OPINION OF THE COURT
While a parolee on a 1977 robbery conviction, defendant was charged in an indictment with promoting prostitution in the second degree, assault in the third degree, and endangering the welfare of a child. These crimes allegedly occurred on or about October 18, 1980 and involved a 15-year-old female resident of the Rochester Children’s Center, a youth detention facility where defendant was employed. A parole violation warrant was issued, charging defendant with five violations of his parole on the basis of the same facts underlying the criminal charges. At the conclusion of the final parole revocation proceedings, the hearing officer found that the teen-age victim, an admitted prostitute, was no more credible than defendant, dismissed the five charges and canceled the delinquency.
Defendant’s attorney, as part of his pretrial omnibus motions on the criminal charges, moved to dismiss the indictment under principles of collateral estoppel in view of the determination made at the parole revocation hearing. The court denied the motion. Following a Bench trial, defendant was convicted of promoting prostitution and endangering the welfare of a child. On appeal, defendant contends that '\) the doctrine of collateral estoppel precluded the prosecutor from attempting to prove on a criminal trial the same charges which the State had failed, on the merits, to prove under a lesser burden of proof at the parole revocation hearing; (2) the trial court committed reversible error in allowing three witnesses improperly to testify as to the prior consistent statements of the complainant; and (3) the prosecutor impermissibly bolstered his case and became an unsworn witness by stating in his summation that there existed other evidence not presented at trial which linked the defendant to the crime.
The doctrine of collateral estoppel bars relitigation of an issue of ultimate fact which has previously been determined as between the same parties (Ryan v New York Tel. Co.,
In Dowdy (supra), the Court of Appeals determined that a defendant who had successfully presented an affirmative defense at the trial of a criminal action could “claim the benefit” of such when authorities subsequently sought to revoke his parole for the same underlying conduct. However, the court specifically avoided lending its imprimatur to the analysis that in general an acquittal in a criminal action does not bar related parole revocation proceedings due to the different standards of proof applicable to each (People ex rel. Dowdy v Smith, supra, pp 483-484). Subsequently, the court resolved this issue when it held that while the People may fail to establish a defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt in a criminal action, they are not deprived of the opportunity to establish his guilt under the less stringent “preponderance of evidence” standard applicable to parole revocation proceedings (see People ex rel. Matthews v New York State Div. of Parole,
Defendant contends that the converse of this principle would inure to his benefit and require dismissal of the indictment. The issue then for our resolution is: if the State has failed in its proof at a parole revocation proceeding requiring the less stringent “preponderance of evidence” standard, does this determination preclude a court (or jury) in a criminal prosecution from redetermining an issue previously resolved by an administrative agency?
At the outset, we question whether a determination made in a parole hearing could be equated to a “valid and final judgment” for collateral estoppel purposes in a criminal action. In any event, public policy considerations militate against application of the doctrine in these circumstances.
Parole revocation proceedings are not an integral part of a new criminal prosecution. In our view, the question of whether a new crime has been committed by a parolee should be properly addressed to the criminal justice system (e.g., formal prosecution in the context of the criminal action) and that matters within that system must be permitted to be there decided unhampered by parallel parole revocation proceedings. Parole revocation hearings and criminal actions are separate proceedings having different procedures and, most importantly, different objectives. The distinctions between the two proceedings should, not be blurred and their objectives compromised by giving collateral estoppel effect to determinations at parole revocation proceedings. Care must be taken lest the rigid application of collateral estoppel principles to other areas of law runs afoul of countervailing policies which may at times outweigh the otherwise sound reason for the doctrine in preventing repetitive litigation to the greatest extent possible (People v Berkowitz, supra, p 344).
“For one thing, in the criminal law, in contrast to civil litigation, society has an overwhelming interest in ensuring not merely that the determination of guilt or innocence be made, but that it be made correctly. While the correct resolution of civil disputes is indeed an important goal of our legal system, it may fairly be said that society’s primary interest in the resolution of civil disputes is that they be settled in a peaceful, orderly, and impartial manner. Since this is so, it is appropriate that litigation-limiting devices such as the doctrine of collateral estoppel be liberally applied in civil litigation. In contradistinction, it is the correctness of the result which is of pre-eminent concern in a
Defendant next contends that the court erred in permitting employees of the center to testify as to their conversations with the complainant. It is claimed that this testimony impermissibly bolstered that of the alleged victim, in that “the introduction of the statements resulted in a totally unjustifiable four-fold increase in the number of witnesses testifying that the defendant had committed upon the complainant [sic]”. It is true that a party may not ordinarily bolster the testimony of his witness by showing that the witness has previously made statements of the same tenor (People v Wooden,
While the predicate groundwork for a recent fabrication exception to the “no bolstering” rule had been laid, it is readily apparent from the record that the exception would not have been applicable. Prior statements, in order to be admissible under the recent fabrication exception, must have been made before the motive to falsify existed (People v Davis,
Defendant further claims that the prosecutor committed misconduct by stating in his summation that there existed other evidence not presented at trial, which linked defendant to the crime. No objection to this comment was taken, however, and the issue has therefore not been preserved for appellate review (CPL 470.05, subd 2; People v Dawson,
Accordingly, the judgment of the Monroe County Court should be affirmed in all respects.
Dillon, P. J., Doerr, Denman and Moule, JJ., concur.
Judgment unanimously affirmed.
