State v. Grenci

964 A.2d 776, 197 N.J. 604, 2009 N.J. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 24, 2009
DocketA-104 September Term 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 964 A.2d 776 (State v. Grenci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Grenci, 964 A.2d 776, 197 N.J. 604, 2009 N.J. LEXIS 44 (N.J. 2009).

Opinions

Justice ALBIN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendant Angelo A. Grenci was tried and convicted by a jury in absentia on a superseding indictment alleging six counts of aggravated assault and one count of second-degree burglary. The initial indictment charged defendant only with second-degree burglary. Defendant absconded after his arraignment on the initial indictment but before he could be arraigned on the superseding indictment. Both the trial court and the Appellate Division found that defendant had waived his constitutional right to be present at his trial on the superseding indictment because he received notice of the trial date on the first indictment and because he had actual notice that the prosecutor intended to return to the grand jury to seek additional charges.

We now hold that defendant’s trial in absentia on the superseding indictment did not comply with Rule 3:16(b). Because defendant was never arraigned on the superseding indictment and never waived — in writing or orally on the record — his right to be present at trial on that indictment, the trial should not have proceeded in his absence. See R. 3:16(b). Therefore, we conclude no conviction arising from any of the additional charges contained in the superseding indictment can stand.

We also reverse defendant’s conviction on the burglary charge that was contained both in the original indictment and superseding indictment. We do so because the trial court’s instructions to the jury directed a verdict on an element of the offense and thereby relieved the State of its constitutional burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

[608]*608I.

A.

Defendant and co-defendants Henry Fallas and William Ger-mann were each charged in one count of an Ocean County indictment with committing second-degree burglary, N.J.S.A. 2C:18-2.1 The indictment arose from allegations that defendant and his co-defendants forced their way into an apartment where they engaged in a violent brawl. At a pretrial conference on April 28, 2008, defendant rejected a plea offer extended by the State. That same date, defendant signed a pretrial memorandum acknowledging that if he failed to appear on the trial date or any rescheduled trial date, the trial would proceed in his absence and that he would “be bound by the jury’s verdict.” The court scheduled a June 9,2003 trial date.

On June 9, the court conducted a status conference instead of a trial. The court advised defendant in person that the trial was adjourned until July 28 and that the trial would proceed on that new date even if he failed to appear. At that same conference, the prosecutor told defense counsel that he intended to re-present the case to the grand jury and seek a superseding indictment that would include an additional count of aggravated assault.2

On June 11, the Ocean County grand jury returned a superseding indictment charging defendant with one count of second-degree burglary, N.J.S.A 2C:18-2, three counts of second-degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-l(b)(l), and three counts of [609]*609third-degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-l(b)(2). Co-defendants Fallas and Germann were only charged in the burglary count of the superseding indictment.

Defense counsel forwarded a copy of the superseding indictment to defendant at his last known address, his parents’ home, but had no further communication with defendant after the June 9 court conference. Defendant failed to appear at a July 21 pretrial conference, resulting in the issuance of a bench warrant for his arrest. On July 29, the trial on the superseding indictment began with only Fallas present. Neither defendant nor co-defendant Germann appeared during the three-day trial.

At the trial, the State presented testimony that, on the evening of August 10, 2002, defendant attended a party in Manchester Township. At that party, co-defendant Fallas got into a fight with Roy Piazza and knocked him unconscious. After defendant and his friends, including Fallas, left the party, Piazza recovered and then, apparently, wanted to go a second round with Fallas. Piazza went to Fallas’s home, but did not find him there. He told Fallas’s parents that he wanted to talk to their “scumbag” son and ended by saying, “I’ll be home.” Piazza, accompanied by his friends, then retired to his second-floor apartment in nearby Berkeley Township.

The news of Piazza’s visit to Fallas’s home was quickly transmitted to defendant, who was driving to Atlantic City with a group of friends. Apparently enraged, defendant changed directions and headed to Piazza’s residence. Defendant and his friends entered Piazza’s apartment building through an open door on the ground floor and climbed the stairs. Defendant knocked on the door to Piazza’s apartment. Someone inside began to open the door, but immediately had second thoughts and tried to close it. Defendant and his friends pushed their way in and a melee ensued.

Defendant and Germann pursued Piazza into the kitchen where defendant picked up empty beer bottles and used them to strike Piazza’s head and body. When Michael Ricciardella interceded to stop defendant’s pummeling of Piazza, defendant turned on Ric-[610]*610ciardella, breaking a bottle over his head and biting him in the chest. In return, Ricciardella stuck his thumb in defendant’s eye. At about this point Fallas yelled that the police were on their way, and the combatants poured out of the apartment. As defendant was leaving in his car, he observed Piazza in the parking lot and attempted to run him down — without success.

Defendant’s counsel, in summation, argued that the violence in Piazza’s apartment was a consensual fight, not a burglary. With regard to the burglary charge, the court instructed that

it’s true with regard to [defendant and Germann] that they entered without license or privilege to be there. But there is some evidence here that Mr. Fallas may have — it could be inferred that he had license to be there or some type of implied or expressed invitation, whatever you may find from that testimony or evidence if you believe it to be true.

The jury convicted defendant of second-degree burglary, two counts of second-degree aggravated assault, and one count of simple assault — a lesser-included offense of aggravated assault— related to defendant’s attempt to run down Piazza.3 After the verdict, defendant was apprehended in Mexico and extradited to New Jersey.

Defendant moved for a new trial, arguing that the State could not try him in absentia on charges in an indictment on which he was never arraigned. The trial court denied that motion. While acknowledging that “technically there was no arraignment on the superseding indictment in the presence of the defendant,” the court nevertheless found that defendant knew at the June 9 conference that the State intended to seek a new indictment that would include additional charges arising from the same events involving the burglary indictment.

The court sentenced defendant on the second-degree burglary conviction to an extended term of seventeen years in state prison and on the two second-degree aggravated assault convictions to seven-year terms, to run concurrently with each other but consec[611]*611utively to the burglary charge.

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Bluebook (online)
964 A.2d 776, 197 N.J. 604, 2009 N.J. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-grenci-nj-2009.