People v. Thomas

389 N.E.2d 1094, 47 N.Y.2d 37, 416 N.Y.S.2d 573, 1979 N.Y. LEXIS 1933
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 26, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 389 N.E.2d 1094 (People v. Thomas) 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. Thomas, 389 N.E.2d 1094, 47 N.Y.2d 37, 416 N.Y.S.2d 573, 1979 N.Y. LEXIS 1933 (N.Y. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Fuchsberg, J.

In the rather unusual circumstances presented by this case, we hold that the People are estopped from asserting the one-year limit of CPL 460.30 to defeat defendant’s motion for an extension of time to appeal his criminal conviction.

After his conviction in Orleans County Court on the charge of possession of a forged instrument in the second degree, on April 18, 1975 James Thomas was sentenced to an indeterminate term of from three and a half to seven years. At that time the Presiding Judge informed the defendant of his right of appeal, specifically advising him that the time within which to do so was 30 days, and that assigned counsel would assist him in filing a notice of appeal. Immediately after sentencing, according to the defendant, he informed counsel of his desire to appeal and the latter assured him that he would file the necessary notice.

But no notice was ever filed. Indeed, he received no word from the lawyer for nearly three months. Apparently still anxious to obtain a review of his conviction, at this juncture he took matters into his own hands. However, despite his due diligence, unschooled in the intricacies of appellate practice, he mistakenly proceeded by mailing to this court a document entitled "Notice of Motion to Appeal in Forma Pauperis” accompanied by an affidavit in which he stated "I am aware of my right to appeal, and that I am filing a notice of appeal” and requested the appointment of counsel for the prosecution of the appeal he no doubt believed he had thus initiated. The clerk at the Court of Appeals, in a letter to the defendant dated July 15, 1975, explained that the motion should properly have been addressed to the Appellate Division and indicated that copies of the papers had been forwarded to the clerk of the Orleans County Court and to assigned counsel.

Defendant having followed up by promptly forwarding the papers to the Appellate Division, its consultation clerk mailed the Orleans County District Attorney’s office a form reporting that Thomas had moved for "permission to prosecute an appeal” and requesting certain information, namely, the date [41]*41of entry of the order from which the appeal was being taken, the date on which the District Attorney’s office had received a notice of appeal, and the date on which the defendant had filed a notice of appeal in the county clerk’s office. The District Attorney was instructed to reply by August 13. That date having come and gone without a reply, the Appellate Division dispatched a second letter of inquiry. It too went unanswered.

The District Attorney has never proffered any explanation for his disregard of the correspondence of a high court of this State. Nor does he contend that the defect in defendant’s appeal was not known by his office at that time. However, despite the District Attorney’s failure to respond, the Appellate Division, acting on the logical assumption that a notice of appeal had been timely filed, on September 8, 1975 issued an order granting defendant’s application to proceed as a poor person and chose the original assigned counsel as his counsel on the appeal. Though copies of the order were sent to the District Attorney and the newly redesignated counsel, neither notified the court that a notice of appeal had never been filed in the case. Thus, on three separate occasions, while his default was still curable, and under circumstances that officially brought home the fact that defendant was proceeding as though a live appeal were pending, the District Attorney sat back and maintained an unbroken silence while defendant’s last chance to obtain the status of an appellant was ebbing away.

So things continued for 18 months. Meanwhile the defendant, continuing to manifest his desire to appeal, though incarcerated, unsuccessfully sought other available relief.1 It was not until March 29, 1977, after the defendant had filed a pro se motion for reversal of his conviction in the Appellate Division, and his right to move under CPL 460.30 had long since expired, that the District Attorney, alert and zealous to defeat the motion, for the first time made known that a proper notice of appeal had never been filed. The denial of the motion brought with it a vacatur of the order permitting defendant to appeal as a poor person. Having secured another lawyer, the defendant at long last was advised to make a CPL 460.30 motion. The motion was denied on the law by the Appellate Division because under that section it was required [42]*42to have been made within one year after the time for taking an appeal had expired, in other words by May 18, 1976.2 3****It is from the denial of this motion that defendant has appealed.

CPL 460.30 "plainly and precisely deals with and encompasses the relief’ provided in People v Montgomery (24 NY2d 130). (See People v Corso, 40 NY2d 578, 580.) We there held that, upon a showing that a defendant had not been informed of his right to appeal and had a genuine appealable issue, he was entitled to "be resentenced so that his time to appeal will run anew” (People v Montgomery, supra, p 134; see, also, People v Rivera, 39 NY2d 519, 525). The same remedy was afforded in cases in which a defendant’s failure to appeal was due to un-co-operative prison officials (People v Hairston, 10 NY2d 92) or to his lawyer’s assurance that an appeal would be taken in his behalf (People v Callaway, 24 NY2d 127). CPL 460.30 defined the means by which such claims could be raised (People v Corso, supra).

As pertinent there, CPL 460.30 (subd 1) provides, inter alia, that upon motion by a defendant who has failed to file a notice of appeal "the time for the taking of such appeal be extended to a date not more than thirty days subsequent to the determination of such motion, upon the ground that the failure to file such notice of appeal * * * in timely fashion resulted from improper conduct of a public servant or from improper conduct, death or disability of the defendant’s attorney. Such motion must be made with due diligence after the time for taking of such appeal has expired, and in any case not more than one year thereafter.”3

To excuse his failure to file a notice of appeal within the required 30-day period, the defendant relies on his assigned counsel’s inaction. Thus, his claim falls squarely within the embrace of the statute. But the District Attorney argues that the one-year time limit constitutes an inflexible bar to the defendant’s appeal. While we concur in his characterization of [43]*43the statute’s time period, we reject the conclusion to which it would lead in this case.

The one-year limitation on the bringing of a Montgomery claim by means of a 460.30 motion has been a part of the statute since its inception, remaining unchanged despite at least two legislative re-examinations (see L 1970, ch 996, § 1; as amd by L 1971, ch 671, § 6; as amd by L 1977, ch 699, § 4). The purpose of the time limit, like that of any Statute of Limitations, was to eliminate stale Montgomery claims, but it served as well the ameliorative goal of automatically extending for an extra year the time to appeal for those whose right to do so had been infringed. Our statement in Corso that CPL 460.30 motions "may not be made more than one year after the time for taking an appeal has expired” was unequivocal (40 NY2d 578, 581).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
389 N.E.2d 1094, 47 N.Y.2d 37, 416 N.Y.S.2d 573, 1979 N.Y. LEXIS 1933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-thomas-ny-1979.