People v. Brown

185 Misc. 2d 326, 711 N.Y.S.2d 707, 2000 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 297
CourtCriminal Court of the City of New York
DecidedJuly 18, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 185 Misc. 2d 326 (People v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Criminal Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Brown, 185 Misc. 2d 326, 711 N.Y.S.2d 707, 2000 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 297 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Ethan Greenberg, J.

The relatively simple facts developed in the course of a brief bench trial in this case raise two surprisingly complex and interesting legal questions.

First, is the defendant in a prosecution for unauthorized use of a vehicle, like the defendant in a traditional larceny prosecution, entitled to assert as a defense that he acted under a good-faith claim of right?

Second, can a defendant properly be charged with the crime of criminal mischief for deliberately destroying property— namely, a car — where defendant genuinely believed in good faith that he was entitled to share the use of that car with the car’s legal owner?

For the reasons detailed below, the court answers both these questions in the affirmative and therefore finds the defendant not guilty of attempted unauthorized use of a vehicle, but guilty of attempted criminal mischief. An analysis of the criminal mischief charge and the facts of this case also leads the court to conclude that there is good reason to re-examine the rule of People v Person (239 AD2d 612 [2d Dept 1997]) which places severe, and in this court’s view, unwarranted restrictions on prosecutions for criminal mischief in cases involving domestic violence.

[328]*328Facts

This case grows out of a quarrel over an automobile between the defendant Leroy Brown and his estranged former lover Lisa Lindo.

The largely undisputed facts developed in the course of the trial herein were as follows. Defendant and Ms. Lindo lived together for a time, and they remained on friendly terms even after they took up separate residences. They decided to buy a car. The defendant made the initial down payment for the car of about $6,000. Legal title to the car was placed in the name of the complainant Ms. Lindo and of her father (who graciously agreed to cosign for the car loan).

For several months Mr. Brown and Ms. Lindo shared the car amiably and without incident. Then defendant Brown fell behind in making payments on the car, and the quarrel over the car began to develop. Things got so bad that one night, several months before the incident in question, the complainant Ms. Lindo traveled from her home in the Bronx to defendant’s neighborhood in Brooklyn and simply took the car off the street, without any notice to the defendant. Thereafter she kept the car herself.

On the day in question, October 18, 1998, relations between Ms. Lindo and Mr. Brown were apparently somewhat friendlier. Ms. Lindo drove defendant from Brooklyn to the Bronx. But Mr. Brown and Ms. 'Lindo began to argue again while standing on the sidewalk in the Bronx. The argument touched upon many sore topics, including the car. After several minutes of quarreling, defendant Brown got into the driver’s seat of the car and prepared .to drive away. Complainant Lindo jumped into the car’s back seat and continued the argument.

Defendant began to drive with Ms. Lindo in the back seat. They proceeded for several blocks. Finally, in a fit of anger, defendant Brown declared “If I can’t have the car, then no one can” and wrecked the car by deliberately driving it into a light pole. Defendant Brown quickly fled the scene, but was ultimately arrested and now stands charged with attempted unauthorized use of a vehicle in the third degree (in violation of Penal Law §§ 110.00, 165.05 [1]) and attempted criminal mischief in the fourth degree (Penal Law §§ 110.00, 145.00 [1]).

The car (which was not insured) requires very expensive repairs. Neither the defendant nor Ms. Lindo has been willing or able to pay for those repairs. Thus Ms. Lindo’s father — a decent, hard-working man whose only mistake was to trust his [329]*329daughter and her friend Mr. Brown to act responsibly — has been saddled with making monthly payments for a wrecked and useless car since September 1998.

The testimony of the complainant Ms. Lindo — the People’s chief witness at trial — demonstrated that there was and is a genuine dispute between the complainant and defendant Brown about who owned the car and who was entitled to use it.

Complainant’s and defendant’s positions can be restated (in somewhat more formal legal language than they themselves employed) as follows. Complainant Lindo took the view that defendant made the initial down payment (and several subsequent monthly payments) on the car as a gift to her, and that she was the sole owner of the car. In the complainant’s view, complainant consented of her own free will to permit the defendant to occasionally use the car for several months following the purchase of the car, but she then withdrew that consent after they quarreled about several issues, including defendant’s failure to keep up payments on the car. Once complainant Lindo withdrew that consent, she believed that defendant had no right to take, use or damage the car.

Defendant Brown, for his part, took the view that he made the very substantial initial down payment (and several subsequent monthly payments) on the car not as an outright gift to Ms. Lindo, but as an act pursuant to an informal agreement with complainant Lindo whereby they would share the use of the car. Defendant’s understanding was that he and Ms. Lindo had agreed that Ms. Lindo (along with her father) would be the legal titleholders to the car, but that defendant retained the right to use the car from time to time and that Ms. Lindo was therefore required to share the car with him. In defendant’s view the complainant had no right to unilaterally declare that defendant — who had paid for the car in the first place — could no longer use the car at all. Thus, at least in his own mind, defendant was not stealing Ms. Lindo’s car on the day in question; rather defendant believed that he was entitled to drive the car from time to time, and that Ms. Lindo was obligated to share it.

Analysis

At the outset, it should be noted that based on the evidence presented at trial it certainly appears that defendant was guilty of a number of charges that were not brought by the People, including: (1) reckless endangerment (Penal Law [330]*330§ 120.20) (for deliberately causing a car wreck while he and complainant were still in the car); (2) leaving the scene of an incident (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 600); (3) driving with a suspended license (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 511); and (4) criminal mischief in the fourth degree (Penal Law § 145.00) (for damaging the light pole, which belongs to the City). The District Attorney’s office has, however, elected to focus solely on two property crimes allegedly committed against the complainant Ms. Lindo, namely, unauthorized use and criminal mischief.

In a case like this, where there was a genuine dispute over the property in question, the prosecution of those property crimes raises the concern that an essentially civil dispute over the ownership and use of a car should not be elevated into a criminal prosecution. (See, People v Zinke, 76 NY2d 8, 13 [1990].)

As detailed below, the law is not fully settled on the question whether a person claiming to be an equitable co-owner of property can be charged with either unauthorized use or criminal mischief. The law is a bit clearer with respect to the closely related crime of larceny. An examination of the law regarding larceny is therefore a useful starting point for analysis here.

A. Larceny

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55 M.J. 712 (Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 Misc. 2d 326, 711 N.Y.S.2d 707, 2000 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brown-nycrimct-2000.