People v. Mann

61 Misc. 2d 107, 305 N.Y.S.2d 226, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1202
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 61 Misc. 2d 107 (People v. Mann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Mann, 61 Misc. 2d 107, 305 N.Y.S.2d 226, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1202 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1969).

Opinion

Edward J. Gtreestfield, J.

Prior to the trial of this case before me, a preliminary hearing was had on the motion of the defendants to suppress evidence seized in the defendant Mann’s apartment tending to connect him with the commission of the crime. The motion was predicated upon the alternative theories that there was no valid basis for the arrest or that the seizure of evidence took place first, and the arrest thereupon followed. After hearing the testimony, this court decided that there was a valid basis for the arrest, and that the arrest having taken place before the discovery of .the evidence, the seizure was proper. The motion to suppress was thereupon denied, and the case proceeded to trial.

On the trial, the complainant Frederick Watford, a married man for 38 years, testified that in'the early morning hours of June 15, 1968 he agreed to drive a young lady, the defendant Carol -Mack, from Harlem to her home in The Bronx. She invited two young men who were accompanying her to ride along in the -back seat. Watford paid little attention to them, but he believed them to be the defendants Mann and Ferguson. He dropped them off at Carol Mack’s house, but then he and Miss Mack drove off, first to a party in an after-hours club, and then to an all-night restaurant. He was drinking rather heavily. When they got back to Miss Mack’s house, she took his bottle and disappeared into the building. He followed after her, and entered an apartment one flight up, at the head of the stairs. In the apartment were two men, whom he identified as Mann and Ferguson, and they announced, 11 This is a robbery. ’ ’ Mann then stripped him to his underwear and took the articles in his pockets: his watch, his car keys, and the ring from his fingers. Watford ultimately made his way out of the building, found his car was gone, and by pulling a fire alarm summoned the Fire Department and the police. He did not, on that day, take the police back to the premises where he claimed to have been robbed.

The defendants each disputed Watford’s version of the events of June 15th. A witness was produced who testified he and his cousin, and not defendants Mann and Ferguson, were the males who accompanied Watford and Miss Mack on their ride uptown. Ferguson claimed he was elsewhere on the night of the crime, and had a witness to corroborate it. Carol Mack testified she did not know Ferguson at all, and Mann only as a resident of her building, that she left Watford quite drunk in his car, and proceeded directly to her own apartment. Mann testified that in the early morning of June 15th he was with one Alonzo Walker, not Ferguson, and that' Watford had blundered into his apartment, quite drunk, looking for Carol Mack. He claims that after [109]*109several hours of drinking and talking together Watford left, leaving behind a batch of boat-ride tickets they agreed to sell, his license, credit cards, bank deposit slips and other personal papers he evidently overlooked, and his ring, watch and keys which Walker told him he had beaten Watford for.

On the evening of June 21st, six days later, Oarol Mack, who says she heard of the robbery of Watford the next day, voluntarily appeared at the police precinct house, and told them the men they were looking for were in Apartment 2D, at 520 East 147th Street — 'Mann’s apartment. The detectives, accompanied by Watford, proceeded to those premises, and when Mann opened the door, dressed in his underwear, Watford immediately identified him as one of the robbers. The police entered the apartment, placed Mann under arrest, and directed him to get dressed. As he proceeded down the corridor to the bedroom, the police followed him. In the bedroom was the defendant Ferguson. With some hesitancy, Watford identified him as his other assailant. On the top of the bureau in the bedroom, in open sight, were Watford’s ring, watch, cigarette lighter, boat-ride tickets, bank deposit slips, and credit cards.

On weighing all the testimony, this court concluded that the case against Oarol Mack and Phil Ferguson as participants in the robbery of Watford had not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Miss Mack’s actions were more compatible with innocent explanation than the alternative conclusion that she was the Judas goat leading the lamb to slaughter. The identification of Ferguson was shaky, and his alibi, together with Mann’s testimony that on the night of the robbery he was with Alonzo Walker, and not Ferguson, necessitated his acquittal. There was no doubt about Mann’s participation, however. Admittedly, he was in his apartment when Watford came blundering in in pursuit of Carol Mack. His story, that they just drank and chatted, that Watford gave him a batch of boat-ride tickets to sell, that Watford left his apartment fully dressed but forgot to take his auto license, his credit cards, and his bank deposit slips with him, that later he saw his friend Walker with Watford’s ring and keys which Walker said he had beaten him for in Mann’s absence, and that Mann took them back and held them all in his apartment with the intention of returning them when he saw Watford again, was beyond the belief of the most credulous. Mann was found guilty of robbery in the second degree and grand larceny in the third degree.

Mann now moves to vacate the convictions on two grounds — that he could not properly be convicted in view of the acquittal of the other two codefendants who were named in the indictment [110]*110as Ms accomplices, and that the evidence found in his apartment linking him with the crime was illegally obtained. The first contention can be readily disposed of. Defendant relies on People v. Munroe (190 N. Y. 435) in support of the proposition that that where two accomplices are jointly tried for robbery, one cannot be acquitted while the other is found guilty. In that case, however, there was no difference in the evidence as to both defendants —■ either the witnesses inculpating both were correct in their observations or they were not. Since the statute requires for conviction of the crime of robbery in the second degree proof that that robbery was committed in the presence of another (Penal Law, § 160.10), if the trier of the facts found no other person to be present, the conviction could not stand.

In this case, however, the court did not find that no other person was present when Mann committed the robbery. It found codefendants Mack and Ferguson had not been proved to have been present, but both Watford, the complaining witness, and Mann, the defendant, testified there was someone else present. Mann said it was one Alonzo Walker, Watford thought it was Ferguson (though not with sufficient certainty to satisfy the court), but even if it was not proved to have been Ferguson or Mack, someone besides Mann was there to help pin down Watford, remove his pants, and help relieve him of his possessions. There is nothing either conceplually or factually implausible in the identity and complicity of one person accused of acting with an accomplice being readily established, while the identity of his accomplice has not been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. “ The question of the one defendant’s guilt cannot turn upon the establishment of the other’s guilt; it is an independent issue to be tried out alone.” (People v. Kief, 126 N. Y. 661, 663. See, also, People ex rel. Guido v. Calkins,

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Bluebook (online)
61 Misc. 2d 107, 305 N.Y.S.2d 226, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mann-nysupct-1969.