The New York Legal News Round Up
May 14, 2008
It's time for the round up of interesting New York legal news headlines from the past week:
- Ex-NYPD Cop Guilty Of Gun, Drug Charges (North Country Gazette)
It's time for the round up of interesting New York legal news headlines from the past week:
This week's Daily Record column is entitled "Youthful Inexperience Is Not a Crime." The article is set forth in full below and a pdf of the article can be found here.
My past Daily Record articles can be accessed here.
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Youthful inexperience is not a crime
Last week, the New York Court of Appeals handed down its decision in People v. Cabrera, 2008 NY Slip Op 03994.
In this case, the 17 year-old defendant, Brett Cabrera, was driving an SUV in Sullivan County with four teenage passengers.
It is estimated he was traveling at about 70 mph in a 55- mph zone and failed to slow down in a curve for which the recommended speed limit was 40 mph.
His vehicle skidded off the roadway and into a tele- phone pole. Three of his passengers were killed, and the other suffered a fractured spine. None were wearing seatbelts. Cabrera was not under the influence of alcohol or drugs at the time of the accident.
A jury convicted Cabrera of three counts of criminally negligent homicide, assault in the third degree, reckless driving and other traffic infractions. He was sentenced to 1 1/3 to 4 years in state prison. He served the full length of his sentence in a maximum-security prison while his appeal was pending.
The verdict and sentence were upheld by the Third Department. The majority opinion acknowledged that the New York Court of Appeals had previously held that excessive speed alone could not form the basis for a conviction based on a showing of recklessness or culpable negligence, but concluded that the necessary level of culpability was established in light of the evidence that Cabrera committed two traffic violations: failing to ensure that no more than two passengers were under the age of 21; and failing to require that all passengers were wear seat belts.
When I wrote about this case a few months ago, I lamented the Third Department’s decision and was hopeful that the Court of Appeals would reverse the ruling.
Last week, my hopes became reality when the Court of Appeals disagreed with the Third Department, concluding that Cabrera’s, traffic violations did not cause or contribute to the crash.
The court held that:
The question on this appeal is therefore whether, when viewed in the light most favorable to the People, the evidence adduced at trial showed that Cabrera's conduct constituted "not only a failure to perceive a risk of death, but also some serious blameworthiness in the
conduct that caused it" (Boutin, 75 NY2d at 696). Measured by that standard, the evidence falls short. For a 17-year-old to badly misgauge his ability to handle road conditions is not the kind of seriously condemnatory behavior that the Legislature envisioned when it defined
"criminal negligence," even though the consequences here were fatal...This crash resulted from noncriminal failure to perceive
risk; it was not the result of criminal risk creation.
This was a horrific and devastating accident that will no doubt haunt Cabrera for the rest of his life. What happened in this case was a tragedy for all involved. Young lives were needlessly lost as a result of Cabrera’s negligence.
However, as the Court of Appeals aptly noted, negligent conduct does not necessarily constitute criminal conduct. If ever there was a case in which prosecutorial discretion was called for, this was it. Instead, discretion was thrown to the wind and a young man was criminally prosecuted and convicted for the crime of youthful inexperience.
Fortunately, the Court of Appeals had the good sense to reverse this travesty of justice and allow the issue of Cabrera’s negligence to be prosecuted in the proper venue: civil court.
It's Monday and time to get back to work. But first, it's the round up of interesting posts from my fellow New York blawgers:
Judgment Day:
Juz the Fax:
New York Attorney Malpractice Blog:
New York Civil Law:
New York Coverage Counsel:
New York Personal Injury Law Blog:
New York Public Personnel Law:
No-Fault Paradise:
Simple Justice:
It's time for the weekly round up of New York law-related news headlines:
This week's Daily Record column is entitled "It's for your own good." The article is set forth in full below and a pdf of the article can be foun here.
My past Daily Record articles can be accessed here.
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It's for your own good.
“Of all tyrannies, a tyranny exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their consciences.”
— C. S. LEWIS
Over the last over 40 years, our government has enacted laws for the good of its presumably dimwitted
and uninformed citizens.
In 1965, the federal government first required that health-warning labels be placed on cigarette packages. The warnings became more explicit in 1984 with the enactment of the Comprehensive Smoking Education Act. The goal of the legislation was to provide consumers with information regarding the health risks of tobacco.
In an effort to reduce head injuries caused during motorcycle accidents, the New York State legislature passed a law in 1967 requiring that all motorcyclists wear a helmet.
Our state government saw fit to enact legislation in 1984 requiring the use of seatbelts in motor vehicles. The law was enacted for the good of New York’s citizens, the rationale being that it would reduce the number of deaths caused by automobile accidents.
In 1989, a federal law became effective which required that all alcoholic beverages have warning labels informing consumers of the dangers of drinking and driving and of the effects of drinking alcohol during pregnancy.
That same year, New York enacted the Clean Indoor Air Act, which prohibited smoking in auditoriums, elevators, gymnasiums, food stores, shared taxicabs and limousines. In 2003, the antismoking ban
was expanded to restaurants, bars and the workplace. Again, the law was intended to benefit New York residents, both smokers and non- smokers.
Most recently, a New York City Health Department regulation requiring that fast food chain restaurants disclose caloric information on their menus was upheld by Southern District of New York Judge Richard J. Holwell in New York State Restaurant Association v. New York City Board of Health, 08 Civ. 1000. The stated goal of the legislation was to hinder the “obesity epidemic.”
Last week, Judge Holwell concluded that the caloric disclosure requirement of Regulation 81.50 was reasonably related to the government’s interest in reducing obesity and thus did not infringe on the
First Amendment rights of fast food restaurateurs:
Regulation 81.50 compels only the disclosure of ‘purely factual and uncontroversial’ commercial information — the calorie content of restaurant menu items. Furthermore, ... (it) attempt(s) to address a state policy interest by making information available to
consumers, consistent with the First Amendment objective... Therefore Regulation 81.50 passes constitutional muster as long as there is a ‘rational connection’ between the dis-
closure requirement and the city’s purpose in disclosing it... (A) regulation may be reasonably related to the goal it is intended to promote even if ‘it does not get at all facets of the problem it is designed to ameliorate,’ ... Regulation 81.50 is an entirely reasonable approach to the city’s goal of reducing obesity.
And thus another law enacted for the benefit of the feckless New York State consumer successfully withstood constitutional scrutiny.
Unfortunately, I’m unsure whether to declare victory or foul.
On the one hand, it is indisputable that some people have a tendency to make horrible lifestyle choices. Arguably, access to information regarding their options might assist them in making better decisions for themselves and their families. Accordingly, requiring large corporations to make relevant information regarding their products readily available is not necessarily objectionable.
However, our government’s increasing tendency to require its citizens to comply with paternalistic mandates enacted for “their own good” is unpalatable at best.
Likewise unappealing is the self-interested motivation lurking behind the arguably laudable First Amendment claims of the New York State Restaurant Association: unadulterated greed.
I am thus resigned to ambivalence on the issue of whether fast food menus should include caloric content information. For, the inescapable fact remains: regardless of whether you are swayed by free speech claims or public health concerns, whenever the average citizen is pitted against large, faceless entities, be they corporate giants or the government — the little guy rarely, if ever, wins.
It's the first Monday in May, and time for the weekly round up of enlightening posts from my fellow New York blawgers:
Indignant Indigent (there's a slew of new posts not featured here, so head on over and check them out for yourself):
Judgment Day:
New York Attorney Malpractice Blog:
New York Civil Law:
New York Personal Injury Law Blog:
No-Fault Paradise:
Simple Justice:
Wait a Second!:
Last week, the New York Court of Appeals handed down its decision in People v. Cabrera, 2008 NY Slip Op 03994. I wrote about this case in my Daily Record column last September and was quoted in March in this article from Sullivan County's newspaper, the Times Herald-Record.
In both instances I stated that it was my opinion that the Third Department incorrectly upheld the jury's verdict, which convicted Mr. Cabrera of three counts of criminally negligent homicide, assault in the third degree, reckless driving and a number of traffic infractions. The Third Department reasoned that the verdict was supported by the traffic violations convictions, which included failure to keep right, driving left of a yellow line and violations of his junior license restrictions (namely that he failed to ensure no more than two passengers were under the age of 21 and that all passengers were wearing seat belts).
It was my opinion that:
In this case, a 17-year-old boy who possessed a junior driver’s license was sentenced to one and one-third to four years in state prison for doing what inexperienced teenage drivers have done since the advent of motor vehicles — exercising poor judgment while driving too fast...Civil liability does not necessarily amount to criminal liability...The vast majority of errors in judgment simply do not rise to the level of culpable conduct required for a criminal conviction.
The New York Court of Appeals (at least the majority of the court, in this case) and I apparently see eye to eye on this issue. The Court held that:
For a 17-year-old to badly misgauge his ability to handle road conditions is not the kind of seriously condemnatory behavior that the Legislature envisioned when it defined "criminal negligence," even though the consequences here were fatal. This crash resulted from noncriminal failure to perceive risk; it was not the result of criminal risk creation.
My faith in humanity is restored--at least temporarily.
Last week's term was sprinkling trust, which is defined as:
A trust that gives the person managing it (the trustee) the discretion to disburse its funds among the beneficiaries in any way he or she sees fit.
No one guessed correctly this time around.
Today's term is:
volenti non fit injuria.
As always, no dictionaries, please.
Once again, Sui Generis' partner, The Daily Record, is seeking nominations for the Up & Coming Attorneys for 2008.
Each year, The Daily Record spotlights some of the younger attorneys in the Rochester & Buffalo area who have demonstrated a commitment to the legal profession early in their careers, distinguishing themselves from many of their peers.
In the next few weeks, The Daily Record will identify and recognize Up & Coming Attorneys from the Seventh & Eighth Judicial Districts.
Nominations are due by Friday, June 27.
Up & Coming Attorneys will be held on Thursday, July 31st from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at Terry Hills in Batavia.
Further information and the nomination form can be found here.