People v. De Jesus

122 Misc. 2d 190, 471 N.Y.S.2d 195, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4094
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 122 Misc. 2d 190 (People v. De Jesus) 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. De Jesus, 122 Misc. 2d 190, 471 N.Y.S.2d 195, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4094 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Jeffrey M. Atlas, J.

The defendant has made a pretrial motion to “controvert” a special information which accompanies an indictment charging him with operating a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or drugs as a felony.1 The special information, filed to comply with CPL 200.60, alleges that the defendant was convicted of the same offense as a misdemeanor on July 16, 1980, in the Criminal Court of the City of New York, Bronx County.

The defendant admits that as a consequence of his plea of guilty he was convicted of the misdemeanor in 1980, but contends that the plea was unconstitutionally obtained because it was unintelligently and involuntarily entered. In this respect the defendant has shown that the court taking his plea failed, among other things, to ascertain [191]*191whether the defendant knew of his rights to remain silent, confront witnesses and be tried in the matter and whether the defendant voluntarily waived those rights. (See Boykin v Alabama, 395 US 238.) Given that, the defendant further contends that his earlier misdemeanor conviction cannot properly serve now as a predicate for prosecution of the instant offense as a felony and that the grade of the crime, from misdemeanor to felony, and the possible sentence, as a felon up to a maximum of IVs to 4 years, may not be enhanced upon the strength of that misdemeanor conviction. Based upon all of that, the defendant asks me to prevent the prosecution from proving the allegations of the special information.

Unconcerned that the CPL provides no process for the particular relief sought, the defendant relies upon the decisions in People v Dorn (105 Misc 2d 244); People v Sirianni (109 Misc 2d 781, revd on other grounds 89 AD2d 775); and People v Solomon (113 Misc 2d 790), each of which holds that a misdemeanor conviction, used as a predicate for enhancement of a second offense to a felony, may be collaterally challenged at the time of the filing of the special information and in the very court in which it was filed.

My analysis of the problem constrains me to disagree with those decisions, first, because each of those decisions intuitively fashions a new remedy without regard for the remedy long ago made available by our appellate courts in such proceedings, and, second, because each decision purports to follow Baldasar v Illinois (446 US 222) which, I find, is not at all supportive of their view.

We must start with an acknowledgment of the principle that a judgment of conviction entered by a court having jurisdiction of the accused and the cause and not set aside upon direct or collateral appeal is, for all purposes, presumed to be valid. (See People v Bell, 36 AD2d 406, affd 29 NY2d 882; People v Richetti, 302 NY 290; Matter of Morhous v New York Supreme Ct., 293 NY 131.)

Notwithstanding that, it is certainly well established that while such a judgment may have fallen beyond appellate review as to issues to be found within the underlying record, under certain circumstances, the same judgment [192]*192may be subject to collateral attack, at least with respect to matters not within the record. (See, e.g., CPL 440.10; People v Shapiro, 3 NY2d 203.) This is particularly true with respect to claims affecting the constitutionality of the conviction in question. In this respect, our courts had long ago noticed that, since infirmities of a constitutional dimension not appearing in the record could not be asserted on appeal, absent a collateral avenue of relief, these claims would be foreclosed. (See People v Shapiro, supra.) Yet, due process of law has always demanded that some procedure give voice to claims of infirmity that may affect the fundamental fairness of the judgment and overcome any presumption of validity it has. (See People v Sullivan, 3 NY2d 196; Matter of Morhous v New York Supreme Ct., supra; Matter of Lyons v Goldstein, 290 NY 19.)

The urgent demands of due process have always been especially compelling when a previously unchallenged judgment is claimed to lack of constitutional validity and that assertion is made at the very time that the judgment is sought to be used to enhance the sentence of one newly convicted of another crime. (See Burgett v Texas, 389 US 109.)

We are all now acutely aware, with respect to the use of such judgments to enhance the penalty of second and persistent felony offenders, that the demands of due process are more than adequately met by sections of our CPL which allow the litigation of such constitutional claims at a hearing prior to .sentence. (See CPL 400.20, 400.21.)

The issue in this case is framed by the fact that neither those sections of the law nor any other section of our CPL provide any avenue by which this collateral attack on the constitutionality of an earlier misdemeanor judgment may be made before the sentencing court to prevent the use of the earlier conviction in either enhancing the grade of the offense or the sentence.

Indeed, defendant asks that I now fashion a remedy, similar to that provided by the predicate felony sentencing statutes, by which he may, in this court, raise and litigate a constitutional challenge to the earlier misdemeanor conviction. It is clear that the defendant supposes that I have the power to create such a remedy in order that there be no [193]*193failure of due process such as was avoided by the sections governing felonies.

I will not here dispute whether I may now create such a procedure to give effect to defendant’s claims, for, it is clear, an historic remedy already exists by which the defendant may adequately assert his claims.

In this respect, I must note that were there no statutory procedure as now exists with respect to predicate felony sentencing, that enhancement scheme would not only be remarkably similar to the one presented here but, it too would not suffer for want of due process.

This becomes clear when one considers that the statutory provisions for challenge to predicate felonies did not result from some intuitive leap of the Legislature but, rather, evolved from an earlier body of law which had already provided a common-law basis for such a collateral challenge.

In fact, CPL 400.20, and its companion, CPL 400.21, are derived from section 470-a of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1881 (as added by L 1967, ch 681, § 60) which, in turn, was derived in essential part, from section 1943 of the Penal Law of 1909, passed in 1964 to codify, for the first time, a procedure to challenge the constitutionality of predicate felony convictions obtained against a defendant in New York or in other jurisdictions. Until 1964, the procedure in such matters was that discovered and directed by our courts. In Matter of Lyons v Goldstein (supra) it was first held that an unappealed conviction, no longer subject to attack under any statute but, sought to be used as the predicate for an enhanced felony sentence, might be subject to collateral attack, made upon the ground that the judgment was obtained by fraud or misrepresentation, through the use of writ of error coram nobis.

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Related

People v. Knack
128 A.D.2d 307 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 Misc. 2d 190, 471 N.Y.S.2d 195, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-de-jesus-nysupct-1983.