; United States v. Conforti, 200 F. 2d 365, 367; Wilson v. United States, 59 F. 2d 390, 392; Priestly v. Superior Ct., 50 Cal. 2d 812; see, also, Drouin v. State, 222 Md. 271, 287; Note, 76 A. L. R. 2d 262, 338-343.)
In such a situation, the disclosure of the informer’s identity is essential to a fair hearing on the issue of probable cause. Without knowledge of the informer’s identity and an opportunity to question him, it is impossible for a defendant to show either that the informer does not exist, that he was unreliable or that the information which he gave to the police was other than as testified to. (See, e.g., Priestly v. Superior Ct., 50 Cal. 2d 812, 823, supra, per Cartee, J., concurring; Drouin v. State, 222 Md. 271, 287, supra.) “If testimony of communications
In the case before us, a showing of probable cause necessarily depended in part upon the information furnished by the unknown informer. The law enforcement officials, it is true, testified that they “ checked ” the story given by the informer — and we have no reason to disbelieve them — but the fact remains that the conclusion that the informer actually existed and that he gave the information ascribed to him depended solely upon their own testimony. Accordingly, since the defendant had no effective way of contradicting or impeaching this testimony without knowledge of the informer’s identity, disclosure should have been required. It may well be that the proof of the defendant’s guilt is clear but that does not decide this appeal, for, as the court emphasized in the Roviaro case (353 U. S. 53, 60, supra), “ fundamental requirements of fairness ” are involved.
I would reverse the order appealed from and direct a new hearing.
Judges Dye, Van Voorhis, Burke, Foster and Scxleppi concur with Chief Judge Desmond ; Judge Fuld dissents in an opinion.
Order and judgment affirmed.