The People v. John Andujar

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 2017
Docket91
StatusPublished

This text of The People v. John Andujar (The People v. John Andujar) 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. John Andujar, (N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports. ----------------------------------------------------------------- No. 91 The People &c., Respondent, v. John Andujar, Appellant.

Karen M. Kalikow, for appellant. Catherine M. Reno, for respondent.

RIVERA, J.: Defendant, a tow truck operator, was charged under Vehicle and Traffic Law § 397, which provides, "[a] person, not a police officer or peace officer, acting pursuant to his special duties, who equips a motor vehicle with a

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radio receiving set capable of receiving signals on the frequencies allocated for police use or knowingly uses a motor vehicle so equipped . . . without having first secured a permit so to do . . . is guilty of a misdemeanor. . . ." (VTL 397). This case presents a discrete statutory construction question regarding whether the statute's prohibition on equipping a motor vehicle with a police radio scanner, or knowingly using a vehicle so equipped, applies in the case of a freestanding device found on a defendant driver's person. We conclude the statute does not require that the prohibited device be physically attached to the motor vehicle. *** The initial charging instrument alleged that while the deponent officer was "responding to a radio call of a motor vehicle accident . . . he observed defendant seated behind the driver's seat and operating" a pick-up truck bearing the name of a tow truck company. The officer claimed that defendant stated, "I received a radio call for an off duty officer in an accident." The officer "observed defendant to have on his person, inside his front left jacket pocket, one (1) scanner, which was on and receving signals on the frequencies allocated for police use . . . . [D]efendant could not produce a permit to operate and or possess said scanning device." The prosecution subsequently filed a superseding accusatory instrument which added that the officer had been trained in radio receivers capable of receiving police frequencies, and that when he turned on the receiver he

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heard frequencies from the particular police precincts, as indicated on the receiver's display panel. Criminal Court granted defendant's motion to dismiss the accusatory instrument on the ground that the superseding information lacked allegations that the motor vehicle was equipped with the scanner, as there were "no allegations that the scanner was specifically prepared to be used with a vehicle, either by having a particular power cord or otherwise." The Appellate Term reversed, concluding that the accusatory instrument was sufficient for pleading purposes because the factual allegations were adequate to put defendant on notice of the charge and that the statute does not require the scanner to be attached to or otherwise installed in the motor vehicle (People v Andujar, 49 Misc 3d 36, 36 [App Term, 1st Dept 2015]). According to the court, because "the scanner was in defendant's jacket pocket, where it could be accessed and operated in the vehicle within seconds, the accusatory instrument was sufficient for pleading purposes, to satisfy the 'equips a motor vehicle' element of the charge" (id. at 38). A Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal (People v Andujar, 26 NY3d 1085 [2015]). Our analysis begins with the language of the statute. Neither the VTL nor the Penal Law defines "equips" or any derivation of that word. Absent a statutory definition "we must give the term its 'ordinary' and 'commonly understood' meaning

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(People v Ocasio, 28 NY3d 178, 181 [2016], citing People v Versaggi, 83 NY2d 123, 129 [1994]; see People v Morales, 20 NY3d 240, 247 [2012]; People v Quinto, 18 NY3d 409, 417 [2012]). To that end, "[i]n determining the meaning of statutory language, we 'have regarded dictionary definitions as useful guideposts'" (Ocasio, 28 NY3d at 181, quoting Yaniveth R. v LTD Realty Co., 27 NY3d 186, 192 [2016]). A review of recent sources and those available at the time the statute was enacted in 1933 indicates that "equips" does not necessitate physical attachment or a special adaptation. For example, Merriam-Webster classifies "equip" as a transitive verb defined as, "to furnish for service or action by appropriate provisioning," or "to make ready" (Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 10th ed 1997).1 The Random House Dictionary of the English Language defines the word as "to furnish or provide with whatever is needed for use or for any undertaking; fit out, as a ship or army" (2d ed 1987). Webster's Third New International Dictionary defines it as "to provide what is necessary, useful, or appropriate" or "to make ready or competent for service or

1 A transitive verb is "characterized by having or containing a direct object" (Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 10th ed 1997). An intransitive verb, on the other hand, does not have a direct object. For example, "I walk" is an intransitive verb, while "I wear pants" is an example of a transitive verb.

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action or against a need" (1981).2 This definition has remained largely unchanged in Webster's since at least 1913. The definition in Black's Law Dictionary is nearly identical, providing that the word means, "to furnish for service or against a need or exigency; to fit out; to supply with whatever is necessary for efficient action" (10th ed 2014 [the definition from the 1951 edition is nearly identical]). Under these definitions "equip" means to provide something with a particular feature or ability. None states or implies any need for the object's physical attachment to the thing equipped. To the contrary, the essential quality or meaning of the word is the act of outfitting to prepare for the ready, irrespective of whether an item or device has permanent or temporary connection to the object equipped. As the District Court for the Eastern District of New York concluded after canvassing dictionaries to determine the "ordinary everyday meaning" of the word "equipped" as used in a federal statute prohibiting certain firearms "equipped" with a silencer, "[w]hat is key to these definitions is not whether items are attached to one another, as urged by defendant, but whether the items stand in a relation one to the other that makes them ready for efficient service to meet a particular need or exigency" (United

2 As an example, which was previously quoted in People v Verdino (78 Misc 2d 719, 721 [Suffolk County Ct 1974], Webster's Third New International Dictionary provides: "[H]e was equipped with letters that opened every European door."

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States v Rodriguez, 841 F Supp 79, 83 [EDNY 1994], affd 53 F3d 545 [2d Cir 1995], citing People v Verdino, 78 Misc2d 719, 721 [Suffolk County Ct 1974]). Giving "equip" its commonly understood meaning, VTL 397 applies regardless of whether the prohibited device is physically attached to the motor vehicle, so long as the device is ready for efficient service. Other sections of the VTL use the terms "fastened," "mounted," "affixed," or "attached" in combination with the term "equipped" to describe the physical location of the object in the motor vehicle, which supports our construction of section 397. For example, VTL 375(48)(b) provides that a motor vehicle must be "equipped with a side view mirror which shall be affixed to the left side," and section 375(9) provides that a bus must be "equipped with one hand fire extinguisher mounted in a place readily accessible for use." If the legislature intended "equip" to mean that the object must be physically attached, the terms "affixed" and "mounted" would be unnecessary.

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