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Opinions of The and the Court of Appeals To be used in
conjunction with the CPS Criminal Procedure Textbook |
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CPS Commonwealth
Police Service, Inc. and the Law Office of Patrick Michael Rogers |
Commonwealth v.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts,
Argued
Decided
Steven M. Bloom,
Julia K. Holler, Assistant District Attorney (Linda
Wagner, Assistant District Attorney, with her) for Commonwealth.
Before LIACOS, C.J., and WILKINS, LYNCH, O'CONNOR and FRIED, JJ.
FRIED, Justice.
The
defendant refused to turn over his sneakers
[422
I
On
At
approximately 8:20 P.M., the brothers arrived at the apartment of a friend of
Martin in a car registered to the defendant's girl friend. Martin asked his friend if he would help them
move something. The friend agreed and
followed them in his own car to the alley behind the plaza. The friend helped the brothers lift the safe
into the back of their car and cover it with a quilt. After leaving the alley, the two cars [422 Mass. 263] pulled to the side of the road to aid a female friend of theirs
whose car had broken down. After a brief
conversation, the brothers agreed to give the woman and her companion a ride to
her apartment. Once at her apartment,
the brothers and the friend moved the safe into the apartment and the brothers
began to pry it open with a crowbar and a sledgehammer. Although they succeeded in removing the dial
from the safe, the safe would not succumb to their efforts, and the brothers
eventually gave up. In the meantime, the
friend had left the apartment and drove to the police station where he
disclosed his involvement in this affair.
The police, in the course of their pursuit of another vehicle, came upon
the car that had been used by the brothers.
The car appeared to have been recently abandoned, and in it the police
found the crowbar and the sledgehammer used by the brothers to pry at the safe,
as well as the safe's dial. The police
eventually discovered the safe sitting in the middle of a nearby dirt road
within one mile of the car.
Prior to
trial, the defendant's trial counsel sought to exclude the testimony of an
officer of the Barnstable County jail who was prepared to testify that the
defendant refused to turn over his sneakers to the police so that investigators
could determine if the sneakers matched the shoe prints found at the
landfill. (FN2) Counsel protested that this witness did not
appear on the Commonwealth's witness list.
Counsel also challenged the admission of this evidence on the ground
that it was more prejudicial than probative.
He explained that he was stressing prejudice because "based on the
law I have read, [refusal evidence] is not testimonial in nature and therefore
on that basis wouldn't be excluded."
The prosecutor agreed. The judge
declined to decide the issue before trial.
When the Commonwealth sought to have the jail officer testify, the judge
overruled the defendant's renewed objection, stating that refusal evidence
"was non‑testimonial and basically it's admissible," and
permitted the testimony concerning the defendant's refusal for the purpose of
establishing consciousness of guilt. In
its closing argument, the Commonwealth argued that the jury could infer the
defendant's [422 Mass. 264] guilt from his refusal to turn over
his sneakers. (FN3) At the Commonwealth's requests, the judge
instructed the jury that they were permitted to infer guilt from the defendant's
refusal but cautioned them that this evidence could not serve as the sole basis
for their verdicts.
On
November 20, 1991, the jury convicted the defendant and Martin of breaking and
entering in the daytime and larceny in a building. In an unpublished memorandum issued pursuant
to its rule 1:28 the defendant's convictions were affirmed by the Appeals
Court.
Commonwealth v. Hinckley, 38 Mass.App.Ct.
1103, 644 N.E.2d 986 (1995). This court
granted the defendant's application for further appellate review and we now
reverse the convictions.
II
A
[1] The
defendant asserts that the admission of the evidence that he refused to produce his sneakers violated his privilege
against self‑incrimination as protected by art. 12 of the Declaration of
Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution.
(FN4) In 1992, after the
defendant's trial, this court decided
Commonwealth v. Lydon, 413 Mass. 309, 597 N.E.2d
36 (1992), and rendered an Opinion of the
Justices, 412 Mass. 1201, 591 N.E.2d 1073 (1992). We held in
Lydon that the admission of refusal evidence
violated a defendant's State constitutional privilege against self‑incrimination. Lydon, supra at 313‑315, 597 N.E.2d 36 (evidence
of refusal to submit to swabbing of hands for evidence of gunpowder
inadmissible). See also Opinion of the Justices, supra
(evidence of refusal to take breathalyzer would be unconstitutionally
inadmissible). The admission of the
defendant's refusal to turn over his sneakers similarly violated his State
constitutional privilege against self‑incrimination. In all these instances, the defendant's
refusal tends to communicate his belief that he is guilty. Although the refusing party has no
constitutional right to refuse to produce real or physical evidence[422 Mass. 265] that the Commonwealth is
seeking, see Lydon,
supra at 313‑314, 597 N.E.2d 36; Opinion of the Justices, supra at 1207‑1208,
591 N.E.2d 1073; Commonwealth v. Brennan, 386 Mass. 772,
776, 780, 438 N.E.2d 60 (1982), if he refuses, that refusal may not be
introduced at trial to establish the defendant's consciousness of guilt. If this issue had been properly preserved
below, the prohibition against refusal evidence recognized in Opinion of the Justices, supra, would
undoubtedly apply to the defendant retroactively. See
Commonwealth v. D'Agostino, 421 Mass. 281, 284
& n. 3, 657 N.E.2d 217 (1995); Commonwealth v. Figueroa, 413 Mass. 193,
202, 595 N.E.2d 779 (1992), S.C., 422 Mass. 72, 661 N.E.2d 65 (1996).
[2] The
defendant, however, did not preserve this issue. In his motion in limine,
trial counsel did not raise the issue of the constitutionality of admitting the
refusal evidence. Counsel, citing Commonwealth v. Diaz, 383 Mass. 73, 417
N.E.2d 950 (1981), argued only that the probative value of the refusal evidence
was outweighed by its prejudicial impact.
This argument does not raise the constitutional implication of refusal
evidence. See Commonwealth v. Pisa, 384 Mass. 362, 366, 425 N.E.2d 290
(1981). When the issue was raised at
trial, the defendant's counsel dismissed any constitutional concerns related to
the sneaker issue as not supportable, and the prosecutor and the judge
concurred. In addition, trial counsel
did not object when the prosecutor incorporated the refusal testimony in his
closing argument, or when the judge gave her instructions on this point to the
jury.
When the
issue appealed is not properly preserved, we would normally only reverse a
conviction if the error created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of
justice. See Commonwealth v. Jackson, 419 Mass. 716, 719, 647 N.E.2d 401
(1995). "However, we have ruled in
a number of cases that a defendant does not waive a constitutional issue by
failing to raise it before the theory on which his argument is premised had
been sufficiently developed to put him on notice that the issue is a live
issue. Counsel need not be
'clairvoyant.' " Commonwealth v. Bowler, 407 Mass. 304,
307, 553 N.E.2d 534 (1990). See Commonwealth v. Rembiszewski,
391 Mass. 123, 126, 461 N.E.2d 201 (1984); DeJoinville v.
Commonwealth, 381 Mass. 246, 248, 408 N.E.2d 1353 (1980); Commonwealth
v. Miranda, 22 Mass.App.Ct. 10, 16, 490 N.E.2d
1195 (1986). The court's reasoning in D'Agostino,
supra, with respect to the relationship of the clairvoyance exception and
the principle recognized of the clairvoyance exception and the principle recognized
in Opinion of the Justices, supra, is
determinative of this issue. In D'Agostino,
supra, the jury convicted the defendant of [422 Mass. 266]
operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating
liquor. The defendant asserted that the
jury instructions, which had the effect of telling the jury, "by strong
implication at least, that the defendant's blood alcohol level had not been
tested, and that the reason no test was conducted was that the defendant
refused to submit to such a procedure,"
Commonwealth v. Zevitas, 418 Mass. 677, 683, 639
N.E.2d 1076 (1994), (FN5) violated his privilege against self‑incrimination. At trial, however, the defendant did not
object to these instructions on the ground that they violated his privilege against
self‑incrimination by permitting an improper inference to be made from
refusal evidence. After the trial in the D'Agostino
case, the Justices opined in Opinion of
the Justices, supra, that these particular instructions would violate a
defendant's privilege against self‑incrimination. (FN6)
Thus, the issue in D'Agostino was whether the application of the
constitutional privilege to refusal evidence had been "sufficiently
developed to put [counsel] on notice that the issue is a live issue."
Bowler, supra at 307, 553 N.E.2d 534. In D'Agostino, supra, we examined the decisional law prior
to Opinion of the Justices, supra,
and concluded that "[n]ot until Opinion of the Justices, supra, was
there anything in the nature of discussion by an appellate court in the
Commonwealth which would have put the defendant fairly on notice that an
instruction calling the jury's attention to a defendant's probable refusal to
submit to a breathalyzer test might be held to violate art. 12's right against
self‑incrimination." D'Agostino, supra
at 286, 657 N.E.2d 217. Accordingly, by
application of the clairvoyance exception, we permitted the constitutional
issues to be raised on appeal.
There is
no basis on which to distinguish the arguments here from those decided in the D'Agostino
case. Indeed, the defendant's trial here
occurred prior to the trial of the defendant in D'Agostino. See
Commonwealth v. D'Agostino, supra at 284, 657
N.E.2d 217. Therefore, relying on the
discussion of this issue in D'Agostino, supra, we conclude that the defendant is
entitled [422 Mass. 267] to benefit from the principle
announced in Opinion of the Justices,
supra, and applied in Lydon, supra.
(FN7)
[3] Since
the clairvoyance exception applies, "[t]he remaining question is whether
the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Commonwealth v. McGrail, 419 Mass. 774, 780, 647
N.E.2d 712 (1995); Commonwealth v. Perrot,
407 Mass. 539, 548‑549, 554 N.E.2d 1205 (1990)." D'Agostino,
supra at 287, 657 N.E.2d 217. We
determine that it was not. The
Commonwealth's case was purely circumstantial;
it introduced no evidence that placed the defendant at the landfill at
the time of the crime. The friend who
helped with the safe after it had been removed from the landfill office did not
testify that the brothers told him that they had committed the breaking and
entering or the larceny. The
Commonwealth introduced no physical evidence of the defendant's involvement in
the breaking and entering or larceny: no
fingerprints, and no evidence linking the tools in the car to the ones used to
break into the landfill office. All that
the evidence shows is that the defendant was associated with the safe after it
had been removed from the landfill's office.
Refusal evidence, particularly accompanied by the prosecution's
argumentation and the judge's instruction on the implications of this evidence,
is persuasive, and may have convinced the jury of the defendant's guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt. (FN8)
For these
reasons, the defendant's convictions of breaking [422 Mass. 268] and
entering in the daytime and larceny
of a building are reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial.
So ordered.
(FN1.) The defendant and Martin were tried
together. Martin also was found guilty
of the same offenses, but he is not a party to this appeal.
The
defendant was also indicted on receiving stolen property. The defendant did not contest this
indictment. The trial judge instructed
the jury not to consider this indictment if they found the defendant guilty of
the more serious larceny indictment, since convictions on both indictments
would have been inconsistent. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Nascimento,
421 Mass. 677, 682‑685, 659 N.E.2d 745 (1996). Accordingly, the judge dismissed the
receiving stolen property indictment following the defendant's conviction of
breaking and entering in the daytime and larceny in a building.
(FN2.) A deputy sheriff testified that the
shoe prints found outside the facility did not match Martin's sneakers.
(FN3.) The prosecutor stated: "[The defendant], after he's arrested,
refuses to turn over his sneakers. Now
that in and of itself doesn't prove anything, ladies and gentlemen, enough to
find the defendant[ ] guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, but that's another fact
for you to consider in this case."
(FN4.) Article 12 provides in part that
"[n]o subject shall be ... compelled to accuse, or furnish evidence
against himself."
(FN5.) The instructions were mandated by G.L. c. 90, § 24(1)(e
) (1994 ed.).
(FN6.) In
Commonwealth v. Zevitas, 418 Mass. 677, 682‑683,
639 N.E.2d 1076 (1994), we made it "abundantly clear that its holding is
grounded in the earlier analysis provided in the Opinion of the Justices, supra."; Commonwealth v. Adams, 421
Mass. 289, 293, 657 N.E.2d 455 (1995) (holding that clairvoyance exception did
not apply because defendant's trial occurred after this court's opinion in Opinion of the Justices, supra ).
(FN7.) The defendant properly raised this
issue in a footnote in his brief to the Appeals Court. In that footnote, the defendant outlined the
standard, provided citations, and applied the standard to his case, thereby
satisfying Mass.R.A.P. 16(a)(4), as amended, 367
Mass. 921 (1975).
(FN8.) The defendant also contends that there
was prejudicial error where the judge allowed the prosecution to introduce
evidence that indicated that the codefendant, Martin, and other family members
had intimidated a witness. The defendant
argues that the intimidation evidence was inadmissible and, if admissible, was
so prejudicial that the judge should have ordered a severance. We find no error in the judge's actions. The evidence was admissible as revealing the
state of mind of the witness, and, at the close of the testimony concerning the
intimidation, the judge gave a careful limiting instruction. The balancing of the prejudicial impact of
this evidence and its probative value is best done by the trial judge and we
"see no error, let alone palpable error, in the judge's balancing of the
relative probative value and unfair prejudice of the evidence."
Commonwealth v. Fordham, 417 Mass. 10, 23, 627 N.E.2d 901 (1994).