OPINION OF THE COURT
The People moved pursuant to CPL 190.75 (3) for authorization to resubmit to another Grand Jury the charges that the Fourth February-March Grand Jury had dismissed against defendants Jose C. and Elvis R
“[A] determination by the Grand Jury that the evidence before it does not warrant an indictment should end the matter and there should not be a resubmission unless it appears, for example, that new evidence has been discovered since the former submission; that the Grand Jury failed to give the case a complete and impartial investigation; or that there is a basis for
“Although a case may be resubmitted for reasons such as those enumerated above, a District Attorney is not entitled, and should not be permitted, to resubmit a case merely because he is dissatisfied with or disagrees with the conclusion of the Grand Jury.”
We have at bar perhaps the first case to give dimension to the second test mentioned in Dykes: “that the Grand Jury failed to give the case a complete and impartial investigation.”
GRAND JURY PROCEEDINGS
On March 15, 1984, the Fourth February-March 1984 Grand Jury heard testimony from three police officers. The People submitted all but the charge of attempted murder, second degree, reserving this count until the jurors could hear testimony from Stanley M., the civilian victim under this charge. The Grand Jury then voted to indict defendant Elvis R. for the various crimes the prosecutor had submitted to that body including counts of attempted murder, first degree.
TESTIMONY
The testimony showed that defendant, Elvis R, with a substantial number of friends, had attended a party near Columbus Avenue and 96th Street, in the County of New York. A dispute broke out, and Elvis and his friends found themselves on the street confronting Stanley M. Elvis pulled a gun and fired at Stanley. Two officers out of uniform saw this, and, when Elvis pointed his gun, one officer fired a shot. Elvis ran north. The pursuing officers exchanged fire with Elvis; one officer and Elvis sustained wounds during the pursuit. Eventually, Elvis was captured in Central Park. The gun was nearby.
Elvis testified, too, that there was a crowd, but that it was Stanley who had the gun. When Stanley dropped it, Elvis picked the gun up from the ground. In fear, he fired some shots into the sidewalk. When Elvis saw two other individuals with guns who shot at him, he did not know they were police officers. He ran, carrying the pistol into Central Park.
Jose C. testified as well. From his observations, he did not even see Elvis with a gun but saw another man firing toward an individual in the crowd.
THE MOTION
It seems that the acting foreman of the Fourth February-March 1984 Grand Jury, responding to the invitation of the impaneling Justice, addressed a lengthy letter to Honorable Robert M. Haft, the Justice then presiding in this part. The grand juror expressed many frustrations with the then completed Grand Jury service and criticized the attitude of prosecutors that, according to the writer, gave the impression that the Grand Jury was expected to be a rubber stamp.
Some five months after the February-March 1984 Grand Jury dismissed all charges against both defendants, the People made this motion to resubmit.
The People also contend that even if the Grand Jury had rejected all testimony of the prosecution witnesses and believed only Elvis R., it should at least have indicted for criminal
THE GRAND JUROR’S LETTER
The letter from the acting foreman of the Fourth February-March 1984 Grand Jury is a remarkable document. Whoever he or she is,
This letter undercuts the prosecutor’s motion. If anything, it shows a complete and impartial investigation of all matters that came before the author of this letter. However, nothing in the papers on this motion establishes that this letter writer deliberated on the presentation against Elvis R. and Jose C. I have given no effect to this letter in disposing of the People’s application.
DECISION
No question exists of the legal sufficiency of the evidence before the Grand Jury, if believed, to support an indictment for each charge submitted against Elvis and Jose. Indeed, if the evidence of the People’s witnesses be rejected — as the grand jurors apparently did — sufficient legal evidence remained from the testimony of Elvis alone to indict him for reckless endangerment, first degree (Penal Law § 120.25) and criminal possession of a weapon, third degree (Penal Law § 265.02 [4]). He admitted shooting into the sidewalk with a crowd around and possessing a loaded operable firearm at locations that were not his home or place of business.
This court is not saying that the grand jurors were mandated to indict and that, therefore, a resubmission is required for them to perform their duty. Of course, if they are following their oaths and the instructions on the law, when they have heard and believed legally sufficient evidence which, if unexplained and uncontradicted, would warrant conviction (People v Dunleavy,
The focus instead must be maintained on the only issue: Did the Grand Jury fail to give the case a complete and impartial investigation? The defendants point to the numerous and incisive questions posed throughout the presentation by members of this Grand Jury.
Crediting the Grand Jury, as the court does, with following the legal instructions given by the Assistant District Attorney and with acting according to the oath its members took, the court concludes that they must have given the case an incomplete or partial investigation. In reaching this conclusion, the court presumes that they drew every reasonable inference in favor of the defendants and rejected on credibility grounds the testimony that would tend to inculpate Elvis R. All other efforts to rationalize the result fail.
One rationalization that can be imagined is that the grand jurors pieced together a completely exculpatory version selecting snippets of testimony from one or another witness but
Another possibility presented by the circumstances is that the Grand Jury accepted the instructions on justification but applied them erroneously to all the charges including criminal possession of a weapon, third degree. Whether or not justification would be a defense under the facts at bar to reckless endangerment, first degree (see, People v Zurita,
Lastly, the Grand Jury may have resorted to some notion of a defense of temporary, lawful possession. Yet, the Assistant District Attorney furnished no instructions respecting such a defense. This omission was eminently appropriate. From the very testimony of Elvis R. it is clear that he possessed the weapon from the moment Stanley M. dropped it to the ground and while Elvis fired shots into the sidewalk and during his flight of a few blocks into Central Park. To be sure, that portion of his possession that occurred while Elvis was disarming and fending off Stanley M. may, if the possession had ended there, have required a charge of temporary, lawful possession. (Contrast, People v Williams,
From the foregoing analysis, it becomes clear that the grand jurors applied their own notions of the law in voting no true bill. They either applied improperly the justification defense that was charged to the count of criminal possession of a weapon, third degree, or adopted some notion of temporary, lawful possession on which they were never instructed. In either event, they departed from the law as delivered by the Assistant District Attorney. It is unnecessary to guess at their motives for this departure.
REMEDY
Since the locus of the Grand Jury’s failure to give a complete and impartial investigation was the charge of criminal possession of a weapon, it might be argued that only this charge should be resubmitted. But, to limit the resubmission would be to speculate on the extent of the Grand Jury’s error.
Notes
. True names concealed in view of the dismissal of charges by the Grand Jury.
. The other standards mentioned in People v Dykes (
. Against defendant Elvis R., the People asked the Grand Jury to consider two counts of attempted murder, first degree (as to two plain-clothes police officers), one count of attempted murder, second degree (as to the civilian named Stanley M.), two counts of criminal possession of a weapon, second degree (respecting shots fired at the police officers on 97th Street and the civilian on 96th Street), one count of criminal possession of a weapon, third degree (not at defendant’s home or business), and one count of reckless endangerment, first degree (in firing into the sidewalk with a crowd around).
. For this testimony, the prosecutor asked the Grand Jury to consider charges of peijury, first degree, against Jose C.
. Though made on notice to the accused, this motion could have been made ex parte. (People v Ladsen,
. The copy of the letter annexed to the motion conceals the signature and identity of the author of this letter.
. CPL 190.65 (1) provides: “Subject to the rules prescribing the kinds of offenses which may be charged in an indictment, a grand jury may indict a person for an offense when (a) the evidence before it is legally sufficient to establish that such person committed such offense provided, however, such evidence is not legally sufficient when corroboration that would be required, as a matter of law, to sustain a conviction for such offense is absent, and (b) competent and admissible evidence before it provides reasonable cause to believe that such person committed such offense.” (Emphasis added.)
. The historical function of the Grand Jury “as a buffer between the State and its citizens, protecting the latter from unfounded and arbitrary accusations” (People v Calbud, Inc.,
. Defendants also suggest that this motion is made merely because the District Attorney is disappointed with the failure to indict and disagrees with the grand jurors’ decision. The Assistant District Attorney confesses to her disappointment and disagreement. This, of course, cannot furnish any ground for resubmission as she readily admits. (People v Dykes,
. Whether on trial and at the request of defendant the instruction of temporary, lawful possession would be required need not be decided here and now. The Grand Jury need not be instructed with the same precision as the petit jury. (People v Calbud, Inc.,
. As asserted earlier in this opinion (p 693, supra), the Fourth February-March 1984 Grand Jurors are credited with faithfulness to their oaths. Nonetheless, it is conceivable that they were vexed at the manner in which this case was presented. After their initial vote on an indictment, they were requested to reopen the case first to hear additional prosecution witnesses and later to hear testimony from Elvis R. and other defense witnesses. After Elvis made a statement, the assistant cross-examined him at such length and with such tenacity that even the reader of the transcript is forced to sympathize with him. The proceedings were extruded so that the assistant was required to ask the Grand Jury to vote to extend its term. It did so by a bare 12 votes. And, to top this all off, the Grand Jury was saddled with a new charge to consider of perjury against Jose C.
. In People v Groh (
. The same reasoning is invoked when a court is asked to review the verdict of a petit jury where an error pertains to part of a count or to one of several counts. (See, People v Root,
