State v. Tropiano
This text of 381 A.2d 828 (State v. Tropiano) 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.
ARTHUR GUI TROPIANO, DEFENDANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division.
*453 Mr. Oscar W. Rittenhouse, Hunterdon County Prosecutor, for plaintiff.
Messrs. Norris, Mc Laughlin & Marcus (by Mr. Richard A. Norris) attorney for defendant.
SCHOCH, A.J.S.C.
By filing a motion to dismiss the indictment defendant presents the court with this interesting question: Is the defense of impossibility available in New Jersey to the crime of attempt?
A recitation of the history of the case is necessary to provide the background out of which this issue has arisen. Sometime in the three-week period before the middle of June 1975 the residence of one Henry Barnard in Hunterdon County was burglarized. Included in the list of stolen property were two Chinese rose medallion garden seats valued at some $2,000. Shortly thereafter one Elaine Miskis was arrested and charged with, among other offenses, the Barnard burglary, *454 and the two Chinese garden seats were recovered by the police. During the course of this investigation Miss Miskis told members of the Somerset County Prosecutor's office that she had previously sold stolen articles to defendant Tropiano, who operates a jewelry store in Somerville. Thereafter Miss Miskis, along with a Somerset County Prosecutor's investigator who was posing as an antique dealer, went to defendant's store and had several conversations about selling these "hot-stolen" garden seats, with the result that on July 8, 1975 defendant went to the Miskis residence in Hunterdon County, bought the garden seats from her for $100 and with the help of the bogus dealer loaded the seats into his vehicle. Thereupon the investigator advised defendant of his true identity and placed him under arrest for receiving stolen property.
The present indictment represents the third endeavor by the Hunterdon County Prosecutor to bring defendant to trial, based on the foregoing factual situation. Defendant was first indicted on a charge of receiving stolen property, in violation of N.J.S.A. 2A:139-1. This indictment was dismissed by this court, on defendant's motion, relying primarily on People v. Rojas, 55 Cal.2d 252, 10 Cal. Rptr. 465, 358 P.2d 921 (Sup. Ct. 1961); U.S. v. Cawley, 255 F.2d 338 (3rd Cir.1958); and U.S. v. Cohen, 274 F. 596 (3 Cir.1921). In Cohen, the Third Circuit stated:
When the actual, physical possession of stolen property has been recovered by the owner or his agent, its character as stolen property is lost, and the subsequent delivery of the property by the owner or agent to a particeps crimins, for the purpose of entrapping him as the receiver of stolen goods, does not establish the crime, for in a legal sense he does not receive stolen property.
Thereafter the matter was again presented to the Hunterdon County grand jury which returned Indictment 106-J-76 charging defendant Tropiano and Elaine Miskis with the crime of conspiracy to receive stolen property, and Indictment 105-J-76, now under attack, charging Tropiano with attempt *455 to receive stolen property, contrary to N.J.S. 2A:85-5 and 2A:139-1.
Thereafter the prosecutor on his own motion, moved to dismiss the conspiracy indictment on the ground that because the acts of Miss Miskis were lawful, the crime of conspiracy was not committed. Not surprisingly, this motion was not opposed by defendant and Indictment 105-J-76 was dismissed by this court, which brings us to a consideration of the issue raised by the third indictment.
The elements of the offense of "attempt to commit a crime" N.J.S.A. 2A:85-5 are: (1) the intent to commit the crime; (2) performance of some act toward commission of the crime, and (3) failure to complete the commission of the crime. State v. Swan, 131 N.J.L. 67, 69 (E. & A. 1943).
Defendant's theory in support of his motion to dismiss the indictment is this: the court's ruling in the original indictment charging receiving stolen property is "the law of the case" and consequently the finding by the court that, at the time of this transaction between defendant and Miskis, the property was not "stolen property," precludes defendant from being charged with the crime of attempting to receive stolen property. He relies on language from State v. Weleck, 10 N.J. 355 (1952):
It is the well settled rule that there cannot be a conviction for an attempt to commit a crime unless the attempt if completed, would have constituted a crime. [at 372]
He also cites as authority the decision of the New York Court of Appeals in People v. Jaffe, 185 N.Y. 497, 78 N.E. 169 (1906), reh. denied, 79 N.E. 1113 (1906).
Defendant takes the position that there was a legal impossibility to commit the crime of receiving stolen property because even if the transaction had been consummated, the previous ruling of the court that the property could not be considered "stolen property" applied, and if the crime itself could not be committed, defendant could not be guilty of attempting to commit it. Defendant further refers to the case of *456 U.S. v. Berrigan, 482 F.2d 171 (3 Cir.1973), for an exposition on the distinction between factual impossibility and legal impossibility, and the significance attached to that difference.
The State advances the argument that the crime of attempt has been committed when a defendant has the intent to commit the particular substantive crime and perform some overt act toward the commission of that crime; the fact that the crime cannot be consummated because of some extraneous fact unknown to defendant does not relieve the defendant of criminal responsibility, citing State v. Meisch, 86 N.J. Super. 279 (App. Div. 1965) certif. den., 44 N.J. 583 (1965); State v. Moretti, 52 N.J. 182 (1968); State v. Palumbo, 137 N.J. Super. 13 (App. Div. 1975); State v. Lavary, 152 N.J. Super. 413 (Law Div. 1977).
In Meisch, supra, defendant was convicted of the crime of attempting to commit larceny based on facts which demonstrated that while alone in the office area of a gasoline service station he thrust his hand into the drawer of a desk, the obvious inference being that he was searching for something to steal. As it happened, the desk drawer was empty. On appeal defendant relied upon the rule that there cannot be a conviction for an attempt to commit a crime unless the attempt, if completed, would have constituted a crime, citing State v. Weleck, 10 N.J. 355, 372 (1952). In rejecting this argument, the court stated:
[T]his rule is to be distinguished from the rule that is applicable to the case of a person designing to perpetuate a crime, when he cannot complete it by reason of the existence of some fact unknown to him at the time. Whenever the law makes it a penal offense to take one step toward the accomplishment of a crime with the intent of a purpose of accomplishing it, a person taking that step, with that intent and purpose, and himself capable of doing every act on his part to accomplish that object, cannot protect himself from responsibility by showing that by reason of some fact unknown to him at the time of his criminal attempt, it could not be fully carried into effect in the particular instance. [86 N.J. Super. at 281; citations omitted]
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381 A.2d 828, 154 N.J. Super. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tropiano-njsuperctappdiv-1977.