People ex rel. Curtis v. New York State Board of Parole

179 Misc. 2d 89, 684 N.Y.S.2d 410, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 610
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1998
StatusPublished

This text of 179 Misc. 2d 89 (People ex rel. Curtis v. New York State Board of Parole) 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
People ex rel. Curtis v. New York State Board of Parole, 179 Misc. 2d 89, 684 N.Y.S.2d 410, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 610 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Martin Marcus, J.

In this matter, after the New York State Division of Parole (Division) instituted parole revocation proceedings against the petitioner,1 a preliminary parole revocation hearing was twice scheduled to be held within 15 days of the execution of the parole warrant, as required by law. The hearing was not held on either of the scheduled dates, however, because on each occasion the defendant was in court on criminal charges arising out of the same incident upon which the parole revocation proceedings were based. The defendant contends that the Division of Parole was bound to hold the hearing within 15 days of the execution of the warrant, regardless of his court appearances, while the Division argues that his court appearances excuse the delay in holding the hearing until after the 15 days had passed.2 For the reasons set forth below, I hold that [91]*91the Division is correct and the petitioner was afforded a timely preliminary hearing.

A parolee must be afforded a preliminary hearing “no later than fifteen days from the date of the execution of the [parole] warrant” (Executive Law § 259-i [3] [c] [iv]), and a final hearing “within ninety days of the probable cause determination” at the preliminary hearing. (Executive Law § 259-i [3] [f| [i].) However, the Division is excused from affording a parolee a preliminary or final hearing during any period the parolee is lodged in a place not “ ‘subject to the convenience and practical control of the Parole Board.’ ” (People ex rel. Walsh v Vincent, 40 NY2d 1049, 1050 [1976], quoting Matter of Beattie v New York State Bd. of Parole, 39 NY2d 445, 447 [1976]; see also, People ex rel. Gonzales v Dalsheim, 52 NY2d 9 [1980].) For these purposes, a parolee is in a place “subject to the convenience and practical control” of the Board when he is an inmate in a correctional facility over which the Parole Board has jurisdiction. (Matter of Beattie v New York State Bd. of Parole, 39 NY2d, at 447.) There is no question that Rikers Island is such a place.

The question remains whether, even when a parolee is lodged in an institution subject to the Board’s convenience and practical control, a delay in providing him with a parole revocation hearing may be excused because it was scheduled for a day when he was produced in court on a criminal matter. The Court of Appeals has considered this question in the context of a final parole revocation hearing, and has held that “[t]he responsibility rest[s] on the Division to arrange the hearing earl ¡y] enough within the 90-day period to accommodate necessary future adjournments or to coordinate their hearings with the demands of the criminal courts.” (People ex rel. Brown v New York State Div. of Parole, 70 NY2d 391, 399 [1987], supra) In so holding, the Court reasoned that “Executive Law § 259-i (3) (f) (i) reflects a legislative judgment that 90 days is sufficient time to overcome unexpected contingencies, such as court appearances, so long as the parolee is subject during that time to the Division’s practical control.” (Supra, at 400.) To put it another way, while a conflicting court date may prevent the Division from affording a parolee a final hearing on any particular date, it is unlikely to prevent the Division from affording him such a hearing sometime within the allotted 90 days.

[92]*92While holding that “[t]he Division is not entitled to an extension based simply on a showing of its lack of fault” {supra, at 400), the Court in Brown nonetheless left open the possibility of “rare cases in which the failure of the Division of Parole to hold a revocation hearing within the 90-day period due to the parolee’s attendance in court on the scheduled hearing date may be excused.” {Supra, at 399.) The Court suggested that such “rare cases” could include situations in which parolees “abuse the statutory framework by, for example, intentionally obtaining an adjournment of a court date so that the new date conflicts with a scheduled parole hearing” (at 399), or in which the Division offers an acceptable explanation for its failure to hold a hearing some other time within the 90-day period.

In People ex rel. Madison v Sullivan (142 AD2d 621 [2d Dept 1988]), for example, the petitioner’s final parole revocation hearing, scheduled to occur within the 90-day period permitted by the Executive Law, was adjourned beyond that time limit, because, two days before the hearing was to be held, the petitioner was briefly transferred pursuant to court order to Erie County Jail, hundreds of miles away. When the petitioner challenged the timeliness of the hearing he later received, the Court held that, “[w]hile the petitioner may be said to have been within the convenience and practical control of the Board of Parole while he was being detained in the Erie County Jail * * * the administrative difficulties involved in rescheduling the hearing hundreds of miles from the original site during such a brief period of detainer in Erie County * * * provides sufficient justification for the Board’s failure to conduct a hearing within the statutory 90-day period”. (142 AD2d, at 622.)

When the analysis the Court of Appeals employed for a final parole revocation proceeding in Brown (supra) is applied to a preliminary hearing, instead, the practical considerations change dramatically. If a final hearing is originally scheduled well within the 90-day period, and the defendant has a conflicting court date, ample time remains to reschedule the hearing before the 90 days expire. Should the second date for the final hearing conflict with another court appearance, sufficient opportunity should still exist to hold a timely hearing on a third date, and perhaps even a fourth. No less significantly, adjournments of both the final hearing and of the court case may be long enough to give the Division an opportunity to learn of a conflict, and to reschedule a final hearing, even before the date arrives and the defendant is not produced for the hearing.

Because the limit for holding a preliminary hearing is 15 days rather than 90, however, it presents a much less forgiving [93]*93deadline, particularly if the parolee is incarcerated during those 15 days on a new criminal charge. Given the need to set bail, to discuss the possibility of a plea bargain, and/or to decide whether the case will be presented to the Grand Jury and, if so, whether the defendant will testify before it, the parolee may be produced in court on several occasions over a short period of time. Meanwhile, in order to prepare for the preliminary parole revocation hearing, the Division may reasonably request that it be scheduled more than a week after the warrant is executed, thus reducing the time in which the hearing must then be held to a week or less. Moreover, at the time the hearing is scheduled or rescheduled, the Division may be unaware of when the parolee is next to be in court and, even if it is aware of that date and schedules the hearing for a later one, the criminal case may thereafter again be adjourned, this time to the date previously set for the hearing.

The present case is a perfect illustration of such problems. On June 3, 1998, the petitioner was arrested for a shooting in Bronx County. On that same day, and based on the same allegations, a parole warrant was issued and executed against him, and he was served with the notice of violation at Rikers Island,3

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Related

Beattie v. New York State Board
348 N.E.2d 873 (New York Court of Appeals, 1976)
People ex rel. Walsh v. Vincent
360 N.E.2d 919 (New York Court of Appeals, 1976)
People ex rel. Gonzales v. Dalsheim
417 N.E.2d 493 (New York Court of Appeals, 1980)
People ex rel. Brown v. New York State Division of Parole
516 N.E.2d 194 (New York Court of Appeals, 1987)
People ex rel. Madison v. Sullivan
142 A.D.2d 621 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
179 Misc. 2d 89, 684 N.Y.S.2d 410, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-curtis-v-new-york-state-board-of-parole-nysupct-1998.