|
Opinions of
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
and the Massachusetts
Court of Appeals
To be used in
conjunction with the CPS Criminal Procedure Textbook
|
|
CPS
Commonwealth
Police Service, Inc.
and the Law Office
of Patrick Michael Rogers
|
Commonwealth v. Sneed, 440 Mass. 216 (2003)
Suffolk.
September 5, 2003. - October 14, 2003.
Present: Marshall,
C.J., Greaney, Ireland,
Spina, Cowin & Cordy, JJ.
A pretrial
motion to suppress evidence was heard by Dermot Meagher, J.
Cathryn A.
Neaves, Assistant Attorney General, for the Commonwealth.
Dana Alan Curhan for the defendant.
GREANEY, J.
The defendant, seventy years of age and a
long-term employee of the State Lottery Commission, made incriminating
statements during an interview with a Massachusetts
State trooper and an investigator
from the Attorney General's Office regarding approximately $24,000 in receipts
missing from the Boston lottery
office. The defendant subsequently was summonsed to the Boston Municipal Court
and there arraigned on a complaint charging larceny over $250 by a single
scheme in violation of G. L. c. 266, § 30 (1). After an
evidentiary hearing on the defendant's motion to suppress her statements, a
judge entered a memorandum of decision and order in which he ruled that the statements
were the product of custodial interrogation without the warnings required under
Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966), and, thus, inadmissible. A single
justice of this court allowed the Commonwealth's application under Mass. R.
Crim. P. 15 (a) (2), as appearing in 422 Mass. 1501 (1996), to pursue an
interlocutory appeal from the order granting the motion to suppress, and the
appeal was transferred to the Appeals Court. That court affirmed the judge's
order. Commonwealth v. Sneed, 56 Mass. App. Ct. 391 (2002). We granted the Commonwealth's application for
further appellate review and now conclude that the defendant
was not entitled to Miranda warnings because she was not in custody at the time
the statements were made. We further conclude, based on the judge's findings of
facts and on our independent examination of the transcript of the evidentiary
hearing, that the defendant's statements were voluntarily made. Accordingly, we
vacate the order allowing the motion to suppress and remand the case to the
Boston Municipal Court for further proceedings.
1. The facts as found by the judge, all of which are supported by the evidence,
are as follows. See Commonwealth v. Morse, 427 Mass. 117, 118 (1998). On Wednesday,
June 9, 1999, the defendant remained home due to illness from her
job as one of the two employees of the "Game Room," a commission
outlet where lottery tickets are sold to the public. At approximately 1 P.M., State Trooper Matthew Murphy,
accompanied by a civilian investigator, James McFadden,[1]
rang her doorbell. Trooper Murphy was unarmed and in plain clothes. The two men
went to the defendant's home, unannounced, with the purpose of inquiring about
the defendant's job at the Game Room and about $24,000 in missing lottery
receipts. A simultaneous investigation was being conducted of the other
employee of the Game Room. Murphy and McFadden had with them copies of the Game
Room's daily reporting forms for January, 1999, through March, 1999, as well as
the results of another trooper's investigation of the defendant's slot machine
gambling activity at Foxwoods Casino in Connecticut.
The defendant answered the door dressed in sweat pants or pajamas. Trooper
Murphy identified himself and asked if they could come in to talk to her about
her job. The defendant answered that she was not feeling well but that they
could come in. The defendant suffered from asthma, and her condition required
the use of a nebulizer, which was plugged into an electric socket in her home.
The interview lasted for two hours. Murphy asked questions of the defendant,
and McFadden recorded her responses.[2]
The defendant was stressed by the interrogation, and, a couple of times during
the interview, she used her nebulizer. At one point she left the room to rid
herself of accumulated phlegm and to answer a telephone call from her daughter.
The defendant told her daughter she had visitors from the Lottery but did not
reveal to her daughter, who sensed her discomfort, the reason for the visit. At
no time was the defendant informed that she did not have to
answer the questions put to her or that she could leave the room or order
the two men to leave her apartment. The defendant was not given Miranda
warnings.
The judge made no findings regarding specific questions posed to the defendant,
but he appeared to credit the defendant's testimony that Trooper Murphy's tone
was "very quiet, forceful, insistent, stern and sort of accusatory."[3]
On a few occasions during the interview, the defendant asked whether she should
call a lawyer. Trooper Murphy informed the defendant that she should call a
priest to discuss (what Trooper Murphy characterized as) her gambling
addiction.[4]
The defendant made various incriminating statements to the investigators.[5]
Although the Commonwealth claims that she admitted the larceny, she was not
arrested at the conclusion of the questioning but was later summonsed. Three
hours after the interview ended, the defendant received emergency treatment for
her asthma.
2. The central issue is whether the judge correctly concluded that the
defendant was in custody, for purposes of Miranda, at the time she made the
statements to Trooper Murphy in her home, on June 9, 1999.[6]
"In reviewing the judge's decision, we 'give[] substantial deference to
the judge's ultimate findings and conclusions of law, but independently
review[] the correctness of the judge's application of constitutional
principles to the facts found.'" Commonwealth v. Morse, 427 Mass.
117, 122 (1998), quoting Commonwealth v. Magee, 423 Mass.
381, 384 (1996).
In his memorandum of decision and order on the motion to suppress, the judge
offered no justification for his ruling that the defendant's interrogation was
custodial in nature. We agree with the Appeals Court,
however, that implicit in the judge's determination of custody was his
conclusion that "the defendant could not leave the interrogation and did
not feel that she could otherwise end the questioning." Commonwealth
v. Sneed, supra at 396. This factual determination, however, does not
support the legal conclusion that the judge apparently attached to it.
The determination of custody depends primarily on the objective circumstances
of the interrogation, and not on the subjective views of either the
interrogating officers or the person being questioned. The critical question in
making the custody determination is "whether, considering all the
circumstances, a reasonable person in the defendant's position would have
believed that he was in custody." Commonwealth v. Brum, 438 Mass.
103, 111 (2002), quoting Commonwealth v. Damiano, 422 Mass.
10, 13 (1996). See United States v. Ventura, 85 F.3d 708, 712 (1st Cir. 1996)
("court must first examine all the circumstances surrounding the exchange
between the government agent and the suspect, then determine from the
perspective of a reasonable person in the suspect's shoes whether there was . .
. a formal arrest or restraint on freedom of movement of the degree associated
with a formal arrest").[7] Although the inquiry undoubtedly
encompasses a subjective element, for it requires a court initially to examine
the coercive elements of the particular questioning session from the point of
view of the person being questioned, its ultimate resolution depends on how a
reasonable person would feel in those circumstances. See Commonwealth
v. Conkey, 430 Mass. 139, 144 (1999). This court has set forth four indicia of
custody: (1) the place of the interrogation; (2) whether the officers have
conveyed to the person being questioned any belief or opinion that the person
is a suspect; (3) the nature of the interrogation, i.e., whether the interview
was aggressive or, instead, informal; and (4) whether, at the time the
incriminating statement or statements were made, the suspect was free to end
the interview by leaving the place of the interrogation or by asking the
interrogator to leave, or, alternatively, whether the interview terminated with
the defendant's arrest. See Commonwealth v. Groome, 435 Mass. 201, 212 & n.13 (2001). There is no specific formula
for weighing the relevant factors, see Commonwealth v. Haas, 373 Mass.
545, 552 (1977), S.C., 398 Mass. 806 (1986), but "[r]arely is any single
factor conclusive." Commonwealth v. Bryant, 390 Mass. 729, 737
(1984).
We now apply the above analytical framework to the questioning of the defendant
by Trooper Murphy. The defendant herself voluntarily admitted her questioners
into the familiar surroundings of her home. See Commonwealth
v. Conkey, supra at 144; Commonwealth v. Painten, 429 Mass. 536, 541
(1999); Breese v. Commonwealth, 415 Mass. 249,
255-256 (1993). It is true that the defendant was one of only two
employees at the Game Room, from which a substantial amount of money was
missing. That she may have been a target in the investigation does not inform
the custody determination, however, in view of the fact that, at the outset of
the questioning, she was informed only that her visitors "would like to
talk to her about her job." Moreover, undisputed testimony at the
suppression hearing indicates that, for the first half of the interview, the
defendant was questioned solely in general terms about how the Game Room
operated, and not about the missing money. There is no evidence of shouting or
raised voices on the part of the investigators. At one point, the defendant
freely left the room and spoke on the telephone with her daughter.[8] Although the judge found that the
defendant asked "on a couple of occasions if she should call a
lawyer,"[9] significantly, in our view, the judge made no finding
with respect to (and, thus, presumably, did not credit) the defendant's
testimony that Trooper Murphy advised her not to do so. Finally, the defendant
was not placed under arrest at the end of the interview, even though, accepting
the Commonwealth's version of events, her statements would have provided
probable cause to do so. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Brum, 438
Mass. 103, 112 (2002); Commonwealth v. Buckley, 410 Mass. 209, 217
(1991); Commonwealth v. McDonough, 400 Mass. 639, 656
(1987). See also Commonwealth v. Bryant, supra at 742
n.15 (noting that nonarrest of suspect at close of interrogation often
indicates lack of custodial atmosphere). We conclude that a reasonable
person, in the defendant's position at the time she made the statements,
undoubtedly might have believed that she was a suspect in the investigation
into the missing lottery money. A reasonable person, however, would have known
that she was free to terminate the interview and to ask the two men to leave
her home. The interview was not custodial and, thus, Miranda warnings were not
required.
3. The defendant's motion to suppress raised, somewhat imprecisely and
indirectly, a challenge to the voluntariness of her statements. The judge made
no ruling with respect to the matter in view of his conclusion that suppression
was required on Miranda principles. The judge's factual findings, however,
permit us to resolve the separate, but parallel, issue of voluntariness, which,
unlike the determination of custody, turns on whether this particular
defendant's will was overborne to the extent that her statements were not the
result of a free and voluntary act. See
Commonwealth v. Selby, 420 Mass.
656, 663 (1995), and cases cited; Commonwealth v. Tavares, 385 Mass.
140, 145, cert. denied, 457 U.S.
1137 (1982). The judge's findings are devoid of any indication that the
investigators practiced deceit or duress. There were no threats, inducements,
or promises of immunity or favor. The defendant's age and compromised health
(she was seventy years old, asthmatic, and required a nebulizer during the
interview to assist her breathing) suggest a degree of vulnerability, but
nothing in the judge's findings, or in the record, would support a legal
conclusion that her will was overborne by any coercion exerted on her by the
investigators, particularly in view of the fact that she was able to provide an
exculpatory version of events. See Commonwealth v. Makarewicz, 333 Mass. 575, 585-587 (1956). Although the defendant may have been
"stressed by the interrogation," her physical and mental competence
at the time the statements were made is unassailable. We conclude beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendant's statements to the investigators were
voluntary.[10]
4. The order allowing the motion to suppress is vacated, and an order is to
enter denying the defendant's motion to suppress. The case is remanded to the
Boston Municipal Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] James McFadden was a financial investigator for
the Attorney General's office.
[2] The record indicates that the defendant answered
all the questions posed to her.
[3] Trooper Murphy testified that he was
"[c]onversational, polite" on his arrival at the defendant's home and
that he was "[p]olite, sympathetic maybe" when he questioned the
defendant about the missing money.
[4] The defendant testified that Trooper Murphy
suggested that she "needed to call a priest if [she] had a priest or
someone that [she] could speak to because [she] had a gambling problem."
[5] The content of the statements made by the
defendant is disputed. The Commonwealth claims that the defendant admitted
taking the $24,000 as well as scratch tickets without paying for them. The
defendant claims that she said only that she occasionally borrowed small sums
of money from the office, but that she replaced the money with her check and
repaid with cash as soon as she had visited her bank, and that she paid for all
of the scratch tickets except those that had been damaged by the ticket
machine.
[6] "Miranda warnings are only necessary for
'custodial interrogations.'" Commonwealth v. Jung, 420 Mass.
675, 688 (1995), quoting Miranda v. Arizona,
384 U.S. 436,
444 (1966). The parties are in agreement that the two-hour interview
constituted an interrogation.
[7] Whether an interrogation is custodial for Miranda
purposes, of course, is primarily a question of Federal constitutional law. See Commonwealth
v. Morse, 427 Mass. 117, 123 (1998).
[8] We note that, had the tone and substance of the
questioning indicated to the defendant that she was the prime suspect in the
disappearance of the money, she could easily have asked her daughter to come to
her assistance or to telephone a lawyer.
[9] The defendant does not assert that her questions
regarding an attorney required the interview to cease. As matter of law, they
did not. See Commonwealth v. Girouard, 436 Mass. 657, 666 (2002); Commonwealth v. Judge, 420 Mass. 433,
449-550 (1995). Trooper Murphy testified that, had the defendant stated
that she wanted to speak to a lawyer, he and McFadden would have left.
[10] If there is a trial and voluntariness is a live
issue, under our "humane practice," the jury must be instructed that
"the Commonwealth has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that
the statement[s were] voluntary and that the jurors must disregard the
statement[s] unless the Commonwealth has met its burden." Commonwealth v. Tavares, 385 Mass. 140, 152,
cert. denied, 457 U.S. 1137 (1982).