85 A.D.2d 92 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1982
OPINION OF THE COURT
As a result of killing his former girlfriend, defendant has been convicted after a Bench trial of manslaughter, first degree, and criminal possession of a dangerous weapon. Shortly after the killing, defendant called an Assistant District Attorney who had formerly been his personal attorney, admitted the killing and asked the attorney to arrange his surrender to police. At the trial these admissions were received in evidence, as was a confession defendant made to police after he surrendered. The primary issues on this appeal are whether the court erred in receiving these statements because (1) the admissions to the
Defendant had lived with the victim, Patty Manz, periodically for several years and had fathered a child by her. About six weeks before the homicide, their relationship had soured because the victim believed that he had stolen her stereo console. She filed a larceny complaint against defendant and threw all of his clothes out of the house. Defendant, emotionally distraught over the possibility of losing his girlfriend and going to jail, spent most of the day before the killing with a friend named Helen Abraham, ingesting drugs and alcohol. During that time he displayed a pistol to Ms. Abraham and tested it by firing it into her living room baseboard. At about 6:00 p.m., after twice telling her that he intended to kill Patty, he left Ms. Abraham and went to the victim’s house. After arguing with her, he shot her in the head from short range. She died from the wound seven days later. The victim’s daughter, who was in the house at the time, witnessed the argument and the shooting.
About 9:00 p.m. defendant returned to the Abraham house and told Ms. Abraham that he had shot Patty. He made some telephone calls from there in an attempt to obtain money so that he could leave Rochester and he then left at about 9:45 p.m. Around midnight defendant telephoned Louis Vallone, an Assistant District Attorney of Monroe County, at his home. Defendant told Vallone that he had killed Patty Manz and, at Vallone’s suggestion, he made arrangements to surrender.
Defendant opened the telephone conversation, Vallone recalled, by stating: “This is Jerry — I am in trouble.”
At the trial Vallone testified to these admissions and defendant challenges the trial court’s ruling receiving the evidence over defendant’s claim that the communication was privileged.
I
The attorney-client privilege is now codified in CPLR 4503 but it is deeply rooted in the common law. It is based upon a considered public policy to encourage full disclosure between an attorney and his client (see Upjohn Co. v United States, 449 US 383, 389; Matter of Priest v Hennessy, 51 NY2d 62, 67-68, supra). Recognition of this privilege, however, excludes evidence which has a high degree of reliability, it stands in derogation of the public’s “right to every man’s evidence” (8 Wigmore, Evidence, § 2192, at p 70) and for that reason it has, not been without its critics (see Fisch, New York Evidence [2d ed], §§ 516, 517; 5 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac, par 4503.01). Thus, it has been frequently said that the privilege “ought to be strictly confined within the narrowest possible limits consistent with the logic of its principle” (8 Wigmore,
There have been a number of formulations of the rule (see People v Belge, 59 AD2d 307, 309, and cases cited; see, generally, Richardson, Evidence [10 ed], § 412; Fisch, New York Evidence [2d ed], §§ 518, 519; 8 Wigmore, Evidence, § 2292), but the Court of Appeals has stated that the privilege attaches when an attorney-client relationship has been established and the information sought to be protected from disclosure is a confidential communication made to the attorney for the purpose of obtaining legal advice or services. (Matter of Priest v Hennessy, supra.) The client must consult the attorney as an attorney, not as a friend or to engage him for nonlegal matters (see, e.g., Rosseau v Bleau, 131 NY 177,183 [attorney employed as a scrivener]; Lifschitz v O’Brien, 143 App Div 180 [attorney employed to procure a loan on real estate]). The relationship is not established because one pays a legal fee (Matter of Priest v Hennessy, supra), or lost because the client does not pay a fee (Bacon v Frisbie, 80 NY 394) and neither the fact that the parties have had an attorney-client relationship in the past (People v Hess, 8 App Div 143), nor that they may have such a relationship in the future (Rintelen v Schaeffer, 158 App Div 477, 484, affd 219 NY 620) is determinative. Whether the relationship exists or not is determined by the client’s purpose in contacting the attorney. Its existence at the time of the communication is a matter to be resolved by the court and the party who asserts the privilege bears the burden of establishing each element of it (Matter of Priest v Hennessy, supra, pp 68-69).
Turning then to the facts of this case -
Defendant’s acquaintance with Vallone dated back to 1963 or 1964 when Vallone, then in private practice, was assigned to represent him on a criminal charge. Vallone did not represent defendant again thereafter although defendant contacted him while he was on the prosecutor’s staff. When defendant did contact Vallone, Vallone told
Thus, when defendant called Vallone on the night of the killing and made the incriminating admissions, he was not a client of Vallone’s and was not seeking to become one. He had been advised long before that that Vallone could not represent him (see People v Hess, 8 App Div 143, supra; see, also, Kitz v Buckmaster, 45 App Div 283, supra; People v Fentress, 103 Misc 2d 179). Moreover, it appears from, the conversation that he did not seek legal advice or assistance of Vallone. Manifestly, his call to Vallone wqs made for nonlegal purposes, to learn if the victim was still alive, to see her at the hospital if possible and to arrange for his safe surrender to police. The fortuitous circumstance that Vallone had represented defendant 11 years earlier, or even that he may have given him legal advice in the more recent past, is of no consequence since that representation had no relation to the communication which is claimed to be privileged here (see Matter of Priest v Hennessy, 51 NY2d, at p 71). Accordingly, defendant’s statements to Vallone should be viewed as those made to any other law enforcement officer for any other purpose (cf. People v Ortiz, 54 NY2d 288).
The trial court did not specifically rule on whether an attorney-client relationship had been established. Rather, it held that defendant waived any claim of privilege when
In short, defendant did not contemplate the possibility of Vallone representing him on the criminal charge here and the trial court correctly denied the privilege and admitted the relevant conversation into evidence not only on that ground but also on the ground of waiver.
II
Defendant also contends that his constitutional right to counsel was abridged when the police accepted his waiver of his Miranda rights in the absence of counsel and took a lengthy statement from him. He cites People v Marrero (51 NY2d 56, supra) in support of his contention, but that case is critically different from this one. In Marrero the attorney was private counsel, hired for the limited purpose of surrendering defendant to the police. The Court of Appeals held that notwithstanding the limited nature of the re
Nor do we find the statement to police or any part of it involuntary because the police discontinued their interrogation in the station house for a short time while defendant led them to the place where he had discarded the gun so that it could be retrieved. Defendant was fully advised of his Miranda rights at the commencement of questioning and no further advisement was required upon returning to the station house after the temporary break to retrieve and identify the weapon.
Ill
Finally, while the court may have improperly circumscribed defense counsel’s cross-examination of Helen Abraham, any error in this respect was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt in view of the overwhelming evidence of guilt.
We have considered defendant’s other claims of error and find them without merit.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Hancock, Jr., Callahan, Denman and Schnepp, JJ., concur.
Judgment unanimously affirmed.