People v. Boyd

123 Misc. 2d 634, 474 N.Y.S.2d 661, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3046
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 123 Misc. 2d 634 (People v. Boyd) 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. Boyd, 123 Misc. 2d 634, 474 N.Y.S.2d 661, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3046 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sheldon S. Levy, J.

When police officers execute a valid search warrant at premises alleged to be a crime scene or the repository of stolen goods or instrumentalities of a crime, can the victim properly be present to make an on-the-spot confirmation of [635]*635items being seized under the warrant? If so, can the officers also confiscate objects which are not enumerated in the warrant, but which are then and there identified by the victim as his property or as having been criminally employed against him? These questions have not been addressed previously in this State.

An additional issue, also of first impression, is whether the police, seeking to assist a robbery victim who has been stripped of most of his clothing, may undertake a warrant-less search of a crime scene apartment to attempt to recover these garments? This question presents an interesting variation on the emergency exception to the warrant requirements.

Defendants Diane Boyd and Veronica Bishop were indicted for robbery in the first degree and assault in the second degree. They are charged with using dangerous instruments, forcibly to steal property from one John Dillabough and intentionally to cause physical injury to him.

The pertinent facts are simply stated. On April 12,1983, at about 1:30 a.m., in response to a radio run, Police Officer Dennis Finnerty drove to the La Fiesta Bar on West 46th Street near Eighth Avenue, Manhattan. There he met with complainant Dillabough, a troubled adolescent from out-of-State, who was then clothed only in his underwear and was covered by a blanket provided by an emergency ambulance crew. Dillabough averred that he had been assaulted and robbed by a man and two women about an hour earlier, and he directed Officer Finnerty to an apartment in a nearby residence where the incident had allegedly occurred. After Dillabough identified as his assailants two women who had been arguing in the doorway of the said apartment, Finnerty arrested the defendants.

The officer then searched the apartment for the third alleged perpetrator, but found no one. Next, at defendants’ request, Finnerty went back inside the apartment to bring them their coats. Finally, the officer, accompanied by Dillabough, re-entered the apartment and, after a brief search, permitted Dillabough to put on a pair of dungarees and a shirt, which Dillabough stated belonged to him.

[636]*636After securing the premises, Finnerty applied for, and was issued, a warrant to search the subject apartment. The warrant authorized, inter alia, the seizure of a wooden club, a monkey wrench and a partially burnt candle — objects Dillabough claimed had been employed against him in a bodily assault — as well as a variety of specifically stated clothing, a $20 bill, a $5 bill, and personal identification papers — property Dillabough asserted had been stolen from him. At 5:25 p.m., on April 12, Finnerty and several other officers went to the apartment to execute the warrant. Dillabough accompanied them, even though the warrant provided no explicit authorization for his presence.

During the search that ensued, at various times, when an officer uncovered an object that he believed was listed in the warrant, he sought corroboration from Dillabough. After one and a half hours, the police had found almost every item named in the warrant. Meanwhile, although Dillabough did not physically participate in any actual search, he did observe his pocket comb lying on a dresser. When he alerted Finnerty to this, the officer confiscated the comb, which was not an item listed in the warrant. Similarly, while Finnerty was searching through a small wooden box in a bedroom, he seized a piece of paper with identifiable phone numbers written on it when Dillabough stated that the paper belonged to him. The paper, like the comb, was not named in the warrant.

Defendants now move, pretrial, to suppress all of the confiscated items. They argue that the entry to recover some of Dillabough’s clothing was an improper, warrant-less search and seizure, and that the final search, although authorized by warrant, was invalidated by Dillabough’s presence and participation. Contrariwise, the People contend that the clothes search was justified by emergency circumstances; that the execution of the warrant was proper in all respects; and that the items not listed in the warrant are admissible under the plain view exception to the warrant requirements.

The issues raised by the separate searches will be discussed in inverse order.

[637]*637PARTICIPATION BY A CRIME VICTIM IN A WARRANT-AUTHORIZED SEARCH

The Fourth Amendment mandate — that search warrants must describe with particularity objects to be seized — ensures that even those searches deemed necessary and judicially buttressed by a probable cause finding will be as limited as possible.

Using a warrant merely as a license to gain admission to private premises, and ignoring its dictates once inside, could readily result in a search as improper as one in which no warrant had been obtained at all. Defendants argue, therefore, that the participation of a crime victim transforms a warrant-authorized search into a general, illegal exploration because the police, instead of being guided by the warrant, seize those objects that are selected by the victim. That type of procedure, however, was not employed here.

No word or action on Dillabough’s part induced the police to extend the hunt beyond the area or the scope authorized by the issuing magistrate. Although a thorough and exhaustive search of the apartment did occur, it was the warrant itself that permitted the police to examine all of the nooks and crannies where they might legitimately expect even small items, such as identification papers, to be concealed.

Nor did Dillabough’s presence serve as an impermissible substitute for the warrant’s requirement of particularity. The descriptions of the items listed in the warrant clearly passed constitutional muster since they were sufficiently definite to enable the police to identify the articles with a reasonable degree of accuracy (People v Nieves, 36 NY2d 396; People v Burke, 53 AD2d 802). Only after the officers uncovered objects that they judged to be listed in the warrant did they turn to Dillabough to seek definitive confirmation. His responses made it even more positive that the items seized were the ones enumerated in the warrant. Surely, it is incongruous for defendants to complain that the police confiscated particular items after achieving a higher level of certainty than that mandated by the Fourth Amendment!

[638]*638Moreover, just as an immediate, on-the-scene showup proceeding “is consistent with good police work, insures accuracy and protects innocent suspects” (People v Barrett, 51 AD2d 840, 841; see, also, People v Brnja, 50 NY2d 366, 372; People v Smith, 38 NY2d 882, 883; People v Blake, 35 NY2d 331, 336-337), so, too, having a knowledgeable person present at the execution of a search warrant, which contains multiple items, for immediate confirmatory viewing of seized property is an equal demonstration of police efficiency, exactitude and protection forthwith against an erroneous confiscation of objects which may appear similar to those listed on the warrant. In essence, the presence of the corroboration witness provides a fair method for augmented assurance that the warrant will not be executed with excess.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 Misc. 2d 634, 474 N.Y.S.2d 661, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-boyd-nysupct-1984.