STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. VINCENT A. PALEY (18-11-1495, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2019 )


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  •                NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0308-19T6
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,           APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    November 6, 2019
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    VINCENT A. PALEY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    __________________________
    Argued October 21, 2019 – Decided November 6, 2019
    Before Judges Sabatino, Sumners and Geiger.
    On appeal from an interlocutory order the Superior
    Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Middlesex
    County, Indictment No. 18-11-1495.
    Whitney Faith Flanagan, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E.
    Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Whitney Faith
    Flanagan, of counsel and on the brief).
    Patrick F. Galdieri, II, Special Deputy Attorney
    General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause
    for respondent (Christopher L.C. Kuberiet, Acting
    Middlesex County Prosecutor, attorney; Patrick F.
    Galdieri, II, of counsel and on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    SUMNERS, J.A.D.
    In this interlocutory appeal, we are asked to determine whether the trial
    court's August 28, 2019 order violated N.J.S.A. 2A:162-22(a)(2)(a), the speedy
    trial requirements of the Criminal Justice Reform Act (CJRA), N.J.S.A.
    2A:162-15 to -26, and Rule 3:25-4(c)(1). The order excluded 137 days –
    August 19, 2019 to January 2, 2020 – from the October 15, 2019 speedy trial
    deadline for defendant Vincent A. Paley. Defendant is consequently confined
    in jail until his scheduled January 2, 2020 trial date. 1
    In his single point merits brief, defendant argues:
    THE COURT ERRED IN ORDERING 137 DAYS OF
    EXCLUDABLE    TIME    OVER      DEFENSE
    OBJECTION AND WITHOUT STATUTORY
    AUTHORITY.
    Because the record does not support the court's excludable time order, we
    reverse and order defendant be released pending his trial.
    I.
    Initially, we discuss three separate pretrial conferences – two in the
    morning session and one in the afternoon session – all occurring on August 19,
    which culminated in the order in question. We also discuss some other relevant
    court proceedings leading up to that order.
    1
    For the sake of convenience, hereafter, we do not state the year of the
    pretrial conference, excludable time order, speedy trial date, and trial date. We
    mention just the dates.
    A-0308-19T6
    2
    Proceedings Prior to August 19
    On November 7, 2018, defendant and his codefendant Edward F.
    Figueroa were indicted for second-degree conspiracy to commit robbery, first-
    degree robbery, second-degree robbery, second-degree aggravated assault, and
    third-degree theft. At that time, defendant was not confined to county jail due
    to a previous pretrial release order. However, when he failed to appear for his
    arraignment on November 26, a bench warrant was issued for his arrest.
    On January 10, 2019, the bench warrant was executed upon defendant's
    arrest. The State's motion to revoke defendant's pretrial release and keep him
    confined pending his trial was granted on January 28. Three subsequent court
    orders, all reflecting defendant's consent, excluded a total of ninety-nine days
    from defendant's speedy trial date in accordance with N.J.S.A. 2A:162-
    22(b)(1)(l), which allows delay for "good cause," and Rule 3:25-4(d)(2)(H),
    which allows delay resulting from "unreasonable acts or omissions of the
    defendant."
    August 19 Proceedings
    A. First morning appearance
    Defendant, who was in custody, appeared for his pretrial conference
    with counsel. After advising the court that a plea agreement could not be
    reached, counsel reminded the court she needed additional time to provide the
    A-0308-19T6
    3
    State with an expert report concerning cell phone records. The court expressed
    concern regarding the importance of an expert report, and asked defendant if
    he was going to sign the pretrial memorandum to go to trial. Defendant, who
    was being represented by the Public Defender, replied that his mother was
    going to hire private counsel after his court appearance and he would sign the
    pretrial memorandum thereafter.
    It was then mentioned that Figueroa, whose pretrial conference was also
    scheduled that morning, was not in the courtroom. Figueroa's counsel advised
    the court Figueroa was in a drug rehabilitation program, which had not yet
    transported him to court that morning, and he also wanted to go to trial.
    Noting defendant and Figueroa would be tried together, and Figueroa's
    counsel had to appear before another judge that morning, the court excused
    everyone with the direction to come back in the afternoon in order to finalize
    and execute pretrial memorandums.          Before leaving, defendant's counsel
    indicated again that she needed more time to secure her expert's report and
    requested another conference to give her more time to do so.         Remarking
    defendant was arraigned on "December [18]" 2 and wanted to go to trial, the
    court retorted that a trial date would be set irrespective of outstanding
    2
    It appears the court misspoke because, as noted above, defendants'
    arraignment occurred on November 28, 2018.
    A-0308-19T6
    4
    discovery. The court stated, "[defendants] are yakking about a trial, let's get to
    a trial.   All that cell phone stuff, [the attorneys] can resolve before trial.
    Exchange [d]iscovery, do what you got to do." No possible trial date was
    mentioned by the court during the colloquy.
    B. Second morning appearance
    At some point later that morning, Figueroa appeared in court.            His
    counsel was present. After learning Figueroa would not accept the State's last
    plea offer and wanted to go to trial, which was expected to take five days to
    complete, the court stated the trial date would be January 2. The prosecutor
    promptly remarked that a January 2 trial date created an "issue" because
    defendant and his counsel were not in the courtroom at the time and defendant
    had an October 15 speedy trial date. The court replied, "[w]ell it 's the only
    time we have to try this case." At which point the prosecutor interjected,
    "[w]ell then [j]udge[,] the State would then ask for excludable time, given the
    [c]ourt's calendar, as well as the outstanding expert report that the State has
    not received, and would need to evaluate and perhaps obtain its own expert
    witness.    So I would ask for excludable time until January [2]."         When
    codefendant's counsel mentioned defendant's counsel was not present, the
    court replied it would "deal with it."
    A-0308-19T6
    5
    C. Afternoon session
    The court advised defendant that Figueroa's trial was set for January 2,
    and that would be defendant's trial date as well, unless he reached a plea
    agreement. Defendant stated he wanted to review the pretrial memorandum
    with "another attorney." The court replied that defendant had the right to hire
    a new attorney, which is why it gave him a January 2 trial date, but he needed
    to sign the pretrial memorandum that day.        When defendant objected to
    extending the trial date, the court declared it was excluding the time from his
    speedy trial date due to the possibility he would hire a new attorney and the
    outstanding cell phone expert discovery his current counsel wanted to provide
    the State.
    Next, during a brief discussion clarifying the State's plea offer,
    defendant's counsel objected to the court making August 19, 2019 through
    January 2, 2020 excludable time. Counsel argued that since defendant was
    signing a pretrial memorandum, outstanding expert discovery should not be a
    reason for excludable time. The court reiterated that since defendant wanted to
    hire private counsel, the January 2 trial date would afford new counsel the time
    needed to be ready.    Counsel responded that defendant had not begun the
    process of hiring a new attorney and that she would comply with discovery
    A-0308-19T6
    6
    rules. The Court was unpersuaded; defendant was required to execute the
    pretrial memorandum, which set trial for January 2.
    The court confirmed its oral decision on August 28, issuing an order
    excluding a total of 137 days from defendant's speedy trial date under N.J.S.A.
    2A:162-22(b)(1)(d), stating only that the excluded time was "[t]o allow time
    for def[endant] to hire [a private attorney] to prepare for trial." We thereafter
    granted defendant's motion for leave to appeal on an expedited basis.
    II.
    A trial court "must consider both the speedy trial statute and the speedy
    trial rule" when "determining what time is excludable." State v. Washington,
    
    453 N.J. Super. 164
    , 195 (App. Div. 2018).          The CJRA requires that a
    defendant "shall not remain detained in jail for more than 180 days" from an
    indictment's return – not counting excludable time – "before commencement of
    the trial." N.J.S.A. 2A:162-22(a)(2)(a). There are thirteen periods that "shall
    be excluded" under N.J.S.A. 2A:162-22(b)(1) when the trial court computes
    the date the trial must start:
    (a) The time resulting from an examination and
    hearing on competency and the period during which
    the eligible defendant is incompetent to stand trial or
    incapacitated;
    (b) The time from the filing to the disposition of an
    eligible defendant's application for supervisory
    treatment pursuant to N.J.S.2C:36A-1 or N.J.S.2C:43-
    A-0308-19T6
    7
    12 et seq., special probation pursuant to N.J.S.2C:35-
    14, drug or alcohol treatment as a condition of
    probation pursuant to N.J.S.2C:45-1, or other pretrial
    treatment or supervisory program;
    (c) The time from the filing to the final disposition of
    a motion made before trial by the prosecutor or the
    eligible defendant;
    (d) The time resulting from a continuance granted, in
    the court's discretion, at the eligible defendant's
    request or at the request of both the eligible defendant
    and the prosecutor;
    (e) The time resulting from the detention of an eligible
    defendant in another jurisdiction provided the
    prosecutor has been diligent and has made reasonable
    efforts to obtain the eligible defendant's presence;
    (f) The time resulting from exceptional circumstances
    including, but not limited to, a natural disaster, the
    unavoidable unavailability of an eligible defendant,
    material witness or other evidence, when there is a
    reasonable expectation that the eligible defendant,
    witness or evidence will become available in the near
    future;
    (g) On motion of the prosecutor, the delay resulting
    when the court finds that the case is complex due to
    the number of defendants or the nature of the
    prosecution;
    (h) The time resulting from a severance of
    codefendants when that severance permits only one
    trial to commence within the time period for trial set
    forth in this section;
    (i) The time resulting from an eligible defendant's
    failure to appear for a court proceeding;
    A-0308-19T6
    8
    (j) The time resulting from a disqualification or
    recusal of a judge;
    (k) The time resulting from a failure by the eligible
    defendant to provide timely and complete discovery;
    (l) The time for other periods of delay not specifically
    enumerated if the court finds good cause for the delay;
    and
    (m) Any other time otherwise required by statute.
    Our court rules mimic the CJRA. Rule 3:25-4(c)(1) similarly precludes
    detaining a defendant for more than 180 days between the return of an
    indictment and the start of trial, "not counting excludable time" for reasonable
    delays "as set forth in paragraph (i) of this rule." Rule 3:25-4(i) describes the
    trial court's authority to grant excludable time in words identical to N.J.S.A.
    2A:162-22(b)(1) except the rule also declares that the provision allowing for
    "other periods of delay not specifically enumerated" be narrowly construed. R.
    3:25-4(i)(12).
    In applying these principles to the factual circumstances surrounding the
    August 19 pretrial conference for defendant and his codefendant, we agree
    with defendant that the court should not have excluded 137 days from his
    speedy trial date and he should be released from confinement pending his trial.
    At the initial morning session for the pretrial conference, there were
    multiple competing concerns the court needed to address. Defendant could not
    A-0308-19T6
    9
    reach a plea agreement with the State. Defendant expressed an interest in
    hiring a private attorney to evaluate his trial prospects and did not want to
    execute his pretrial memorandum. Defendant's counsel was waiting for an
    expert report, which the court viewed as having minimal, if not insignificant,
    value at trial. The court wanted to schedule a trial date but could not do so
    because Figueroa, with whom defendant would be tried with, had not yet
    appeared for the conference. Thus, the conference, with all parties present,
    was continued to the afternoon.
    Figueroa, however, appeared later that morning session and the court
    conducted his pretrial conference without defendant. Figueroa also could not
    reach a plea agreement with the State, thus he executed a pretrial memorandum
    in which the court set a January 2 trial date, the earliest available trial date on
    the court's calendar.   Aware that the trial date would result in defendant's
    release from jail due to his October 15 speedy trial date, for which the State
    sought an excludable time order, the court stated it would deal with the issue
    when defendant returned that afternoon for the continuation of his pretrial
    conference.
    That afternoon, the court directed defendant to execute the pretrial
    memorandum with a January 2 trial date. Over defendant's objection, the court
    advised defendant that the next 137 days prior to trial would be excludable
    A-0308-19T6
    10
    time, thereby keeping him confined pending trial. The court ruled this was
    because defendant wanted to go to trial, wanted to hire private counsel, and his
    current counsel needed to provide outstanding discovery.
    While we appreciate the court's need to schedule a two-defendant trial
    amidst what appears to be a full calendar, the record before us does not supp ort
    the reasoning the court expressed on August 19, nor set forth in the confirming
    August 28 order, that defendant needed time to hire a new attorney.
    Defendant, like his counsel, was fully aware of his speedy trial date and never
    requested trial be delayed beyond his speedy trial date due to the need to hire
    or consult with a new attorney. Counsel likewise did not seek a trial date after
    October 15, to enable a new attorney to represent defendant. Only if
    defendant's mother had engaged private counsel should the court have
    considered its impact on a trial date.
    Turning to defendant's plan to provide a cell phone expert report to the
    State after the pretrial conference, the court's oral decision mentioned this
    outstanding discovery as a reason for the 137-days excludable time, but the
    court's order does not. Although the order does not conflict with the oral
    decision, we will consider the latter. See generally Taylor v. Int'l Maytex
    Tank Terminal Corp., 
    355 N.J. Super. 482
    , 498 (App. Div. 2002) ("Where
    A-0308-19T6
    11
    there is a conflict between a judge's written or oral opinion and a subsequent
    written order, the former controls.").
    Importantly, defense counsel argued her need to provide an expert report
    to the State, post conference, should not be considered in the excludable time
    determination because she would comply with the discovery rules. Our rules
    require a defendant to provide the State with expert information, including but
    not limited to any report, at least thirty days prior to trial. R. 3:13-3(b)(2)(E);
    see also, 
    Washington, 453 N.J. Super. at 187
    (holding when an issue of
    discovery arises, "courts should consider [it] separately from speedy trial
    issues" as it is "improper to impose a discovery sanction based on a perceived
    failure to comply with the speedy trial statute.").
    Based upon our review of the record, it appears the primary factor in
    determining the excludable time was revealed in the court's initial comment –
    made without defendant or his counsel present in the courtroom – that the trial
    had to be scheduled for January 2 because "it's the only time we have to try
    this case."   Thereafter, the possible hiring of a new defense attorney and
    pending discovery to the State were put forth by the court as issues affecting a
    trial date. However, applying those two reasons to order excludable time was
    premature. A new attorney had not been hired, nor was there any tangible
    indication it would occur, and a trial date beyond the October 15 speedy trial
    A-0308-19T6
    12
    date was not requested or claimed to be necessary to allow for additional trial
    preparation time. There was no indication that pending discovery would cause
    either party to be unprepared to try the case by the speedy trial date. Since
    neither issue had impacted the court's ability to start the trial, they did not
    support the court's excludable time rationale.
    We find it significant that the court's order cites N.J.S.A. 2A:162-
    22(b)(1)(d), which allows for the exclusion of time at the defendant's or the
    joint parties' request for a granted continuance, so that defendant can hire
    private counsel.    However, as defendant contends, he did not request a
    continuance. Further, in terms of the court's reliance upon its trial calendar
    until January 2, there were no findings of fact sufficient to establish excludable
    time under another subsection of N.J.S.A. 2A:162-22(b)(1) despite defendant's
    objection to the continuance. N.J.S.A. 2A:162-22(b)(1)(l) contains a catch-all
    provision designating as excludable time "[t]he time for other periods of delay
    not specifically enumerated if the court finds good cause for the delay." But,
    the accompanying rule, Rule 3:25-4(i)(12), adds "that this provision shall be
    narrowly construed." The record fails to indicate why defendant's trial could
    not preempt another case on the court's calendar, or why another court in the
    vicinage could not conduct defendant's trial prior to his speedy trial date.
    A-0308-19T6
    13
    Hence, based upon the record before us, we are constrained to agree with
    defendant that the 137-days excludable time is contrary to the CJRA and
    related court rules.    Defendant shall be released pending trial, which is
    currently scheduled for January 2. Our decision does not preclude the State
    from making future applications to confine defendant or impose conditions of
    release that are consistent with the law.
    Our disposition is stayed for three business days, sua sponte, to enable
    the State to seek immediate relief from the Supreme Court if it so chooses.
    Reversed.
    A-0308-19T6
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-0308-19T6

Filed Date: 11/6/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/7/2019