81 Misc. 2d 757 | Suffolk County District Court | 1975
Defendant stands charged with a violation of section 511 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law in that he allegedly operated a motor vehicle while his license was revoked. The court has found that the defendant was operating a motor vehicle while his license to drive was revoked, however defendant argues that the People failed to establish a prima facie case because no competent evidence was presented to prove that the defendant had notice of the revocation.
The People argue that notice of the revocation is not required and need not be proven on a charge under section 511 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law. Alternatively, the People assert that they have met any burden of proof on this element that may be found to exist by their introduction at trial of a certified copy of a letter of the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles which contained the defendant’s address in the upper left hand corner and informed him that his license had been revoked for reasons stated therein.
It should be noted that no witnesses were called to testify that the above described letter was actually mailed to defendant and no affidavit of service by mail or other document was proffered to show that the letter was properly mailed. The People are relying upon the presumption of regularity to prove that the letter was actually mailed to the defendant and that defendant received notice of the revocation. Hence, the issues to be determined herein are whether notice of the prior revocation of one’s license is an element of the prima facie case, and if so, whether the presumption of regularity may properly be applied in this criminal prosecution to satisfy the notice requirement.
Although section 511 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law does not specifically state that notice to the defendant of the revocation of his license must be proved prior to a conviction under such section the court is of the opinion that such notice is an integral part of the People’s prima facie case. Section 511 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law should be read in conjunction with section 510 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law. Section
It having been determined that notice of the revocation of defendant’s license is an element of the People’s prima facie case it must now be decided if a proper foundation was laid for the admission of such proof at trial. As stated above the People are relying on the presumption of regularity to sustain their position that the letter of the Department of Motor Vehicles was actually mailed to the defendant.
The People’s reliance on the presumption of regularity in
"It was essential, in this case, to the admissibility of the copies, that the testimony of the defendant as to the sending of the letters should have been supplemented by the further evidence of the clerk, or other employe[e], whose duty it was to post letters, that in the regular course of business he had invariably collected the letters upon the defendant’s desk and had posted them. However strong the convictions and the statements of the defendant as to the usual mailing of the letters placed on his desk, there was the gap in the proof, created by the failure to show that regular practice, or custom, of carrying them to the post, by some one charged with that duty, from which a presumption would naturally arise of these letters having been posted. I think that the trial court committed no error in excluding the copies of letters offered by the defendant.” (198 NY 175, 180, supra.)
The court is cognizant of the fact that the presumption of regularity as discussed above has, on occasion, been extended to include the doing of official acts by certain governmental entities. Professor Wigmore has described this presumption as "more often mentioned than enforced; and its scope as a real presumption is indefinite and hardly capable of reduction to rules.” (9 Wigmore, Evidence [3d ed., 1940], § 2534.) In Matter of Miller v Greene County (40 AD2d 738) the court presumed
The letter of the Department of Motor Vehicles which the People sought to introduce as evidence in the case at bar is clearly inadmissible under the rules discussed above for several reasons. There was no evidence introduced at trial that the letter was deposited with postal authorities and no employee of the department was called to testify that he deposited the letter with the postal authorities in the regular course of duties. Not even the author of the letter was called to testify that the letter was addressed and mailed to the defendant. All that can be presumed from the proffered letter is that it is a copy of a letter that is on file with the Department of Motor Vehicles in Albany. It is inadmissible for the purpose of proving that notice of revocation was mailed to defendant and accordingly the defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted upon the People’s failure to present a prima facie case under section 511 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law.
The trial on the charge of driving while intoxicated shall be held on May 5, 1975, at the First District Court, Hauppauge, New York.