The People v. Drury Duval

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 2021
Docket10
StatusPublished

This text of The People v. Drury Duval (The People v. Drury Duval) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Drury Duval, (N.Y. 2021).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 10 The People &c., Respondent, v. Drury Duval, Appellant.

Hunter Haney, for appellant. Paul A. Andersen, for respondent. New York State Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, amicus curiae.

WILSON, J.:

Defendant Drury Duval challenges the validity of a search warrant, the summary

denial of his suppression motion, and the reasonableness of the manner in which the

warrant was executed. We conclude that the search warrant was facially valid and that the

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motion court did not abuse its discretion in denying, without a hearing, suppression of

evidence obtained from the search. Mr. Duval’s challenge to the execution of the search

warrant is unpreserved for our review.

Officers searched Mr. Duval’s residence and recovered, among other things, a

handgun and ammunition. They conducted the search pursuant to a warrant issued that

same day. The warrant authorized officers to search for and seize property including

firearms, ammunition, and evidence relating to ownership of the premises and the purchase

or sale of firearms, located at a specified street address for a “private residence clearly

marked” with that street number.

Mr. Duval moved to controvert the search warrant and suppress the physical

evidence seized, arguing that the warrant was “void for failing to meet constitutional

requirements of particularity with respect to the description of the place to be searched”

because it failed to identify any individual unit within the house, which Mr. Duval alleged

was a multi-unit dwelling. Mr. Duval’s counsel affirmed that the house contained three

private residences, one on each floor, and offered three documents to support that factual

assertion: a deed showing that the property was owned by Mr. Duval’s mother, a record

from the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD)

website showing that the house had been registered with HPD as having three “A” units,

and an affidavit from Mr. Duval’s mother stating that on the date of the search, Mr. Duval

“was living at” the specified address, “Third Floor, Bronx NY.” Counsel also alleged that

when police officers executed the search warrant, Mr. Duval’s mother told the officers that

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each floor was a private residence, and that when a resident of the second floor presented

identification, the officers declined to search the second floor and proceeded to the third

floor. In addition, Mr. Duval moved for disclosure of the search warrant application

documents and, in the alternative, for a hearing “to challenge the validity of the warrant

and underlying documents.” In response, the People maintained that the house was a single

residence without separate units, and that the warrant properly authorized a search of the

entire residential address.

The motion court reviewed the information before the warrant court, which

consisted of the affidavit and testimony of the detective who applied for the warrant, the

testimony of a confidential informant, and the material provided by Mr. Duval. The court

denied suppression without a hearing, holding that the warrant was properly issued upon a

finding of probable cause and that “the warrant and the application comported with the

constitutional and statutory particularity requirement.” Mr. Duval moved for reargument,

asserting that CPL 710.60 required the motion court to hold a suppression hearing; the

court denied Mr. Duval’s motion. Mr. Duval pleaded guilty to third-degree criminal

possession of a weapon and was sentenced to 2 to 4 years’ imprisonment.

The Appellate Division affirmed the judgment, upholding the denial of Mr. Duval’s

suppression motion (179 AD3d 62 [1st Dept 2019]). The Appellate Division, with two

Justices dissenting, held that the warrant was sufficiently particularized on its face, and that

the warrant application materials and Mr. Duval’s submissions did not provide a basis to

controvert the warrant. The majority concluded that the motion court “reasonably

determined that the building in fact did not consist of multiple discrete units” (id. at 66).

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The dissent contended that the denial of suppression should be reversed “because the search

warrant did not specify which apartment in the three-unit building was to be searched . . .

and that deficiency was not cured by reference to any other documents that could properly

have been considered by the court,” insofar as the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Groh

v Ramirez (540 US 551 [2004]) prevented consideration of supporting materials that were

not incorporated by reference and attached to the warrant (Duval, 179 AD3d at 67 [Gesmer,

J., dissenting]). A dissenting Justice granted Mr. Duval leave to appeal (34 NY3d 1164

[2020]).

To begin, the warrant’s description of the target premises satisfied the constitutional

requirement that the warrant “particularly describ[e] the place to be searched” (US Const

Amend IV; see also CPL 690.15 [1] [a], 690.45 [5]). The warrant’s description of the place

to be searched as “a private residence,” located at a unique, specified street address, was

not facially deficient; given a commonsense reading, the warrant clearly commanded a

search of “a” single residence, not a multi-unit building, at the marked street address.

Because the warrant was facially sufficient, the case does not implicate the U.S. Supreme

Court’s ruling in Groh v Ramirez that courts may not rely on documents not incorporated

and attached to the warrant in order to provide particularity that the warrant, on its face,

lacks (see 540 US at 557-558). The motion court did not rely on the unincorporated warrant

application materials to cure a facial deficiency in the warrant, which Groh forbids. Rather,

the court considered those materials for a different purpose—to determine whether the

warrant’s description of the place to be searched as a single private residence was supported

by the information available to the detective who applied for the warrant and the court that

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issued the warrant. Where Mr. Duval challenged the warrant on the ground that the

building identified in the warrant actually comprised multiple residences, the motion court

reviewed the documents supporting the issuance of the warrant to determine whether they

established that the building was in fact a single residence, as described in the warrant.

Thus, the motion court did not err by considering those materials when deciding Mr.

Duval’s motion.

To establish his entitlement to a suppression hearing, Mr. Duval was required to

raise a question of fact as to whether, based on what the detective knew or should have

known about the premises when the warrant was sought, the warrant’s description of the

target premises as a single residence was accurate. In People v Rainey (14 NY2d 35

[1964]), we held that a search warrant failed to meet the particularity requirement where it

commanded a “search of said entire premises . . . 529 Monroe Street in the City of Buffalo,”

but in fact the premises “consisted of two separate residential apartments,” and that fact

was “known to the police officer, but not brought to the attention of the court at the time

he obtained the warrant” (id. at 36, 37).

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Related

Maryland v. Garrison
480 U.S. 79 (Supreme Court, 1987)
Groh v. Ramirez
540 U.S. 551 (Supreme Court, 2004)
People v. Mendoza
624 N.E.2d 1017 (New York Court of Appeals, 1993)
People v. Jones
746 N.E.2d 1053 (New York Court of Appeals, 2001)
People v. Danclair
139 A.D.3d 541 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2016)
People v. Atkins
2017 NY Slip Op 7342 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2017)
People v. Rainey
197 N.E.2d 527 (New York Court of Appeals, 1964)
People v. Germaine
87 A.D.2d 848 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1982)

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