People v. Minott

172 Misc. 2d 916, 660 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1997 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 220
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedMay 8, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 Misc. 2d 916 (People v. Minott) 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. Minott, 172 Misc. 2d 916, 660 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1997 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 220 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1997).

Opinion

[917]*917OPINION OF THE COURT

Peter M. Leavitt, J.

On October 14, 1995, following a jury trial, defendant was found guilty of manslaughter in the first degree. On February 5, 1996, this court granted defendant’s application to be adjudicated a youthful offender, vacated his conviction and sentenced defendant, as a youthful offender, to a term of probation for a period of five years. During the sentence proceeding the People had advised the court that, in the interim since the verdict had been rendered, defendant had been arrested and indicted for the alleged robbery of the employees of a restaurant in Brooklyn, New York. Citing the Court of Appeals decision in People v Outley (80 NY2d 702 [1993]), the People argued that the fact that defendant had been indicted should be considered by this court as an aggravating factor in its youthful offender and sentencing determinations.

Although he was neither requested by the court, nor otherwise bound to do so, defendant’s attorney responded to the People’s comments. He indicated that he was representing defendant in, and was fully familiar with the facts and circumstances of, the Brooklyn matter. He represented that defendant had not been identified in a lineup, that defendant had an alibi and that another person had taken defendant’s coat and perpetrated the robbery with others. Defendant personally said nothing about the Brooklyn matter or his attorney’s representations concerning it. Since at that point defendant was still entitled to the presumption of innocence with respect to the Brooklyn matter, the court declined the People’s entreaty to consider the fact of indictment for that extraneous transaction as an aggravating factor. (See, People v Villanueva, 144 AD2d 285 [1st Dept 1988].)

By letter dated October 11, 1996, Ms. Janice E. Taylor, General Counsel to the City of New York. Department of Probation, advised the court that defendant had entered a plea of guilty to a felony in the matter for which he had been indicted in Brooklyn. The court considered that this development might constitute grounds to vacate the youthful offender and sentencing adjudications, and to resentence, because said judgments had been obtained by defendant’s fraud upon the court. Accordingly, when the People’s time to seek such relief pursuant to CPL 440.40 (1) expired without any motion therefor having been interposed, the court directed the parties to appear before it on March 3, 1997. At that time the parties were advised that [918]*918the court was contemplating vacatur and resentence as aforesaid, sua sponte, and invited them to submit memoranda of law on the issue. Defendant was also invited to submit his own affidavit concerning the substance of his plea of guilty in the Brooklyn matter as well as a certified transcript of said allocution. Memoranda of law were submitted and have been considered. Defendant chose not to make, any other submissions.

Initially, it must be noted that the People’s citation of the Outley decision (supra) at the sentence proceeding was inapposite and based upon a misreading thereof which they apparently still labor under. In Outley the Court of Appeals determined the consolidated appeals of three defendants who had been convicted upon negotiated pleas of guilty. In each instance the court which accepted the plea had expressly conditioned its sentence promise upon the defendant not being arrested for any other crime before the date on which sentence was to be imposed; and, in each instance, the defendant had been arrested during such period and, consequently, received an enhanced sentence. (People v Outley, 80 NY2d, at 707-712.)

As the Court noted: "The question before us concerns the minimum requirements of due process when, as in these appeals, the defendant has breached a no-arrest condition by being arrested before the sentence but denies any complicity in the underlying crime” (People v Outley, supra, at 712).

In answer to this question, the Court concluded: "The inquiry must be of sufficient depth * * * so that the court can be satisfied — not of defendant’s guilt of the new criminal charge but of the existence of a legitimate basis for the arrest on that charge” (People v Outley, supra, at 713 [emphasis added]).

The Court found that the fact that an indictment had been returned charging one of the defendants (i.e., Maietta) with the criminal conduct for which he’d been arrested, in combination with other circumstances,1 was sufficient to satisfy the minimum requirements of due process for the sentencing court’s [919]*919determination that the defendant had violated the no-arrest condition of his plea agreement. (People v Outley, supra, at 714.) Thus, the Outley decision authorizes a sentencing court to impose a more severe sentence, then that which it had promised a defendant who had entered a plea of guilty in reliance thereon, where such defendant has violated a no-arrest condition and the court determines that there was a legitimate basis for the arrest. Certainly, a sentencing court may always consider a defendant’s intervening commission of another crime in reaching an appropriate sentence. (People v Khan, 146 AD2d 806, 807 [2d Dept 1989].) Also — assuming that the fact of arrest for the alleged commission of another crime would be sufficient — it can be reasonably argued that the portion of the Outley decision which addresses the minimum due process requirements for a finding of a "legitimate basis” for such an arrest may be applied in the determination of an appropriate sentence upon a verdict after trial.2 However, this court was, and remains, unaware of any existing judicial or statutory authority — and the People have cited none— sanctioning a sentencing court’s use of the mere fact of an arrest for — as opposed to, "accurate, reliable evidence that defendant actually committed” (People v Villanueva, 144 AD2d 285, supra) — an intervening extraneous crime as a basis for denial of youthful offender status or to enhance sentence.

Yet, despite their ardent beseechment that defendant’s application for youthful offender adjudication should have been denied, and his sentence more severe, as a consequence of his involvement in the Brooklyn matter — a position which subsequent events have vindicated — the People appear curiously equivocal about the action which the court is about to undertake: an action which would remedy the very inequity which they had so vociferously railed against. Defendant, of course, opposes such action on several grounds.

It is well settled that courts possess the inherent power to vacate and correct their own judgments which have been obtained by fraud or misrepresentation. (E.g., Chambers v [920]*920NASCO, Inc., 501 US 32, 44 [1991]; Levitin v Homburger, 932 F Supp 508, 518-519 [SD NY 1996].) This inherent power is deeply rooted in the common law (Hazel-Atlas Co. v Hartford Co., 322 US 238, 244-245 [1944]), applies to judgments rendered in criminal, as well as civil, matters (e.g., Matter of Hogan v Supreme Ct., 295 NY 92 [1946]; Matter of Lyons v Goldstein, 290 NY 19, 25 [1943]), and is not circumscribed by any statutory time period (see, People v Wright, 56 NY2d 613, 615 [1982]). Nor is said authority limited to the rectification of mere clerical errors [see, contra, Matter of Campbell v Pesce,

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Related

People v. Minott
254 A.D.2d 306 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
172 Misc. 2d 916, 660 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1997 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-minott-nycountyct-1997.