People v. Hogan

5 Misc. 3d 151, 780 N.Y.S.2d 883, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1050
CourtRochester City Court
DecidedJuly 2, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Misc. 3d 151 (People v. Hogan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Rochester City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hogan, 5 Misc. 3d 151, 780 N.Y.S.2d 883, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1050 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas Rainbow Morse, J.

The above defendants are facing felony charges before this court in cases which are unremarkable in and of themselves. The cases are important, however, because they have arisen at a time when the traditional Rochester City Court procedure regarding felony complaints has been altered dramatically as a result of our District Attorney’s newly enacted preliminary hearing policy1 as well as a recent decision by Justice Bellini dismiss[153]*153ing a felony complaint. Accordingly, because my colleagues and I are now being asked to answer questions heretofore rarely posed, I write today to document the resolutions I reached in these three cases regarding a number of important issues and to suggest possible legislative action to bring additional coherence and consistency to a local court’s exercise of preliminary jurisdiction in felony matters.

Since the end of March, in almost every case involving defendants in custody after arraignment, the Monroe County District Attorney has elected to pursue immediate grand jury consideration of felony charges rather than proceed with a preliminary hearing.2 In addition, while sitting nisi prius as a “Rochester City Court Judge,”3 acting Supreme Court Justice Elma Bellini recently ruled in People v McNair4 that when the People do not go forward with evidence on the date scheduled for a preliminary hearing and they do not file a grand jury certification, allow review of the felony complaint for possible reduction, or request an adjournment of the preliminary hearing, the Criminal Procedure Law compels dismissal of the felony complaint in addition to release of the defendant. In the Hogan and Colon cases, as in Justice Bellini’s case, the People did not file a certification, request an adjournment of the preliminary hearing, or present proof at such a hearing. The record, however, is silent regarding whether Justice Bellini actually held a pre[154]*154liminary hearing as this court did in those two cases. This court dismissed the felony complaints and released defendants Hogan and Colon finding the proof at each abbreviated hearing insufficient. Following these dismissals, this court sua sponte raised an issue not addressed in Justice Bellini’s decision, the sealing of official records after such a dismissal. In the Wilson case, the People did not go forward with a preliminary hearing within 144 hours of arrest or file a certification and the court released the defendant on his own recognizance. Unlike the situation presented in the McNair, Hogan and Colon cases, however, the People in Wilson requested repeated adjournments of the preliminary hearing which this court granted over the defendant’s objection. Accordingly, this opinion starts where Justice Bellini’s left off and addresses a number of ancillary issues not presented by the facts in McNair which local court judges confront daily.5

Preliminary Proceedings on a Felony Complaint in a Local Court

In New York, local criminal court accusatory instruments include a felony complaint which “charges one or more defendants with the commission of one or more felonies and which serves to commence a criminal action but not as a basis for prosecution thereof.”6 Thus, the filing of a felony complaint merely vests the local court with temporary preliminary jurisdiction of the case which constitutionally can be tried as a felony only after indictment by a grand jury.7 While rarely exercised, a local court has statutory authority to review the sufficiency of and dismiss a felony complaint at arraignment.8 More commonly, a prosecutor interested in resolving certain felony accusations at the local court level may permit the court to evaluate the facts underlying the felony complaint to determine if the interest of justice would be served by reduction of the charge to a [155]*155nonfelony offense.9 If a prosecutor feels felony prosecution is warranted or does not wish to subject witnesses to cross-examination at this early stage, he or she may file a certification of grand jury action before a preliminary hearing is held.10 In other circumstances, a defendant may waive his or her right to such a preliminary hearing.* 11 However, if none of those alternatives are pursued, the only other local court disposition contemplated by the statute is for the court to direct the People to proceed with a prehminary hearing.

The “Right” to a Preliminary Hearing

By statute, a defendant arraigned on a felony complaint in local court is entitled to a “prompt hearing upon the issue of whether there is sufficient evidence to warrant the court in holding him for the action of a grand jury.”12 In addition, local court judges “must accord the defendant opportunity to exercise such rights and must itself take such affirmative action as is necessary to effectuate them”13 Yet, neither the term “prompt” nor the phrase “holding ... for the action of a grand jury” are specifically defined by the statute to provide aid to local court judges. Their meaning, however, may be inferred from the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure which preceded the Criminal Procedure Law, other portions of CPL article 180 and its statutory history.

Entitlement to a Prompt Hearing

The argument that a “prompt” hearing must only be held if the defendant is in custody or out on bail finds support in part IV title III, chapter VII of the Code of Criminal Procedure (the predecessor of CPL art 180) which was entitled “Examination of the Case, and Discharge of the Defendant or Holding Him to [156]*156Answer.”14 In fact, an early Court of Appeals case refers to the judge at such a preindictment hearing as a “committing magistrate.”15 Under the code, if the magistrate found the preliminary hearing evidence insufficient the defendant was “to be discharged.”16 On the other hand, if the magistrate found “sufficient cause” at the hearing, then an order was to be entered directing that the defendant “be held to answer.”17 The argument that holding a defendant to answer related to his or her custodial status finds more statutory support when that section is read together with other sections requiring that when sufficient evidence is presented the defendant is to “be committed to the sheriff’18 or allowed to post bail.19 It also has a foundation in at least one Appellate Division case which noted that if sufficient proof is elicited “the magistrate must . . . ‘hold the prisoner to answer the same.’ ”20 Lastly, given the importance our constitutional framers placed on the common-law tradition of habeas corpus relief which is specifically guaranteed in our earlier enacted Constitution rather than in the Bill of Rights,21 it can be argued that modern day preliminary hearings are but statutory vestiges of this centuries old check on the sovereign’s authority to hold someone in custody without independent judicial review.22

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Related

People v. McBean
52 Misc. 3d 336 (Ithaca City Court, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Misc. 3d 151, 780 N.Y.S.2d 883, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hogan-nyroccityct-2004.