The People v. Rhian Taylor
The People of the State of New York, Respondent, v. Rhian Taylor, Appellant
Attorneys
POINTS OF COUNSEL, Law Offices of Joel B. Rudin, P.C., New York City (Joel B. Rudin and Steven R. Aquino of counsel), for appellant., Richard A. Brown, District Attorney, Kew Gardens (Sharon Y. Brodt, John M. Castellano and Laura T. Ross of counsel), for respondent.
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION OF THE COURT
The dispositive issue on this appeal is whether a trial court abuses its discretion and commits reversible error when, in response to a request from a deliberating jury, it does not provide the jury with a substantial portion of requested evidence regarding the potential bias of key prosecution witnesses and then suggests to the jury that there is no other evidence relevant to its inquiry. Under the circumstances of this case, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion in taking such actions, necessitating reversal of defendantâs convictions.
L
Based on his alleged shooting of Wayne Peacock and Darion Brown, which resulted in Brownâs death, defendant Rhian Taylor was indicted and tried on charges of murder in the second degree (see Penal Law § 125.25 [1]), attempted murder in the second degree (see Penal Law §§ 110.00; 125.25 [1]), assault in the first degree (see Penal Law § 120.10 [1]), assault in the second degree (see Penal Law § 120.05), reckless endangerment in the first degree (see Penal Law § 120.25) and two counts of criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree (see Penal Law § 265.03 [1] [b]; [3]). According to the Peopleâs proof at trial, the shooting occurred during a dispute outside the location of a party in Queens.
Specifically, on the night of August 10, 2007, Brown drove Peacock, as well as their friends Seprel Turner and Anthony Hilton, to the site of the festivities. Upon their arrival and while they remained in the car, Brown tried to flirt with a
Within a couple of days, Peacock led the police to Turner, who was shown a photo array and identified defendant as the shooter. Acting on this identification, the police searched for defendant, who eventually surrendered. On August 14, Turner identified defendant in a lineup. Meanwhile, Hilton learned that the police were looking for him, and he decided to speak to them; in Hiltonâs telling, â[b]ecause they w[ere] riding around [the] neighborhood with [his] pictureâ and he was âgoing to court for a case,â he âfelt [he] needed to take care of it.â Hilton informed the police of his observations of the crime, and he identified defendant in a photo array as the perpetrator.
Months later, in 2008, Hilton was arrested on unrelated charges. Because Hilton was already on probation in connection with another criminal matter, he was charged with violating his probation. When Hilton appeared in court to answer the specifications of a probation violation, the prosecutor who handled the instant case also attended that court appearance and requested that no bail be set in Hiltonâs case. In August 2009, Hilton pleaded guilty to the violation without any negotiated plea. The court returned Hilton to a five-year term of probation. While he continued serving his probation term, Hilton shoplifted a scarf from a store, leading to his arrest and eventual conviction on a charge of criminal possession of stolen property. Hilton also had prior convictions for menacing and disorderly conduct.
As for Turner, over a year after the shooting, in late 2009, he was arrested for unlawfully possessing a weapon. Thereafter, the People and Turner negotiated a plea agreement, under which Turner would plead guilty to criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree, a felony, and to criminal posses
At trial, Turner acknowledged that he would obtain other benefits as a natural consequence of the deal. For example, by receiving only a misdemeanor conviction, he could not be sentenced as a second felony offender on any future crime that he might commit. And, Turner, who was pursuing a career as a rap artist, would avoid incarceration, thereby ensuring that he would not jeopardize his recently signed contract with a record label due to imprisonment. As previously noted, Turner and Hilton were the only witnesses who identified defendant as the man who shot Brown and Peacock.
After the presentation of proof of the foregoing facts at trial, the parties presented their summation arguments. In his summation, defense counsel argued that Hilton and Turner had been motivated to testify falsely against defendant, and in addition to the Peopleâs written cooperation agreement with Turner, counsel cited Turnerâs testimony about the additional benefits he would naturally receive from his plea and Hiltonâs testimony about the Peopleâs intervention at his probation hearing as proof of the witnessesâ bias in favor of the People. Counsel also argued that Hilton had a motive to kill Brown out of jealousy over Brownâs flirtation with Hiltonâs friend, and counsel denounced Turner and Hilton as untrustworthy criminals whose testimony should be discounted. In her summation, the prosecutor countered that the only material benefits which Turner had received were those set forth in the cooperation agreement, and she insisted that the Peopleâs advocacy for Hiltonâs release without bail in his case did not give Hilton a motive to testify favorably to the People in this case.
Prior to the start of the juryâs deliberations, the parties agreed that the court could submit any exhibits in evidence to the jury upon request without having to reconvene the parties and the jury in open court. The next day, the deliberations commenced, and before any proceedings occurred in open court, the jury issued three notes. The first note said, âWe would like to see all the Peopleâs exhibits of the car inside, outside, and
The next day, prior to the start of proceedings on the record, the jury issued its fourth and fifth notes. The fourth note declared, â[W]e would like to see the benefits offered to Mr. Hilton and Mr. Turner, please.â The fifth note stated, âWe would like to have definition of reasonable doubt.â In response to the fourth note asking to see the benefits offered to the witnesses, the court sent the jurors the written cooperation agreement between the People and Turner, without consulting the parties. Thereafter, on the record, the court allowed the parties to inspect the two notes, and it read the contents of the notes aloud.
Defense counsel objected to the courtâs response to the fourth note. Counsel essentially asserted that the response was incomplete without a readback of Turnerâs and Hiltonâs testimony about the benefits they had received outside the context of the written cooperation agreement, such as the career-related and sentencing benefits to Turner and the pretrial release obtained by Hilton in his probation matter. The court replied that the jurors âdidnât ask for thatâ and had âgotten the agreement,â adding, âIf they want anything more Iâll be there to listen.â When the court returned the jurors to the courtroom, it said, âI believe we sent in to you the cooperation agreement with Mr. Turner. Thatâs what is in evidence.â Next, the court proceeded to answer the fifth note, stated, âWe will be here if you need anything,â and sent the jurors back to the jury room.
Outside the presence of the jury, the court told defense counsel that its comments had accurately indicated to the jurors that they had received only an agreement between the
Following the contested fourth note, deliberations continued for just over two more days, and the jury issued, and the court answered, several more notes, including one stating that the jury was deadlocked. Finally, on the fifth day of deliberations, the jury rendered a verdict convicting defendant of second-degree murder, second-degree assault, two counts of second-degree weapons possession and first-degree reckless endangerment. After post-verdict proceedings not relevant to the disposition of this appeal, the court sentenced defendant to an aggregate prison term of 20 years to life, to be followed by five years of postrelease supervision, and defendant appealed.
The Appellate Division unanimously affirmed defendantâs convictions (see People v Taylor, 120 AD3d 842, 842-843 [2d Dept 2014]). As relevant here, the Appellate Division rejected defendantâs contention that the trial court had improperly responded to the fourth jury note by failing to read back Turnerâs and Hiltonâs testimony about the benefits they received in other cases based on their aid to the People in defendantâs case (see id. at 842-843). Essentially adopting the trial courtâs reasoning, the Appellate Division declared,
âWhile it may have been preferable for the court to seek further clarification from the jury with respect to its request to âsee the benefits,â the wording of the subject jury note, particularly when read in conjunction with several other notes, demonstrated that the jury was requesting only the physical exhibit,â and therefore the courtâs âresponse did not fall outside the acceptable bounds of its discretion,*224 and thus satisfied the requirement of CPL 310.30â {id. [citations omitted]).
A Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal, and we now reverse (24 NY3d 1089 [2014]).
IL
CPL 310.30 provides that, â[u]pon such a requestâ for evidence or legal instruction from a deliberating jury, âthe court must direct that the jury be returned to the courtroom and, after notice to both the people and counsel for the defendant, and in the presence of the defendant, must give such requested information or instruction as the court deems proper.â Similarly, absent a withdrawal of the juryâs inquiry or similar circumstances, common-law principles of procedural fairness generally require the court to furnish the jury with information requested during its deliberations, and the court has significant discretion in determining the proper scope and nature of the response (see People v Gonzalez, 293 NY 259, 262-263 [1944] [âThe general rule in the United States is that âthe court may and ordinarily should give the jurors additional instructions on their requestâ â], quoting 23 CJS, Criminal Law § 1376 [c] at 1046 [1940]; see also People v Malloy, 55 NY2d 296, 302-303 [1982]). Thus, regardless of whether the issue is framed under CPL 310.30 or common-law rules governing jury deliberations, where, as here, the defendant has preserved for our review a specific objection to the contents of the trial courtâs response to a jury note, we must determine whether the trial court acted within the bounds of its discretion in fashioning an answer to the juryâs inquiry (see Malloy, 55 NY2d at 302; see also People v Cooke, 292 NY 185, 188 [1944] [noting that, under a pre-CPL 310.30 statute, which reflected to some extent the common law, not every refusal to answer the jury in a particular manner constituted reversible error]). In determining whether the trial court abused its discretion and committed reversible error, â[t]he factors to be evaluated are the form of the juryâs question, which may have to be clarified before it can be answered, the particular issue of which inquiry is made, the [information] actually given and the presence or absence of prejudice to the defendantâ (Malloy, 55 NY2d at 302; see People v Steinberg, 79 NY2d 673, 684 [1992]).
In this case, an evaluation of those factors demonstrates that the trial court abused its discretion by declining to provide the jurors with information that they plainly wanted and incor
Contrary to the trial courtâs supposition, the jury could not have desired exclusively to receive the written cooperation agreement, as that agreement did not provide any benefits to Hilton and simply memorialized a portion of the benefits received by Turner. Given the juryâs entreaty for all proof of Turnerâs and Hiltonâs gains related to their assistance in the prosecution of defendant, the court should have supplied the jurors not only with the cooperation agreement, but also with: Turnerâs testimony that the cooperation agreementâs provision for a non-prison sentence enabled him to keep a potentially lucrative recording deal; his testimony that his plea to a misdemeanor allowed him to avoid receiving a predicate felony offender adjudication on any future conviction; and Hiltonâs testimony that the trial prosecutor in defendantâs case spared him from having to post bail in his probation proceeding.
Although, as the trial court noted, the jurorsâ expressed wish âto seeâ the pertinent evidence might have implied a desire solely to view an exhibit, this single phrase did not undermine the noteâs otherwise clear request for the entirety of the evidence of benefits conferred upon Turner and Hilton, especially in light of the context in which the note was issued. Notably, in their summations, both parties disputed the extent to which the written cooperation agreement and the witnessesâ testimony on the subject of benefits reflected the witnessesâ motives to testify in favor of the People, thereby drawing the jurorsâ attention to all of that evidence in a manner that would naturally prompt them to request that proof in its entirety. More importantly, prior to the issuance of the fourth note, the jurors had expressed their desire to visually inspect physical exhibits by specifically referring to particular physical objects, such as âphoto arrays,â âsketches]â or âexhibits,â and therefore,
In addition, since the issue about which the jury inquired, namely the Peopleâs favorable treatment of Turner and Hilton, was essential to the juryâs ability to judge the credibility of the sole witnesses to identify defendant as Brownâs killer and Peacockâs assailant, the courtâs inadequate response to the juryâs query on that central issue further reflected the courtâs abuse of its discretion. Given the lack of any other testimony or physical evidence that defendant was the shooter,
Moreover, after the court failed to supply the jurors with the full extent of the requested evidence, the court made comments suggesting that the remainder of the sought-after proof did not exist, and the combination of the courtâs failure to give the jury necessary information and its inaccurate follow-up remarks prejudiced the defense. Specifically, when the court told the jurors that the written cooperation agreement between the People and Turner was âwhat [was] in evidenceâ in relation to their note, the court incorrectly indicated that there was no evidence, other than the agreement, regarding benefits received by Hilton and Turner, even though testimony about such benefits did in fact exist. Based on this statement, the jurors may have erroneously believed that either their recollection of the existence of such evidence was faulty or the testimony they had sought was irrevelant, prompting them to cease their inquiry into this important evidence based on false assumptions. Since the Peopleâs proof of defendantâs identity as the shooter was less than overwhelming and the courtâs response to the note seriously inadequate, the court abused its discretion as a matter of law, and reversal is required.
In reaching this conclusion, we do not signal any erosion of a trial courtâs discretion in answering jury notes. In acting within the bounds of discretion delineated by People v Malloy (55 NY2d 296) and similar cases, a trial court retains leeway to shape its response to the jurorsâ inquiry based on the record as a whole and the applicable law, and if the court entertains some doubt as to the meaning of a jury note, it can and should seek clarification from the jury (see Lykes, 81 NY2d at 769-770). Additionally, if some of the circumstances here were to arise in isolation in other cases, they might not support the conclusion that the trial court abused its discretion in answering a note, for no single factor is dispositive. Thus, we go no further than to hold that, under the totality of the circumstances in this case, the trial court abused its discretion as a matter of law by failing to adequately answer the jurorsâ fourth note and creating a false impression of the nature of the evidence.
Because defendantâs challenge to the substance of the trial courtâs response to the juryâs fourth note mandates reversal of his convictions, we need not decide whether the court committed a mode of proceedings error by revealing the contents of the fourth note to the parties only after it had sent the cooperation agreement to the jury, and we express no opinion on that matter. For the same reason, we need not address defendantâs remaining contentions. Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
Although defendantâs DNA was found on a cigarette filter near several shell casings at the scene of the shooting, this evidence showed that defendant was in close proximity to the shooting and not that he was necessarily the shooter.