People v. Betillo

53 Misc. 2d 540, 279 N.Y.S.2d 444, 1967 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1583
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 53 Misc. 2d 540 (People v. Betillo) 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 v. Betillo, 53 Misc. 2d 540, 279 N.Y.S.2d 444, 1967 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1583 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1967).

Opinion

Thomas Dickens, J.

In 1936, defendant, who had then been indicted on a number of counts involving moral turpitude, was subsequently convicted after trial, and later, sentenced to a cumulative .term of not less than 25 years nor more than 40. He now moves, by coram nobis, in conformity with the authority of People v. Shaver (26 A D 2d 735) to invalidate the sentence.

The gravamen of this application, in its employment as the medium of attack upon the validity of the sentence imposed upon defendant, has, as pressed by defendant, for its pitch the nervus probandi of constitutionality, predicated upon the faultfinding of being deprived, at the time of sentence, of counsel of his own choice — a deprivation, he contends,- which had the effect of violating his protection under the Constitution.

More concisely put, defendant makes prominent the critical point that an attorney named John Valluzzi, a stranger, who was other .than the attorney Ceasar Barra, whom he had retained to represent him throughout the case, had allegedly stood up for him at the imposition of sentence; but, that, defendant contends further, Valluzzi, so far as defendant was concerned, did without book. As a result, he now feels that he had, after that had happened, become a defendant inops consilii, that is, a defendant without further aid of personal counsel.

[541]*541A hearing was recently held on this motion, at which time defendant testified, in support of his application, that on the day of sentence Mr. Barra did not appear, but, instead, Mr. Yalluzzi appeared and addressed the court.

At this hearing defendant, when answering all questions in chief, steadfastly persisted that he had never retained Yalluzzi as his attorney to represent him at the sentencing, nor given Yalluzzi authority to speak for him on sentence day; that he had neither spoken to Yalluzzi on the day of sentence nor spoken to him prior thereto nor thereafter. He, in effect, drove home by assertion the fact that he had engaged only the above-named Ceasar Barra to represent him in this prosecution, from stem to stern, that is, representation from the time of arraignment to the final disposition of the sentence.

Cross-examination of defendant by the District Attorney produced confirmatory testimony that Yalluzzi had not been chosen as representative attorney by defendant, but, instead, Yalluzzi had acted as representative attorney for Barra.

And, on redirect examination, defendant substantially confirmed what he had stated on direct examination.

At this hearing, the People produced, in support of their case, the attorney Yalluzzi as a witness for the State. Of course, by way of a parenthetical observation, it goes without saying that his testimony became binding on the People, for by adopting him as their witness they vouched for his credibility and thereby held him out as worthy of belief (People v. Cosad, 253 App. Div. 104). Consequently, his testimony is highly important and must be given serious thought in resolving the issue.

All told, defendant declares, in effect, that Yalluzzi’s testimony tends to add, first and last, strong support to defendant’s charge that the deprivation of counsel of his own choice subverted his rights, and, therefore, such act fell under the ban of the law as a palpable perversion of justice and was anticonstitutional.

The first requisite for wider factual enlightenment, reflecting on the controversial issue as a means for helpful solution, is the process of making an anatomized inspection of the material evidence put forth at the hearing of this coram nobis motion. With such material evidence, sifted and then welded together to serve as a background, I am of the persuasive opinion that a proper determination of the vital issue can be arrived at when this background of the evidence is cast in the light of the applicable principles of law, cited hereinafter.

After stating that he had started as a clerk in Barra’s office, then later, after being admitted to the Bar, he performed, as a “minor functionary,” certain “chores” in exchange for [542]*542office space and facilities, Vallussi acknowledged that he had represented Barra who represented defendant, a fact of which he had knowledge, and that his best recollection was that he had never spoken to defendant, and particularly, that he had not spoken to defendant concerning defendant’s consent to have him appear as defendant’s attorney, nor had he told the court that defendant had consented to his, Vallussi’s, representation as defendant’s attorney.

As a side light, I refer to Valluzzi’s admission on the witness stand, to wit, that he had never tried a criminal case, his practice as an admitted attorney consisting of civil litigation.

The following excerpts, as illustrations, from Valluzzi’s testimony, will not be amiss at this time as corroborating proof that, so far as defendant was concerned, Valluzzi’s status as proctor counsel for defendant by uninvited devolution, was solely a representation ab invito.

In his direct examination of Valluzzi, the District Attorney, apparently with the object of showing that defendant had representation at the time of sentencing (although its effect against the People assumed the mark, at least, by implication, of an admission against interest), read, in question form, a statement made to the court by Valluzzi, at the time of sentencing, the pertinent part of which was as follows: “ Mr. John J. Valluzzi: If your Honor please, I represent Mr. Barra, who represents the defendants Pennochio, and Betillo.” (Emphasis supplied.)

And, on pages 92 and 93 of Valluzzi’s examination in chief at the hearing, appear the question put to him by me and his answer:

“ the court : Did you tell the defendant that you were representing him for Mr. Barra?
“ the witness: I don’t think so, Judge. I don’t remember that, Judge. I remember going up there and saying, ‘ I represent Mr. Barra', I represent the defendant.’” (Emphasis supplied.)

The whole outcome of the case turns upon these cardinal questions: Was the office association of Valluzzi with Barra sufficient enough as a factor in law to vest, by Barra’s direction, Valluzzi with vicarious authority to appear for defendant at the sentencing, although neither Valluzzi nor Barra had obtained consent from defendant? Furthermore, did such association make consent unnecessary?

It must be borne in mind, in rendering an answer to either question, that, as the minutes indicate, in the activity of affairs at the sentencing, defendant, as a layman, standing before the [543]*543court, could only pay the piper as defendant; he could not call the tune as attorney, so to speak, in view of his arranged reliance upon his hired attorney, Barra, to take up the cudgels for him.

In order to consider these questions within circumscribed bounds befitting the situation here, it may be apropos to note, before reviewing the authorities, four well-established tenets that should, in judging the factors of concern here, be adhered to, in the face of the unimpeached weight of the proof evolved from the minutes of this hearing showing nonconsent. These tenets are:

1. That which [absence of consent] is proved by the record ought not to be denied (Ballentine’s Law Dictionary, p. 1078).

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Bluebook (online)
53 Misc. 2d 540, 279 N.Y.S.2d 444, 1967 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-betillo-nysupct-1967.