State v. Hacker
This text of 400 A.2d 567 (State v. Hacker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE OF NEW JERSEY, PLAINTIFF,
v.
MORRIS HACKER, JAMES JOYCE, WAYNE DeBELLIS AND MILES BURKE, DEFENDANTS.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division (Criminal).
*168 Mr. John J. Degnan, Attorney General for the State of New Jersey (Mr. Robert DeGeorge and Ms. Ileana N. Saros, Deputy Attorneys General, appearing).
*169 Mr. Sal B. Daidone for defendant Morris Hacker.
Mr. Francis J. Hartman for defendant James Joyce.
Mr. Charles H. Nugent for defendant Wayne DeBellis.
Mr. R. Alan Aslaksen for defendant Miles Burke.
IMBRIANI, J.S.C.
Are statements of persons previously acquitted of conspiracy admissible against an alleged coconspirator as a vicarious admission exception to the hearsay rule (often called the coconspirator rule)? The applicable rule is Evid. R. 63(9)(b) which provides:
"A statement which would be admissible if made by the declarant at the hearing is admissible against a party if * * * (b) at the time the statement was made the party and the declarant were participating in a plan to commit a crime or civil wrong and the statement was made in furtherance of that plan."
This is substantially similar to Federal Rule 801(d) which provides that a "statement is not hearsay if * * * (2) * * * offered against a party and is * * * (E) a statement by a coconspirator of a party during the course and in furtherance of the conspiracy".
This rule does not offend the right to be confronted by witnesses, as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. State v. D'Arco, 153 N.J. Super. 258, 262 (App. Div. 1977).
A multi-count indictment charged four defendants and several unindicted persons with conspiracy. Another 61 counts charged one or more of the four defendants with other crimes.
When called for trial eight months ago, defendant Morris Hacker was severed from that trial for medical reasons. He is now being tried separately. At the earlier trial defendants Joyce and Burke were acquitted of conspiracy (although Joyce was convicted of other charges), and the third *170 defendant, DeBellis, was convicted of conspiracy and other charges.
In this trial against Hacker only, the State seeks to offer statements made by Joyce and Burke allegedly during and in furtherance of the conspiracy.
Hacker objects because Joyce and Burke were acquitted of conspiracy at the earlier trial. That acquittal, he says, means that they were not conspirators.
The coconspirator rule was first enunciated in the United States by Mr. Justice Story in United States v. Gooding, 25 U.S. (12 Wheat.) 460, 469, 6 L.Ed. 693, 696 (1827). Since then it has received widespread acceptance. "Developments in the Law-Criminal Conspiracy", 72 Harv. L. Rev. 920, 988-9 (1959).
New Jersey espoused the coconspirator rule at least as early as State v. Carbone, 10 N.J. 329, 340 (1952), which held that a "conspiracy is a partnership in crime" and "each conspirator [is] liable under the criminal law for the acts of every other conspirator done in pursuance of the conspiracy." See also, State v. Rios, 17 N.J. 572, 596 (1955); State v. Yedwab, 43 N.J. Super. 367, 374 (App. Div. 1957).
The rule was adopted by the Report of the New Jersey Supreme Court, Committee on Evidence (March 1963) and is now embodied in Evid. R. 63(9)(b).
A conspiracy is an agreement of two or more persons to do an unlawful act, or to do a lawful act by unlawful means. The gist of the offense is not the doing of the act but simply the entering into the scheme or agreement. State v. Carbone, supra, 10 N.J. at 336-337.
We are not concerned in this case with the principles that one may not be convicted of conspiracy if all of the other alleged conspirators are acquitted, see Annotation "Conspiracy," 91 A.L.R. 2d 700, 705 (1963), or if all of the others never intended to enter into a criminal agreement (they were police officers). State v. Mazur, 158 N.J. Super. 89 (App. Div. 1978).
*171 A conspiracy requires the agreement of two or more parties, and one person cannot commit the offense. The recently developed "unilateral" or single person theory adopted by the proposed New Jersey Penal Code, § 2C:5-3(a), applies only to offenses committed after September 1, 1979. State v. Mazur, supra at 101.
Rather, here we are concerned with the question whether one acquitted of conspiracy may be deemed by a subsequent jury to have been a participant in a plan to commit a crime in the very conspiracy for which he was previously acquitted as a participant.
This issue was discussed in State v. D'Arco, supra, where defendant was charged with conspiracy, misconduct in office, solicitation of misconduct and bribery. The hearsay statements (taped telephone conversations) between two other persons who were allegedly a part of the conspiracy were admitted in support of the conspiracy count pursuant to Evid. R. 63(9). It may be significant that the misconduct in office charge was also framed in terms that defendant acted "in concert" with the two persons whose telephone conversation was taped. Defendant was found not guilty of conspiracy and guilty of the three substantive offenses.
D'Arco sought a new trial because the jury "may have" considered the hearsay evidence allowed on the conspiracy charge in convicting him of misconduct in office. The Appellate Division refused to "speculate as to the reasons that prompted such acquittal," id., 153 N.J. Super. at 266, noted the adequacy of independent proof of defendant's guilt of the three substantive offenses, and concluded that the hearsay statements of coconspirators did not taint the convictions.
But could the jury have properly considered the statements of the coconspirators in their conviction for misconduct in office since that charge alleged that defendant acted "in concert" with the persons whose hearsay statements were admitted in evidence? Or did the acquittal on the conspiracy charge prevent the jury from finding that defendant was a participant in a plan to commit a crime *172 by acting "in concert" with others as alleged in the misconduct in office charge? The court declined to answer these questions.
While the Federal Rules use of the phrase "statement by a co-conspirator" may suggest that such rule is limited to cases where a conspiracy is charged, the absence of such language in our rules must mean that Evid R. 63(9)(b) is applicable to any case where concert of action is alleged. Curiously, research indicates that the use of this rule in New Jersey, at least in criminal cases, has been limited to conspiracy charges.
D'Arco appears to support admissibility in spite of the acquittal of the conspiracy charge, since it noted that
There was adequate independent proof of the likelihood of defendant's illicit association and plan with these men [i.e., the persons whose telephone conversation was taped], in connection with the misconduct in office charge, to justify the admission into evidence, and consideration by the jury, of their hearsay statements with respect to that substantive offense and this, irrespective of the jury's acquittal on the conspiracy charge and even if there had been no separate conspiracy count. [at 266]
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400 A.2d 567, 167 N.J. Super. 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hacker-njsuperctappdiv-1979.