52 A.D.2d 887 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1976
Appeal by defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, rendered January 31, 1975, convicting him of grand larceny in the third degree and petit larceny, upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence. Judgment reversed, on the law and as a matter of discretion in the interest of justice, and new trial ordered. On December 11, 1975, shortly before the commencement of the defendant’s trial, a hearing was held pursuant to CPL 670.20 to determine whether the complainant’s testimony, given at a preliminary hearing in the Criminal Court should be read into evidence at the trial in lieu of her appearing personally as a prosecution witness. John Delgiorno, a detective assigned to the District Attorney’s office, testified that, on the previous day, he and his partner went to 165 Dykeman Street, Brooklyn, to speak to one Carmen Rodriguez. They were seeking information as to the whereabouts of Maria Carion, the complainant in this case and the mother of Carmen Rodriguez. The superintendent told Delgiorno that the daughter had moved seven months earlier. He and his partner then tried to locate the complainant at her last known address at Dwight Street, also in Brooklyn, but were unable to do so. They then went to the Bay Ridge Social Center and the Welfare Department’s Central Office to ascertain the address of either or both women. These attempts by them were also unsuccessful. At the continuation of the hearing the next day, the People produced Carmen Rodriguez, the complainant’s daughter. She testified that although her mother had been a permanent resident of the "Red Hook projects” for nearly 24 years, she was then visiting her nephew’s wife in New Jersey; she had been gone for about two weeks. Although the witness did not know where her mother was in New Jersey, and had no telephone number at which she could be reached, she did testify that her mother had called her the previous week and had spoken to her for a short time. She concluded her testimony by stating that her mother usually made such visits for about a week or two and that she sometimes also stayed at her brother’s house for a similar period, and that she should be coming back. Based upon the daughter’s testimony, the trial court concluded that the prosecution had used due diligence pursuant to CPL 670.10 in trying to ascertain the whereabouts of the complainant, that such evidence indicated that she was without the State, and that all efforts to bring her before the court had been unsuccessful. It then found that there were sufficient grounds to permit the use at the trial of complainant’s