The People &c.,
Appellant,
v.
Darwin Whipple,
Respondent.
2001 NY Int. 119
The issue on this appeal is whether, when the People
rest without evidence establishing an element of an offense, and
the defendant moves for a trial order of dismissal on that basis,
the Trial Court can permit the People to reopen their case and
cure the omission. We conclude that reopening is permissible
where the missing element is simple to prove and not seriously
contested, and reopening the case does not unduly prejudice the
defense. Because this rule did not, as a matter of law, preclude
the Trial Court's decision to let the People present limited
On the afternoon of March 14, 1998, defendant Darwin Whipple was seen driving his pickup truck into the wall of Dutch's Bar in the Town of Thompson. Deputy Sheriff Robert Clark arrived and asked Whipple to take a series of field sobriety tests, which Whipple failed. After his arrest, a test showed his blood alcohol content as 0.13 percent.
Whipple was indicted under Vehicle and Traffic Law sections 1192(2) and 1192(3), both in conjunction with section 1193(1)(C). The first count of the indictment alleged that Whipple drove while he had a blood alcohol content in excess of 0.10 percent; the second count charged that he drove while intoxicated, as evidenced by his physical condition and performance on the field sobriety tests. Each count alleged that Whipple drove in a "public parking lot."
At trial, the People asked an eyewitness whether the parking lot at Dutch's was a "public parking area," and the witness answered in the affirmative. Deputy Sheriff Clark testified to the same effect, and defense counsel cross-examined him about this very point:
"Q.
Now, you said that in the general area
there was a public parking lot, is that
correct?
"A.
Yes.
"Q.
That's not a public parking lot in the sense it's owned by the government or public, that's private property where the public would drive in and out to go to a private bar or some other business, is that correct?
"A.
It's an adjoining parking lot. There's several different businesses along that strip there.
"Q.
Okay. So, it's public in that it's open to the public, but it's private property, is that fair to say?
"A.
I believe so. It is open to the public, though, yes." Neither Deputy Sheriff Clark nor any other witness testified about the number of spaces in the parking lot before the People rested.
Late in the People's presentation of their direct case, the Trial Court, during a precharge conference, stated that it intended to instruct the jury on Vehicle and Traffic Law section 1192(7), which reads:
"* * * For the purposes of this section 'parking lot' shall mean any area or areas of private property, including a driveway, near or contiguous to and provided in connection with premises and used as a means of access to and egress from a public highway to such premises and having a capacity for the parking of four or more motor vehicles.
* * *"
Observing that this subsection pertains to driving under the influence "on public highways, public roads open to motor vehicle traffic and any other parking lot," the court directed the parties' attention to the statutory text and People v Williams, (66 2 659 [1985]). Defense counsel requested a chance to review the statute, while the prosecutor merely stated "That's fine, judge."
The People rested, and Whipple rested immediately thereafter. Whipple then moved for a trial order of dismissal directed at the lack of evidence that the parking lot at Dutch's Bar had the capacity to park four or more motor vehicles. Noting Deputy Sheriff Clark's testimony about "other premises" that shared the same parking area as Dutch's, the court stated that the People had made a prima facie case that the incident occurred in a public parking lot within the statutory definition. When the People moved to reopen their case pursuant to CPL 260.30, the court found that under this section it retained its "common law discretionary power to alter the order of proof at least up to the time the case is submitted to the jury." It further noted that the missing testimony would be crucial to the People's case and that granting the motion would not prejudice Whipple.
Having prevailed on their motion to reopen, the People
re-called Deputy Sheriff Clark and, with seven brief questions
and answers, established that the parking lot at Dutch's Bar has
On Whipple's appeal, the Appellate Division reversed, concluding that "while a trial court certainly has discretion in permitting witnesses to testify out of the usual order (see, CPL 260.30), that discretion does not permit the reopening of the case after a meritorious motion to dismiss for legal insufficiency following the close of all proof" (276 2 829, 830-831). The court found that the need to prove the parking lot's capacity was not unexpected after the precharge conference, and that the case was distinguishable from cases in which motions to reopen were made to permit previously unavailable witnesses to testify or to admit stipulations or exhibits into evidence. We now reverse.
Initially, we note that CPL 290.10(1), relied on by the
Appellate Division, does not resolve the issue before us. CPL
290.10(1) provides that a trial order of dismissal may be granted
if, "at the conclusion of the people's case or at the conclusion
of all the evidence * * * the trial evidence is not legally
sufficient to establish the offense charged therein or any lesser
included offense." Thus, the Appellate Division reasoned,
CPL 260.30(7), on which the People rely, is a somewhat closer fit. It provides that after the People rest but before the close of all evidence:
"The people may offer evidence in rebuttal of the defense evidence, and the defendant may then offer evidence in rebuttal of the people's rebuttal evidence. * * * In the interest of justice, the court may permit either party to offer evidence upon rebuttal which is not technically of a rebuttal nature but more properly a part of the offering party's original case."
CPL 260.30(7), then, permits the People to present evidence
"properly a part" of their case-in-chief after resting, under
some circumstances (see, e.g., People v Harris, , 57 NY2d 335, 345-
Nonetheless, review of CPL 260.30 has prompted us to observe that the statutory framework "is not a rigid one and the common-law power of the trial court to alter the order of proof 'in its discretion and in furtherance of justice' remains at least up to the time the case is submitted to the jury" (People v Olsen, , 34 NY2d 349, 353 [1974]). In Olsen we held that the trial court erred when it reopened the case during jury deliberations for submission of additional evidence relating to a witness's credibility, as the danger of the jury's according such evidence undue weight is considerable (id., at 355; see also, People v Behling, , 54 NY2d 995, 996 [1981]). We distinguished that danger, however, from the "risks" associated with a determination comparable to that made by the Trial Court here:
"The risks are not substantially increased when, upon the request of counsel, the case is reopened merely to supply a necessary element which has been overlooked. As a practical matter an element which has been forgotten, although technically essential, should generally be simple to prove and not hotly contested. * * * Thus, the possibility of seriously disrupting the trial process or unduly prejudicing one of the parties should not materialize"
(Olsen,
In this case, as in the situation we hypothesized in
Both sides, and the Appellate Division, recognize an
analogy between this case and People v Hollis (255 AD2d 615, lv
denied , 92 NY2d 1033 [1998]). In Hollis, the defendant was
convicted of assaulting a peace officer. "Peace officer" was a
defined term under the applicable statute, but the People
referred to the victim only as a court security officer, without
explaining how his job description fit within the statutory
definition. The Appellate Division held that the Trial Court did
not abuse its discretion in permitting the People to reopen in
Whipple argues that permitting the People to reopen enabled them to exploit his attorney's "work product," the legal research on the basis of which Whipple brought his motion. If, indeed, the People had moved to reopen in order to cure some defect in their case that became discernible only after a defense motion based on research, we might agree. In this case, however, the "work product" of defense counsel consisted only of noticing a facial requirement of Vehicle and Traffic Law section 1192(7) that was uncontested. Under such circumstances, we see no misappropriation of defense work product by the People.
As the Appellate Division pointed out, the People's
narrow circumstances where, as here, the
missing element is simple to prove and not seriously contested,
and reopening the case does not unduly prejudice the defense, a
court may, in its discretion, grant a motion to reopen.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the case remitted to that court for consideration of the facts.
1 Whipple additionally contends that when moving to reopen their case, the People should not be subject to a more lenient standard than a defendant moving to set aside a verdict or vacate a judgment (see, CPL 330.30; CPL 440.10[g]). The motion under review, however, did not implicate the same interests, as the jury had not yet begun to deliberate, much less arrived at a verdict.