People v. Farmer

90 A.D.2d 106, 456 N.Y.S.2d 360, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18813
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 2, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 A.D.2d 106 (People v. Farmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State 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. Farmer, 90 A.D.2d 106, 456 N.Y.S.2d 360, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18813 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Milonas, J.

The defendant, Tyrone Farmer, appeals from a judgment of the Supreme Court, New York County, entered on March 14, 1979, convicting him, following a jury trial, of murder in the second degree and sentencing him to a term of imprisonment of from 25 years to life.

At trial, the People’s principal witness was George Baldwin, who stated that he had become acquainted with Farmer when the latter started dating Baldwin’s sister. Early in the summer of 1977, the defendant moved into the [107]*107Baldwin apartment and began living there with Baldwin and Baldwin’s mother. Several days prior to July 2, 1977, the date of the murder, the defendant showed Baldwin a .22 caliber pistol, explaining that he had obtained it from his mother’s boyfriend. (Although Baldwin initially claimed that the defendant had exhibited the gun to him a month or so earlier, on cross-examination he recalled first seeing the weapon two days before the murder. Francis Clayton Bowlding, a security guard living with the defendant’s mother, testified that he had discovered his .22 caliber pistol missing sometime shortly before July 2, 1977.) The gun had only two or three bullets in it, and Baldwin offered to provide Farmer with five additional bullets that he had collected as “souvenirs”.

On the day of the incident, Baldwin encountered the defendant standing on a street corner with a group of people. He approached Farmer and requested to borrow some money in order to take a date to the movies that evening. The defendant, however, declined to extend the loan. After conversing with the defendant for approximately 25 minutes, Baldwin asked Farmer to watch his bicycle while he stopped by at a nearby grocery store for a soda. Inside the store were Abraham Myers, 78 years old, and his wife, 67-year-old Rachel Myers. Baldwin walked up to the counter and ordered a soda. While he waited, the defendant entered, pulled out a gun and leaped on top of the counter near the cash register. When Mrs. Myers resisted Farmer’s attempt to open the cash register, the defendant shot and killed her. Mr. Myers, who had been in the back of the store, rushed to the front in response to his wife’s screams. The defendant shot twice at him, missed, and then fled outside. Baldwin repeatedly denied any knowledge of, or participation in, the attempted robbery.

The prosecution also called three neighborhood women as witnesses, all of whom were about to go into the store at around the time of the shooting. As they arrived at the front door, Hattie Garnett glanced through the window and observed the defendant on the counter with a gun in his hand. In the middle of the room was another man whom she did not recognize. She instructed her friends to inform the police and then ran back to her house. Rosalyn Brown [108]*108also testified to having seen the defendant on the counter, as well as an unknown man standing in the middle of the store. She too hurried away from the scene. However, unlike her friends, Arlene Washington did not immediately depart, but remained on the spot for a few moments, looking inside. She noticed one man on the counter and another in the middle of the store, but did not recognize either one “for sure”. As she watched, the man on the counter reached down toward the cash register, stood up and, after stuffing something in his pocket, jumped down. In addition, Abraham Myers observed a man descend from the counter but was unable to identify him.

Baldwin had left the store before Farmer. Arlene Washington and her friends, the latter having returned to the area, noticed Baldwin’s exit. A few seconds later, the defendant came out and headed in the same direction as Baldwin. According to Baldwin, as he was retrieving his bicycle, Farmer caught up to him and complained that Baldwin had done “wrong” to walk away from him and said, “the old man got away from me”. Baldwin got on his bicycle, and riding away, noted that the defendant entered a building across the street. He encountered Farmer again later that night in the Baldwin apartment. The defendant asserted that he had not taken anything from the store after the shooting. A few days subsequent to this, Baldwin and the defendant rode their bicycles up to Farmer’s mother’s apartment in The Bronx, and the defendant brought the pistol back to Francis Bowlding. Although the gun was later recovered by the police, the bullet found in Mrs. Myers’ body was too deformed for the ballistics expert to ascertain whether the bullet had been shot from that particular .22 caliber gun. However, the police were able to determine that the pistol was operable and bore evidence of having been discharged.

The defense called Detective Eugene Heghmann, who testified that he had been in charge of the investigation since the night of the murder. He declared that the forensic unit summoned to the scene were unable to discover any bullets in the store other than the one found in Mrs. Myers’ body. He further stated that when he first interviewed Rosalyn Brown, she claimed that the only thing she had [109]*109observed was two men leaving the store. Farmer’s mother also took the stand in her son’s behalf. She asserted that until she moved to The Bronx, she and the defendant had lived in the same Manhattan apartment building as Mr. and Mrs. Myers and that Mr. Myers was acquainted with her son.

Following the People’s direct case and during the defense presentation, the court inquired whether the defendant’s attorney wished the jury to be charged on the question of Baldwin’s possible complicity in the crime. The defense counsel indicated that he did, and the court declared that it would submit to the jury the matter of Baldwin’s status as an accomplice. However, the District Attorney, after discussions between the parties, later announced that the prosecution and defense had reached an agreement that:

“on the understanding that there would not be a request for the jury to be charged on accomplice testimony, I have an application to amend the indictment under the murder count to delete from the indictment surplusage dealing with another person since that isn’t a required element of the crime to begin with and need never have been put on the indictment and certainly since the jury is not going to be charged on accomplice testimony that it is not necessary.
“My application would be that the first count read after, ‘Committed as follows:’
“ ‘The defendant in the County of New York on or about July 2nd, 1977, while engaged in the commission of attempted robbery and in the course of such crime and in the furtherance therefrom, the defendant caused the death of Rachel Myers, not a participant in the crime, by shooting her in the chest.’ ”

The court, having been informed that the defense did not object, granted the People’s motion to strike from the felony murder count of the indictment those words relating to other participants. On summation, the defendant’s lawyer argued that the testimony of Brown, Garnett and Washington was unreliable and that Baldwin, an admitted perjurer (apparently because he conceded having lied to the Grand Jury during his first appearance before it in [110]*110August of 1977, although he returned to the Grand Jury in October and, at that time, related the same account as he did at trial), was the only real witness to the crime. It was the defense’s position that Baldwin actually fired the shot and that Farmer would never have committed such a deed knowing that Myers could identify him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.D.2d 106, 456 N.Y.S.2d 360, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-farmer-nyappdiv-1982.