75 N.Y.2d 449 | NY | 1990
Lead Opinion
Defendant, tried with two accomplices, was convicted after a jury trial of multiple counts of burglary and robbery in the first and second degrees, assault in the second degree (two counts), and criminal possession of a weapon. He and four others broke into the home of a woman early one morning and terrorized her by the commission of many crimes against her person and property. They departed with her purse and television set.
Two issues are presented to us: first, whether the trial court committed reversible error requiring a new trial when it did not allow defense counsel to be present for the voir dire hearing — after four witnesses had testified — into possible taint of the impaneled jury; second, whether the District Attorney committed error, requiring dismissal of all charges, in not instructing the Grand Jury with respect to certain controverted evidence.
The voir dire hearing occurred during the course of the trial when a question arose as to whether a potentially prejudicial surmise — an alternate juror expressed concern to the court upon seeing defendant examining papers she thought might contain jurors’ home addresses — and conversation was had among the alternate juror and four other woman jurors. The Trial Justice questioned the alternate in Chambers with the prosecutor and defense counsel present. The trial court, however, proceeded to inquire of the other four sitting jurors with
The Appellate Division, in affirming the judgment of conviction, addressed the voir dire issue and reasoned that because the actual presence of a defendant has been held dispensable in certain circumstances at such a hearing (People v Mullen, 44 NY2d 1), so too is the presence of defense counsel excusable where, as that court phrased it, the hearing was "evenhanded and not prejudicial.” (People v Boatman, 147 AD2d 912, 913 [codefendants].) The court appears to have rejected the Grand Jury instruction claim as being "without merit”.
We cannot agree with the Appellate Division’s rationale or result on the voir dire issue. The fundamental unfairness to defendant by the exclusion of his counsel from this relevant inquiry is evident from the inherently speculative nature of the impact on those four jurors. For that reason, we reverse and order a new trial.
CPL 260.20 requires that "[a] defendant must be personally present during the trial of an indictment”. In People v Mullen (44 NY2d 1, supra), we held that in camera questioning of a juror was not a "material part” of a trial requiring the personal presence of defendant, reasoning, however, that the presence of defense counsel at the inquiry was "sufficient to afford the defendant a 'fair and just hearing.’ ” (Id., at 6, quoting Snyder v Massachusetts, 291 US 97, 108.)
By holding here that under Mullen nothing less than counsel’s presence will suffice in these circumstances, we need decide no more in this case. While greater safeguards may be desirable or even eventually held to be required depending on some future particular fact pattern, it is unnecessary, because of the narrowness of the defense objection and its determinative impact on this case, to express any additional views to resolve this case (see, however, e.g., People v Buford, 69 NY2d 290, 299 [which, in holding that a juror was not "grossly unqualified” and should not have been discharged over defendant’s objection under CPL 270.35, commented that a defendant as well as the attorney should be present at an in camera hearing to determine that question]).
We believe and conclude that an inquiry to determine the existence and extent of prejudice affecting the gross dis
We agree with the Appellate Division, however, that defendant’s second argument addressed to the instructions to the Grand Jury is unavailing. Defendant, in testimony before the Grand Jury and at a later Huntley hearing, claimed his inculpatory statement was coerced. The Huntley hearing court ultimately ruled it was voluntary and admissible. Defendant nevertheless now contends that the District Attorney’s failure to instruct the grand jurors that a statement may turn out to be inadmissible infected the Grand Jury proceeding to the point that its "integrity [was] impaired” and requires the dismissal of the indictment. CPL 210.35 (5) provides: "A grand jury proceeding is defective within the meaning of paragraph (c) of subdivision one of section 210.20 when * * * [t]he proceeding otherwise fails to conform to the requirements of article one hundred ninety to such degree that the integrity thereof is impaired and prejudice to the defendant may result. ” (Emphasis added.) The dissenting-in-part opinion accepts that proposition as applicable here and would dismiss the indictment entirely. We disagree because neither the demanding test, nor the policies underlying it, nor the facts and evidence of this case warrant the final plenary remedy of dismissal of this criminal proceeding.
"[A] Grand Jury need not be instructed with the same degree of precision that is required when a petit jury is instructed on the law.” (People v Calbud, Inc., 49 NY2d 389, 394.) The separate and distinct standards of instruction applicable to the issue are further made clear by CPL 190.30 (7): "Whenever it is provided in article sixty that a court presiding at á jury trial must instruct the jury with respect to the significance, legal effect or evaluation of evidence, the district attorney, in an equivalent situation in a grand jury proceeding, may so instruct the grand jury.” (Emphasis added.)
Here, defendant’s statement was ultimately admitted into evidence at trial after it was determined the statement was voluntary and a product of "a knowing, voluntary and intelli
The dissent-in-part complains that without such a result the Grand Jury proceeding in this case becomes "skewed” for lack of the particular evidentiary instruction. But this misses the point of the statutory test, which does not turn on mere flaw, error or skewing. The statutory test is very precise and very high: "impairment of integrity” of the Grand Jury process. It has not been met here.
We find it difficult to understand, in any event, how a third procedural litigation of the issue of voluntariness of a statement — which would be routinized now at the Grand Jury stage — advances fairness and justice generally or to this defendant. Defendant necessarily, appropriately and ultimately had his Huntley hearing to contest the voluntariness issue and he lost. He was also allowed by law to raise the issue a second time at the trial (CPL 60.45). Only if the very high hurdle of impairment of the integrity of the Grand Jury process, plus prejudice, is met, can it then be said that an additional evaluation of that issue should have been presented to the Grand Jury in the first instance. To rule otherwise would make the exceptional routine and without a valid justification.
Finally, the dissent-in-part finds some support for its view on this issue in People v Batashure (75 NY2d 306 [decided today]). That case, however, deals with arrogation by a prosecutor of authority reposed in the Grand Jury. It does not turn on or focus on the assertion of a particularized evidentiary instruction. We conclude in this case, in any event, that it was not even error because accomplice evidence does not have to be "ironclad” but rather only minimal. Thus, People v Batashure (supra) seems beside the point in this case on the pertinent issue.
Accordingly, because error was committed in excluding
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part and dissenting in part). Although I agree that the conviction in this case must be reversed, I cannot concur in the majority’s rationale, which rests not on the State statutory right to be present during "material parts” of the trial (CPL 260.20; see, People ex rel. Bartlam v Murphy, 9 NY2d 550; Maurer v People, 43 NY 1) but rather on the more fundamental right of a defendant to be present, but only in circumstances "where his absence would have a substantial effect on his ability to defend.” (People v Mullen, 44 NY2d 1, 5, citing Snyder v Massachusetts, 291 US 97, 105-106.) Since the latter right has heretofore been treated strictly as an aspect of a defendant’s due process rights under the Federal Constitution (see, People v Mullen, supra, at 5, citing Snyder v Massachusetts, supra; People ex retl. Bartlam v Murphy, supra), I cannot subscribe to an analysis that fails to come to grips with United States v Gagnon (470 US 522) and Rushen v Spain (464 US 114), two recent decisions drastically constricting the scope and effect of the Federal right.
Before the applicable legal principles may be considered, a brief review of the facts underlying the issue is required. The charges against defendant stemmed from a five-man robbery and brutal assault against a middle-aged woman. Although there was some evidence other than accomplice testimony connecting defendant to the crime, this evidence was not ironclad and, consequently, defendant’s identity as one of the perpetrators was clearly one of the factual issues for the Grand Jury to resolve. In this regard, one of the most significant pieces of evidence that were placed before the Grand Jury was a station house statement by defendant in which he admitted to having been present at the scene of the crime.
Turning to the applicable legal principles, I begin with People v Calbud, Inc. (49 NY2d 389), in which the standard for reviewing the quality of Grand Jury instructions was discussed. In that case, the court said: "We deem it sufficient if the District Attorney provides the Grand Jury with enough information to enable it intelligently to decide whether a crime has been committed and to determine whether there exists legally sufficient evidence to establish the material elements of the crime.” (Id., at 394-395 [emphasis supplied]; see also, People v Goetz, 68 NY2d 96.) After establishing this relatively lenient standard, the court nonetheless went on to caution that the Grand Jury’s integrity might well be deemed impaired within the meaning of CPL 210.35 (5) "[w]hen the District Attorney’s instructions to the Grand Jury are so incomplete * * * as to substantially undermine [the Grand Jury’s] function” (People v Calbud, Inc., 49 NY2d, at 396, supra). It seems to me that this language is directly applicable here.
It is now beyond dispute that one of the Grand Jury’s fundamental functions is to determine whether there is legally sufficient evidence to support a particular criminal charge (CPL 190.65 [1] [a]; see, People v Batashure, 75 NY2d 306 [decided today]; see also, People v Jennings, 69 NY2d 103, 115). Indeed, in People v Calbud, Inc. (49 NY2d, at 394, supra [emphasis supplied]), the court stated that "[t]he primary function of the Grand Jury in our system is to investigate crimes and determine whether sufficient evidence exists to accuse a citizen of a [particular] crime”. Further, in the first instance, it is the Grand Jury’s exclusive right to determine whether there is "reasonable cause to believe” that the charged crimes were committed by the accused (CPL 190.65 [1] [b]; see, People v Deegan, 69 NY2d 976, 979; People v Jennings, 69 NY2d, at 114-115, supra).
Thus, in order for the Grand Jury to perform its essential function in a case involving a seriously contested confession or admission, that body must be told by its legal advisor, the District Attorney, that the confession or admission cannot be used as part of the People’s direct case if found involuntary (see, People v Valles, 62 NY2d 36, 38 ["(t)he District Attorney is required to instruct the Grand Jury on the law with respect to the matters before it”]). Such an instruction, which is standard fare for petit juries (see, People v Huntley, supra), is necessary to enable the Grand Jury realistically to evaluate the People’s proffered evidence and to determine whether the legal sufficiency standard has been, or can be, satisfied.
Without such an instruction, the Grand Jury cannot properly determine the significance, if any, to be assigned to the testifying defendant’s claims that his statement was coerced. Moreover, in cases where the Grand Jury elects to credit the defendant’s claims of coercion, the absence of a proper instruction deprives the Grand Jury of the all-important knowledge that the sufficiency of the People’s case must now be assessed completely without regard to the statement. The net result is that the Grand Jury’s "essential function” is "substantially undermined,” and "it may fairly be said that the integrity of that body has been impaired”, requiring dismissal under CPL 210.35 (5) (People v Calbud, Inc., supra, at 396).
Finally, the fact that the Huntley hearing court in this case ultimately rejected defendant’s claims and found his station house statement to be voluntary does not cure the defect in the Grand Jury proceedings or otherwise vitiate the need for reversal. The issue here does not concern the sufficiency of the evidence before the Grand Jury or the propriety of admitting defendant’s station house statement — questions which may well be rendered moot by the subsequent determinations of an appropriate fact finder (see, People v Oakley, 28 NY2d 309; People v Valinoti, 26 NY2d 553, 557; People v Nitzberg, 289 NY 523, 529-530). Rather, the dispute concerns an impairment of the process by which the Grand Jury reached its decision to indict. If, as I believe, this process was improperly skewed by
For that reason, I vote to reverse the order of the Appellate Division and dismiss the indictment.
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Simons, Kaye, Alexander and Hancock, Jr., concur with Judge Bellacosa; Judge Titone concurs in part and dissents in part and votes to reverse and dismiss the indictment in a separate opinion.
Order reversed, etc.
The Rushen case (464 US 114) is particularly important here because it treated an in camera inquiry conducted in the absence of the defendant and defense counsel as subject to harmless error analysis.