38 A.D.2d 836 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1972
Memorandum. Appeal by defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, rendered December 18, 1970, convicting him of murder (2 counts), upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence. Judgment affirmed. No opinion. Martuscello, J. (dissenting). I concur with the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Shapiro insofar as it indicates that the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction for felony murder based on robbery and that the judgment should be reversed. However, I further vote to dismiss the two counts in the indictment for felony murder upon which the defendant was convicted and not to order a new trial. The trial court dismissed the common-law murder counts as well as other counts of the indictment upon the motion of the District Attorney. Thus, the only counts remaining are those upon which the conviction rests. Since the People failed to produce sufficient evidence to sustain a conviction, the indictment must be dismissed. This case is distinguishable from People v. Jackson (20 N Y 2d 440), mentioned in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Shapiro, since there the indictment charged that the defendant willfully, feloniously and with malice aforethought shot William J. Ramos, Jr. with a revolver and thereby inflicted divers wounds upon him, from which he died. Under such an indictment, evidence of both common-law murder and felony murder was properly adduced and the conviction could be for either or both. At bar, on the other hand, there were separate counts for common-law murder and for felony murder and the latter count was not in the common-law form but specifically alleged the underlying felonies. Shapiro, J. (dissenting). The principal point raised on this appeal is that there is no evidence in the record to establish whether the defendant conceived the intent to rob his two victims before or after he killed them and that therefore his conviction on a felony murder theory was not warranted. The issue thus is a narrow one: Was there sufficient evidence to permit the jury to determine that the defendant formed the intent to commit the robbery before he
. CPL 470.20 (subd. 2), which requires dismissal of the accusatory instrument upon a reversal for legal insufficiency of trial evidence is not applicable, as the notice of appeal was served and filed prior to Sept. 1, 1971, the effective date of .the CPL (CPL 1.10, subd. 2). In the interest of justice a new trial is mandated (cf. People v. Lee, 308 N. Y. 302).
. Of course, if the intent to steal was formulated only after the victims were killed, the taking is technically a larceny and not a robbery (cf. Penal Law, §§ 155.00, 160.00). However, to avoid undue confusion, the term robbery shall be used to describe the taking, regardless of when the intent arose.
. Whether, if the judgment appealed from is ultimately reversed, the prosecutor may nevertheless move to withdraw his motion to dismiss and to reinstate the common-law murder and other substantive counts of the indictment which the jury did not pass upon is an open question (cf. People v. Cefaro, 45 Misc 2d 990, 991-992, the reasoning of which was necessarily affirmed in 28 A D 2d 694 and 21 N Y 2d 252). The verdict as to the felony murder counts did not amount to an implied acquittal on the common-law murder counts, as the jury never had a full opportunity to consider those counts (cf. People v. Jackson, 20 ,N Y 2d 440, 452). In Jackson, jeopardy was held not to have attached to felony murder counts of the indictment which the jury had been instructed not to consider if they found the defendant gulty of common-law murder. There the indictment charged both common-law and felony murder. The jury was instructed that it could not convict the defendant on more than one homicide count. Hence, the jury’s silence on the felony murder count did not bar his subsequent conviction on that count following the utlimate reversal of the common-law murder conviction. The practical effect of the dismissal of the common-law murder counts in this ease had no different effect than the instructions in Jackson. The jury was prevented from reaching a verdict as to the common-law murder and other counts which it had not yet fully considered.