71 A.D.2d 280 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1979
Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant was convicted of three counts of murder in the second degree (Penal Law, § 125.25, subd 1 [intentional killing]), for killing his "girlfriend”, Deborah Williams,
The confession established that at about 1:00 a.m., on March 21, 1977, defendant went to Deborah’s apartment to speak to her because earlier that evening he had heard her talking to a man in another apartment. When defendant confronted Deborah about the other man, she was lying on a sofa bed in the living room watching television. Defendant seated himself on the arm rest. Michele, Deborah’s five-year-old daughter, was asleep on the bed between them. Deborah denied his accusations that she had been "messing around”. They began arguing. During the argument he reached across the bed and struck her. When she turned over in the bed, defendant pulled out a knife which he had been carrying and stabbed her in the back. As he tried to remove the knife, the handle came off. He then jumped over Michele and struck Deborah again, causing her to fall to the floor. When she attempted to get up, he kicked her.
By this time Michele had awakened, and defendant told her to go to the bedroom and stay with her sister, Karen. When the children began to cry, defendant took a pair of scissors which he had found in a kitchen cabinet, went to the bedroom, and stabbed both girls in the back as they lay in bed.
Defendant then returned to the living room. After propping Deborah up on the bed, he went to the refrigerator, took out ice, wrapped it in a towel, and placed it on her forehead. When Deborah, still conscious, asked why Michele was crying, he told her that she wanted "to come back into the living room”. He then returned to the bedroom and stabbed Michele repeatedly with the scissors. He went once more to the living room and began stabbing Deborah with the scissors. Finally,
The bodies were not discovered until approximately 12:30 p.m. that afternoon. The two children were still alive. Karen, three years old, died two hours after her arrival at the hospital. Michele died the following morning. All three victims died of skull fractures, contusions and lacerations of the brain, and multiple stab wounds.
Defendant, who testified in his own behalf, denied any involvement in the killings and disclaimed the confession as the product of coercion by threats and force. Thus, the affirmative defense of extreme emotional disturbance (Penal Law, § 125.25, subd 1, par [a]) was not raised. Furthermore, defendant specifically requested that the court not charge the lesser included offense of manslaughter in the first degree (Penal Law, § 125.20, subd 2), based upon extreme emotional disturbance.
The trial court submitted murder in the second degree to the jury and, in accordance with defendant’s request, the lesser included offense of manslaughter in the first degree (Penal Law, § 125.20, subd 1 [intent to cause serious physical injury, but not to kill]), was submitted in the alternative. In its charge, after distinguishing motive from intent and explaining that intent was a silent operation of the mind which could be determined from the facts and all the surrounding circumstances, the court gave the following instruction, which is at the center of defendant’s appellate argument that he was denied his due process rights to a fair trial: "On the question of intent the law says that a person is presumed to intend the natural and probable consequences of his act. You will readily understand that the intention with which a person commits an act or a crime is seldom, if ever, put into words before a commission of the crime. Crimes are ordinarily secret and a person does not advertise beforehand or say beforehand what he intends to do. So the law says a person is presumed to intend that which he actually does. A person acts intentionally with respect to a result or to conduct when his conscious objective is to cause such result or engage in such conduct.” (Emphasis added.)
An essentially identical charge was recently found to be
Conceding that the instruction in this case was error, and that the court should have explained that the presumption of intent was permissive, not mandatory, and, in any event, rebuttable, the People argue that the error was, nevertheless, harmless.
The error here was of constitutional dimension in that it involved a shifting of the People’s burden of proof as to the elements of a crime: "Lest there remain any doubt about the constitutional stature of the reasonable-doubt standard, we explicitly hold that the Due Process Clause protects the accused against conviction except upon proof beyond reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged.” (Matter of Winship, 397 US 358, 364.) An error of constitutional magnitude cannot be harmless unless "there is no reasonable possibility that the error might have contributed to defendant’s conviction” (People v Crimmins, 36 NY2d 230, 237.)
The charge complained of here cannot be deemed to constitute harmless error since it absolved the People of the duty to prove an essential element of murder in the second degree, viz., intent to kill. Although, in his confession, defendant had admitted the stabbings, he at no time verbally expressed the mens rea with which he acted. His narrative is a chronology of what he did, never indicating, though it is inferable, what his objective was. Thus, even though the jury accepted the truthfulness and voluntariness of the confession, it still had to determine whether defendant acted with the requisite intent. The court, in effect, directed the jury to find an intent to kill because defendant’s acts caused death.
Given both an unqualified charge that a person is presumed
Moreover, having recognized the existence of a reasonable view of the evidence to justify the submission of manslaughter in the first degree as a lesser included offense (CPL 300.50, subd l),
That the court did charge the statutory definition of intent (Penal Law, § 15.05, subd l),
Consequently, the judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County (D. Sullivan, J.), rendered December 15, 1977, should be reversed, on the law, and the matter remanded for a new trial.
. Although defendant believed Deborah to be his girlfriend, it is not clear that she had the same view of their relationship.
. " 'Serious physical injury’ means physical injury which creates a substantial risk of death, or which causes death or serious and protracted disfigurement, protracted impairment of health or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any bodily organ.” (Penal Law, § 10.00, subd 10.) Thus, even were it otherwise appropriate, we could not exercise our appellate power and sustain the verdict by reducing the conviction to manslaughter in the first degree (Penal Law, § 125.20, subd 1) and remanding for resentence (CPL 470.15, subd 2, par [a]; see People v Young, 66 AD2d 666).
. "[T]he court in its discretion may, in addition to submitting the greatest offense which it is required to submit, submit in the alternative any lesser included offense if there is a reasonable view of the evidence which would support a finding that the defendant committed such lesser offense but did not commit the greater.”
. "A person acts intentionally with respect to a result or to conduct described by a statute defining an offense when his conscious objective is to cause such result or to engage in such conduct.”
Dissenting Opinion
The critical factor which prompts my departure from the scholarly and articulate majority opinion lies in the application of the legal maxim cited by the majority to the effect that "[a]n error of constitutional magnitude cannot be harmless unless 'there is no reasonable possibility that the error might have contributed to defendant’s conviction’ (People v Crimmins, 36 NY2d 230, 237)” (emphasis supplied). Under the circumstances herein, given the defendant’s confession, the circumstances surrounding the crime, and in view of the entire record herein, it is my considered view that although a mere possibility exists that the error might have contributed to the defendant’s conviction, that possibility is simply not a reasonable one. The quantum and character of the injuries inflicted on the victims, coupled with the defendant’s confession, belie anything other than an intent to kill. The record demonstrates an attack on an adult female, in a living room, by stabbing with a knife and beating, the traversing of the premises into another room, a bedroom, and in the latter room, the stabbing repeatedly with a scissors of the adult victim’s two infant children, the subsequent return to the living room where the wounded adult lay, and, after an interval, a return to the bedroom containing the two little girls and again stabbing repeatedly one who was crying, a further return to the living room and more stabbing of the adult victim, and yet another return to the bedroom and repeated stabbing of the other child.
It is not just the number of times the defendant stabbed his three victims (45 times), but the time intervals and the physical spaces traversed which mandate the conclusion on this record that no reasonable possibility exists that the error might have contributed to the defendant’s conviction. The majority aptly note that the affirmative defense of extreme
Restated in other terms, it is my conclusion that the trial court erred as a matter of law in submitting the lesser included offense of manslaughter in the first degree, as there is no reasonable view of the evidence which would support such a finding (CPL 300.50, subd 1).
Fein, J. P., Lane and Lynch, JJ., concur with Sullivan, J.; Lupiano, J., dissents in an opinion.
Judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County, rendered on December 15, 1977, reversed, on the law, and the matter remanded for a new trial.
CPL 300.50 (subd 1) states, in part: "If there is no reasonable view of the evidence which would support such a finding, the court may not submit such lesser offense.”