Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Thе defendant stands convicted of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree. The only issues which warrant discussion are: (1) whether it was improper to allow the prosecutor to use previously suppressed unsworn oral
On the evening of June 6, 1975 the police were summoned to the home of the defendant and his now estranged wife. She ushered the police into the living room where they found the defendant asleep on the couch with the handle of a gun protruding from his pants pocket. A police officer removed the gun, checked to see whether it was loaded, awakened the defendant, and placed him under arrest.
After his arrest, the defendant allegedly made two statements concerning how he came to have the gun on his person. The first statement was to the effect that he had found the weapon in a car that evening before returning home from work. The seсond statement was to the effect that his wife had planted the gun in his pocket.
The defendant sought a Huntley hearing on the issue of whether the oral statements were "made in violation of the defendant’s Constitutional rights.” The only witness to testify at the hearing was the arresting officer to whom the defendant had allegedly made the statements. After extensively cross-examining the officer, defense counsel argued that the officer’s testimony that the statements were made and that the Miranda warnings were given, was a blatant fabrication. After further argument and examination, the court (McGrover, J.), found that insofar as the Huntley hearing was concerned, the credibility of the police officer had been so impaired that "the People have not established beyond a reasonable doubt that the Police Officer gave the defendant his Miranda warnings; nor have they established that those statements were made by this defendant.” Consequently, the statements were suppressed.
At trial the defendant’s wife testified that she and her husband had argued on the evening of June 5, 1976; that the defendant left and did not return until the next day; that, upon his return, she believed that he had been drinking; and that when he lay down on the living room couch, she saw a
Prior to the commencement of the defendant’s case, the court (Scholnick, J.) ruled that if the defendant testified, the prosecution could use the suppressed statements for purposes of cross-examination. The defendant took the stand in his own behalf and essentially testified that when he returned home he did not have a gun in his possession and that he had made no statements to the police. On cross-examination, the prosecution asked the defendant if he recalled first telling the police that he found the gun in a car, and later telling them that his wife put the gun in his pocket. The defendant denied making any statement to the police. After several more questions concerning statements that the defendant had allegedly made in an interview with the "Pre-trial Services Agency”, the court instructed the jury that: "The witness may be questioned about alleged prior statements. These questions are permitted not for the truth of the statement contained therein but the witness may be questioned about inconsistent statements. And it is for you to determine whether these statements are inconsistent. And if they are, it is for you to evaluate that on the issue of the defendant’s credibility and not as to the truth of those particular statements.”
After some further examination the defense rested. The prosecution recalled the arresting offiсer as a rebuttal witness for the purpose of impeaching the defendant’s credibility. At this time, no cautionary instruction was given or requested. This witness was extensively cross-examined along the same lines as at the Huntley hearing.
The court gave a fairly complete charge, including the proper instruction that a police officer is not entitled to any greater degree of credibility than any other witness. The court also charged on the introduction of prior statements as follows: "Now, in connection with the admission into evidence or [sic] prior statements made by witnesses, I instruct you that a witness may be cross-examined about prior statements * * * I caution you, however, these prior statements are not evidence of facts therein contained nor received for their truth. Questions are permitted only for the purpose of impeaching the credibility of the witnesses and thereby discrediting his testi
The jury engaged in lengthy deliberations which were interrupted several times to have certain testimony reread and to have aspects of the charge on reasonable doubt and possession clarified. After reporting itself deadlocked, a supplemental charge was given and the jury finally returned with a verdict of guilty. At no time did the jury request a rereading of the defendant’s testimony or the rebuttal testimony, or a further charge as to the effect of prior inconsistent statements.
It is indisputable that involuntary confessions may not be used as evidence in chief agаinst a criminal defendant. This conclusion is founded in the dual guarantees of the Fourteenth Amendment right to due process and the Fifth Amendment right against self incrimination (Jackson v Denno,
The Harris case (supra) questioned the propriety of using a written confession obtained in contravention of the strictures of Miranda (supra) for purposes of impeachment. In upholding such use, the United States Supreme Court reasoned that "[t]he shield provided by Miranda cannot be perverted into a license to use perjury by way of a defense, free from the risk of confrontation with prior inconsistent utterances” (Harris v New York, supra, p 226). Thus, despite the
The rationale allowing use of suppressed statements for purposes of impеachment has been logically extended to suppressed oral statements. In People v Wise (
In light of the Court of Appeals determination in People v Wise (supra), there is no question that it was proper to use the defendant’s alleged statements concerning how he came to possess the gun as a means of evaluating his credibility. In Wise, as here, the question of whether Wise had actually made the prior statement was "an issue of much vigorous dispute, the alleged remark having been made without the benefit of other witnesses and appellant, of course, having denied it at the trial” (People v Wise,
The appellant has argued that since Criminal Term also found that the prosecution had not proven that he had made the statements, they should have been suppressed for all purposes. This contention does not comport with the history and limited purposes of a Huntley hearing and, therefore, it
As previously noted, a conviction cannot be upheld if it is even partly based on an involuntary confession. To the extent that the concept of voluntariness has been expanded by Miranda v Arizona (
In speaking of the applicability of that amendment in determining the admissibility of a confession, Mr. Justice Frankfurter wrote (Rogers v Richmond,
The above approach replaced the prior standard оf testimonial trustworthiness which allowed the admission of any confession which was reliable. The question of reliability was resolved by reference to the truth or falsity of the statement.
In discussing the transition from the standard of trustworthiness to the due process standard of voluntariness, Wigmore cites the Federal District Court’s opinion in Stevenson v Boles (
The Lee v Mississippi case (
The court further stated (p 745): "His alleged denial of the confession went only to the original issue of whether he actually made the confession, an issue that is no longer open. That question was at most a disputed one; but the jury resolved the matter against petitioner and, like the court below, we accept that determination. The sole concern now is
Upon reversing the judgment of conviction, the United States Supreme Court remanded the case to the State court solely for a determination of whether the confession was involuntary because it was coerced. The responsibility of evaluating the defendant’s denial of having made the statement was left to the jury. By expressly limiting the scope of the hearing on voluntariness to issues of coercion, the Supreme Court necessarily refused to expand the traditional meaning of voluntariness under the due process clause to include the issue of whether the defendant had in fact made the alleged confession.
An accused’s denial of having made a statement is entirely irrelevant to the question of admissibility. Rather, such a denial is pertinent only to the jury’s function of evaluating credibility in its search for truth. Factual questions involving credibility of witnesses and the weight of evidence are traditionally in the exclusive province of the jury. Although New York has not entirely rejected the concept of trustworthiness as a factor affecting admissibility, the continued import of trustworthiness is the question of volitional competency (People v Schompert,
The dissent’s suggestion that an accused’s denial of having made an admission is a proper subject of inquiry at a Huntley hearing, cannot be accepted. There is no support for such a conclusion. The New York requirement of a pretrial hearing to determine the admissibility of a confession (i.e., a Huntley hearing) stems from the Supreme Court’s opinion in Jackson v Denno (
The Jackson case involved a confession which appeаred to be obtained in circumstances of physical duress. Pursuant to prior New York procedure, the issue of voluntariness was submitted to the jury. This procedure was found to violate due
There is nothing in the Jackson opinion which expands the scope of vоluntariness beyond the usual definition of coercion and duress. Thus, even under Jackson v Denno (supra), the three pronged inquiry of voluntariness (i.e., [1] "the external, 'phenomenological’ occurrences and events surrounding the confession”, [2] the imaginative re-creation of internal psychological fact, and [3] the application of legal standards and factual circumstances to the psychological facts [Culombe v Connecticut,
No persuasive reason has been advanced why we should expand the intended scope of a suppression hearing to require the determination of whether an accused in fact made the alleged confession. Such a determination is peculiarly a function of credibility and absent any question of improper conduct in obtaining a confession, there are no compelling reasons for excluding a statement purportedly made by an accused. The question of whether the alleged statement was made is an integral part of the truth-testing function and to remove it from the jury would be antithеtical to the fundamentals of our system of jurisprudence.
In the present case, the decision at the Huntley hearing necessarily involved an evaluation of credibility in the determination of whether Miranda warnings were given. However, no further determination was either necessary or proper. Not only was suppression ordered on the basis of a Miranda violation, but Criminal Term expressly qualified its evaluation of credibility to the purposes of that hearing. In these circum
There is no question that the trial court failed to give adequate instructions concerning the use and effect of rebuttal testimony (see People v Boone,
Two eyewitnesses, the defendant’s wife and the arresting officer, testified that they observed a gun in the defendant’s pants pocket. Since it is uncontested that the dеfendant had been previously convicted of a crime, nothing more was necessary to establish the defendant’s guilt (see Penal Law, § 265.05, subd [1]; § 265.02, subd [1]). On his direct testimony, the defendant did little more than deny that he had the gun in his possession when he entered the house. In view of the defendant’s testimony, it is noted that the introduction of the second statement, i.e., that his wife planted the gun, is, if believed, consistent with the thrust of his testimony and is exculpatory. If the gun had been planted, it would constitute "innocent possession” which may be a basis for acquittal, even though intent is not a necessary element of the crime charged (cf. Penal Law, § 265.01, subd [1]; People v Trucchio,
The other statement, i.e., that he found the gun, is inculpatory and, if believed, could be of some prejudice. However, in the circumstances of this case, it is unlikely that any such prejudice occurred. The court timely instructed the jury that this and the other statement were being introduced only on the issue of the defendant’s credibility. Furthermore, although the court gave no charge regarding the rebuttal witness, it gave a fairly complete charge that the statements could be used only in evaluating credibility. The court also gave a
In view of the above circumstances, there is no doubt that the defendant received a fair trial and that the properly admitted evidence fully supports the guilty verdict. Any harm resulting from the failure to charge on rebuttal testimony was minor. The lengthy deliberations indicate that the jury weighed the evidence carefully and it is significant that in none of their requests did the jury refer to the statements or the rebuttal testimony. The instant record and applicable legal principles do not justify interfering with the judgment of conviction and, therefore, there should be an affirmance.
We note that we have considered the other arguments raised on appeal and find them to be without merit.
Dissenting Opinion
Defendant appeals from a judgment convicting him, upon a jury verdict, of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree. Inculpatory statements, allegedly made by defendant after his arrest, were used to impeach his credibility at trial despite the finding of the trier of fact at an earlier hearing conducted pursuant to the dictates of People v Huntley (
THE FACTS
The factual issues presented to the jury in this case were simple and their resolution revolved primarily upon questions of credibility. On June 6, 1975 Police Officer Caracappa received a radio run indicating that there was a report of a man with a gun in a specified apartment at 2729 West 33rd Street in Brooklyn. Upon his arrival at the scene, Caracappa was let into the apartment by Gertrude Washington, defendant’s wife. Defendant was found sleeping on a living room couch with a gun handle protruding from his pants pocket. After removing the gun, Caracappa roused defendant and arrested him.
At the trial, presided over by Mr. Justice Scholnick, Officer Caracappa testified to the circumstances which led to his arrest of defendant. Gertrude Washington, now defendаnt’s estranged wife, testified that prior to June 6, 1975 she had been having arguments with her husband and on occasion he had struck her. On the evening of June 6 appellant came home, apparently "high” or "drunk”, and fell asleep on the couch. At this point she noticed the gun in his pocket. Sarah Spencer, Gertrude’s sister, who had lived with the Washing-tons for several months prior to this incident, also saw the gun but left before the police arrived.
Defendant testified in his own behalf. On the evening in question he came home to visit his children but fell asleep on the couch. He did not have a gun when he entered the apartment and only became aware of its existence when awakened by Caracappa. He had made no statement to Caracappa when arrested. He had previously argued with his wife about Sarah Spencer’s presence in the apartment, and Sarah had been in the apartment when he arrived on June 6.
Over strenuous objection, the Trial Judge ruled that pursuant to Harris v New York (
The jury had great difficulty in reaching a verdict. They retired to deliberate at approximately 12:30 p.m. on February 17, 1977 and, after being sеquestered overnight, found defendant guilty at approximately 4:10 p.m. on February 18. On two separate occasions the jury reported itself hopelessly deadlocked and a verdict was reached only after supplemental instructions were given.
THE LAW
Any analysis must begin with a determination of whether Mr. Justice McGrover was acting within the scope of his authority when he made a factual determination that the People had failed to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant had made any statements to Caracappa. Both case law and simple logic dictate the conclusion that, at a Huntley hearing, the trier of the facts, in order to properly weigh the vоluntariness of an admission, has the inherent and ineradicable right to determine whether the challenged admission was ever made. If it be determined that the alleged statement was, in fact, never made, it patently follows that it may not be referred to, for any purpose, at the subsequent trial.
In Jackson v Denno (
The landmark New York case of People v Huntley (supra) followed closely upon the heels of Jackson. The Court of Appeals stated (p 78) that " 'the jury passes on voluntariness only after the judge has fully and independently resolved the issue against the accused’ ” and then went on to suggest (p 78) that "[t]he Judge must find voluntariness beyond a reasonable doubt before the confession can be submitted to the trial jury.”
When, as here, a defendant denies having made any statement and claims, in the alternative, that any statement made was extracted from him involuntarily, it is at least plausible for the trier of fact to rationally and reasonably conclude that although precise and proper Miranda warnings were given, the defendant never made a single admission to his interrogator. The scope of a Huntley hearing should therefore allow for such a determination because, as noted in Jackson (supra, p 380), "the underlying factual issues” must be determined before voluntariness can be found. The concept of voluntariness does not exist in a vacuum. Rather, it must attach to some deed or action, in this instance the act of confession. Absent a finding that a confession was indeed made, voluntariness becomes a moot issue, and, as Huntley makes clear, the confession cannot be submitted to the jury when voluntariness is not found.
In Harris v New York (
The doctrine of Harris and Hass was recently extended by People v Wise (
By any standard, even if the alleged statements were admissible for impeachment purposes, a reversal is still mandated because the charge given to the jury as to the limited purposes for which the statements werе admitted was totally inadequate. At the time that Officer Caracappa offered his rebuttal testimony the court failed to promptly instruct the jury that this testimony could be used for impeachment purposes only. Furthermore, the charge on the use of prior inconsistent statements did not clearly apprise the jury that
In conclusion, it is nоted that the People contend that the use of the alleged statements did not contribute at all to defendant’s conviction and should therefore be deemed harmless. This argument merits little discussion. The prosecutor relied heavily on the use of the inconsistent statements in his summation, arguing that they evidenced defendant’s consciousness of guilt. In a case that revolved almost entirely around the issue of credibility, and in which the jury twice reported itself deadlocked, it cannot be said that there was no reasonable possibility that the admission of the evidence contributed to the conviction or that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt (see People v Almestica,
Damiani, J. P., and Gulotta, J., concur with Rabin, J.; O’Connor, J., dissents and votes to reverse the judgment and order a new trial, with an opinion.
Judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, rendered April 12, 1977, affirmed.
