People v. Pitt
This text of 70 A.D.2d 796 (People v. Pitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
dissents in a memorandum as follows: This appeal is companion to the appeal in People v MacIntosh (70 AD2d 554). There we reversed the conviction and remanded for a new trial. Although both Macintosh and Pitt were charged in the same indictment and tried together on the same evidence, there are salient differences in the two cases; differences which warrant an affirmance in this case. Both defendants were indicted for murder in the second degree and for criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree. At the conclusion of the case, the court, in addition to [798]*798charging the counts alleged, charged down to manslaughter in the first degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree. The jury acquitted on both homicide counts and on the count of criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree. They convicted both defendants on the charge of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree. The proof disclosed that Calbert Allen lived in an apartment on East 165th Street in The Bronx. On November 26, 1976, an argument arose at the apartment between Allen and one Robinson. Robinson, shortly to become the deceased, shot Allen in the leg. Pitt was present at the time; Macintosh was in an apartment across the hall. After the shooting Robinson left, stating that he was going to the park. Following a short interval, Pitt left the apartment. According to Allen, he was carrying a .45 caliber automatic in his waistband. Allen also testified that Macintosh left the apartment across the hall armed with a .38 caliber revolver. Allen proceeded to the hospital, where he ' received treatment for his leg. He returned home sometime thereafter and, finding that he had failed to take the key to the apartment with him, waited outside for a friend whom he had telephoned to bring the key. Approximately an hour later, Pitt and Macintosh returned. Pitt commented that they had "licked the boy’s head off”, a Jamaican phrase meaning that someone had been shot in the head. Macintosh interpolated that "the boy” was Robinson. Robinson’s body was found in the park at or about that time. Near the body was a discharged cartridge which was turned over to the ballistics section of the police department. Pitt and Macintosh were arrested about a month later in a Clinton Place apartment. At the time of their arrest, two weapons were seized, a .45 caliber automatic and a .38 caliber pistol. Tests conducted by ballistics demonstrated that the discharged cartridge found near Robinson’s body on the day of the shooting came from the .45 caliber automatic. In reversing the Macintosh conviction we noted that: "The trial court, in carefully couched instructions, appropriately charged the jury as to the applicable law on murder, manslaughter and criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree. In accordance with the agreement between the court and counsel, the jury was instructed, with respect to possession of a weapon in the second degree, to consider only whether defendants were in possession of the .45 caliber automatic in the park on November 16, 1978 * * * However, in instructing the jury on the lesser included offense of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree, the court did not similarly limit the proof which the jury could consider. Instead, the court charged the jury as follows: 'You may find a defendant guilty of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree if there is proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant possessed any loaded firearm; mere possession is sufficient. There is no requirement to prove that the defendant intended to use this implement unlawfully against another.’ ” (Emphasis supplied.) We held that the use of the word "any” in conjunction with the term "loaded firearm” permitted the jury to consider the .38 caliber pistol in connection with this charge. Since no proof was ever submitted to show that on November 26, 1976, the .38 was operable, loaded or in the park, we were constrained to reverse the Macintosh conviction. With respect to Pitt, however, the picture changes materially. Allen’s testimony places the .45 caliber weapon in Pitt’s possession. The other elements—that it was operable, loaded and in the park—are all demonstrated by the discharged cartridge found in the vicinity of Robinson’s body. While this evidence is circumstantial, it is so compelling that only a single conclusion may be drawn therefrom. Nor, despite the vehement protestation of counsel at the time of sentence, was there any possibility that the jury [799]*799could have been confused by the fact that the police found the weapon in the vicinity of Pitt when he was arrested on December 24, 1976 at the Clinton Place apartment. Both defense counsel, in his summation, and the court, in his charge, made clear that the possession which was, in part, the subject matter of the trial, was the possession in the park on November 26, 1976. Inasmuch as all the elements of proof missing in Macintosh are here present, the inadvertent slip by the court in referring to any weapon when it charged criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree could not possibly have misled the jury. I find the error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Accordingly, I would affirm.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
70 A.D.2d 796, 417 N.Y.S.2d 83, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-pitt-nyappdiv-1979.