Simmons v. State

17 Misc. 3d 394, 843 N.Y.S.2d 794
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 23, 2007
DocketClaim No. 113313
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 Misc. 3d 394 (Simmons v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. State, 17 Misc. 3d 394, 843 N.Y.S.2d 794 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Philip J. Patti, J.

The motion is denied, and the cross motion is granted.

Leroy Simmons, Jr., filed this claim on February 9, 2007 seeking $2,000,000 in damages for his alleged wrongful conviction and imprisonment (Court of Claims Act § 8-b), a claim he alleges accrued on July 7, 2006. In lieu of an answer, the defendant seeks dismissal of the claim on various grounds. Claimant rejoins, opposing the motion, and making a cross motion seeking permission to amend his claim.

The underlying event leading to the criminal conviction herein occurred on June 19, 2001 when claimant was driving a motor vehicle and a baby was killed in a motor vehicle accident. As a result of that incident, claimant was indicted by a grand jury (exhibit C to defendant’s motion is a copy of a five-count indictment). Following a jury trial, claimant was convicted of (1) criminally negligent homicide (Penal Law § 125.10); (2) operation of a motor vehicle at imprudent speed (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1180 [a]); (3) failure to stop at a stop sign (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1172 [a]); and (4) failure to keep right (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1120 [a]) (exhibit E to defendant’s motion). He was sentenced to six months in jail, five years’ probation and a one-year revocation of his driver’s license for his conviction on criminally negligent homicide. He was given an unconditional discharge on the other convictions. Upon appeal, the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, modified the judgment

“as a matter of discretion in the interest of justice and on the law by reversing that part convicting defendant of criminally negligent homicide and dismissing count one of the indictment and as modified the judgment is affirmed, and the matter is remitted to Supreme Court, Monroe County, for proceedings pursuant to CPL 470.45” (People v Simmons, [396]*39631 AD3d 1143, 1144 [2006]).

The cross motion is addressed first. One of the grounds for dismissal is the purported lack of documentary evidence, inter alia, that claimant served a term of imprisonment, etc. In his cross motion, claimant provides a proposed amended claim with additional documentary evidence appended thereto. Leaving aside the arguments relating to a determination whether the proposed amended claim, as well as the original claim, affirmatively state facts that establish innocence, defendant maintains that the documentary submissions are also deficient because they contain no documentary proof of what happened after the criminal case was remanded to Supreme Court. It asserts that no certificate of disposition has been produced. For the reasons that follow, and pursuant to my discussion of the merits of the dismissal motion below, these arguments are rejected.

First, defendant suggests that a motion to amend the claim must be denied, relying upon Martinez v State of New York (Ct Cl, Apr. 30, 2004, Sise, J., UID No. 2004-028-532, Claim No. 106265, Motion Nos. M-67817, CM-67982).1 Claimant raises the cogent argument that this case has just started, there has been no discovery, nothing in the proposed amended claim is prejudicial, and this matter is well within the statute of limitations. Claimant of course could have amended his claim without leave of the court (CPLR 3025; and see 22 NYCRR 206.7 [b]). Moreover, in Acosta v State of New York (270 AD2d 164, 165 [2000]), the First Department held that where a motion

“sought an amendment remedying a pleading deficiency, not one curing a jurisdictional defect relating to the notice of claim requirements of Court of Claims Act §§ 10 and 11 (see, Cannon v State of New York, 163 Misc 2d 623, 626) [and that] Claimant, having satisfied such jurisdictional requirements, is not to be precluded from repleading his claim so as to have it comply with the pleading requirements of section 8-b (4) (see, supra, at 628).”

The Second Department recently reiterated this holding in Harris v State of New York (38 AD3d 144, 150 [2007]), observing that the

“request to amend the claim was subject to the general rule that leave to amend a pleading should be

[397]*397‘freely given’ in the absence of prejudice or unfair surprise to the nonmoving party [and] instead of dismissing the claim for failing to explicitly identify . . . the statutory ground upon which the judgment of conviction was vacated, the Court of Claims should have granted that branch of the claimant’s cross motion which was for leave to serve and file an amended claim curing the technical defect” ([citations omitted]; see also Lockley v State of New York, 41 AD3d 439 [2007]).

I hold that the filed claim met the jurisdictional requirements of the Court of Claims Act, and since the documentary submissions now appended to the proposed amended claim fall, in my opinion, within the penumbra of satisfying a pleading deficiency, the cross motion is granted and the claimant may serve and file his amended claim within 30 days of service of a file-stamped copy of this order. The defendant shall then have 40 days to answer or otherwise respond to the amended claim. Claimant might be well advised, in the event of an appeal of this relief (that might not be decided prior to the expiration of the underlying two-year period described in section 8-b [7]), to consider serving and filing a totally new claim, albeit with another filing fee.

Defendant seeks dismissal on the ground that claimant cannot establish his innocence, a linchpin of section 8-b, or prove the same by “clear and convincing” evidence, the intentionally stringent burden of proof. It asserts that the pleadings are deficient because claimant has failed to provide proof of his innocence, and thus the claim must be dismissed at this early pleading stage. This matter, like so many claims under section 8-b, raises interesting and provocative issues.

First, I will not be diverted by extraneous arguments. To the extent that defendant argues that claimant has failed to include any documentary evidence demonstrating what happened when the matter was remanded to the Supreme Court, that may be true. However, the Fourth Department modified the judgment “by reversing that part convicting defendant of criminally negligent homicide and dismissing count one of the indictment and as modified the judgment is affirmed, and the matter is remitted to Supreme Court, Monroe County, for proceedings pursuant to CPL 470.45” (People v Simmons, 31 AD3d 1143, 1144 [2006], supra). CPL 470.45 reads in relevant part that:

“Upon reversing or modifying a judgment and [398]*398directing corrective action, an appellate court must remit the case to the criminal court in which the judgment was entered. Such criminal court must ex-. ecute the direction of the appellate court and must, depending upon the nature of such direction, either discharge the defendant from custody, exonerate his bail or issue a securing order.”

In the claim at bar, this mandatory remittitur directing the criminal court to fulfill the direction from the Appellate Division is nothing more than a formality, and in this instance further documentation is not required.

Similarly, the issue of whether the sufficiency of the evidence was raised on appeal is of little or no significance in deciding this motion.

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Related

Simmons v. State
59 A.D.3d 1013 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Misc. 3d 394, 843 N.Y.S.2d 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-state-nyclaimsct-2007.