People v. Luther

48 Misc. 3d 699, 12 N.Y.S.3d 491
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedSeptember 26, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 Misc. 3d 699 (People v. Luther) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Luther, 48 Misc. 3d 699, 12 N.Y.S.3d 491 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

John L. DeMabco, J.

The People appeal from an order of the Town of East Rochester Justice Court (41 Misc 3d 185 [2013, Brown-Steiner, J.]) granting defendant’s motion to vacate a judgment of conviction entered against him February 11, 2013, following defendant’s guilty plea to one count of driving while intoxicated (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1192 [3]). The plea also satisfied transactional charges under Vehicle and Traffic Law §§ 1128, 1163, and 1194. The defendant was sentenced on the date of his plea to the minimum fine and surcharge, a six-month revocation of his New York State driver’s license, and required to install and maintain an ignition interlock device (IID) for a period of six months in his vehicle.

The facts underlying the charges are not in dispute. The question on this appeal is whether the trial court erred as a matter of law in granting defendant’s motion to vacate judgment under CPL 440.10 (1) (h). The People answer that question in the affirmative. They contend that defendant failed to make any showing that the judgment against him was obtained in violation of a right under either the New York State Constitution or the United States Constitution. More specifically, the People argue that defendant’s contention that 15 NYCRR 136.5 (b) (3), as amended on or about February 22, 2013, violates the Ex Post Facto Clause is misplaced. They assert that the Ex Post Facto Clause applies only to penal statutes, not the suspension or revocation of one’s driving privileges, which is civil or remedial in nature. Thus, say the People, the trial court’s application of the Ex Post Facto Clause was erroneous. Additionally, the People contend that the loss of one’s driver’s [701]*701license is a collateral consequence, the nondisclosure of which by the trial court prior to sentencing does not warrant vacatur of defendant’s guilty plea.

The defendant responds that the court properly vacated his judgment of conviction. More specifically, defendant argues that at the time he entered into the above plea and was sentenced, the law on that date was that his driver’s license would be revoked for six months, following which he would become immediately eligible to apply for re-licensure. He asserts that he may have made an entirely different decision than to plead guilty if he knew at that time of his guilty plea what was then unknown to the parties, the lower court, and community at large, namely, that 11 days after his guilty plea section 136.5 (b) (3) would be amended and consequently render him ineligible to reapply for his driver’s license for at least five years in addition to the six-month revocation. Tethered to this argument, defendant contends that as his driver’s license is a property right, the imposition of these unforseen (at the time of his guilty plea and sentencing) consequences attendant to the revocation of his license would allow section 136.5 (b) (3) to operate, in effect, as an ex post facto punishment in deprivation of due process. Finally, the defendant argues that the loss of one’s driving privileges is not, as the People maintain, merely a collateral consequence. Rather, says defendant, it is part and parcel of the punishment of a DWI conviction and, as such, without complete knowledge of its duration prior to pleading guilty, he was deprived of the foremost consideration in making that decision. Defendant thus concludes that as the starkly different details regarding the circumstances surrounding the revocation of his license were unknown at the time of his guilty plea and sentencing, the lower court’s decision to grant his motion to vacate was a provident exercise of discretion.

The court agrees with defendant’s latter point, and affirms the lower court’s decision for the reasons that follow.1

The dispositive question, in the eyes of this court, is not whether the application of section 136.5 (b) (3), as amended, resulted in an ex post facto sentence. And while, for that reason, the merits of that contention need not be addressed, the court finds defendant’s arguments on that point largely un[702]*702persuasive and unsupported by the law (see e.g. Matter of Allen v New York State Dept. of Motor Vehs., 45 Misc 3d 475 [Sup Ct, Albany County 2014]).2 Nor is the court persuaded by defendant’s antediluvian and neolithic historical references leading to the gratuitous recognition that consuming alcohol, without driving, is endemic to our culture and not against the law. Legal esoterics and social philosophy aside, the rudimentary bottom line here is that the defendant, as expressed in his papers, may never have pleaded guilty were he then (at the time of his guilty plea) aware that the consequences as to relicensure entailed, among other things, principally that he would be ineligible to drive for at least five years following the expiration of the six-month revocation (see 15 NYCRR 136.5 [b] [3]).

The bedrock of due process of law is fairness. “The obligation is to recognize, acknowledge and extend ‘those fundamental principles of basic justice and fair play which underlie our entire system of jurisprudence’ ” (Matter of Quinn v Lane, 36 Misc 2d 2, 5 [Sup Ct, Albany County 1962], quoting Matter of Hecht v Monaghan, 307 NY 461, 469 [1954]). What happened here — through no fault of the People, defendant’s plea attorney, or the trial court — was an affront to the notion of due process and patently unfair. In balancing the equities, the court fails to apprehend any straight-faced argument that the defendant’s due process rights — as a matter of fundamental fairness — were not violated. Likewise, the court fails to descry how, under the circumstances, the defendant should not be returned to status quo ante, having been jarred, post guilty plea and sentencing, with the harsh reality of being ineligible for re-licensure for five years beyond what he thought would be the case when he agreed to plead guilty and be sentenced.

Even assuming arguendo that the post-revocation consequences at issue here are collateral, as argued by the People, the cases cited in their reply brief were decided within the context of consequences that were accessible knowledge prior [703]*703to and at the time of plea and sentencing.3 In such cases, the question regarding disclosure is obviated,4 though in a sense not applicable here where the consequence at issue was unknown. Nor is that nuance casuistic, but rather it substantively disjoints the analysis. That is, but for the revocation consequences at issue being publicly unknown until after defendant’s plea and sentencing, the remedy of vacatur on the ground of ineffective assistance may have lied for counsel’s failure to disclose (see Padilla v Kentucky, 559 US 356, 370 [2010] [“there is no relevant difference between an act of commission and an act of omission” in the context of professionally competent assistance of counsel] [citations and internal quotation marks omitted]). That remedy is unavailable to the defendant here, however, where it is undisputed that the post-revocation consequences at issue were not available for public consumption until 11 days after defendant’s guilty plea and sentencing— and thus, could not have been known. Obviously, then, defendant’s counsel at the time of his guilty plea and sentencing cannot be said to have been ineffective for failing to disclose to defendant then unknown and publicly unavailable information.

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Related

People v. Olecski
57 Misc. 3d 698 (Criminal Court of the City of New York, 2017)
People v. Wheaton
49 Misc. 3d 378 (New York County Courts, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Misc. 3d 699, 12 N.Y.S.3d 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-luther-nycountyct-2014.