Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
People v Grant (
Defendant crashed a stolen car and the police found him asleep in the driver’s seat. He was visibly inebriated, smelled of alcohol when he exited the vehicle and was arrested for driving while intoxicated. Defendant subsequently failed physical coordination tests and his blood alcohol content was .09%. A crack pipe and an open bottle of rum were found during a search of the automobile. After waiving his Miranda rights, defendant admitted that he had been drinking alcohol “non-stop for days” and smoking cocaine during that time as well.
Defendant moved to suppress the evidence found inside the car, arguing that it was obtained by police during an invalid inventory search. Following an evidentiary hearing, Supreme Court determined that the search was proper and denied the suppression motion. Defendant then informed the court that he wanted to plead guilty to driving while ability impaired because he “was not planning on going to trial if I got a negative ruling” on the motion and “didn’t want to waste the taxpayer’s dollars.” Supreme Court accepted defendant’s guilty plea and imposed the agreed-upon sentence.
The Appellate Division affirmed, concluding that the inventory search was improper but that the erroneous denial of the motion to suppress was harmless due to independent and overwhelming proof of defendant’s guilt (
The harmless error rule was “formulated to review trial verdicts” (People v Grant, 45 NY2d at 378). It requires an appellate court to assess the quantum and nature of the People’s proof of guilt independent of erroneously admitted evidence and the causal effect, if any, that the introduction of that evidence had on the factfinder’s verdict (see People v Crimmins,
The Grant doctrine is not absolute, however, and we have recognized that a guilty plea entered after an improper court ruling may be upheld if there is no “reasonable possibility that the error contributed to the plea” (id. at 379). Although a failure to suppress evidence may detrimentally influence a defendant’s plea negotiations, a concession of guilt may be treated as valid if the defendant articulates a reason for it that is independent of the incorrect preplea court ruling (see id. at 379-380) or an appellate court is satisfied that the decision to accept responsibility “was not influenced” by the error (People v Burrows,
People v Lloyd (
The same cannot be said here. After Supreme Court ruled that the police conducted a valid inventory search of the automobile defendant had been operating, he explained that he hoped to obtain a “positive ruling” on the suppression motion but “was not planning on going to trial if [he] got a negative ruling.” Defendant then admitted that he drove while impaired. Since the Appellate Division determined that defendant was entitled to the “positive ruling” he sought—i.e., suppression of the crack pipe and open bottle of rum that were discovered in the front of the vehicle
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, defendant’s guilty plea vacated and the case remitted to Supreme Court for further proceedings on the complaint.
Notes
. This aspect of the Appellate Division’s decision is not before us and we express no view on its legal propriety.
. Defendant’s remaining contention lacks merit (see People v Allen,
Dissenting Opinion
I would affirm. In my view, the Appellate Division correctly applied harmless error analysis to defendant’s guilty plea, because this is a case in which an appellate court can, from the record, “determine whether an erroneous denial of a motion to suppress contributed to the defendant’s decision” to plead guilty (People v Grant,
The evidence that Supreme Court failed to suppress—a crack cocaine pipe and an open bottle of rum—was not necessary to prove that defendant was guilty of driving while ability impaired. Even if the search of the stolen car had been suppressed, the People would have been able to introduce at trial the arresting officer’s observations of defendant’s intoxication and his statement to her that he had been smoking cocaine and drinking alcohol “non-stop for days.” It is true that defendant stated that he “was not planning on going to trial if [he] got a negative ruling” at the suppression hearing. But this does not mean that he would have gone to trial if Supreme Court had ruled in his favor with regard to the search of his car, but against him as to his statements to the arresting officer and other evidence of intoxication. It is noteworthy that defendant, during his persistent questioning of the arresting officer at the
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
Chief Judge Lippman and Judges Read, Smith, Rivera and Abdus-Salaam concur with Judge Graffeo; Judge Pigott dissents and votes to affirm in an opinion.
Order reversed, defendant’s guilty plea vacated and case remitted to Supreme Court, Bronx County, for further proceedings on the complaint.
