Case ID: ny-2d_30/html/0315-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "\n      Breitel, J. Jasen, J. (dissenting).", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

The People of the State of New York, Respondent, v. Richard Flowers, Appellant.
    Argued March 20, 1972;
    decided May 4, 1972.
    
      
      Lawrence Stern and Leonard Rubin for appellant.
    
      Thomas J. Mackell, District Attorney (Thomas A. Duffy, Jr. of counsel), for respondent.
    
      William A. Nelson and William E. Hellerstein for The Legal Aid Society, amicus curiae.
    
   Breitel, J.

Defendant, convicted of felony on his plea of guilty, has sought to set aside his plea on the ground that it was exacted from him by the duress of circumstances. The ground is one often asserted, and entitled more often than not to short shrift when supported only by the convicted defendant’s say-so. What distinguishes this case is that during prior court proceedings and from information supplied to the court by his lawyer, it remains undisputed that apart from any other motives he might be supposed to have had, defendant was sexually abused, beaten, and in “ potential danger ” of his life, so long as he remained in the local jail. During this period he requested, in vain, transfer to another jail, and when he finally pleaded guilty he was concerned with whether and how soon he would be removed from the local jail.

The pleading court, after a hearing, denied defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea, finding generally that defendant was not believable and that it did not believe him. If the issue turned on defendant’s credibility alone that would be the end of the matter, but it does not. The court transcripts and the information conveyed by defendant’s lawyer, never disputed, demonstrate that to some extent defendant’s guilty plea was occasioned by duress. If that be true, it is not tolerable that the plea should stand (cf. People v. Nixon, 21 N Y 2d 338, 344; People v. Serrano, 15 N Y 2d 304, 310). Hence, there should be a reversal, a vacatur of the conviction, and the action remanded.

Under prosecution for criminal possession of stolen property and dangerous weapons, defendant was detained in the Queens House of Detention since sometime after his arrest on February 25,1970, until after he pleaded guilty. During this period in October, 1970, the jail was the scene of riots and a take-over by the inmates. On November 9, 1970 defendant pleaded guilty to a class D felony to cover the described charges and a later indictment for sodomy arising out of an event in the Queens jail. At the time of the plea, there were conversations among the pleading Judge, defendant’s Legal Aid lawyer, and defendant, whether, if defendant pleaded guilty, he would be transferred out of the Queens jail to the Manhattan jail. Before that defendant had made several motions seeking a transfer reciting the abuse to which he had been subjected. The motions had been denied. On the plea withdrawal hearing defendant’s Legal Aid lawyer testified that the warden, the captain, and several guards at the jail had told him that defendant was in “potential danger” of his life. He testified, moreover, that defendant was not persuaded to plead to a class D felony rather than the lesser class E felony until he was told that the pleading court would not entertain a transfer from the Queens jail if the Queens sodomy indictment were still outstanding.

During the plea withdrawal hearing defendant’s then lawyer said on the record that defendant had said to him that if withdrawal of the plea meant that he would have to stay in the Queens jail pending trial, he wished to withdraw the motion. There is more testimony of this sort emanating from defendant’s lawyers and attributed to the prison personnel, without contradiction. It is not useful to detail it all. It suffices to show that more than defendant’s credibility on his say-so was presented in open court before the plea and, later, in testimony on the plea withdrawal hearing.

Critical to the sequence of events is that defendant, before sentence, moved to withdraw his plea on December 16, 1970, he having pleaded guilty on November 9, 1970. Moreover, he had filed papers in the Federal court in another proceeding, several days before he pleaded guilty, describing the barbaric abuse to which he had been subjected in the Queens jail. The letters defendant sent to the Federal court were received in evidence on the plea withdrawal hearing.

On this history of defendant’s plea it is precious to explore whether he is in fact guilty of the crimes charged (assume he is), whether he was or is unable to stand trial and avoid a conviction (that may well be), or whether he is a homosexual and, therefore, a likely victim in a jail (assume he is), and whether as a result of the foregoing he was in part motivated to plead guilty (assume he was). The guilty plea may not stand, even if only in part it was indisputably motivated by duress visited on defendant by anarchic and criminal conditions in the jail. Nor should it be necessary that there be a high probability that the guilty plea was tainted. The State is not so short of grist for its criminal mill that it must absorb convictions obtained in the corroborated circumstances present here. No one may consider the events in this case, quite apart from defendant’s testimonial versions, without concluding that there is palpable evidence that the guilty plea lacks the integrity and stability acceptable in a civilized criminal system.

In short, as a matter of law, the plea is tainted if it appears on the uncontradicted evidence that it was motivated in part by the barbarous prison abuses directly involving Flowers. It is immaterial that the hearing court did not believe that the alleged duress was the only motivation for the plea, assuming that is what the hearing court meant by its general statement that it disbelieved Flowers. Thus, on this analysis, the court does not disturb, as it may not, the findings of fact, as contrasted with reviewable questions of law, propounded by the hearing court.

Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, the motion to withdraw the plea of guilty granted, and the action remanded to the trial court for appropriate proceedings.

Jasen, J. (dissenting).

I would affirm.

The trial court, after a full hearing, determined that defendant did not tell the truth when he claimed his guilty plea was coerced by conditions in the Queens House of Detention (QHD). This finding of fact was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division.

In my opinion, the undisputed factual history of this case convincingly supports the conclusion of the courts below — that the defendant’s plea of guilty was voluntarily interposed. Certainly, nothing is present in this record which would require reversal, as a matter of law, of the affirmed findings of fact. This being so, it is an undoubted abuse of our powers of review. (Cohen and Karger, Powers of the New York Court of Appeals, § 198, subd. [b], p. 745.)

A review of the record discloses that “ [tjhere has been a studied effort on this defendant’s part * * * to avoid going to trial. ’ ’ The prosecutor, at the hearing on the motion to withdraw the plea, stated, ‘1 This is a case where the defendant was indicted on April 22, 1970. We have been prepared to go to trial with this case since June 3 of 1970 * * * [I]t’s been on the calendar almost thirty, forty times.” Defendant’s own counsel testified at the hearing that he told the defendant on October 30, 1970 that “ we would have to go to trial on this case and that the Court would not permit' us to delay any more ’ ’.

On November 9, 1970,. defense counsel was ready to take defendant’s case to trial. He had requested the warden have defendant’s hair and beard cut to make defendant presentable. Defendant’s mother was asked to bring clothing to the defendant for that same purpose. At this point, defendant, who had previously been informed that Legal Aid would not accept a plea of guilty from an innocent man, stated he wished to plead guilty, and related the details of the crimes to his attorney. Defense counsel testified he had never told defendant that pleading guilty would obtain a transfer from QHD. Further, defense counsel testified that the ‘1 [defendant] did not tell me he was pleading guilty to this crime because he wanted to get out of the jurisdiction. ’ ’ An agreement was reached by defense counsel with the prosecutor and court that defendant would plead guilty to a class E felony in satisfaction of all counts, but not including the sodomy indictment. It was only after being informed of this agreement that defendant 1 ‘ then asked [defense counsel] to go into the courtroom and ask the Judge whether he could be sent to the Tombs.” Defense counsel informed the defendant that 11 [the Judge] would consider the possibility of sending him to the Tombs, but it could not be the basis of the plea; that he was giving [defense counsel] no promises as to what he was going to do ”. The prosecutor brought the outstanding Queens sodomy indictment to the court’s attention, and the court indicated that trial on that indictment would bar defendant’s transfer from QHD. The defendant then agreed to plead guilty to the dangerous weapon and stolen property charges as a class D felony, and thus dispose of the sodomy charge as well. In pleading guilty before the court, the defendant admitted the details of the dangerous weapon and stolen property charges.

The timing and other circumstances of this case convincingly demonstrate the hearing court did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea. Defendant’s fear for his life, as indicated by his motions to transfer from QHD, both before and after the riots, existed at least as early as August 1, and probably even earlier. Still, it was the defendant who purposefully followed a course of delaying the trial—having it postponed approximately 30 times, from June 3,1970 to November 9, 1970. It was only on November 9, 1970, when it had become clear beyond any doubt the case would no longer be delayed, that defendant chose to admit his guilt, both orally and in writing, to counsel and the court.

Moreover, the record discloses that the defendant did not inquire as to the transfer until after the negotiations with regard to the class E felony had been completed. Of importance is the undisputed fact that he was informed immediately that no promises were being made as to whether defendant would be transferred upon his plea of guilty. Defendant, at least according to his own attorney’s testimony, never informed him he was pleading guilty for the purpose of obtaining a transfer.

It should also be noted that defendant’s guilty plea to the class D felony disposed of the first degree sodomy indictment — a class B felony. Thus, the guilty plea yielded defendant a substantial benefit in reducing the permissible sentence that could be imposed.

In my view, on the record before us, it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the denial of the defendant’s application to withdraw his plea of guilty was an improper exercise of discretion.

Chief Judge Fttld and Judges Burke and Gibson concur with Judge Breitel; Judge Jasen dissents and votes to affirm in a separate opinion in which Judges Scileppi and Bergan concur.

Order reversed and case remitted to Supreme Court, Queens County, for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein.