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Opinions of
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and the Massachusetts
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Commonwealth v. Hernandez, 439 Mass. 688 (2003)
Plymouth. May 9, 2003. - July 2, 2003.
Present: Marshall, C.J., Greaney, Ireland, Spina, Cowin, Sosman, & Cordy, JJ.
The case was tried before Patrick F. Brady, J.
David R. Yannetti for the defendant.
Mary E. Lee, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
COWIN, J.
The defendant, Junior Hernandez, was convicted
of trafficking in cocaine over one hundred grams, on both principal and joint
venture theories. He appealed, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to
convict him as a principal and that the judge committed prejudicial error in
the joint venture instructions. The Appeals Court
affirmed in an unpublished memorandum and order pursuant to its rule 1:28.
Commonwealth v. Hernandez, 56 Mass. App. Ct.
1110 (2002). We granted the defendant's application for further appellate
review and now affirm.
1. Facts. The jury could have found the following facts. See
Commonwealth v. Latimore, 378 Mass.
671, 676-677 (1979). This case began with an investigation by the State police
into a possible cocaine delivery service. The investigating officers on four
occasions[1] in April and May, 1999, saw the defendant and Armando
Quinones (codefendant at trial) drive to Arnold's
Restaurant in Holbrook. Each time, Quinones was the driver with the defendant
in the front passenger seat. The details of each trip differ, but the jury
could have found (and the defendant did not seriously dispute) that on each
occasion the defendant delivered cocaine to various persons at the restaurant.
From the defendant's perspective, the key issue at trial was whether he could
be connected to the apartment that contained the larger stash of cocaine (for
convenience, the stash apartment). On that, the evidence was as follows.
The stash apartment was one of ten apartments in a building on Main
Street in Brockton.
The defendant and Quinones were seen entering the apartment building just
before making two of the sales at the restaurant. While Quinones was seen
entering the building without the defendant on other occasions, the defendant
was never seen entering the apartment building in the absence of Quinones.
As a result of their surveillance, the investigators sought and obtained search
warrants for various locations with which Quinones and the defendant were
involved, including the stash apartment. On the day that the State police
planned to execute the warrant for the stash apartment, June 24, 1999, Quinones and the defendant arrived
at the building in the early evening. They entered the building through the
rear door (Quinones appeared to use a key) and left the building about one-half
hour later. The police confronted the two men as they sat in a two-door vehicle
in the apartment building's parking lot. Officers wearing State police raid
jackets (with State police patches on the front and sleeves) approached the
vehicle, shouting, "State police search warrant, open the door." The
vehicle's doors, however, were locked, and neither the defendant nor Quinones
opened them. Instead, they sat, fidgeting, and the defendant swallowed small
plastic bags containing white powder, "putting one after another in his
mouth." Eventually, the officers used a flashlight to break open the
passenger side window. After the defendant and Quinones were secured, eight
plastic bags containing a white powder were found in the vehicle on the floor
on the front passenger side, where the defendant had been seated. The bags
contained a total of 7.65 grams of cocaine of thirty-eight per cent purity,
with lactose as a dilutant. They were similar in appearance to what the
defendant had been ingesting. During a search of the defendant, the police
found a pager. On Quinones, the police found a pager as well as various keys,
including keys to the rear door of the building and to the stash apartment. The
officers searched the stash apartment (after gaining entry with a battering
ram), recovering a can of acetone (a drying agent used for cocaine), a bottle
of lactose (a dilutant used to "cut" cocaine), boxes of sandwich
bags, a pager, a large plastic bag filled with plastic sandwich bags that had
the corners cut out of them, and a dungaree coat with approximately $600 in an
inside pocket. An electronic scale was found secreted beneath cushions of a
couch. Behind tiles of a dropped ceiling in the bathroom, investigators found
six baggies containing a white powder. Four of the baggies contained a total of
71.01 grams of cocaine of forty-six per cent purity. The remaining two baggies
contained a total of fifteen smaller plastic bags which, in turn, contained a
total of 24.74 grams of cocaine of thirty-five per cent purity. The jury also
heard expert testimony, from which they could find that the apartment was used
to prepare the cocaine for sale, and that the cocaine above the bathroom was
intended for distribution.
Later that same day, the police also searched another address where the
defendant claimed to live (and where the telephone was listed to Quinones). No
drugs were found there, but the police did seize two or three bottles of
lactose.
2. Sufficiency of the evidence on principal liability. The defendant was
charged with trafficking in cocaine on June
24, 1999. As noted, the case was submitted to the jury on principal
and joint venture theories. At the close of the Commonwealth's case (which was
also the close of all the evidence), the defendant moved for a directed
verdict, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence as to him on the element
of possession. He makes the same argument on appeal. The Commonwealth argues
here, as it did below, that the evidence was sufficient for the jury to infer
constructive possession.
"To sustain a conviction of trafficking in cocaine under G. L.
c. 94C, § 32E, the Commonwealth must show that the defendant had
'possession' of the cocaine. Commonwealth v. Santana, 420 Mass.
205, 215 (1995). Possession may be actual or constructive. See
Commonwealth v. Daley, 423 Mass.
747, 752 (1996)." Commonwealth v. Sinforoso, 434 Mass.
320, 327 (2001). "Constructive possession may be proved by 'knowledge coupled
with the ability and intention to exercise dominion and control.'"
Commonwealth v. Sabetti, 411 Mass.
770, 778 (1992), quoting Commonwealth v. Garcia, 409 Mass.
675, 686 (1991).
Here, the Commonwealth points to the following: there was evidence of the
defendant's actual participation in drug sales; he and Quinones always
travelled together to and from the sales; they were seen entering the building
containing the stash apartment together; the defendant claimed to live at an
apartment where police found bottles of lactose; the defendant had a pager; the
defendant tried to swallow the cocaine in the vehicle when the police raided,
evidencing his guilty knowledge; and the cocaine in the vehicle and the cocaine
in the bathroom were similar in purity and packaging.
These facts, however, are most relevant to the issue of joint venture, for
which the evidence was plentiful. In its brief, the Commonwealth has confused
evidence of constructive possession with evidence required to prove joint
venture. Although there was ample evidence that the defendant was a partner in
Quinones's cocaine-delivery enterprise, there was a dearth of evidence that he
had constructive possession of the drugs in the stash apartment. Actual
participation in drug dealing can be probative of this, but the cases the
Commonwealth cites are inapposite. Each involves whether a defendant had
"knowledge" of drugs located in areas clearly within his ability to
control. See Commonwealth
v. Gonzalez, 42 Mass. App. Ct.
235, 237 (1997) (back porch of apartment); Commonwealth v. Pichardo, 38
Mass. App. Ct. 416, 417-418 (1995) (defendant
entered apartment and returned with requested drugs); Commonwealth v. Watson, 36
Mass. App. Ct. 252, 258-259 (1994) (defendant in
apartment and opened door). See also Commonwealth v. Washington, 50
Mass. App. Ct. 167, 167-169 (2000) (defendant's
identification card found in room where drugs found on floor next to drug
paraphernalia). To a similar effect was the evidence of the defendant's guilty
knowledge: that he was swallowing bags of cocaine speaks to his complicity in
his partner's business, but precious little about whether he had the ability to
exercise dominion and control over the stash apartment. Here, again, the
Commonwealth's citations are not helpful. See
Commonwealth v. Velasquez, 48
Mass. App. Ct. 147, 149-151 (1999) (drugs in
basement to which all building tenants had access); Commonwealth v. Whitlock, 39
Mass. App. Ct. 514, 519 (1995) (attempts to
conceal or dispose of contraband permit inference of possession when combined
with proximity to contraband and knowledge of its location). Cf.
Commonwealth v. Cruz, 34
Mass. App. Ct. 619, 623 (1993) (evidence proved
neither that defendant tried to flee apartment where drugs were found nor that
he tried to protect contraband; insufficient evidence of possession). Evidence
that the cocaine found in the vehicle and the cocaine found in the apartment
were similarly packaged permitted the inference that the cocaine in the vehicle
was drawn from the larger stash and, together with other evidence, proved the
defendant's knowledge of a stash, but did not prove that the defendant
possessed (had the ability and intent to exercise control over) that larger
stash. Contrast Commonwealth v. Pratt, 407 Mass. 647, 651-653 (1990) (constructive
possession established where defendant resided in cottage where some drugs were
discovered; her knowledge of scale of drug operation and similarity of
packaging and her access to and use of surrounding property established
constructive possession of drugs on that property); Commonwealth v. Delarosa,
50 Mass. App. Ct. 623, 626-628 (2000) (evidence, including similarity between
drugs actually possessed and stash, permitted inference defendant exercised
dominion and control over stash in apartment for which defendant paid rent and
was seen leaving and keys for which were on same key ring as keys for car
defendant was driving at time of arrest); Commonwealth v. Fernandez, 48 Mass.
App. Ct. 530, 533 (2000) (similarity of packaging and transfer of heroin to
another passenger permitted inference that defendant jointly possessed that
heroin); Commonwealth v. Watson, supra at 260.
The evidence that the defendant constructively possessed the cocaine in the
stash apartment was not sufficient to support his conviction of trafficking on
this theory. There was no evidence that the defendant had any possessory or
ownership interest in the apartment. None of his belongings was found there.
Cf. Commonwealth v. Navarro, 39 Mass. App. Ct. 161, 169 (1995) (evidence
insufficient to prove constructive possession where no evidence defendant
exercised control over apartment, even though she was present and possessed
drugs similar to stash). The defendant was never seen coming into or out of the
apartment containing the stash. He had only been seen twice before in the area
of the apartment building, each time accompanied by Quinones. The apartment was
securely locked, and the defendant did not possess a key to the apartment or to
the building. Nothing inside the apartment suggested that he lived there or
frequented it. The defendant was entitled to entry of a required finding of not
guilty on the theory of principal liability. See
Commonwealth v. James, 54
Mass. App. Ct. 726, 729-731 (2002), S.C., 438 Mass.
1013 (2003); Commonwealth v. Dennis, 33 Mass. App. Ct.
666, 669-672 (1992), S.C., 416 Mass.
1001 (1993). Contrast Commonwealth
v. Alcantara, 53 Mass. App. Ct.
591, 597 (2002) (defendant's papers and prescription pill bottle among evidence
found in apartment).
3. Jury instructions on joint venture. Even though the evidence was
insufficient to support a conviction on the theory that the defendant was a
principal, because the jury rendered special, not general, verdicts, the
defendant's conviction may be upheld if the verdict on the basis of the joint
venture theory withstands appellate scrutiny. See
Commonwealth v. Plunkett, 422 Mass.
634, 635 (1996) (verdict cannot stand unless jury reached it on theory with
factual support). Contrast Commonwealth v. Rolon, 438 Mass. 808, 820 (2003)
(convictions set aside where verdict slip did not require jury to specify
whether verdict based on supportable joint venture theory or unsupportable
principal liability theory). As to this theory, the defendant does not contest
the sufficiency of the evidence. Rather, he argues that the judge erred by
failing to instruct that the Commonwealth was required to prove that he knew of
the hidden stash of cocaine.
The judge correctly instructed that, to prove the defendant guilty as a joint
venturer, the Commonwealth was required to prove that he was present at the
scene of the crime, had knowledge that another intended to commit the crime and
shared the intent to commit the crime, and by agreement was willing and
available to help the other if necessary. Commonwealth v. Netto, 438 Mass.
686, 700 (2003). The judge also correctly instructed the jury that, to prove
the defendant guilty of trafficking on a joint venture theory, the Commonwealth
must prove (1) that the underlying crime of trafficking in cocaine was
committed and (2) that the elements of joint venture defined above were
satisfied. See Rendon-Alvarez v. Commonwealth, 437 Mass. 40, 44-45 (2002).
On the evidence adduced at trial, the defendant was entitled, on request, to an
instruction that the jury were required to find that he knew that he was
distributing the inventory of cocaine held by the principal. See
Commonwealth v. Cuffie, 414 Mass.
632, 639 (1993). Where it is a stash of cocaine that forms the basis for a
charge of trafficking, a defendant can only share an intent to traffic if he
knows the stash exists. The joint venturer need not know the amount of cocaine
in the stash, id. at 638-639 (nor need the principal, Commonwealth v.
Rodriguez, 415 Mass. 447, 453 [1993]), or even that the stash is in fact
cocaine, as long as he knows it is a controlled substance, id. at 454.
The difficulty for the defendant is that he did not request such an
instruction. After the judge instructed the jury, defense counsel[2]
asked the judge to instruct also that "each defendant should be judged on
his own as to whether or not he possessed or constructively possessed the drugs
in that ceiling panel . . . . There must be an independent finding
that I know that I had the right to exercise dominion and control over whatever
is in that panel . . . ." He even submitted a written proposed instruction
to that effect.[3] The requested instruction was patently inaccurate.
Under the joint venture theory, for a trafficking conviction, the defendant
need not have possessed the drugs, actually or constructively. See
Commonwealth v. Sabetti, 411 Mass.
770, 779-780 (1992); Commonwealth v. James, 30 Mass.
App. Ct. 490, 499 (1991). He need only have shared
the intent of the principal to distribute. The judge properly denied the
defendant's request.[4]
This was not a case suggesting a low-level assistant ignorant of a larger stash
or an assistant involved only in a one-time sale. Rather, the evidence was
plentiful that the defendant regularly and repeatedly assisted Quinones in the
distribution of the stash, and that the defendant "would necessarily
understand that [the concealed inventory] was of a quantity sufficient to
support the volume of traffic in which he [was] involved." Commonwealth v.
Rivera, 40 Mass. App. Ct.
308, 312 (1996). See Commonwealth
v. Cuffie, 414 Mass. 632, 639
(1993); Commonwealth v. Sabetti, supra at 780; Commonwealth v. Robinson, 43
Mass. App. Ct. 257, 261 (1997).
Judgment affirmed.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] On three of these occasions, the officers
followed the defendant and Armando Quinones from Brockton
to Arnold's Restaurant. One other
time, the officers did not follow the vehicle, but observed it arrive at the
restaurant.
[2] The defendant's trial counsel is not his
appellate counsel.
[3] The defendant's written request for an
instruction also did not adequately raise the issue he now argues. The
requested instruction provided: "A person may joint venture [sic] as to
distribution of drugs but in order to find constructive possession of drugs not
at same place as act of distribution you must find defendant himself was
capable of control and dominion in fact and not by joint venture with another
merely from the venture to distribute. In other words you must judge each
defendant separately as regards their possession of the drugs (or constructive
possession of the drugs) and not by joint venture."
[4] The defendant's trial argument was not sufficient
to preserve the issue he seeks to raise on appeal. Even if we were to assume
that the defendant properly preserved the issue, there was no prejudice. See
Commonwealth v. Prater, 431 Mass.
86, 97 (2000) (where error in instruction is preserved, court reviews to
determine whether there was prejudicial error). The judge defined the shared
intent component of joint-venture liability as the intent "to distribute
the cocaine to others." He then instructed that the defendant must share
"the same intent as the principal, the intent required for the underlying
crime." The judge further instructed the jury that they may find the
defendant guilty, as a joint venturer or as a principal, or both, of the
offense as charged, viz., trafficking in one hundred grams or more of cocaine,
or of the lesser included offenses of trafficking in twenty-eight grams or more
(but less than one hundred grams) or of possession of cocaine with intent to
distribute. Of course, the jury could find the defendant not guilty on any
theory. Thus, the instructions adequately conveyed to the jury that the extent
of the guilt of the defendant depended on the nature of his agreement with
Quinones and the degree to which he shared Quinones's intent to engage in
trafficking. See Commonwealth
v. Cuffie, 414 Mass. 632, 639
(1993). This subsumed the defendant's knowledge. In other words, no reasonable
juror could have understood the jury instructions to allow conviction of the
defendant of trafficking on a joint venture theory if he did not know of the
hidden stash. See Commonwealth
v. Nieves, 394 Mass. 355, 360
(1985), and cases cited (where claim of error in instructions is preserved,
court assesses how reasonable juror could have interpreted instruction). Our
conclusion that the omission of the instruction did not prejudice the defendant
is bolstered by the overwhelming strength and nature of the evidence against him
as a joint venturer, which we noted in the text.