People v. Hawkins
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue common to these otherwise unrelated criminal appeals is the preservation for this Courtâs review of defendantsâ challenge to the legal sufficiency of the evidence.
People v Hawkins
On November 27, 2002, at approximately 2:00 p.m., Thomas Gallina called 911 and reported that someone with a hammer was breaking into his home. The operator heard Gallina yell for the intruder to leave and to let go, and then could hear only Gallinaâs moaning. When the police arrived shortly thereafter, they found Gallina, alone, on the kitchen floor in a pool of blood with several gruesome head injuries that later resulted in his death.
The police saw tire tracks on the driveway and footprints near various entrances to Gallinaâs house, which they later learned were defendantâs. Meanwhile, from a doorway in the house a police investigator collected blood evidence on a swab, âG,â placed it in a box marked âG,â and set it on top of a filing cabinet in the study; police later learned it was defendantâs blood. When the police left the house, the only people remaining there were family members, who cleaned up the broken glass, boarded up a broken window and locked the doors. None of them approached the filing cabinet where the swab was located.
Hours later, the police realized they were missing swab âGâ and returned to the house, but it was locked. After obtaining a
A grand jury indicted defendant for depraved indifference murder, felony murder and burglary in the second degree. At the close of trial, defendant moved for an order of dismissal as follows:
âI respectfully submit that the People have failed to prove a prima facie case of Depraved Indifference Murder. Not only have they failed to prove a prima facie case that my client Bryan Hawkins was the perpetrator of the homicide . . . but they failed to prove that Mr. Hawkins acted with Depraved Indifference Murder in that matter.â
After the trial court denied the motion, the jury convicted defendant of all three charged counts. The Appellate Division affirmed, 3-2, concluding that defendantâs legal sufficiency claim was unpreserved and that the People had proved a chain of custody for the blood evidence (48 AD3d 1279 [2008]). One of the dissenting Justices granted leave to appeal, and we affirm.
People v Eduardo
At 5:00 p.m. on April 13, 2005, Detectives Molina and Lansing, Sergeant Goggin, Undercover Officer 7567 and several other officers conducted a buy-and-bust operation in Manhattan. While driving around in an unmarked car, Molina and the undercover officer saw Adam Sanchez sell marihuana to an unidentified buyer on the sidewalk near where they were parked.
After the buyer walked away, the undercover exited the car. Sanchez called out âWeed.â The undercover approached Sanchez asking âWhat do you have? Dimes?â Sanchez confirmed that he had âdimes,â and the undercover requested two bags. Sanchez gave the undercover two bags of marihuana in exchange for $20 prerecorded buy money. When the undercover asked whether Sanchez was also selling cocaine, he said, â[G]ive me a few minutes.â Sanchez then approached defendant and Freddy Perez, who were standing a few feet away, near a bodega. The undercover pretended to converse with Molina, who observed Sanchez, Perez and defendant talking to one another;
During the brief time Perez was out of sight, Molina testified that defendant looked âwestbound . . . eastbound . . . north and south.â Perez then returned to the corner, where defendant stood, and placed a small object in the coin slot of a public telephone. Perez spoke to defendant and gestured to Sanchez. Sanchez then removed the object from the coin slot as defendant watched, âlooking north and southbound.â Sanchez gave Perez money, walked up to the undercover and handed her a clear bag containing cocaine, and the undercover gave Sanchez $30 in prerecorded buy money. During the cocaine transaction, defendant and Perez waited at the corner for a short time, then the two entered a double-parked van and drove away. Police pulled the van over, arrested defendant and Perez, and separately arrested Sanchez, who had $30 in prerecorded buy money and some marihuana. Laboratory tests proved that the purchase was cocaine.
A grand jury indicted all three defendants for criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree. At the close of the Peopleâs case at trial, defendant moved for a trial order of dismissal:
âthe court: All right. So you move for a trial order of dismissal on the grounds that the people have failed to make out a prima facie case which is denied.
â[counsel]: Yes.
âthe court: The defense rests. You move on the entire case beyond a reasonable doubt?
â[counsel]: Yes. . . .
â[counsel]: Just with respect to the failure of the people to make out a prima facie case, I know your Honor denied the motion. Just for the record essentially this case came down to an officer allegedly observing three people speaking on the street for a few minutes; then the defendant looking up and down the block. That hardlyâ
âthe court: And then taking off with the guys in the car.
â[counsel]: Going with one of them in the car.
*491 âthe court: The totality of the picture goes past prima facie. What do look-outs do? They look around. They swirl their necks in and out. They were talking. The three of them obviously are thick. Theyâre together. He takes off with the guy in theâ no, thatâs it. More than enough.â
The jury convicted defendant of criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree. On defendantâs appeal, the Appellate Division affirmed, holding that defendantâs challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence and constitutional claims were unpreserved, and in any event lacked merit (44 AD3d 371 [2007]). A Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal (10 NY3d 764 [2008]), and we affirm.
Analysis
Preservationâor, more precisely, the lack of preservationâ frequently accounts for the disposition of criminal cases in this Court. The issue, therefore, again merits some elaboration, not only to explain the result in the appeals before us but also in the interest of encouraging that a proper record be made in the first instance.
Analysis begins with the State Constitutionâs general limitation of the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals to questions of law (NY Const, art VI, § 3; see People v Belge, 41 NY2d 60, 62 [1976]).
The Criminal Procedure Law further provides that a question of law arises in a criminal proceeding when
âa protest thereto was registered, by the party claiming error, at the time of such ruling or instruction or at any subsequent time when the court had an opportunity of effectively changing the same.*492 Such protest need not be in the form of an âexceptionâ but is sufficient if the party made his position with respect to the ruling or instruction known to the court, or if in re[s]ponse to a protest by a party, the court expressly decided the question raised on appealâ (CPL 470.05 [2]).
To preserve for this Courtâs review a challenge to the legal sufficiency of a conviction, a defendant must move for a trial order of dismissal, and the argument must be âspecifically directedâ at the error being urged (People v Gray, 86 NY2d 10, 19 [1995]; People v Hines, 97 NY2d 56, 62 [2001]). As we have repeatedly made clearâand underscore againâgeneral motions simply do not create questions of law for this Courtâs review (see People v Finger, 95 NY2d 894, 895 [2000]; People v Bynum, 70 NY2d 858, 859 [1987]; People v Stahl, 53 NY2d 1048 [1981]; People v Cona, 49 NY2d 26, 33 n 2 [1979]).
Sound reasons underlie this preservation requirement. As we stated in Gray, a specific motion brings the claim to the trial courtâs attention, alerting all parties in a timely fashion to any alleged deficiency in the evidence, thereby advancing both the truth-seeking purpose of the trial and the goal of swift and final determination of guilt or nonguilt of a defendant (86 NY2d at 20-21). A defendantâs motion for a trial order of dismissal that specifies the alleged infirmity helps to assure that legally insufficient charges will not be submitted for the juryâs consideration, and serves the overall interest in an efficient, effective justice system.
Viewing the preservation requirement in the context of the individual trial, it is defense counsel who is charged with the single-minded, zealous representation of the client and thus, of all the trial participants, it is defense counsel who best knows the argument to be advanced on the clientâs behalf. Viewing the
Applying these principles to the facts before us, when Hawkinsâ counsel objected that the People âfailed to prove that Mr. Hawkins acted with Depraved Indifference Murder,â that motion did little more than argue that the People failed to prove the essential elements of depraved indifference murder. The objection could have been directed at either the reckless mens rea element, or the objective circumstances evincing a wanton, depraved indifference to human life, and did not alert the trial court to the argument now being advanced: that defendant acted intentionally, not recklessly, in killing the victim. Defendant did not preserve that legal question for our review.
People v Eduardo presents a different scenario. While defendant Eduardo raised no constitutional claims at trial, his legal sufficiency claim is in fact preserved, as the People now acknowledge. Defendantâs effort to specify his objection was frustrated by the trial judge, who plainly was aware of, and expressly decided, the question raised on appeal (CPL 470.05; People v Prado, 4 NY3d 725, 726 [2004]). The preserved issue, however, lacks merit. While defendant argues that the conviction is legally insufficient because no one heard his conversation with Perez and Sanchez, he never handled money or drugs, and the police recovered neither drugs nor money from him, in evaluating the sufficiency of his conviction, we must view the evidence in a light most favorable to the People. Accordingly, a rational factfinder could have inferred from the evidence that, based on the timing, defendantâs conversation must have been about the drug sale, defendantâs looking around was for the purpose of detecting law enforcement, and that, by leaving the scene with Perez, defendant shared Perezâs intent to sell drugs. Thus, the jury could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant aided in the sale and shared a community of purpose with his codefendants to sell cocaine.
Similarly, Eduardoâs contention that the Appellate Division did not correctly perform a weight of the evidence review is without merit.
Accordingly, the orders of the Appellate Division in People v Hawkins and People v Eduardo should be affirmed.
Judges Ciparick, Graffeo, Read, Smith, Pigott and Jones concur.
In each case: Order affirmed.
. Exceptions include death penalty appeals and determinations of the Judicial Conduct Commission, where the Court of Appeals has factual review powers (NY Const, art VI, § 3 [a]; § 22 [d]; see also Karger, Powers of the New York Court of Appeals § 1:3, at 10 [3d ed rev]). By contrast to the Court of Appeals, intermediate appellate courts have factual review powers and interest of justice jurisdiction in criminal proceedings (CPL 470.15 [1], [6]).
. By contrast, a defendant does not have to specifically object to errors that affect the mode of trial proceedings. As we explained in Gray, a mode of proceedings issue
âgoes to the general and over-all procedure of the trial, forbidding alteration of mandated procedural, structural, and process-oriented standards. The examples [of mode of proceedings errors]âchanging of the burden of proof, . . . deviation from State constitutionally mandated requirements for an indictmentâshow that the claimed errors [of legal insufficiency] should not fall within that exceptionâ (86 NY2d at 21-22).
Legal sufficiency errors affect the substance, not the mode of proceedings, of the trial.
. Reed v McCord, 160 NY 330, 335 (1899), quoted in Cardozo, Jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals of the State of New York, at 11 (2d ed 1909).