DEFENDANT HAD REQUESTED NEW COUNSEL AND ARGUED THE JUDGE DID NOT MAKE THE PROPER INQUIRY BEFORE DENYING THE REQUEST; DEFENDANT PLED GUILTY REPRESENTED BY HIS ORIGINAL COUNSEL; THE FOURTH DEPARTMENT RULED THE DEFENDANT “ABANDONED” HIS “INVOLUNTARY PLEA” ARGUMENT BY REMAINING REPRESENTED BY THE SAME ATTORNEY AT THE TIME OF THE PLEA; THE COURT OF APPEALS RULED DEFENDANT NEVER ABANDONED THE “INVOLUNTARY PLEA” ARGUMENT AND THE LINE OF FOURTH DEPARTMENT DECISIONS TO THE CONTRARY SHOULD NOT BE FOLLOWED (CT APP).
The Court of Appeals, reversing the Appellate Division and invalidating a line of Fourth Department decisions, determined the defendant did not waive the argument that his guilty plea was not voluntarily entered. Defendant had argued the trial judge did not make the required findings after defendant requested new counsel. The Fourth Department ruled that argument was abandoned because defendant pled guilty while represented by his original defense attorney. The Court of Appeals held the defendant had never waived the “involuntary plea” argument:
The Fourth Department’s holding, the most recent in a line of cases to the same effect, is wrong for several reasons. First, as the Appellate Division acknowledged, a claim challenging the voluntariness of a plea survives even a valid appeal waiver … . A challenge to voluntariness cannot be extinguished because the same counsel about whom a defendant has complained, unsuccessfully, continued to represent the defendant at plea and sentencing. Second, in any event, these circumstances do not constitute waiver of defendant’s voluntariness claim … . Waiver “occurs when a defendant intentionally and voluntarily relinquishes or abandons a known right that would otherwise survive a guilty plea” … . Here, the fact that defendant pleaded guilty while represented by the same attorneys does not evince an intentional choice to abandon review of the voluntariness of his plea. Defendant contends that his guilty plea was an effort to mitigate the harm resulting from the court’s denial of his request for new counsel, not an abandonment of his request. To the extent that the Appellate Division relied on the fact that, during the plea colloquy, defendant did not renew his complaints about counsel, his silence does not indicate waiver. Finally, the Fourth Department’s line of cases adopting this erroneous rule originates in People v Hobart (286 AD2d 916 [4th Dept 2001]), which cited no case law or authority for its rule, nor does it explain the rule’s origins. The other Departments have not adopted that rule. People v Kelley, 2026 NY Slip Op 03904, CtApp 6-18-26
Practice Point: Here defendant requested new counsel and the request was denied. Then defendant pled guilty while represented by his original counsel. Defendant did not waive his “involuntary plea” argument by pleading guilty with his original counsel. The line of Fourth Department decisions which held a guilty plea in this context abandons defendant’s “involuntary plea” argument is no longer valid. The abandonment or waiver of an “involuntary plea” argument must be explicit.

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