Property Clerk of New York City Police Department v. McDermott

185 A.D.2d 134, 585 N.Y.S.2d 746, 1992 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8763
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 A.D.2d 134 (Property Clerk of New York City Police Department v. McDermott) 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.

Bluebook
Property Clerk of New York City Police Department v. McDermott, 185 A.D.2d 134, 585 N.Y.S.2d 746, 1992 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8763 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Order and judgment (one paper) of the Supreme Court, New York County (Martin Schoenfeld, J.), entered on May 14, 1991 and May 23, 1991, respectively, which, following a non-jury trial, found in favor of defendant Thomas M. McDermott and directed that he recover from plaintiff Property Clerk a 1983 Ford Thunderbird automobile seized at the time of his arrest, is unanimously reversed on the law and plaintiffs application for a declaratory judgment that it is in lawful possession of the vehicle is granted, without costs and disbursements.

Plaintiff Property Clerk of the New York City Police Department commenced this action seeking a declaration that, pursuant to section 14-140 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York, it is in lawful possession of a 1983 Ford Thunderbird automobile seized from defendant Thomas Me[135]*135Dermott as an instrumentality used in the commission of a crime, criminal possession of a controlled substance, and that the vehicle be forfeited to plaintiff. In that regard, at the hearing held in connection with this matter, Detective Eduardo Cirillo testified that on July 17, 1989, while assigned to make observations of drug purchases, he was sitting in an unmarked police car on the southwest corner of Faile and 165th Streets when he saw, at about 12:30 p.m., a man walk up to an abandoned building across the street, approach a hole in the under-blocked portion of the exterior wall of the structure, hand money through the hole and accept several glassine envelopes in return. The man then returned to his car, which was parked in view of Detective Cirillo, who identified defendant as the person who had bought and received the glassine envelopes. According to Detective Cirillo, defendant drove his vehicle, a Thunderbird, towards Westchester Avenue, at which point the detective radioed to his field team with a description of defendant and the car. Detective Cirillo also stated that he noticed other persons make drug purchases that day at the same location.

Detective Richard Coffey testified that on July 17, 1989, he was assigned to the backup field team and was parked on Westchester Avenue north of 165th Street in what he described as a "narcotics-prone location.” At approximately 12:50 p.m., he received a radio call concerning an individual and a Thunderbird vehicle. Moments later, Detective Coffey observed that same automobile traveling north on Westchester Avenue and, after a pursuit, he and other members of the field team pulled the car over and removed the driver, defendant herein. The officers frisked and then searched defendant, recovering blue glassine envelopes from his left front pants pocket. Detective Coffey placed the envelopes, which contained a white, powdery substance, along with defendant’s name and other information, in a manilla envelope. The manilla envelope was put in the glove compartment of the police car before being later vouchered at the precinct when he returned there at around 2:50 p.m. Detective Coffey explained that he was in sole possession of the contraband and that there were no other envelopes in the glove compartment. Further, the glassine envelopes were vouchered in the presence of a superior officer, who saw him store the contraband in an envelope, which was then sealed. Detective Coffey also took a prenumbered voucher form and marked it with his name, the defendant’s name, the tax registry number, the narcotics envelope number and delineation of the contents of the envelope, bearing the Prop[136]*136erty Clerk’s invoice number. At the time that he performed the vouchering process, Detective Coffey applied for a laboratory analysis of the white powder.

The Police Laboratory Controlled Substance Analysis Report, dated January 18, 1990, was admitted into evidence as a record "kept in the ordinary course of the police business but not with regard to the contents thereof.” Detective Coffey stated that the analysis revealed that the four glassine envelopes contained a total of 3.7 grams of heroin. In addition, the report had been certified by the technician who carried out the test. Detective Coffey asserted that after defendant’s apprehension, he had parked the latter’s vehicle on Edgecombe Avenue near Bruckner Boulevard until later in the day when he and his colleagues picked up the car, vouchered it and transferred it to the Whitestone pound. Although Detective Coffey conceded on cross-examination that the handwritten invoice number, which was also on the analysis report, had the last number on the request for a laboratory report altered to reflect a "6”, he rejected defense counsel’s suggestion that he might have confused the subject envelope with another.

Defendant, however, denied possessing any drugs. His version of events was that he drove to the Bronx from his home in Hartsdale to bring his automobile back to the dealership where it had been purchased to ascertain if his leaking radiator was covered by warranty. The dealership was, he claimed, situated a few blocks from the site of his subsequent arrest. In order to acquire some cigarettes, he stopped on 165th Street near Faile and entered a bodega. After buying the cigarettes, he returned to his car and started driving on only to be pulled over by four or five police vehicles. The officers, whose guns were drawn, ordered him out of the automobile and then proceeded to rip the car apart while two others searched him. During the course of the search of his person, he noticed that one of the officers had "blue and yellow tape things” in his hand, which the latter placed in a manilla envelope. Defendant was handcuffed and put into a van, and, as the van was driven around for the next four or so hours, the police stopped to pick up more people, whose possessions were deposited into envelopes. Defendant testified that he decided to plead guilty to the charge against him because he was informed that he would be able to get his car back this way.

Following the arguments by defendant’s attorney challenging the constitutionality of the relevant statute, the credibility of the police witnesses and the accuracy of the laboratory [137]*137report, the court, although expressing its disbelief of defendant’s account, nonetheless ruled in his favor on the ground that the proof was inadequate to establish that defendant was in possession of heroin. According to the court:

"The problem that I’m having has to do with the lab report, and that is the fact that, as I have indicated during the course of the trial, I believe that the report can come into evidence as a business record. But any of the statements contained therein would have to be proven as they would in a criminal case, the 'beyond a reasonable doubt’ standard as required. But, nevertheless, the chemist hasn’t come in here to testify.
"For all I know, assuming that Mr. McDermott did purchase drugs on this date, if we had the chemist here to determine what he did to keep these drugs separate and apart from the other drugs that were purchased that day by other people, and how he used it on his weights and measurements, it could be a possibility that even if defendant was there and did purchase drugs, he didn’t get what he expected to buy.
"We have somebody here from the plaintiff to testify with regard to the weight. All we have is this piece of paper that neither officer rightly so can testify. They can only testify in their experience they made an arrest based upon what they believed to be drugs. It required a confirmation.

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185 A.D.2d 134, 585 N.Y.S.2d 746, 1992 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/property-clerk-of-new-york-city-police-department-v-mcdermott-nyappdiv-1992.