People v. Smith

110 Misc. 2d 118, 443 N.Y.S.2d 551, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3048
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedJuly 24, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 Misc. 2d 118 (People v. Smith) 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. Smith, 110 Misc. 2d 118, 443 N.Y.S.2d 551, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3048 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Albert M. Rosenblatt, J.

The prosecution, by application dated June 8, 1981, has moved for an order authorizing the acquisition of photographs and dental impressions of the defendant’s lower teeth and bite.1

The defendant has been arrested for murder in the first degree upon an allegation, in a felony complaint dated June 8, 1981, that on May 15, 1981, while serving a life sentence as an inmate at Green Haven Correctional Facility, he intentionally killed Donna Payant, a correction officer.

[119]*119He resists the motion, claiming that neither this court nor any other court has legal authority to compel the seizure of this evidence before indictment, in that it would be violative of defendant’s constitutional right to privacy, freedom from self incrimination, and would involve a seizure without probable cause.2

The court ordered a hearing, the results of which, when taken together with the controlling statutes, decisions, and constitutional provisions, relate to four separate considerations, which the court will discuss.

I — THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE PROCEDURE UNDER FOURTH AND FIFTH AMENDMENT STANDARDS — PROBABLE CAUSE REQUIREMENTS.

II — THE STATUTORY AND COMMON-LAW POWER OF THE COURT TO GRANT THE RELIEF SOUGHT AT THIS STAGE OF THE ACTION.

III — THE STATUS OF ODONTOLOGICAL EVIDENCE IN CRIMINAL CASES.

IV — THE NECESSITY OF THE PROPOSED PROCEDURE UNDER THE TEST OF MATTER OF BARBER V RUBIN (65 AD2d 811, 72 AD2d 347) as against the degree of invasion into defendant’s BODY, THE LEVEL OF POSSIBLE HARM, AND THE VALUE OF THE EVIDENCE SOUGHT.

At the hearing, on June 12, 1981, the prosecution called New York State Police Investigator Jack Fox, through whom a photo of the body of the deceased, Donna Payant, was introduced.

The photograph depicts her as mutilated by apparent bite marks. The proof at the hearing further established that the medical examiner, Dr. Michael Baden, on May 18, 1981, upon observing Donna Payant’s body, contacted Dr. Lowell Levine, a leading forensic odontologist. Dr. Levine furnished the court with his credentials, from which he [120]*120may be counted as a forensic odontologist of the widest experience as an expert witness, author, and lecturer in legal and academic circles. He has been consultant to the New York City Medical Examiner, the Kennedy assassination committee, among others, and holds dental school faculty rank, and editorial board positions in several recognized odontological journals. As appears from the court’s own research, Dr. Levine has been cited extensively in both the decisional law and the odontological literature for his numerous writings and appearances. (Point III, infra.)

Dr. Levine testified that he examined photographs of the deceased for purposes of possible bite mark identification. At the time of the examination, Dr. Levine was acquainted with the defendant’s dental characteristics, since he had, in September of 1977, acquired and examined a cast of the defendant’s teeth in an investigation of a Schenectady County homicide, and, on the basis of his examination, had concluded that the defendant, Lemuel Smith, had imposed the bite marks found on the victim, Marilee Wilson.3

Dr. Levine, on the basis of these comparisons, concluded, to a reasonable scientific certainty, that the same person administered the bite marks to both Donna Payant at Green Haven and Marilee Wilson in Schenectady County. Dr. Levine added that he requires a cast of defendant’s teeth, at present, to confirm his opinion, that is, to ascertain whether the defendant’s lower teeth are the same now as they were in 1977. Naturally, points of dissimilarity in this examination might well exonerate the defendant.

Dr. Levine made his conclusions after an examination conducted with the use of instruments employed in forensic odontology, including analog image, enhancement dividers, and a Boley gauge, all of which, he stated, enable him to measure the unique configurations of individual bite marks. While the body of Donna Payant revealed torn nipples and mutilation of the abdomen, there was, in Dr. [121]*121Levine’s judgment, one distinctly discernible bite mark, which formed the basis for his findings.

Notably, his testimony and conclusion was not contradicted, nor did the defendant produce any rebuttal expert or other testimony after a month-long adjournment, granted for the express purpose of affording defendant an opportunity to do so. During this period, the defense received all of the available photographs, and the 1977 cast of the defendant’s teeth, for use in connection with the acquisition of a defense expert.

Dr. Levine testified that the process of casting and photographing defendant’s lower teeth is painless and risk free.

Undeniably, the degree of intrusion is minimal, and the procedure may be completed in a matter of minutes.

At the close of the hearing, it having been asserted that a delay might impair the integrity of the evidence sought, the court asked Dr. Levine to look at the defendant’s lower teeth and determine whether, on the basis of a visual observation only (United States v Wade, 388 US 218, 222; Holt v United States, 218 US 245; People v Cwikla, 46 NY2d 434, 443; United States v Holland, 378 F Supp 144, affd sub nom. Matter of Ehly, 506 F2d 1050, cert den sub nom. Ehly v United States, 420 US 994 [dental examination]), the defendant still had the same number and type of bottom teeth. After doing so, Dr. Levine stated that the defendant did, that his opinion was unchanged, but reiterated his need for a cast and photographs of defendant’s lower teeth.

While the ultimate issue of guilt or innocence must be decided by others, this court need only now determine whether the doctor’s uncontradicted testimony furnishes the requisite probable cause, and whether, on the strength of that testimony, undisputed as of now, the court has the authority to grant the prosecutor’s application.

POINT i

A. FOURTH AND FIFTH AMENDMENT STANDARDS.

As a constitutional matter, the compulsion of nontestimonial evidence generally falls outside pf Fifth Amend[122]*122ment guarantees (Schmerber v California, 384 US 757; Gilbert v California, 388 US 263; People v Goldberg, 19 NY2d 460, 465). Where the intrusion is substantial or dangerous, constitutional interdictions may be invoked (Adams v State, 260 Ind 663, cert den 415 US 935; Rochin v California, 342 US 165; Bowden v State, 256 Ark 820; People v Smith, 80 Misc 2d 210). But when the intrusion is as brief, innocuous, and transitory as ic is here, the Constitution poses no barrier to the compelled production of corporeal evidence, when acquired under due process safeguards, preceded by arrest, adverserial argument, and a hearing to establish probable cause.4

In New York and elsewhere, courts have perceived no constitutional violation upon a compelled submission for dental impressions. In People v Toomer

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Bluebook (online)
110 Misc. 2d 118, 443 N.Y.S.2d 551, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-smith-nycountyct-1981.