OPINION OF THE COURT
Memorandum.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the case remitted to the Appellate Division for consideration of the facts and issues raised but not determined on appeal to that Court.
We agree with the People that the Appellate Division erred in concluding that the trial court was required to excuse prospective juror No. 383 for cause (see
Defense counsel did not follow up with those jurors, but the trial court subsequently attempted to rehabilitate prospective juror No. 123 through an exchange in which the court asked prospective juror No. 123 a series of questions focusing on that juror’s previously stated partiality related to the victim’s age, which questions included the query whether he could “be [a] fair and impartial . . . juror in this case” despite the fact that it involved the death of a child, allegedly at the hands of an adult. That prospective juror responded that he “would try,” and through additional questions the court was unable to elicit an unequivocal assurance of impartiality from him.
The court’s examination of prospective juror No. 383 yielded a different response. Immediately after finishing its examination of prospective juror No. 123, the court turned to juror No. 383. At the outset of its examination of that prospective juror, the court stressed that, as it had done with prospective juror No. 123, it would explore the issue whether prospective juror No. 383 could be fair and impartial if seated for trial. Specifically, and significantly, the court began its questioning of prospective juror No. 383 with the point that it had the “same questions for [her]” before initiating this exchange:
“THE COURT: ... If the [People are] able to prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt, what would your fair and impartial verdict be?
“PROSPECTIVE JUROR NO. 383: Guilty if they prove it guilty.
“THE COURT: Okay. Now, let’s say they bring in lots and lots of witnesses, lots of evidence, lots of DNA, lots of pictures and whatever, but you’re not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt. Let’s say you’re pretty sure, I think maybe he did it but I have a reasonable doubt about this, then what does your verdict have to be?
“PROSPECTIVE JUROR NO. 383: I would have to*1119 say not guilty, you know, if they can’t do it to my satisfaction.
“THE COURT: Yes, exactly, and that’s exactly the way it has to be. It’s all up to your satisfaction. It has to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt as you see that and as I tell you what the law is. Would you have any problem with saying that the defendant is not guilty if they don’t prove their case?
“PROSPECTIVE JUROR NO. 383: No, if [the prosecutor] doesn’t have it, if she can’t prove it.”
After briefly questioning prospective juror No. 132 regarding his ability to follow an instruction given by the court at the end of trial, the court returned to prospective juror No. 383:
“THE COURT: . . . Would you follow the law at the end of the case and listen to what they have to say if somebody, if you think somebody lied about something, you don’t have to believe anything they say. On the other hand, you don’t have to not believe anything they say. You can believe the parts you think are true but not believe the parts you think are not?
“PROSPECTIVE JUROR NO. 383: I was just going to say I’ll listen to what they have to say and then I’ll draw my own conclusion.
“THE COURT: Okay. Then you’ll follow the law as I instruct you at the end of the case.
“PROSPECTIVE JUROR NO. 383: Yes.”
Afterwards, the court excused prospective juror No. 123 for cause. Although he agreed that prospective juror No. 383 “got rehabilitated,” defense counsel moved to dismiss that venire person for cause. The court denied that application, and defense counsel exhausted his peremptory challenges in removing her from the jury pool.
“CPL 270.20 (1) (b) provides that a party may challenge a potential juror for cause if the juror ‘has a state of mind that is likely to preclude him [or her] from rendering an impartial verdict based upon the evidence adduced at the trial’ ” (People v Harris,
“ ‘when potential jurors themselves say they question or doubt they can be fair in the case, Trial Judges should either elicit some unequivocal assurance of their ability to be impartial when that is appropriate, or excuse the juror when that is appropriate,’ since, in most cases, ‘[t]he worst the court will have done . . . is to have replaced one impartial juror with another impartial juror’ ” (Harris,19 NY3d at 685 , quoting People v Johnson,17 NY3d 752 , 753 [2011]).
As our precedent makes clear, a prospective juror must, first and foremost, in unequivocal terms, “expressly state that his [or her] prior state of mind concerning either the case or either of the parties will not influence [the] verdict” (People v Biondo,
Under the circumstances of this case—including the trial court’s direct reference to the questions it had asked of juror No. 123, which called to juror No. 383’s attention her previously stated bias—the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying defendant’s for-cause challenge to the prospective juror based on her subsequent unequivocal assurances of impartiality (see generally Arnold,
Operating under the theory that the Criminal Procedure Law allows us to consider alternative grounds for relief where, as here, an intermediate appellate court modifies or reverses a judgment of a criminal court, defendant advances four contentions of his own for our review on this appeal by the People. In that vein, defendant principally contends that the indictment should be dismissed because the evidence is legally insufficient to support the conviction.
However, to credit defendant’s alternative challenge with respect to the legal sufficiency of the evidence, which was rejected by the Appellate Division (
Although it rejected his contention with respect to the legal sufficiency of the evidence, the Appellate Division did not specifically address the balance of the alternative challenges defendant raised before the Appellate Division and reiterates before this Court. Consequently, the case should be remitted to the Appellate Division so that it may pass upon the facts and
Order reversed and case remitted to the Appellate Division, Third Department, for consideration of the facts and issues raised but not determined on the appeal to that Court, in a memorandum.
