State v. Roccasecca

328 A.2d 35, 130 N.J. Super. 585
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 18, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 328 A.2d 35 (State v. Roccasecca) 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.

Bluebook
State v. Roccasecca, 328 A.2d 35, 130 N.J. Super. 585 (N.J. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

130 N.J. Super. 585 (1974)
328 A.2d 35

STATE OF NEW JERSEY, PLAINTIFF,
v.
ANGELO FRED ROCCASECCA, DEFENDANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division — (Criminal).

Decided October 18, 1974.

*587 Mr. Leonard Meyerson for defendant (Messrs. Miller, Hochman, Meyerson & Miller, attorneys).

Mr. Abel Goldstein, Assistant Prosecutor, for the State, (Mr. James T. O'Halloran, Prosecutor of Hudson County, attorney; Mr. Walter K. Schreyer, Assistant Prosecutor, on the brief).

SCHIAFFO, J.C.C., Temporarily Assigned.

Angelo Roccasecca was indicted on June 5, 1973 for working for a lottery and possession of lottery paraphernalia, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2A:121-3(a) and (b). He then moved to suppress certain evidence allegedly seized from the drawer of his worktable at the Jonathan Logan Dress Co., in North Bergen, New Jersey, pursuant to a search warrant issued by an acting Municipal judge of the Municipal Court of the Township of North Bergen.

Lt. William Sybel of the North Bergen Police Department, in his affidavit, stated:

I have received confidential information that Angelo Roccasecca of 26 Oakwood Drive, Wayne, N.J. picks up number slips from the workers at the Jonathan Logan Dress Company, 3901 Liberty Ave., *588 North Bergen, N.J. The subject writes down the action and then calls it in on telephone. Lieut. Joseph Dunlanie [sic] and I have kept the subject under surveillance for at least ten days and observed him go from worker to worker getting bets and writing them down. From my knowledge of gambling activities the subject collects the action and in turn calls it in to an organized outfit. The subject may also have slips in his 1968 Ford, color white, 2-door vehicle, reg. NMS 843 N.J. On occasion workers have approached him, handed him money, slips of papers with numbers on them, and joked about it.

The only grounds raised by defendant on his motion to suppress were the failure of the affidavit to state facts from which a finding of probable cause could be made, and the lack of jurisdiction of the judge issuing the warrant. The motion was heard by County Judge Young, who denied defendant's contentions without written opinion.

Almost a year later, in the course of preparing the case for trial, Lt. Joseph Dulanie, Sybel's partner, apparently had a conversation with an assistant prosecutor which contradicted the statements made by Lt. Sybel in the search warrant and in grand jury testimony. Dulanie subsequently submitted to the assistant prosecutor a signed statement setting forth his version of the events which led to the issuance of the warrant. Dulanie's statement alleges the following:

(1) During the first week of surveillance defendant had been observed at lunchtime outside of the factory in which he was employed.

(2) Dulanie and Sybel followed him to the Triangle Bar during Roccasecca's lunch hour.

(3) During the second week of surveillance (March 9, 1973) Dulanie entered the factory under the pretense of checking the alarm system.

(4) While in the factory, Dulanie observed defendant at his worktable writing numbers down and talking to other employees.

(5) However, Dulanie did not observe the defendant taking any bets. He only saw defendant refuse to take money from an employee on one occasion.

(6) On the evening of March 9 Dulanie went to the work area of Roccasecca's table and looked around.

(7) Dulanie opened a drawer in the table and discovered a package of papers containing numbers bets.

(8) Dulanie did not take anything from the drawer.

*589 (9) Dulanie notified Sybel of his discovery by telephone on the evening of March 9, and on March 10 he states that "we" secured a search warrant from Judge Tomasin of West New York.

It therefore appears that Lt. Sybel was incorrect when he stated in his affidavit in support of the search warrant that it was he and Dulanie who had "kept the subject under surveillance for at least ten days and observed him going from worker to worker getting bets and writing them down." Lt. Sybel's grand jury testimony also reflects that he had seen defendant taking bets.

Dulanie's statement did not come to the attention of defendant or his attorneys until September 1974. A meeting was held by the assistant prosecutor, defendant's attorney and this court, before which defendant is scheduled to be tried. Defendant's request to renew the motion was referred back to Judge Young, who subsequently deferred to this court. Thereupon, a hearing was held before this court. At the hearing Lt. Dulanie substantiated his written statement, conceding that he had searched defendant's worktable prior to the issuance of the search warrant.

The questions presently before this court are: (1) may the motion to suppress properly be renewed; (2) does the newly disclosed evidence render the search warrant invalid, and (3) was the gambling paraphernalia seized pursuant to a lawful search?

I

The first issue to be determined by the court is whether the discovery of new evidence permits defendant to renew a motion to suppress which was previously denied.

As has been previously stated, the initial motion to suppress was confined to the issues of probable cause and the jurisdiction of the issuing judge. Apparently neither the State nor defendant were aware of the activities of Lt. Dulanie which predated the issuance of the warrant. It is undisputed that defendant could not have learned of Dulanie's *590 search by the exercise of due diligence. Indeed, it was not until a year after the decision by Judge Young on defendant's motion that the prosecutor became aware of the nature of Dulanie's involvement in the case.

Defendant's request to renew the motion to suppress does not address itself to the issues previously raised. Rather, defendant contends that since Dulanie's statement was not in evidence when either the acting municipal judge issued the search warrant or Judge Young ruled upon the motion to suppress the evidence, the motion to suppress ought to be renewed in order that the court might consider the effect of Dulanie's statement and the alleged pre-warrant search. Therefore, defendant is questioning neither the issuance of the search warrant by local judge nor the ruling by Judge Young. The motion is made solely on the newly discovered evidence.

The posture of the renewal of the motion to suppress is analogous to the motion for a new trial. The question presented is whether the doctrine of the "law of the case" precludes the court from reconsidering the motion. As was cited by the court in State v. Hale, 127 N.J. Super. 407 (App. Div. 1974):

It has been generally stated that the "law of the case" doctrine "applies to the principle that where there is an unreversed decision of a question of law or fact made during the course of litigation, such decision settles that question for all subsequent stages of the suit." Wilson v. Ohio River Company, 236 F. Supp. 96, 98 (S.D.W. Va. 1964), aff'd 375 F.2d 775 (4 Cir.1967). This rule is based upon the sound policy that when an issue is once litigated and decided during the course of a particular case, that decision should be the end of the matter. United States v. U.S. Smelting Refin. and M. Co., 339 U.S. 186, 198, 70 S.Ct. 537, 94 L.Ed. 750 (1950). [at 410]

This doctrine "may be applied in a situation where one judge decides a pretrial motion to suppress, but another judge conducts the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
328 A.2d 35, 130 N.J. Super. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-roccasecca-njsuperctappdiv-1974.