People v. MAHER (KENNETH)

677 N.E.2d 728, 89 N.Y.2d 456, 654 N.Y.S.2d 1004, 1997 N.Y. LEXIS 94
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 677 N.E.2d 728 (People v. MAHER (KENNETH)) 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. MAHER (KENNETH), 677 N.E.2d 728, 89 N.Y.2d 456, 654 N.Y.S.2d 1004, 1997 N.Y. LEXIS 94 (N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

*459 OPINION OF THE COURT

Levine, J.

Defendant Kenneth Maher was convicted of counts of intentional murder and felony murder and criminal contempt in connection with the shooting death of Ann Kotel, his estranged paramour. The principal issue on appeal is whether hearsay statements of the victim concerning defendant’s prior violent acts and express or implied threats against her, were admissible as evidence-in-chief in the People’s case.

The People presented other evidence that the victim and defendant were involved in an intimate relationship, living together in an apartment until an argument occurred between them on April 20,1990. After two additional incidents on April 24 and 26, Ms. Kotel contacted the police and vacated the apartment. Another altercation occurred on April 30, leading to the filing of a criminal complaint against defendant for menacing and unlawful imprisonment.

After midnight on June 3, 1990, defendant parked his car in a secluded wooded area near Ms. Kotel’s new apartment. Wearing black pants, a black shirt, a black jacket and a black bandanna, and armed with a 12 gauge single-shot sawed-off shotgun, defendant waited outside Ms. Kotel’s apartment until a friend who was visiting left, at which time defendant cut the telephone wires to the building and forcibly entered her apart *460 ment by smashing in a door with a baseball bat. When Ms. Hotel sought to flee to a neighbor’s apartment, defendant pursued her and forced her back into her own apartment, whereupon defendant shot her three times, killing her. Defendant was arrested 11 hours later.

The People proposed to introduce certain statements of the victim made to the police and a hospital security officer concerning violent and threatening behavior of defendant on April 24, 26 and 30, 1990, as bad acts probative of defendant’s intent and motive (see, People v Molineux, 168 NY 264). At the Ventimiglia hearing (People v Ventimiglia, 52 NY2d 350) on the admissibility of this evidence, as well as at trial, defendant’s sole objection was that these statements violated the evidentiary rule against the admissibility of hearsay. The People’s only ground for avoiding the hearsay objection was reliance upon the theory advanced in various forms in several lower court decisions and in the Federal courts (see, e.g., Matter of Holtzman v Hellenbrand, 92 AD2d 405; United States v Mastrangelo, 693 F2d 269) and subsequently adopted by this Court in People v Geraci (85 NY2d 359), authorizing the introduction of an out-of-court statement of a witness whose unavailability for trial was wrongfully procured by the defendant. 1

The trial court ruled that the victim’s statements were admissible. These essentially consisted of: (1) an April 26 statement to police concerning incidents on April 24 and 26 in which defendant grabbed her, forced her to the ground and held her down, on one occasion placing his hand over her mouth; (2) an April 30 statement to a hospital security officer when she accompanied defendant to the emergency room of a local hospital, prefatory to his voluntary admission to the hospital’s psychiatric ward, following an incident on that date at the couple’s former apartment. In that statement she described his suddenly coming out of a hiding place in a closet, handcuffing her to him and, while brandishing a pistol, stating "talk to me and I won’t kill you”; and (3) a May 1 recorded telephone conversation with the police, similarly describing the events of the April 30 incident and expressing her fear that defendant would kill her.

*461 Defendant did not testify at the trial and did not contest causing Ms. Hotel’s death. Rather, he claimed that, by reason of medication for depression, he was unable to form the requisite criminal intent for the commission of intentional murder. Defendant also invoked the affirmative defense of extreme emotional disturbance (Penal Law § 125.25 [1] [a]). Defendant offered expert and other testimony supporting these defenses. The jury rejected both defenses, finding him guilty of intentional and felony murder, and of criminal contempt of an order of protection granted the victim after the April 30 incident. The Appellate Division affirmed defendant’s conviction (224 AD2d 549), upholding the admissibility of the victim’s statements under the authority of People v Geraci (supra). A Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal.

In our view, admitting the hearsay statements of the victim into evidence was an unwarranted expansion of People v Geraci, in effect converting a narrow departure from the hearsay rule into a categorical authority for the admissibility of victims’ statements in all homicide cases.

In Geraci, we recognized an exception to the defendant’s constitutional right of confrontation as well as to the evidentiary rule against the admission of hearsay evidence upon a showing that a witness had been rendered unavailable to testify in court through the misconduct of the defendant personally, or of others on his or her behalf with the defendant’s knowing acquiescence (85 NY2d, at 366, 370, supra). We emphasized in Geraci that the exception is not based upon the inherent reliability of this class of hearsay evidence, but is essentially a rule "necessitated by the defendant’s misconduct” (id., at 367-368). That is, it is a rule of necessity to preserve the integrity of the adversary process by "reducing the incentive [of a criminal defendant] to tamper with witnesses” (id., at 368).

Because of the weighty countervailing interests, that is, the constitutional right of confrontation and the strong New York policy for narrow treatment of exceptions to the hearsay rule (see, People v Nieves, 67 NY2d 125, supra), we imposed a clear and convincing evidentiary standard of proof for the establishment of the factual basis for admitting out-of-court statements of a declarant whose unavailability was caused by the defendant (People v Geraci, 85 NY2d, at 368, supra).

For the very same reasons, the Geraci exception must not be expanded and applied to circumstances in which the facts giv *462 ing rise to the necessity for the exception are absent. Thus, the Geraci exception cannot be invoked where, as in the instant case, there is not a scintilla of evidence that the defendant’s acts against the absent witness were motivated, even in part, by a desire to prevent the victim from testifying against him in court. Application of the Geraci exception is even more anomalous where, as here, it is invoked against a defendant in the very trial in which the charge is murder of the unavailable witness. Thus, application of the Geraci rule not only would swallow up the narrowly drawn traditional dying declaration hearsay exception, but also would require the trial court in a Sirois hearing 2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
677 N.E.2d 728, 89 N.Y.2d 456, 654 N.Y.S.2d 1004, 1997 N.Y. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-maher-kenneth-ny-1997.