People ex rel. Welch v. Maginley-Liddie

2025 NY Slip Op 03645
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 2025
DocketNo. 53
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 03645 (People ex rel. Welch v. Maginley-Liddie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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People ex rel. Welch v. Maginley-Liddie, 2025 NY Slip Op 03645 (N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

People ex rel. Welch v Maginley-Liddie (2025 NY Slip Op 03645)

People ex rel. Welch v Maginley-Liddie
2025 NY Slip Op 03645
Decided on June 17, 2025
Court of Appeals
Garcia, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided on June 17, 2025

No. 53



[*1]The People & c. ex rel. Danielle Welch, & c., Appellant,

v

Lynelle Maginley-Liddie, & c., Respondent.




Danielle Welch, for appellant.

William H. Branigan, for respondent.




GARCIA, J.:

CPL 510.10 (4) (t) provides a judge with discretion to set bail on certain otherwise non-qualifying offenses committed after a defendant has been "released under conditions" on a prior charge. The issue raised on this appeal is whether a defendant who is arrested on new charges after having been released on bail on the prior, underlying charge is "released under conditions" within the meaning of that provision. We hold that the statute applies in such circumstances, and because affirmative habeas relief is no longer available, we reverse the Appellate Division order to convert the proceeding to a declaratory judgment action and grant judgment in accordance with this opinion.

The 2019 bail reform legislation eliminated cash bail for most crimes, except for certain specified qualifying offenses listed in CPL 510.10 (4) (L 2019, ch 59, § 1, part JJJ, § 2; see People ex rel. Rankin v Brann, 41 NY3d 436, 441 [2024]). In 2020, the legislature amended subdivision (4) by expanding the categories of offenses that qualified for bail. The changes included the addition of CPL 510.10 (4) (t), a harm-on-harm provision, by which "an otherwise non-qualifying offense may be converted into a qualifying offense" (People v Lee, 77 Misc 3d 794, 800 [Crim Ct, NY County 2022]; CPL 510.10 [4] [t], as added by L 2020, ch 56, part UU, § 2; see Report on the 2020-21 Adopted Budget, at 8 [Part UU of the adopted budget "creates a mechanism for repeat offenders to be assigned bail"]). Under that provision, certain ineligible crimes may otherwise qualify for bail if those crimes "arose from conduct occurring while the defendant was released on his or her own recognizance, released under conditions or [*2]had yet to be arraigned after the issuance of a desk appearance ticket for a separate felony or class A misdemeanor involving harm to an identifiable person or property" (CPL 510.10 [4] [t]). For purposes of section (4) (t), the underlying crime need not be a qualifying offense (id.).

In 2022, defendant was arrested and charged with several felony offenses, including attempted murder, a qualifying offense (see Penal Law § 125.25 [1]; CPL 510.10 [4] [a]). The court set bail, which defendant posted, and he was released. The following year, while out on bail, defendant was arrested on charges of theft, larceny, and criminal possession of stolen property (see Penal Law §§ 155.25; 165.45 [2]; 165.40; 190.79 [1]). The new charges standing alone were not qualifying offenses, but at defendant's arraignment the People asked the court to set bail under CPL 510.10 (4) (t), noting that he allegedly committed the instant theft offenses while released on an underlying attempted murder charge. Defense counsel asked the court to impose supervised release given defendant's ties to the community and his appearance record in the underlying case. Instead, the court set bail, explaining that defendant was "before the Court on an otherwise non-bail qualifying offense, which is alleged to have been committed while at liberty on bail" for a prior violent felony, and concluding that bail was appropriate under the circumstances to ensure defendant's "future appearances" at court.

Defense counsel made bail applications at several subsequent hearings, contending that the original securing order made pursuant to CPL 510.10 (4) (t) was improper and asked the court to release defendant to supervised release. Counsel argued that CPL 510.10 (4) (t) only applies to those defendants who are released on recognizance or released under non-monetary conditions, and is not implicated where a defendant is released on the "separate condition" of bail. Because defendant was not "at liberty based on the court releasing him under conditions," counsel asserted that the statute did not apply. Each of these applications was denied, with the courts rejecting defendant's interpretation of the harm-on-harm provision.

Defendant's counsel then commenced this habeas proceeding before the Appellate Division seeking defendant's release on the ground that CPL 510.10 (4) (t) did not apply and that as a result, his later theft charges could not be considered qualifying offenses. The court rejected defendant's reading of the statutory language "released under conditions" as excluding bail, explaining that such an interpretation would require writing the phrase "non-monetary" into the statute (225 AD3d 644, 645 [2d Dept 2024]). Instead, the court held that the use of the term "conditions" without the "non-monetary" modifier "evidenc[ed] the intent of the Legislature to apply that statute to all conditions of release rather than only non-monetary conditions" and dismissed the writ (id.). Defendant was subsequently released upon posting bail.[FN*]

Defendant first argues that bail is not a "condition" of release at all and therefore the language "released under conditions" as used in CPL 510.10 (4) (t) does not encompass a defendant who was released on bail on an underlying offense. If bail is "posted on behalf of the principal and approved, [the court] will permit [the principal] to be at liberty during the pendency of the criminal action or proceeding involved" (CPL 500.10 [3]). That is, the principal is released on the condition that they have paid the amount set by the court. Accordingly, bail is a condition of release and a defendant who posts bail has been "released under conditions."

Defendant also asserts that, even if bail is a condition, we should interpret the phrase "released under conditions" as applying only to defendants released solely on non-monetary conditions on the underlying crime. According to defendant, section (4) (t) was meant to apply to "the narrow group of defendants who had been released without bail and gotten re-arrested on additional bail-ineligible offenses," and claims that in passing section (4) (t), the "legislature closed a gap in the bail statute, returning discretion to judges to set cash bail on those individuals with multiple open non-qualifying cases." Defendant maintains that "this new section was not necessary for individuals who had posted bail, as they necessarily had an open qualifying offense that was subject to modification" under a different statute.

As an initial matter, the legislature uses no such limiting language in this portion of the statute. Whereas elsewhere in (4) (t) the statute refers to defendants "released . . . under appropriate non-monetary conditions," here only the more general language "released under conditions" is used (see CPL 510.10 [4] [t]). Moreover, the plain terms of CPL 510.10 (4) (t) disprove this argument, making clear that the less restrictive meaning of "conditions" was indeed intended.

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