MARCY L. KAHN, J.
On June 27, 2014, defendant Jerry Province was convicted after a jury trial of one count of assault in the second degree (Penal Law § 120.05 [3]), one count of obstructing governmental administration in the second degree (Penal Law § 195.05) and one count of resisting arrest (Penal Law § 205.30). The People sought to have defendant adjudicated a second violent felony offender (Penal Law § 70.04 [1]) pursuant to CPL 400.15 and sentenced accordingly. Citing CPL 400.15 (7) (b), defendant, then acting pro se, challenged the People's proposed adjudication on the ground that the proposed predicate violent felony convictions upon which that adjudication would be based were obtained in violation of his federal constitutional rights and therefore could not serve as predicate felony convictions in this case. The convictions in question are defendant's convictions upon his pleas of guilty on November 18, 1999, in Supreme Court, Kings County, to burglary in the second degree, a class C violent felony (Penal Law § 140.25 [2]), under each of two indictments (People v Province, Sup Ct, Kings County, indictment Nos. 3581/99, 4710/99) (1999 convictions or 1999 plea cases), for which he received concurrent sentences of four years' imprisonment on December 3, 1999. The People maintained that the violation in question is not of a federal constitutional nature affecting predicate sentencing enhancement and that the alleged violation could not be retrospectively challenged either under the law applicable at the time of defendant's plea or under the current law as applied to defendant's plea under general principles of retroactivity.
On November 21, 2014, this court determined, in an oral ruling, that defendant was not procedurally barred from challenging the federal constitutionality of his 1999 convictions in the instant predicate sentencing proceeding; that defendant's 1999 convictions were obtained in violation of his federal constitutional rights under People v Catu (4 N.Y.3d 242 [2005]); and that they could not serve as predicate felony convictions for sentence enhancement purposes here. This court then adjudicated defendant a first violent felony offender and sentenced him accordingly. (Penal Law § 70.02 [2] [a].)
As stated, on June 27, 2014, after a jury trial,
On September 2, 2014, the predicate adjudication hearing continued, with further oral argument concerning the constitutionality of the 1999 convictions. This court adjourned the proceeding for the People and defendant's legal advisor to submit written briefs in support of their respective positions.
By amicus curiae letter brief dated September 24, 2014, Michael Fineman, Esquire, then legal advisor to defendant, argued that defendant's 1999 convictions were obtained in violation of People v Catu, in that the sentencing court failed to advise defendant that his sentences would each include a period of postrelease supervision (PRS). Counsel argued that defendant's pleas were thus not knowingly, intelligently or voluntarily entered, violating defendant's rights to due process under the Federal Constitution, rendering them unavailable as predicate felony convictions for sentencing enhancement purposes in this case. (See CPL 400.15 [7] [b].)
On October 6, 2014, the People served and filed their response to the amicus curiae letter brief (affirmation of Ryan Hayward, Esquire, dated Oct. 6, 2014), asserting that a Catu error does not constitute a federal constitutional violation for
On October 9, 2014, defendant refused to be produced by the New York City Department of Correction for his court appearance. Due to defendant's refusal to appear, this court withdrew defendant's right to pro se representation and reassigned Mr. Fineman as his defense counsel. The predicate hearing was further adjourned for a further submission by defense counsel, to be followed by the court's ruling on defendant's predicate status on November 21, 2014.
On October 16, 2014, this court received a memorandum of law from defense counsel Fineman in further support of defendant's position. On November 21, 2014, with defendant present, the court issued its oral ruling, granting the defense motion precluding enhanced sentencing of defendant on the ground that the 1999 convictions violated defendant's federal constitutional rights under Catu. Defendant was sentenced as indicated as a first violent felony offender.
To establish that a defendant is subject to sentencing as a second violent felony offender under Penal Law § 70.04, the People have the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant has been subjected to the predicate violent felony conviction in question. (CPL 400.15 [7] [a]; People v Konstantinides, 14 N.Y.3d 1, 15 [2009]; People v Harris, 61 N.Y.2d 9, 145 [1983].) Once the People have satisfied this requirement, the burden shifts to the defendant to prove that the conviction was unconstitutionally obtained, offering sufficient facts to overcome the presumptions of validity and regularity of his prior felony convictions. (See Harris, 61 NY2d at 16.)
In this case, defendant's application presents several issues, each of which this court will address in turn.
The threshold question before the court is whether defendant may raise his Catu challenge in the current predicate adjudication proceeding.
The Appellate Division, First Department has recognized that a defendant has an independent right to challenge a prior conviction on Catu grounds, even if there has been no appeal of that conviction. (People v Santiago, 91 A.D.3d 438, 439 [1st Dept 2012].) Accordingly, defendant may raise such a challenge at the predicate adjudication proceedings in this case. (See also CPL 400.15 [7] [b] [a defendant may raise a federal constitutional challenge to a predicate violent felony conviction "at any time during the course of the (predicate adjudication) hearing"].)
The next question to be answered is whether a Catu error occurred at defendant's 1999 plea allocution. Upon review of the transcript of that allocution (tr of proceedings, 1999 plea cases, Nov. 18, 1999), this court finds that the plea court made no reference to PRS at any time in the course of the proceedings. Accordingly, the court finds that, to the extent that the Catu rule is applicable to the plea proceedings resulting in the 1999 convictions, it was violated by the plea court.
The People's contention (citing People v Catu, 2 A.D.3d 306 [1st Dept 2003]) that defendant has not raised a viable Catu claim because he has failed to show prejudice, i.e., that "knowledge of the postrelease supervision component of [his] sentence would ... have affected defendant's decision to plead guilty" (id. at 306), is erroneous. In its decision in Catu, the Court of Appeals reversed the ruling of the First Department and expressly disavowed any such requirement. (4 NY3d at 245.)
The third issue presented is whether a Catu error amounts to a federal constitutional violation, triggering defendant's rights under the statute.
Criminal Procedure Law § 400.15 (7) (b) provides, in pertinent part, that in the context of a second violent felony offender adjudication, a defendant may challenge the use of a previous conviction as a predicate felony conviction on the ground that it was "obtained in violation of the rights of the defendant under the applicable provisions of the constitution of the United States." As the statute provides for challenges of predicate felony convictions on federal, but not state, constitutional grounds (see People v Nevarez, 62 A.D.3d 585 [1st Dept 2009], lv denied 12 N.Y.3d 927 [2009]), defendant's challenge to the use of his convictions in the 1999 plea cases is not viable unless Catu embodies federal constitutional principles.
Citing People v Nevarez and People v Alvarado (67 A.D.3d 430, 431 [1st Dept 2009], lv denied 13 N.Y.3d 936 [2010]), the People contend that Catu rests solely on state constitutional grounds, rendering the decision inapplicable as a defense in sentencing enhancement proceedings under CPL 400.15 (7) (b).
In holding that the failure of a plea court to advise a defendant of the PRS component of a sentence violates due process requirements by rendering the plea not knowingly, intelligently
Further, Catu cited Ford in observing that "the court must advise a defendant of the direct consequences of the plea." (People v Catu, 4 NY3d at 244, citing People v Ford, 86 N.Y.2d 397.) Catu defined a "direct" consequence as "one which has a definite, immediate and largely automatic effect on defendant's punishment" (People v Catu, 4 NY3d at 244), again quoting Ford (86 NY2d at 403), which, in turn, quoted Cuthrell v Director, Patuxent Inst. (475 F.2d 1364 [4th Cir 1973], cert denied 414 U.S. 1005 [1973]), another federal due process case, for that principle. Thus, Catu's antecedents demonstrate, at the very least, that the Catu decision is rooted in both federal and state constitutional principles.
The recent decision of the Court of Appeals in People v Pignataro (22 N.Y.3d 381 [2013]), implicitly acknowledged that a Catu error is a federal constitutional violation. The Court there, in declining to follow the view expressed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit which had denied habeas corpus relief based upon a Catu claim on the ground that PRS is not a direct consequence of a guilty plea, explained that it was not bound by the interpretation of the Federal Constitution set forth by lower federal courts, "[which] directly contradicts this Court's Catu line of cases." (Id. at 386 n 3.) The Court of Appeals therefore "decline [d] the invitation to
Further support for viewing a Catu error as a federal constitutional violation may be found in the recent case of People v Fagan (116 A.D.3d 451 [1st Dept 2014]). While the Appellate Division, First Department was there presented with a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the Fagan court nonetheless remanded the case to the nisi prius court for a new predicate felony adjudication and resentencing proceeding upon finding that defense counsel had ineffectively failed to investigate and raise a Catu claim as to the defendant's prior violent felony conviction at the original predicate felony hearing. In language most telling for purposes of the People's argument in the instant case, the Appellate Division explained its reason for having ordered a new predicate felony adjudication and sentencing proceeding:
In Fagan, had the unadvanced Catu error not sounded in federal constitutional law, the Appellate Division most certainly would not have found ineffectiveness, but rather futility in counsel's not having raised the issue (see People v Caban, 5 N.Y.3d 143, 152 [2005]), and would have had no reason for ordering a new predicate felony adjudication.
Upon the Appellate Division's remand, the plea justice, who had adjudicated the defendant a mandatory persistent violent felony offender (Penal Law § 70.08) and had sentenced him to 18 years to life imprisonment at his original sentencing, found defendant to be a second violent felony offender (Penal Law § 70.04) and resentenced him to 15 years' imprisonment to be followed by five years' PRS. This result, apparent from the court records (People v Fagan, Sup Ct, Bronx County, indictment No. 944/09), establishes that one of the defendant's three predicate convictions was no longer used in the adjudication of his predicate status. Given the arguments advanced in the Appellate Division, the third violent felony conviction was likely jettisoned under CPL 400.15 (7) (b) on Catu grounds.
Similarly, in People v Santiago, court records (People v Santiago, Sup Ct, NY County, indictment No. 3998/06) reveal that on remand, defendant, who had originally been adjudicated a second violent felony offender, was adjudicated a first violent felony offender after the First Department granted CPL 440.20 relief to allow defendant to raise his Catu claim. There, as well, court records suggest that a predicate felony conviction was discarded, likely on Catu grounds.
Thus, the underpinnings of Catu itself, as well as the recent appellate decisions in Pignataro, Fagan and Santiago, demonstrate that a Catu error is a federal constitutional violation, even if also contravening our State Constitution.
The cases cited by the People in support of their argument to the contrary do not help them. Although the Appellate Division, First Department stated in People v Alvarado that "defendant's prior [Catu-violative] conviction was not `obtained in
The People's persistence in relying on the federal habeas corpus cases to aid them is, as before, unavailing. Those rulings involve the application by federal courts of gatekeeping standards for federal collateral review of state court judgments pursuant to the federal Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) (28 USC § 2254 [d] [1]). That statute requires, as a precondition to federal habeas corpus relief from the state court conviction, a showing that the state court ruling "was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States." (28 USC § 2254 [d] [1]; see Williams v Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 382 [2000] [rule that is not derived from clearly established law as determined by the United States Supreme Court is "not available as a basis for relief in a habeas case to which AEDPA applies"].) As the court observed in one of the cases cited by the People, Potter v Green (2009 WL 2242342, 2009 US Dist LEXIS 64230 [ED NY, July 24, 2009, No. 04-CV-1343 (JS), Seybert, J.]), the United States Supreme Court has never held that a Catu violation is a violation of federal constitutional law, and thus it is not a "clearly established" Supreme Court precedent as required by Williams for a viable AEDPA habeas corpus claim. The cases on which the People rely thus stand merely for the proposition that a Catu violation cannot, at this time, be redressed via federal habeas corpus review.
In People v Catalanotte (72 N.Y.2d 641 [1988]), the Court of Appeals established a two-pronged standard for determining the viability of a challenge, in a predicate sentencing proceeding, of a defendant's prior felony conviction as retrospectively violative of a federal constitutional rule. To qualify as applicable for such use, the Court of Appeals there announced, the federal constitutional rule must either be "the law existing at the time the conviction was obtained," or, alternatively, it must be "subsequent law applicable to the judgment under principles of retroactivity." (Id. at 645.) The People here contend that defendant's Catu challenge is barred as Catu was neither the existing law at the time defendant's conviction was obtained nor retroactively applicable to defendant's prior felony conviction.
At the outset, the People's reliance upon Catalanotte is premised upon a mischaracterization of Catu analysis of a prior felony conviction in the context of an initial predicate adjudication proceeding as a "retroactive" application of Catu. Because application of Catu to a prior felony conviction in a post-Catu initial predicate status adjudication proceeding such as this one neither affects the finality of the prior conviction in question nor negates any previously entered judicial determination, Catu analysis of a prior conviction is, in this sense, not "retroactive" at all. Rather, application of Catu in the context of a post-Catu initial predicate adjudication proceeding challenge is simply a means to determine whether a prior felony conviction may properly be used for purposes of enhancement of a sentence imposed in a post-Catu conviction.
Even assuming that Catalanotte is properly applicable in this case, close examination of the Catalanotte rules demonstrates that neither prong of Catalanotte precludes defendant from raising his Catu claim here, however.
At the time of defendant's 1999 plea cases, the first sentence of Penal Law § 70.45, the statute enacted in 1998 pursuant to which PRS was established, provided: "Each determinate sentence also includes, as a part thereof, an additional period of post-release supervision." (Former Penal Law § 70.45 [1], as added by L 1998, ch 1, § 15 [eff Aug. 6, 1998]
Further, at the time of defendant's 1999 pleas, People v Ford, which had been decided in 1995, required advisement by the court of "direct" consequences of a plea, i.e., those consequences which have a "definite, immediate and largely automatic effect on defendant's punishment." (86 NY2d at 403.) As PRS was in 1998 "a part [of defendant's sentence]," and therefore a direct consequence of his plea, the court was required in 1999 to advise defendant Province of the PRS portion of his sentence in order to afford him due process.
In sum, the legal requirement to include PRS "as a part" of a determinate sentence dates back to 1998, and the New York Court of Appeals had determined that federal due process principles required pronouncement of direct consequences of a plea at the time it is entered since the issuance of the Ford decision in 1995. Therefore, the law did not change when Catu was decided in 2005, and defendant's due process right to notice of the PRS portion of his sentences "exist[ed] at the time [his] conviction[s] [were] obtained" (People v Catalanotte at 645) in 1999. Thus, if retroactivity analysis under Catalanotte were required, Catu would apply to defendant Province's 1999 convictions under the decision's first prong.
Alternatively, even if Catu were viewed as a "new" rule first announced by the Court of Appeals in 2005, principles of retroactive application under any of the three potentially applicable retroactivity rubrics would require that defendant receive the benefit of the rule in this proceeding.
First, to the extent that Catalanotte may be interpreted as setting forth its own retroactivity rule for predicate sentencing, that rule is that "a defendant is entitled to the benefit of any
While there are no appellate court holdings squarely addressing the issue of the retroactive applicability of Catu in predicate adjudication proceedings, recent appellate decisions appear to establish that Catu is to be applied to pre-Catu convictions in initial predicate sentencing proceedings.
As discussed above, in People v Fagan, the Appellate Division, First Department vacated a sentence originally imposed in 2010 and remanded the case to the nisi prius court to allow a resentencing proceeding to go forward at which defense counsel could challenge the use for predicate sentencing purposes of a prior, pre-Catu, conviction on Catu grounds. Specifically, in Fagan, the defendant had been sentenced in 2010 as a persistent violent felony offender based upon, inter alia, a 2000 predicate felony conviction in which a period of PRS was added in 2009 to cure an unlawful administrative imposition of PRS (see People v Sparber, 10 N.Y.3d 457 [2008]). Later, the period of PRS was removed from the sentence pursuant to Penal Law § 70.85 and in accordance with People v Williams (14 N.Y.3d 198 [2010]). On its combined review of the defendant's direct appeal of the 2010 judgment and the appeal of the denial in 2013 of his CPL 440.20 motion, the First Department held that the matter should be remanded to the nisi prius court to enable that court to consider whether Catu, decided in 2005, rendered defendant's conviction by guilty plea in 2000 violative of the Federal Constitution for CPL 400.16 predicate sentencing purposes. (People v Fagan, 116 AD3d at 451, 452.) And, as discussed above, on resentencing, the defendant's sentence was reduced from a persistent violent felony offender sentence of an indeterminate term of imprisonment of 18 years to life to a second violent felony offender determinate term of 15 years' imprisonment followed by five years of PRS. If, as appears to be the case, the defendant in Fagan received such sentence because he prevailed on his Catu claim, Catu was applied to the defendant's 2000, pre-Catu conviction at the defendant's new predicate adjudication proceeding for his 2010, post-Catu conviction.
Similarly, as earlier noted, in People v Santiago, a case arising in 2006, subsequent to Catu, the First Department
Additionally, in People v Pignataro, decided in 2013, the defendant was convicted upon his plea of guilty without advisement of PRS by the Court in 2000 and sentenced in 2001. He was then resentenced in 2010 to a determinate term without PRS pursuant to Penal Law § 70.85. Defendant appealed the resentencing order, arguing that his Penal Law § 70.85 resentencing unconstitutionally deprived him of his right to seek vacatur of his Catu-violative plea. The Court of Appeals found that the 2000 guilty plea was defective in light of Catu, decided in 2005, but further found that the 2010 resentencing under Penal Law § 70.85, which was effective as of June 30, 2008, cured the Catu violation in that case.
Therefore, the recent appellate cases of Fagan, Santiago and Pignataro, all of which are controlling precedent for this court, demonstrate that, with respect to Catu challenges of prior convictions in the context of predicate status adjudications, the law has "engrafted an exception to the traditional rule to permit collateral attack on judgments of conviction after they have become final" (People v Catalanotte, 72 NY2d at 645).
The Odom II case is factually distinguishable from this case, as defendant Province has never previously had the opportunity to contest the use of the 1999 convictions as predicate sentencing enhancements. Section 400.15 (7) (b) and (8), which were dispositive of the issues in Odom II, where the defendant had previously waived any constitutional challenge to those convictions, have no application to Province's initial second violent felony offender proceeding.
Moreover, as already explained, subsequent rulings of both the Appellate Division, First Department in Fagan and Santiago, and of the Court of Appeals in Pignataro demonstrate that current law is contrary to any limitation on applying Catu to bar the use of pre-Catu violent felony convictions in predicate sentencing proceedings.
Therefore, to the extent that Catalanotte sets forth its own test on retrospective application of federal constitutional challenges to potential predicate convictions, application of that test demonstrates that Catu may be retrospectively applied in challenging prior felony convictions in predicate adjudications.
Under the general retroactivity rubric of Teague v Lane (489 U.S. 288 [1989]), adopted by the Court of Appeals in People v Eastman (85 N.Y.2d 265, 275 [1995]) and reaffirmed in People v Baret (23 N.Y.3d 777 [2014]), a "new" federal rule of constitutional criminal procedure will not be retroactively applicable outside of direct appeal.
Under an exception to the general rule of Eastman/ Teague, however, where the application is merely one of an existing (or "old") federal constitutional rule being applied to a new situation,
Specifically, the old rule, as stated in Ford, is that principles of federal (and state) due process require courts to advise defendants as to the "direct" consequences of a plea, i.e., consequences "which ha[ve] a definite, immediate and largely automatic effect on defendant's punishment." (86 NY2d at 403.) Catu, citing Ford, held that because PRS is one such "direct" consequence of a plea, the Court has a constitutional duty to advise a defendant of PRS as a part of the sentence. (4 NY3d at 244-245.) Thus, Catu applies the "old" rule of Ford in a new setting, namely, court advisement of PRS. Catu would, therefore, be retroactively applicable, assuming the Eastman/Teague rubric were to govern the analysis. (Cf. Chaidez v United States, 568 US at ___, 133 S Ct at 1105 [Padilla v Kentucky (559 U.S. 356 [2010]) announced a "new" rule and therefore "does not have retroactive effect"]; People v Baret, 23 NY3d at 799 [same].)
In People v Pepper (53 N.Y.2d 213, 220 [1981]), the Court of Appeals adopted the rule articulated by the United States Supreme Court in Linkletter v Walker (381 U.S. 618, 636 [1965]), as its rule to be applied to determine the retroactivity of newly announced rules of New York law, including not only those emanating from New York's constitution, but also from its statutory and common law. Under the Pepper rubric, should the court determine, as a threshold matter, that the rule in question is a "new" rule, the court must examine three factors: the purpose of the new rule; the reliance of law enforcement agencies on the old rule; and the effect of the new rule on the administration of justice. (People v Pepper, 53 NY2d at 220.)
The Court of Appeals has stated that for a new rule to be applied retroactively, its purpose must relate to the fact-finding process as to the determination of guilt or innocence. (People v Favor, 82 N.Y.2d 254, 265 [1993].) Here, the purpose of the new rule is to ensure that the defendant "[is] aware of the post-release supervision component of [a] sentence in order to knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently choose among alternative courses of action" when contemplating a guilty plea. (People v Catu, 4 NY3d at 245.) As Catu's purpose is to ensure that a defendant knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily enters a
With respect to the second Pepper/Linkletter factor, the reliance of law enforcement authorities on the "old" rule, as previously explained, prosecutors and judges in this state have, since 1995, been on notice that courts have a due process duty to advise defendants of the direct consequences of a plea, and have known since the enactment of Penal Law § 70.45 in 1998 that, with respect to a determinate sentence, PRS is "a part thereof" (former Penal Law § 70.45 [1]) which has a "definite, immediate and largely automatic effect on defendant's punishment" of which defendant must be advised. (People v Ford, 86 NY2d at 403.) Therefore, Catu would not unduly impact reliance placed by prosecutors and courts on a different rule antedating Catu, at least not since the enactment of PRS in 1998. Additionally, as Catu applies solely to judicial proceedings, police and other non-prosecutorial law enforcement agencies are not affected by its retroactive application.
With regard to the effect on the administration of justice of any retrospective application of the new rule, judges have been aware of the inclusion of terms of PRS in sentences since Penal Law § 70.45 was enacted in 1998. Any concern that application of Catu in predicate status adjudications might open the floodgates to a plethora of Catu-grounded challenges to old, pre-Catu guilty pleas is misplaced. Notably, allowing a Catu analysis of a conviction when it is initially proffered at a predicate violent felony hearing would not affect the finality of the conviction so challenged, nor overturn any previously entered judicial determination. Again, in that sense, the defendant's desired use of Catu is not "retroactive" at all: rather, it is a defense advanced in a post-Catu, initial predicate sentencing proceeding. (Cf. People v Menjivar, 2005 NY Slip Op 51451[U], *3 [CPL 440.10 motion sought to vacate conviction by retroactive application of Catu].) Additionally, although Catu errors
Further, the availability of such challenges in the context of predicate felony adjudications would be statutorily limited, as failure to raise them in the course of an initial predicate violent felony proceeding, absent good cause, would constitute a waiver of any future challenge on such ground at future adjudication hearings (see CPL 400.15 [7] [b] [second violent felony offender]; 400.20 [6] [discretionary persistent felony offender]; 400.21 [7] [b] [second felony offender or second felony drug offender] ), as occurred in Odom I and Odom II. Accordingly, it is unlikely that application of Catu in initial predicate sentencing proceedings would have an undue detrimental effect on the administration of justice.
Therefore, neither the Catalanotte rule nor the principles of retroactivity under either Eastman/Teague or Pepper/Linkletter, assuming their applicability, bar defendant from challenging his 1999 convictions on Catu grounds.
For all these reasons, defendant's convictions by plea of guilty in Kings County indictment Nos. 3581/99 and 4710/99 are violative of defendant's federal constitutional rights described in People v Catu, and therefore are barred under CPL 400.15 (7) (b) from serving as predicate felony convictions for purposes of enhancement of defendant's sentence in this case. Accordingly, defendant Jerry Province has been adjudicated a first violent felony offender (Penal Law § 70.02), and will serve his sentence as such in accordance with the order of this court dated December 5, 2014.