Opinion
Argued February 15, 1990
Decided April 5, 1990
Appeal from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Fourth Judicial Department, Lee Clary, J.
William J. McClusky for appellant.
Gary W. Miles, District Attorney (Cindy F. Intschert of counsel), for respondent.
MEMORANDUM.
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Defendant was arrested for the fatal stabbing of a fellow inmate at the Watertown Correctional Facility. Before arraignment, a local Spanish teacher was appointed to act as interpreter for defendant, whose English is limited, and she translated the Miranda warnings, which defendant indicated he understood. Defendant was not questioned by anyone. At some point during the arraignment proceedings, after the Town Justice had spoken, defendant inquired in Spanish if he could ask her something. Believing that defendant had a question about the Justice's last statement, the translator said yes without consulting the court. To her surprise, defendant then said, in Spanish, that he had a nervous condition, that he did not realize he had killed the man, and that he was guilty. The translator immediately informed the court of defendant's statement.
Defendant's right to counsel had attached at his arraignment, and any statement he made was inadmissible unless he had waived his right to counsel in the presence of counsel (People v Samuels, 49 N.Y.2d 218) or, as the lower courts found in this case, the statement was spontaneously volunteered and not the result of "inducement, provocation, encouragement or acquiescence" (People v Maerling, 46 N.Y.2d 289, 302-303).
Defendant has not established his contention — required in order for him to succeed on this appeal — that the statement he made was not spontaneous as a matter of law. Rather, there is support in the record for the undisturbed finding that defendant's statement was spontaneous, wholly self-generated, and not the result of any inducement (People v Anderson, 42 N.Y.2d 35, 38-39). Defendant initiated the exchange, and the translator's response, based on the reasonable belief that defendant merely wanted clarification of what she had just said, was neither intended nor objectively likely to elicit an inculpatory statement from defendant, who had been fully advised of his Miranda rights. Indeed, we have found sufficient support for a determination of spontaneity in circumstances where a police officer engaged in a far more extensive dialogue with the defendant than the bare permission to speak given by the translator here (see, People v Lynes, 49 N.Y.2d 286 [following arraignment, defendant asked police officer if he could speak to him]).
This case is by no means the first time that a defendant has been found to have made a spontaneous inculpatory statement after the indelible right to counsel has attached (as only a few of many examples see, People v Lynes, supra; People v Roucchio, 52 N.Y.2d 759; People v Rivers, 56 N.Y.2d 476; People v Ellis, 58 N.Y.2d 748). We tread no new ground at all in today's decision, and we in no way retreat from our recognition of the important rights accorded to a defendant upon the filing of formal criminal charges.
The novel rule is the one urged by defendant and the dissenter, requiring that we turn a deaf ear to admissions made by a defendant upon passing into the "authoritarian yet sanctuarial enclave of a court" (dissenting opn, at 943) though such admissions have been found by two courts to have met our already stringent requirements for spontaneous statements. This we decline to do. We have not previously established a requirement that a defendant affirmatively be stopped from making an inculpatory statement, and we see no reason to depart from our precedents to do so on these unusual facts.
Chief Judge WACHTLER and Judges SIMONS, KAYE, ALEXANDER, TITONE and HANCOCK, JR., concur; Judge BELLACOSA dissents and votes to reverse in an opinion.
Order affirmed in a memorandum.
The accused was an uncounseled incarcerated State felon unable to understand or speak English. As he was formally arraigned before a Judge in a State correctional facility on a new criminal charge committed in prison, he was "authorized" by an agent of the State — an ad hoc Spanish interpreter — to make an inculpatory statement in open court and on the record. After a suppression hearing, that statement was held admissible in evidence and a guilty plea followed. This person, facing the formal initiation of a criminal prosecution, was entitled to and needed all the protection our Constitutions, statutes and cases so assiduously confer on him. Yet the violation of this accused's right to counsel with respect to the use of his statement is being excused, because this otherwise inadmissible evidence is characterized as a spontaneous, voluntary utterance.
I respectfully dissent and vote to reverse and suppress.
The spontaneous utterance exception (see, e.g., People v Lynes, 49 N.Y.2d 286) is a gossamer sliver in the formidable counsel wall. It has never before been applied to an utterance made in a threshold judicial setting where a primary responsibility is the judicial advisement of rights, especially the central counsel right itself (CPL 180.10). The embellishment of the scene in this case is the agent of the State telling the uncomprehending accused to go right ahead and speak. If this accused had spontaneously uttered his question in English in this setting, there cannot be the slightest doubt of the arraigning Judge's required response: "Do not say anything without your counsel present, to which, by the way, you have an absolute right at this accusatory/arraignment stage of this criminal proceeding and which I have an additional obligation to provide to you." (See, CPL 180.10, [5]; People v White, 56 N.Y.2d 110, 112.)
Therefore, I conclude that this accused in these circumstances was legally incapable of providing a voluntary uncounseled statement. The invocation of the spontaneous utterance exception in such a setting converts the sliver in the counsel wall into a significant aperture. This is a difference in kind, not in degree, from the few exceptional applications of this subsidiary rule. It is, as I see it, the rule of law itself which is transformed. The undisturbed findings rationale cannot insulate this violation of the accused's desperately needed and perfectly appropriate right not to have statements used against him without his counsel having been present or provided at his arraignment.
I agree that an accused may blurt out a statement in any language in a court or anywhere else which may rightly qualify as an admissible spontaneous utterance under our existing rules. However, no matter in what language a question is posed by any accused, that accused who asks permission to speak up in court at an arraignment, as here, should receive an equal response before the law: "No. Not without your counsel present." If before or after that warning an accused nevertheless unilaterally chooses to make an admission, we shall have to confront and decide that quite different case when it arises (see, People v White, 56 N.Y.2d, supra, at 112).
A major flaw, as I understand it, in this case is that the majority, in order to allow the spontaneous utterance justification, necessarily concludes that the translator neither intended nor anticipated the accused's inculpatory remarks when she authorized him to speak. This reasoning relaxes the rigors of the spontaneity exception for uncounseled statements made by accuseds incapable of direct communication with a court and disadvantages those charged and compelled to rely on nonlawyer intermediaries when "directly confronted with the awesome law enforcement machinery possessed by the State" (People v Cunningham, 49 N.Y.2d 203, 207). The interposition of a translator even giving an accused only "bare permission" (majority mem, at 940) to speak in a courtroom cannot lessen the court's responsibility for safeguarding the rights of the accused in the unique, initial confrontation between the accused and the judicial system itself (see, e.g., CPL 180.10, [5]). Rather, I see that responsibility as heightened.
Moreover, inasmuch as the Sixth Amendment right to counsel is implicated here, the Miranda case and its warnings having to do with only Fifth Amendment violations are irrelevant. The custodial and formal accusatory categories are quite distinct (Brewer v Williams, 430 U.S. 387, 397-398) and, in any event, would suffer the same inconsequentiality here because Miranda warnings have no bearing on spontaneous utterances, and even with them there can be no cognizable waiver without counsel being present (People v Hobson, 39 N.Y.2d 479, 484).
However, this aspect of the discussion is academic as we all agree that the accused could not and did not waive his right to counsel. That right indelibly attached since a criminal prosecution was begun against him. Inasmuch as we have held that waiver in such circumstance is a legal impossibility (see, People v Samuels, 49 N.Y.2d 218), the rationale of this case for the first time applies the spontaneous utterance exception to the indelibly attached counsel right in a courtroom, where the express statutory safeguards tug in the opposite conclusion (CPL 180.10). As to whether it should apply in this case, we differ. I do not consider my approach "novel" by proposing that the neutral courtroom setting and judicial process should guarantee full and equal protection under the pertinent right to counsel rules. Indeed, the majority agrees with me in that respect, but the special protection regrettably failed to materialize in this case. Instead, the majority's nuanced change in the application of the exception inappropriately extends the law enforcement investigatory room into the courtroom for the accused's judicial arraignment and provides the prosecution with an evidence-gathering bonus.
People v Lynes ( 49 N.Y.2d 286, supra) must be contrasted with the Samuels line of cases and the instant case, as they are sharply different. In Lynes, an inculpatory statement was deemed spontaneous because "[t]he defendant himself initiated the conversation and the [police] officer's response [in a correctional custodial setting, not a court arraignment] need not have been viewed as one designed to elicit some further reply by the defendant." (Id., at 294.) Here, an accused in the preserve of the court itself asked to speak through the State's agent. The translator's direct permission to the accused — instead of asking the court for instructions as to how to respond — must be chargeable to the State and not to the accused in this situation. There can be no doubt in this circumstance that the accused's statement after the translator's authorization — necessarily "designed to elicit some further reply by the defendant" — is forbidden under two of the four categories of People v Maerling; it was "the result of * * * encouragement or acquiescence" ( 46 N.Y.2d 289, 302-303 [emphasis added]).
The majority of law-abiding citizens usually are content with the mere words of their constitutional protections, especially the counsel right, because most rarely find themselves in critical situations where counsel is needed. On the hard specific application, however, this accused's status as an incarcerated felon, being newly charged, cries out for action, not words. The authoritarian yet sanctuarial enclave of a court should warrant heightened vigilance, not the expansion of an exception to so fundamental a right.
The statement should have been suppressed and the prosecution's case put to its proof without the evidentiary acquisition at the arraignment.