People v. Felder

Decision Date31 October 1974
Citation360 N.Y.S.2d 136,45 A.D.2d 587
PartiesPEOPLE of the State of New York, Respondent, v. Leonard FELDER, Appellant.
CourtNew York Supreme Court — Appellate Division

Alfred P. Kremer, Rochester, for appellant.

Jack B. Lazarus, Rochester, for respondent (Christopher J. Enos, Rochester, of counsel).

Before MOULE, J.P., and CARDAMONE, SIMONS, MAHONEY and GOLDMAN, JJ.

OPINION

MOULE, Justice Presiding.

Anderson, Brunson and others were the participants in a card game in the back room of a pool hall in Rochester on the evening of March 21, 1972. Brunson was a winner and Anderson a loser. Anderson, after having lost all of his money, left the premises and in thirty minutes returned with defendant and they both stood about eight feet from Brunson. Anderson saw that Brunson had about $400 in his hand and said to defendant, 'We got to have that money' and defendant walked to about three feet from Brunson. After hearing this, Brunson was told by a spectator that 'this Joe is going to take your money.' Brunson then jumped on a table and then ran out the door. After about twenty feet, he began to walk until he saw the defendant come out the door, when he began to run again. The defendant chased Brunson and shouted, 'Nigger, drop that money.' When defendant was catching up to Brunson, the latter turned and defendant pulled a pistol out of his jacket and shot Brunson three times.

The trial court improperly received Brunson's testimony about the statement made by a spectator to him which warned that Anderson and defendant were going to take his money. However, this error does not require a new trial. The Court of Appeals has stated:

'Errors are almost inevitable in any trial, improprieties almost unavoidable, but the presence of one or the other furnishes no automatic signal for reversal and retrial. On review, the court's inquiry must be directed toward determining whether the claimed defect influenced the jury and tainted its verdict. If the record demonstrates that it did not, then, the defendant is not entitled to a second trial.' (People v. Kingston, 8 N.Y.2d 384, 387, 208 N.Y.S.2d 956, 959, 171 N.E.2d 306, 308.)

The circumstances surrounding the assault established beyond any reasonable doubt that the defendant's motive was robbery even without considering the inadmissible hearsay. The record establishes that Brunson was just leaving a card game in which he won a large amount of money and that defendant knew that Brunson had this money. Further, during the chase, Brunson heard defendant shout for him to drop his money. The crimes committed were of a violent nature and the evidence fully supports the jury's verdict, and therefore the admission of the evidence complained of was harmless error (Brown v. United States, 411 U.S. 223, 231, 93 S.Ct. 1565, 36 L.Ed.2d 208).

The judgment should be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

SIMONS, MAHONEY and GOLDMAN, JJ., concur.

CARDAMONE, J., dissents and votes to reverse the judgment and grant a new trial in the following Opinion.

CARDAMONE, Justice (dissenting).

The appellant was convicted on two counts of attempted robbery and two counts of assault on evidence improperly admitted at the trial. On March 21, 1972 the victim, Joe Brunson, Jr. arrived at a pool hall in Rochester, where he joined a card game. Later, one of the other players, Poncho Anderson, who had lost all his money, left the card room and then returned accompanied by the appellant, Leonard Felder. The two of them stood about eight feet from Brunson who was still at the card table with $400 in his hands. Brunson was permitted to testify on direct and redirect, over strong defense counsel objection, that Anderson said to appellant, Felder, 'We got to have that money'. According to Brunson, appellant then moved toward him. In describing the situation Brunson was permitted, again over objection, to testify as to what a bystander, C. J. Nelson, said, as follows: 'Q. You can state what C. J. Nelson said to you. Say that in a loud voice, please. A. Well, C. J. Nelson told me this Joe is going to take your money.' On redirect Brunson further stated that: 'C. J. Nelson said, Joe, I think they're planning to rob you.' The victim Brunson subsequently jumped on the card table and later ran out the door of the pool hall. He testified that 'pretty soon' appellant came out the door after him. Brunson began to run and appellant ran after him yelling, 'Nigger, drop that money'. He stated that appellant caught up to him in the parking lot and shot him in the chest, shoulder and head.

The only witness produced by the prosecution was the victim, Brunson. Neither Poncho Anderson nor C. J. Nelson was called as a witness at the trial. The appellant testified in his own behalf that Brunson jumped on the table declaring that he would not pay anyone, that Brunson had a knife in his possession, and that appellant then ran out of the pool hall.

In permitting Brunson to testify respecting Anderson's remark the trial court ruled that '(I)t may be stated as simply part of the entire picture', and with respect to C. J. Nelson's comment held that '(T)his goes to possible motivation for what defendant did.' Such rulings were erroneous. The only arguable basis for admitting these statements into evidence was as a spontaneous declaration or under the doctrine of Res gestae. These utterances were not either of these. Before a statement can be admitted as a spontaneous declaration it must be shown to be the impulsive and unreflective response of the declarant to some startling event (6 Wigmore, on Evidence, 3d ed., §§ 1745--1750; Richardson, on Evidence, 10th ed., § 281). Anderson's statement, '(W)e got to have that money', is plainly a statement which evidenced Anderson's intent or state of mind. To the extent that it might have been offered to establish the truth of the assertion stated in it, it cannot, on this record, be construed as spontaneous and unreflective. On the contrary, Anderson's statement is reflective, having come some time after he had an opportunity to consider his own losses and Brunson's good fortune at cards. Accordingly, it is not admissible as a spontaneous declaration. The statement of C. J. Nelson might have been properly received because the utterance '(T)his Joe is going to rob you', could be...

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1 cases
  • People v. Felder
    • United States
    • New York Court of Appeals Court of Appeals
    • July 10, 1975

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