The People v. Gregory Vining

71 N.E.3d 563, 28 N.Y.3d 686
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 14, 2017
Docket1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 N.E.3d 563 (The People v. Gregory Vining) 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. Gregory Vining, 71 N.E.3d 563, 28 N.Y.3d 686 (N.Y. 2017).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Abdus-Salaam, J.

The trial court did not abuse its discretion as a matter of law in admitting a phone call between defendant and his ex-girlfriend as an adoptive admission. Once the People satisfied the threshold evidentiary requirements for admissibility, the call was properly placed before the jury to weigh its import and significance. That the call was recorded while defendant was incarcerated does not change our analysis.

1—1

Defendant was charged with several counts of assault, trespass and criminal mischief, all arising out of incidents involving him and his ex-girlfriend. The proof at trial established that they had a tumultuous relationship. The People introduced evidence of separate crimes from different dates. One involved defendant purposefully breaking the victim’s cable box and hitting her in the face; another involved him pushing her to the ground and stomping on her chest, ultimately breaking two of her ribs; and the third involved him [689]*689entering her apartment without her permission and remaining until he was arrested. As the People conceded, the victim was not the most reliable witness. She had problems with alcohol and drugs, a criminal history which included violence toward other ex-partners, mental health issues related to depression and schizophrenia, and had, on more than one occasion, either lied to or been less than forthcoming with the police and the District Attorney’s Office. She did not appear for her scheduled testimony at the start of trial and had to be forcibly brought to court in handcuffs. The jury was aware of these issues.

During the trial, the court, upon the People’s application, allowed the prosecutor to play a telephone call made from defendant to the victim while he was incarcerated. The People sought to introduce the call as an adoptive admission by silence, which defendant opposed. During the conversation, the victim repeatedly accused defendant of breaking her ribs. Defendant never denied the allegations, and instead gave non-responsive and evasive answers. For example, after she forcefully stated many times that he had broken her ribs and shown no sympathy, his response was “so I’m a threat to you?” When she said he needed time to think and change so he would not do this to anyone else, he responded by asking whether his brother had called her. They also discussed a potential jail sentence, when he accused her of “not caring” if he got “a year.”

The trial court allowed defense counsel to craft a limiting instruction, and counsel offered the following, which the court read to the jury before the call was played and again during its final charge:

“I’m allowing the conversation into evidence for the limited purpose of having you determine if such failure to respond and to remain silent is indeed an admission, and if you so find, give such admission whatever weight you deem appropriate in determining its significance.
“In making this determination, you should apply the same tests you would use in your own everyday life in doing so.
“You may wish to keep in mind, one, an individual [⅛] silence may be attributable to his awareness that he is under no obligation to speak.
“Two: An individual’s natural caution that arises [690]*690from his knowledge that anything he says may be used against him.
“Three: An individual may refrain from speaking because he believes that efforts to exonerate himself under the circumstances would be futile.
“Now, to the extent that the telephone call references the potential jail sentence, the jury is to disregard that portion of the call.”

The jury found defendant guilty of attempted assault in the third degree, assault in the third degree, criminal mischief in the fourth degree, and criminal trespass in the second degree. The Appellate Division modified the judgment in a manner not relevant to this appeal, and otherwise affirmed, holding that the trial court properly exercised discretion in admitting the call (126 AD3d 623 [1st Dept 2015]). A Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal (26 NY3d 1093 [2015]), and we now affirm.

II.

An adoptive admission occurs “when a party acknowledges and assents to something ‘already uttered by another person, which thus becomes effectively the party’s own admission’ ” (People v Campney, 94 NY2d 307, 311 [1999], citing 4 Wigmore, Evidence § 1609 at 100 [Chadbourn rev]). Assent can be manifested by silence, because “[a] party’s silence in the face of an accusation, under circumstances that would prompt a reasonable person to protest, is generally considered an admission” (Robert A. Barker & Vincent C. Alexander, Evidence in New York State and Federal Courts § 8:17 [West’s NY Prac Series Nov 2016 Update]; see also People v Koerner, 154 NY 355, 374 [1897] [“If he is silent when he ought to have denied, the presumption of acquiescence arises”]). We have also recognized that “an equivocal or evasive response may similarly be used against [a] party either as an adoptive admission by silence or an express assent” (Campney, 94 NY2d at 316 [Smith, J., dissenting] [internal quotation marks omitted], quoting 2 McCormick, Evidence § 262 at 176 [4th ed 1992]). Here, despite the dissent’s characterization, defendant was not silent in the face of the victim’s accusations. He gave “equivocal or evasive response[s]” {id.).

Though we recognize that evidence of a party’s silence or evasiveness can have “minimal probative significance” and a [691]*691“substantial” risk of prejudice (People v Conyers, 52 NY2d 454, 458-459 [1981]), our rules of evidence allow that “manifestations made in response or reaction to an accusatory overture, which may be generally inadmissible, may be received into evidence, nevertheless, to establish a relevant demonstrative response of the affected party” (Campney, 94 NY2d at 312 [internal quotation marks omitted]). Further, the “danger” of the potential ambiguity of a party’s silence is not as strongly implicated where, as here, “a verbalized response is involved, not a failure to speak” (id. at 313).

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.E.3d 563, 28 N.Y.3d 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-gregory-vining-ny-2017.