People v. Hayward

2024 NY Slip Op 05243
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 2024
DocketNo. 83
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 05243 (People v. Hayward) 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. Hayward, 2024 NY Slip Op 05243 (N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

People v Hayward (2024 NY Slip Op 05243)
People v Hayward
2024 NY Slip Op 05243
Decided on October 24, 2024
Court of Appeals
Troutman
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided on October 24, 2024

No. 83

[*1]The People & c., Respondent,

v

Codie Hayward, Appellant.


Kristin Bluvas, for appellant.

Bridget Rahilly Steller, for respondent.



TROUTMAN, J.

Defendant contends that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move to suppress the physical evidence recovered by police during the execution of the search warrant on the ground that the police violated the knock-and-announce rule when executing the warrant. We disagree.

We have recognized that a single error in an otherwise competent performance may be sufficiently "egregious and prejudicial as to deprive a defendant of [the] constitutional right to effective legal representation" (People v Keschner, 25 NY3d 704, 723 [2015] [internal quotation marks omitted]; see also e.g. People v Watkins, — NY3d &mdash, 2024 NY Slip Op 02842, *3 [May 23, 2024]; People v McGee, 20 NY3d 513, 518 [2013]; People v Turner, 5 NY3d 476, 480-481 [2005]). To "rise to that level," however, defense counsel's omission "must typically involve an issue that is so clear-cut and dispositive that no reasonable defense counsel would have failed to assert it, and it must be evident that the decision to forgo the contention could not have been grounded in a legitimate trial strategy" (McGee, 20 NY3d at 518; see also Watkins, 2024 NY Slip Op 02842, at *3; People v Espinosa, 40 NY3d 1065, 1066 [2023]; Keschner, 25 NY3d at 723).

That standard is not satisfied if the "omitted argument was not so compelling that a failure to make it amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel" (Keschner, 25 NY3d at 723 [internal quotation marks omitted]). We have stated that counsel is not ineffective when the success of the argument the defendant claims should have been made by counsel "depended on the resolution of novel questions" (Watkins, 2024 NY Slip Op 02842, *3), or when, at [*2]the time of the defendant's trial, "there was no clear appellate authority" supporting the argument the defendant claims that counsel should have made (People v Saenger, 39 NY3d 433, 442 [2023]).

The United States Supreme Court has held that a violation of the knock-and-announce rule by police when executing a search warrant does not require the application of the exclusionary rule under the Federal Constitution (see generally Hudson v Michigan, 547 US 586 [2006]). Defendant acknowledges that no New York appellate decision has decided to the contrary, either by distinguishing Hudson, on the basis of the New York Constitution, or otherwise. Indeed, defendant concedes that the issue is novel. We need not and do not resolve the merits of that question on this appeal. We merely hold that the issue was not so clear-cut and dispositive that no reasonable defense attorney would have failed to assert it, and therefore "defendant's claim of ineffective assistance must fail" (Saenger, 39 NY3d at 442; see Keschner, 25 NY3d at 724).

Our concurring colleagues' reliance on concurring and dissenting opinions in the Second Circuit is puzzling, for three reasons. First, no party to this appeal has argued, either before this Court or the Appellate Division, that New York's single-error standard for ineffective assistance of counsel is irreconcilable with the federal standard or should no longer be followed.

Second, the concern expressed in the concurring and dissenting opinions in both Rosario v Ercole (601 F3d 118 [2d Cir 2010]) and the denial of en banc rehearing in that case (617 F3d 683 [2d Cir 2010]) was that the state standard could "act to deny relief despite an egregious error from counsel so long as counsel provides an overall meaningful representation" (617 F3d at 688 [Pooler, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc]). But as our cases demonstrate, a single, sufficiently egregious and prejudicial error will constitute ineffective assistance of counsel, despite an otherwise competent performance (see e.g. Keschner, 25 NY3d at 723). In cases decided after Rosario, the Second Circuit has repeatedly acknowledged that our state standard for ineffective assistance of counsel "is not contrary to Strickland" (Schouenborg v Superintendent, Auburn Correctional Facility, 707 Fed Appx 20, 22 [2d Cir 2017] [internal quotation marks omitted]; see e.g. Cummings v LaValley, 582 Fed Appx 49, 50-51 [2d Cir 2014]; Brown v Ercole, 563 Fed Appx 821, 823-824 [2d Cir 2014]). Indeed, in Rosario itself, Judge Wesley, writing for the majority, correctly reasoned that if a court misunderstood "the New York standard and look[ed] past a prejudicial error as long as counsel conducted himself in a way that bespoke of general competency throughout the trial," it "would produce an absurd result inconsistent with New York constitutional jurisprudence and the mandates of Strickland" (Rosario, 601 F3d at 126). The concurrence fails to demonstrate that the widespread misunderstanding of our single-error standard of which federal jurists warned in the nearly 15-year-old Rosario decision has since come to pass.

Third, no such misunderstanding has occurred here. We have not relied to any extent on counsel's overall competent performance, which defendant does not dispute, but instead hold that counsel's single alleged failure did not constitute ineffective assistance because the omitted argument was "not so clear-cut and dispositive that no reasonable defense counsel would have failed to assert it" (Saenger, 39 NY3d at 442 [internal quotation marks omitted]). Our concurring colleagues acknowledge that meaningful representation does not require counsel to raise "every conceivable claim" (concurring op at 7). But there is nothing to indicate that "counsel's failure to seek suppression under the State Constitution based upon a violation of the knock-and-announce requirement" was "sufficiently foreshadowed in existing case law" (concurring op at 6-7).

Defendant's legal sufficiency contention is unpreserved for appellate review, and we have no power to review his contention that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence. The trial court did not err in holding that evidence that defendant had completed an uncharged drug sale hours before the search warrant was executed was relevant to defendant's constructive possession and intent to sell the drugs found in the apartment during execution of the search warrant (cf. People v Telfair, 41 NY3d 107, 114-117 [2023]). The uncharged sale occurred in the same apartment in which police subsequently recovered the drugs defendant was charged with possessing. To the extent defendant challenges the trial court's limiting instruction to the jury on that issue, he failed to preserve that contention for appellate review.

Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.


RIVERA, J. (concurring):

I generally agree with the majority's disposition of defendant's challenges to his conviction.

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2024 NY Slip Op 05243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hayward-ny-2024.