Green v. DeMarco

11 Misc. 3d 451
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 11 Misc. 3d 451 (Green v. DeMarco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. DeMarco, 11 Misc. 3d 451 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Kenneth R. Fisher, J.

The Monroe County District Attorney commenced this action, seeking declaratory relief collaterally attacking a ruling of a local criminal court, which precluded the use of government-generated business records to establish the foundation requirements for the admission of breathalyzer test results at the trial of a person charged with driving while intoxicated in violation of Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1192 (2). The local criminal court determined that the use of this documentary evidence, a certification of calibration, violates the Confrontation Clause of the United States Constitution Sixth Amendment, as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Crawford v Washington (541 US 36 [2004]). The same local criminal court made identical rulings thus far in four cases, resulting in the dismissal of the section 1192 (2) charge in each instance on legal sufficiency grounds, because the District Attorney failed to call live witnesses to establish that the breathalyzer was properly functioning. (See CPL 290.10.)

[453]*453Citing 11 other section 1192 (2) cases pending before the same local criminal court, plaintiff fears that each of them and future cases like them will be similarly dismissed at trial because it is, the District Attorney maintains, practically impossible for him to produce for trial in Monroe County the required witnesses from Albany who test the machines and the simulator solutions for prosecutors throughout the state. He therefore seeks a judgment declaring that the use of government-generated business records to establish the foundation requirements for the admission of breathalyzer test results does not violate the Confrontation Clause of the United States Constitution, as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court in Crawford. Additionally, he seeks a declaration that the local criminal court is precluded from denying introduction of such documentary proof on Crawford grounds. Before answering the complaint, defendant has moved to dismiss it on the ground that an action for declaratory judgment does not lie in the present circumstances, or if it does lie in an abstract sense, that the court should exercise its discretion by refusing to hear the matter.

In Matter of Morgenthau v Erlbaum (59 NY2d 143 [1983], cert denied 464 US 993 [1983]), the Court of Appeals upheld the discretionary power of supreme court to entertain an action for declaratory relief that, in effect, collaterally attacks a criminal court’s interlocutory ruling in favor of a defendant. The Court held that a declaratory judgment action against the criminal court judge may be allowed in the rare instance where the controversy is purely a legal one, the ruling affects fundamental rights, and has implications reaching far beyond the immediate case in which the order is made. (Id. at 145-146.) The Court indicated that, while supreme court may decline to hear the matter if there are other available remedies, it is not required to do so. (Id. at 148.) The Court emphasized that, in deciding whether to entertain a declaratory judgment action, supreme court should be concerned primarily with avoiding litigation of “factual issues in proceedings collateral to the criminal trial” and should “shu[n] collateral appeals that will delay the criminal trial.” (Id. at 151.)

With these principles in mind, the Court of Appeals said that a declaratory judgment action is “most appropriate when the challenge is to a ruling on how a trial is to be conducted . . . [since] [t]his ‘procedural’ type of question is also the sort that is likely to recur and to be decided in the same manner regardless [454]*454of the facts underlying the criminal charges.” (Id. at 152.) In contrast, the Court noted that “mere evidentiary rulings would not be proper subjects [of a declaratory judgment action]” (id.), presumably because such rulings are fact based and thus, in that sense, unique.

Here, as in Erlbaum, is an example of the proper use of a declaratory judgment action. The action in Erlbaum was brought by the District Attorney to challenge a criminal court ruling recognizing that persons charged with prostitution have a constitutional right to a jury trial despite CPL 340.40 (2), which mandated a bench trial. The case involved a “ ‘procedural’ type of question . . . that is likely to recur and to be decided in the same manner regardless of the facts underlying the criminal charges.” (Erlbaum, 59 NY2d at 152.) Moreover, the recurring nature of the issue, if ultimately determined not to be meritorious (a question not presented on this motion and not reached), poses “a risk of significantly obstructing the task of administering criminal justice by imposing an undue burden on prosecutors and the courts.” (Id.)

Since Erlbaum, there have been four other decisions of the Court of Appeals approving a district attorney’s use of a declaratory judgment action to challenge the ruling of a criminal court in favor of a defendant. In one of them, the ruling involved the dismissal of a felony complaint by a supreme court justice, whose authority to dismiss was limited by CPL 210.20 to indictments. (Matter of Morgenthau v Roberts, 65 NY2d 749 [1985].) The Court of Appeals determined that declaratory relief was appropriate because “the People’s appeal involves no factual issues, is not collateral and the trial court’s ruling is likely to recur with similar results.” (Id. at 751.) In the other three decisions, the Court of Appeals sanctioned the Appellate Division’s conversion of a CPLR article 78 proceeding to a declaratory judgment action where the underlying issue involved the constitutionality of the plea provisions of the death penalty statute. (People v Mateo, 2 NY3d 383 [2004], cert denied 542 US 946 [2004]; see also, Matter of Hynes v Tomei, 237 AD2d 52 [2d Dept 1997], revd on other grounds 92 NY2d 613 [1998]; Matter of Relin v Connell, 251 AD2d 1041 [4th Dept 1998], revd on other grounds 92 NY2d 613 [1998].) The Court of Appeals explained that, because the Appellate Division order did not reverse the trial court’s order, or immediately prevent the trial court from proceeding on its course, “Erlbaum’s policy considerations — protecting criminal trials from interference, or even [455]*455undoing, by interlocutory appeals — were not implicated.” (Mateo, 2 NY3d at 401.)

The leading commentators recognize this well-established precedent. (See 5 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac If 3001.06k, at 30-74 [2d ed]; Siegel, NY Prac § 437, at 742 [4th ed 2005].) Accordingly, the court declines to dismiss the instant action. Local criminal court ruled that it is unconstitutional at a trial of a person charged with violating Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1192 (2) for the district attorney to rely upon business records to establish the requisite foundation for the admission of the breathalyzer test results. History shows that it is a ruling that is likely to recur with the same results. Although the impact of the ruling is not as great as the impact of the ruling in Erlbaum, which potentially affected several thousand cases a year (59 NY2d at 153), it is, if not meritorious, no less important to the system of criminal justice. Heretofore, the use of business records to establish the foundation for admission of breathalyzer results, under the rubric of Ohio v Roberts

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Bluebook (online)
11 Misc. 3d 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-demarco-nysupct-2005.