People v. Virga

47 Misc. 2d 572, 262 N.Y.S.2d 879, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1865
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1965
StatusPublished

This text of 47 Misc. 2d 572 (People v. Virga) 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. Virga, 47 Misc. 2d 572, 262 N.Y.S.2d 879, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1865 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

Thomas Dickens, J.

The inspiration that has seemingly induced the inauguration of this formal coram nobis application in an attack on the judgment of conviction herein as being founded in part on alleged illegal admissions, stems from the ruling made by the Court of Appeals in People v. Huntley (15 N Y 2d 72) as the result of the holding in Jackson v. Denno (378 U. S. 368) with regard to the validity of the confessions by a defendant as a confitens reus.

This appellate ruling now forms the root of the probe into the facts of this case as pertains to the statement of admissions made by defendant. The vital question for answer, based on the oral argument of respective counsel and on their briefs, the calling of witnesses to testify having been waived, is, therefore, this: Did the District Attorney, by the use of foul tactics, whether directly or indirectly, obtain the pretrial admissions which he had the court reporter read into the evidence at the trial?

Restricted to a diagnosis of the facts and the circumstances relative to the question of the admissions involved here (People v. Loprete, 22 A D 2d 926), I find that the highlights, in which the admissions under scrutiny have their setting, are in short these: Defendant was arrested by F. B. I. agents on a Federal matter and on the same day taken to the United States Court House at Foley Square in Manhattan and allegedly held incommunicado about a week and then released after supplying the F. B. I. agents with an oral statement. Shortly thereafter he was arrested by the New York Police and was charged with the crime of kidnapping. The statement of admissions in question that he made to the District Attorney prior to the trial, is sub[573]*573stantially of the same tenor as that which he had made to the F. B. I. agents.

An extract from the trial minutes, the extract dealing with answers to the District Attorney’s questions which are introductory to the defendant’s pretrial statement of admissions of facts, will not be amiss, if set forth right here:

Q. My name is Rosenblum. I am an Assistant District Attorney in the office of this County, New York District Attorney’s office. The man on my right is Mr. Boynton; he is also an Assistant District Attorney. There is Detective Swander and Detective Shields, who are both detectives of the Police Department. My purpose now is to ask you questions concerning the — any participation that you had, any connection you had with any crime which was committed in the County of New York. Do I understand clearly that you are willing to malee a voluntary statement and tell me any such things as you know, tell me things truthfully? A. Right.

“ Q. You understand that anything you say might he used against you in any future proceeding? A. Yes, sir.

‘ ‘ Q. Are you willing to make to me a truthful, complete and honest statement of your participation in any act which might amount to violation of the State of New York? A. Yes.

“ Q. And over which our office has jurisdiction? A. Right.

“ Q. And this statement, I assume, is voluntary? A. That is right.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The cornerstone of the present motion apparently rests exclusively upon the effect on the statement of admissions made to the District Attorney of defendant’s alleged charge that the Federal agents had used anticonstitutional means in obtaining admissions from him when they had him in their custody. In meaning, and in reality then, defendant holds forth that the oppressive measures employed by the Federal agents had the force of contaminating the admissions made to the District Attorney, although clearly, unequivocally and unqualifiedly, the record proves that he gave his statement of admissions to the District Attorney voluntarily and willingly in this prosecution under State jurisdiction, and that this statement was separate and distinct from that which he gave to the Federal authorities.

In an attempt, nevertheless, to join or link the State statement with the Federal statement in the hope of dovetailing them as of relevant bearing on each other, he gives as the reason for his voluntariness in making the statement to the District Attorney that a lingering fear (however, trial minutes, p. 904, confute it) from the alleged Federal ordeal overcame resistance when he was questioned by the District Attorney. Consequently, [574]*574as the result of having been under the gad or actual compulsion when in custody of the Federal agents, he proceeds to reason, in effect, by what I consider to be an artificial argument, that the Federal and State questioning incidents should be considered as soldered into one continuous legal affair despite the different jurisdictions, instead of having them regarded as insulated one from the other. In aid of such a trend of reasoning, he presents additional arguments in an atmosphere permeated with the Federal incidents and with a number of Federal citations, as if the disposition of this motion rests primarily on the Federal phase of this controversy.

I cannot adjust the reasoning of my mind to side with this apparently strained contention, because of the extraterritorial limits of the Federal courts, making prohibitive, in my opinion, extrajudicial decisions in an instance like that under review. In other words, the extrajudicial admissions within the soc of the Federal prosecution must be held to be confined there for use and are not to be used to affect the admissions made separately to State authorities, if we are to heed the general principles of law that follow immediately as applicable here concerning the powers of the courts in both jurisdictions. Procedure outside the realm of constitutionality is, at this time, the real matter to be concerned with, as I judge the situation in its proper perspective.

On the inherent question of constitutionality of admissions or confessions, the doctrine of stare decisis, in an instance like the present, is a must. But, the procedural form in making use of the statement of admissions as a piece of evidence, especially as one untainted, I maintain to be still existent as a State matter, in the light of what the Court of Appeals had said in Moore v. Moore (47 N. Y. 467, 468) (cited in People v. Grant, 14 Misc 2d 182): the federal government could not prescribe a rule of evidence for the State courts.”

As I have indicated from my view of things, the jurisdiction of the Federal courts, in the present instance, stops at the borders of the New York State courts. Beyond the Federal borders the admissions made to the Federal agents, it seems to me, are extralegal. Fundamentally, the Federal Government, generally speaking, has cognizable power only over persons who are within its respective territory, and thus such persons become subject to the control of its courts (People v. Murphy, 1 N Y 2d 367). Furthermore, inasmuch as the courts of no country execute the penal laws of another and the United States is regarded as another country in relation to this State, the United States falls, therefore, within the meaning of that rule. (Porter [575]*575v. Russell, 271 App. Div. 542 [citing United States Supreme Court cases]; Teall v. Felton, 1 N. Y.

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Related

Jackson v. Denno
378 U.S. 368 (Supreme Court, 1964)
Teall v. . Felton
1 N.Y. 537 (New York Court of Appeals, 1848)
Moore v. . Moore
47 N.Y. 467 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
People v. Grant
14 Misc. 2d 182 (New York Court of General Session of the Peace, 1958)
People v. Pettigrew
34 Misc. 2d 114 (New York Court of General Session of the Peace, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
47 Misc. 2d 572, 262 N.Y.S.2d 879, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-virga-nysupct-1965.