People v. Florio

92 N.E.2d 881, 301 N.Y. 46
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 92 N.E.2d 881 (People v. Florio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Florio, 92 N.E.2d 881, 301 N.Y. 46 (N.Y. 1950).

Opinions

Conway, J.

All four defendants, by a general verdict, have been found guilty on six counts of an indictment which charged kidnapping, rape in the first degree and assault in the second [48]*48degree. The People proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants, acting in concert and each aiding and abetting the other, inveigled the complainant into an automobile, detained and confined her there while transporting her between New York County and Queens County through Kings County, against her will and without authority of law.

The complainant had been visiting at the home of a neighborhood friend, in lower Manhattan. The defendants arranged a plan whereby two of them drove there and one inveigled complainant out of the house upon the pretense that the one who remained in the automobile was known to her. When she reached the automobile, and said that she did not recall ever seeing the defendant seated behind the wheel, she was induced to enter the car, since it was a cold March night and she was without hat or coat, while the defendant driver attempted to recall himself to her. As soon as she entered, the automobile was put in motion, the two other defendants were picked up at a nearby, prearranged meeting place, and complainant was forcibly confined and imprisoned in the automobile, while it was driven to an isolated spot in Queens County where each defendant raped her. Complainant had never seen any of the defendants before that night. The driver of the car subsequently admitted that he thought they were calling for another girl with a similar name, but that he realized his mistake immediately. Nevertheless, he said, “ ‘ We started out for a girl; she was a girl, and we took her.’ ” We are all agreed that the guilt of the defendants of the acts just detailed was established beyond a reasonable doubt. (People v. Yannucci, 283 N. Y. 546.)

It is now urged upon us, however, that the acts proved did not establish the crime of kidnapping, however much they may have established rape and assault, because the complainant is a female and the purpose of the defendants in thus inveigling, detaining, confining and transporting her against her will and without authority of law was to commit the crime of rape in the first degree upon her.

Concededly, had the complainant been a man, the defendants ’ acts would have constituted the crime of kidnapping, since, under our statute, we have held that a wilful and intentional detention for an unlawful purpose against one’s will and without authority of law constitutes the crime of kidnapping. [49]*49(Penal Law, § 1250, subd. 1; People v. Hope, 257 N. Y. 147; People v. Small, 249 App. Div. 863, 274 N. Y. 551.)

It is true that the detention inevitably occurring during the immediate act of commission of such a crime as rape or robbery would not form a basis for a separate crime of kidnapping. That, however, is not this case. Defendants’ inveiglement, detention and confinement of a woman unknown to them against her will and without authority of law, constituted the separate and distinct crime of kidnapping. It was true kidnapping in the popular understanding as well as the legal “ spirit and intent ” of the statute. (People v. Hope, supra, p. 154.) The defendants could have been found guilty of kidnapping even if they had never carried out their purpose of raping complainant or had had some undisclosed or undiscovered purpose. (People v. Hope, supra; People v. Small, supra.)

As indicated, our statute and decisions require this conclusion. Insofar as here material, section 1250 of the Penal Law reads as follows:

“ A person who wilfully: 1. Seizes, confines, inveigles, or kidnaps another, with intent to cause him, without authority of law, to be confined or imprisoned within this state * * * or in any way held to service or kept or detained, against his will * * * Is guilty of kidnapping * * *.”

In People v. Hope (supra) the defendant and two others by threats and intimidations confined a boy at night in the rear seat of an automobile, while compelling his companion, under threat of death, to drive the car as they directed. The purpose of the seizure was never disclosed. We held that the evidence sustained the charge of kidnapping under the above-quoted section 1250 which was then identical with its present wording, except that the word “ secretly ” in the phrase “ to be secretly confined or imprisoned ” was deleted by chapter 773 of the Laws of 1933. We there said (p. 150): “ Kidnapping was a crime under the common law of England, and was defined by Blackstone (Vol. 4, p. 219) as ‘ the forcible abduction or stealing away of a man, woman, or child, from their own country and sending them into another.’ * * * The common-law definition was extended in England at a very early day. (People v. Camp, 139 N. Y. 87.) The crime is now defined by statutes, in all of our States, which have greatly enlarged the [50]*50cases where conviction may be had. (Smith v. State, 63 Wis. 453; People v. Camp, supra.)”

We pointed out at page 152: “ The statute [§ 1250] must be given a reasonable construction in order to promote the efficient enforcement of the criminal law, to prevent crime and to promote the ends of justice. The object of the statute and of the common law on the subject was the same, to secure the personal liberty of citizens and to secure to them the assistance of the law necessary to release them from unlawful restraint.” (Emphasis supplied.) And later we said (pp. 153-154): “ * * * McCarthy [one of the boys] was secretly seized in' the night under circumstances calculated to terrify him. His captors had guns which they threatened to use to kill him with if he moved. They forced him to take the rear seat in the car. They apparently intended to take him in the car to Long Island as Klemmer [the other boy] was told to drive there. They had complete control of his person; he was confined and imprisoned in the car. That was not a mere assault or imprisonment. He was secretly confined and imprisoned because his captors were concealing their purpose from the public by compelling Klemmer and McCarthy to appear to be willing participants in the automobile ride, when in fact they were compelled upon the threat of death to act as they did.

“ The confinement and detention in the automobile for a short time, coupled with the intent, brings the case within the purview of the statute. (State v. Leuth, supra [128 Iowa 189].)

It seems clear that under the common understanding of the term ‘ kidnapping ’ the defendant is guilty of the crime charged and the facts bring the case within the spirit and intent of the statute.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In the instant case, complainant’s captors did not have a gun and they inveigled her into the automobile within the meaning of the statute instead of seizing her, but aside from these immaterial variations, the conduct of the present defendants and the conduct of the defendant in the Hope case (supra) are the same, and constitute the crime of kidnapping.

Likewise, in the Small case (supra), the complainant, a man, as he was returning to his home on a New York City street, was told by the defendants to enter an automobile standing at the curb. He was threatened with a pistol, his hat was pushed [51]

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E.2d 881, 301 N.Y. 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-florio-ny-1950.