People v. Gonzalez

667 N.E.2d 323, 88 N.Y.2d 289, 644 N.Y.S.2d 673, 1996 N.Y. LEXIS 688
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 2, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 667 N.E.2d 323 (People v. Gonzalez) 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. Gonzalez, 667 N.E.2d 323, 88 N.Y.2d 289, 644 N.Y.S.2d 673, 1996 N.Y. LEXIS 688 (N.Y. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Levine, J.

Defendant was convicted following a jury trial of murder, second degree, manslaughter, first degree, and attempted robbery, first degree, arising out of his fatal shooting of a taxi driver during a bungled holdup in the Hunt’s Point area of the Bronx. This appeal concerns the validity of the seizure of the murder weapon, a 12-gouge shotgun, during the investigating detectives’ search of an apartment on Manida Street in the Bronx occupied by Sean DeJesus, defendant’s accomplice, and other members of the DeJesus family. Defendant and Sean DeJesus had been identified by eyewitnesses as the perpetrators, and defendant was already in custody when the police came to the DeJesus apartment looking for Sean.

*292 Two of the officers who conducted the search of the DeJesus apartment, Detectives Spivey and Martino, testified at the suppression hearing. They stated that they were greeted at the door by a young woman who identified herself as Kim DeJesus, Sean’s sister. She and her young daughter were the only persons at home. The detectives informed her that they were looking for Sean in connection with a shooting. Kim told them that defendant also stayed at the apartment, sleeping in Sean’s bedroom "on and off” for a week at a time. One of the detectives asked her whether she had seen either defendant or Sean with a gun. She replied that one day Sean had shown her daughter a shotgun, and she "got upset” and had an argument with Sean about it. She told the police that "she thought he had gotten rid of [the gun]”.

The police then asked Kim if they could "look in Sean’s room”, and she agreed. She led them to a bedroom and pointed out which bed was defendant’s and which was Sean’s. One of the officers patted defendant’s bed and then lifted up the mattress. Under the mattress he discovered a blue canvass duffel bag, which was zipped closed. He unzipped it and found a shotgun, two shotgun shells and personal clothing. The detectives terminated the search and removed the bag and its contents. The next day they had Kim DeJesus sign a letter confirming that she had given the police permission to enter the apartment. At the suppression hearing, the prosecution stipulated that defendant had standing to challenge the entry of the police into the apartment and the ensuing search and seizure.

Supreme Court denied defendant’s motion to suppress. The court concluded that the seizure of the shotgun and other items was valid because Kim DeJesus "had apparent authority to grant permission to the officers to enter and search the apartment[,] * * * consent was properly obtained as a result of the apparent authority of Ms. DeJesus [and] the search was properly conducted pursuant thereto”. The shotgun and other evidence seized were introduced at defendant’s trial. The Appellate Division affirmed (210 AD2d 83), agreeing with Supreme Court that the police "properly relied on defendant’s accomplice’s sister’s apparent authority to consent to the search of the apartment * * * which resulted in recovery of the gun”. Defendant appeals pursuant to leave granted by an Associate Judge of this Court, and we now reverse.

In stipulating to defendant’s standing, the People conceded that, at the time of the police seizure, defendant had a legiti *293 mate expectation of privacy, cognizable under the Fourth Amendment, in the contents of the duffel bag ("a large cylindrical fabric bag for personal belongings” [Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 387 (1990)]). The record is devoid of any evidence that Kim Dejesus’s specific consent was sought or obtained for the search of defendant’s duffel bag.

The courts below érred in relying upon the apparent (if not actual) authority of Kim DeJesus to consent to the search of the apartment, which she jointly occupied, as furnishing apparent authority for a search of a closed and concealed receptacle owned by defendant which, by definition and common understanding, is ordinarily used for storing or transporting the personal effects of its owner.

Analysis begins with the holding of United States v Matlock (415 US 164), that law enforcement officials can establish a constitutionally valid search and seizure by "show[ing] that permission to search was obtained from a third party who possessed common authority over or other sufficient relationship to the premises or effects sought to be inspected” (id., at 171 [emphasis supplied]). The Court construed "common authority” not in any narrow property law sense, but "rather on mutual use of the property by persons generally having joint access or control for most purposes, so that it is reasonable to recognize that any of [such persons] has the right to permit the inspection in his own right and that the others have assumed the risk that one of their number might permit the common area to be searched” (id., at 171, n 7 [emphasis supplied]).

In subsequent applications of the Matlock standard for effective third-party consent to search, the courts have paid heed to Matlock’s reference in the disjunctive to the requisite common authority of the other, consenting person "over * * * the premises or effects sought to be inspected”, particularly when the target of the search was a closed container owned by a guest, located on the premises of the host who consented to the search. Thus, Justice O’Connor, concurring (with then-Justice Rehnquist) in United States v Karo (468 US 705, 725), admonished that, because the Matlock test focuses on the common authority over and mutual use or access and control of the particular place or thing intended to be searched, "[a] homeowner’s consent to a search of the home may not be effective consent to a search of a closed object inside the home”.

The foregoing distinction has been particularly recognized and honored when the guest’s closed container (or similar item) *294 is an article customarily used to hold one’s most personal belongings. As one Federal court put it:

"Common experience of life, clearly a factor in assessing the existence and the reasonableness of privacy expectations, surely teaches all of us that the law’s 'enclosed spaces’ — mankind’s valises, suitcases, footlockers, strong boxes, etc. — are frequently the objects of [one’s] highest privacy expectations, and that the expectations may well be at their most intense when such effects are deposited temporarily or kept semi-permanently in public places or in places under the general control of another. Indeed, to the sojourner in our midst— all of us at one time or another — the suitcase or trunk may well constitute practically the sole repository of such expectations of privacy as are had” (United States v Block, 590 F2d 535, 541 [4th Cir]; see also, 3 LaFave, Search and Seizure § 8.5 [d], at 798 [3d ed]).

Overwhelmingly, the courts have thus rejected the sufficiency of a host’s general consent to search premises to validate the search of a guest’s overnight bag, purse, dresser drawers used exclusively for the guest’s personal effects, or similar objects. 1

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Bluebook (online)
667 N.E.2d 323, 88 N.Y.2d 289, 644 N.Y.S.2d 673, 1996 N.Y. LEXIS 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gonzalez-ny-1996.