Thе defendant pleaded guilty to indictments charging assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, G. L. c. 265, § 15A, and armed assault with intent to murder, G. L. c. 265, § 18. He received consecutive sentences as follows: a committed State prison sentence with respect to the former offense, and a sentence of probation with respect to the latter. The defendant served his full State prison sentence (i.e., he was not
We briefly summarize the facts adduced at the plea hearing. The defendant and the victim were husband and wife. During a fight in their shared apartment, the defendant attacked the victim with a screwdriver. He stabbed her several times, and then threw the victim onto the floor. As the victim scrambled to her feet, the defendant grabbed her and stabbed her several more times. The victim made a second effort to flee, but the defendant held her and continued to stab her. Eventually, the defendant released the victim and left the apartment. An ambulance was summoned by a neighbor, and the victim was taken to a nearby hospital. The victim suffered fifteen to twenty separate stab wounds on her facе, head, leg, arms, and stomach.
We include such other relevant facts as are necessary in our analysis of the legal issue presented.
At the core here is the issue whether the defendant’s State or Federal double jeopardy protections were violated — specifically, whether the consecutive sentences imposed by the trial judge amount to improper multiple punishments for what the defendant asserts is a single criminal act. Before we begin our analysis, we briefly review the relevant governing law.
Both the Massachusetts common law double jeopardy rule
Absent from the above list оf proscribed types of prosecutions is any prohibition against simultaneous prosecutions for the “same” offense. As the Supreme Court stated in Ohio v. Johnson,
In view of the foregoing, there is no question that this defendant lawfully was tried for violations of both G. L. c. 265, § 18, and G. L. c. 265, § 15A. The only open question then is whether his multiple sentences transgress either the Commonwealth’s common law double jeopardy rulе or the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, at least as that provision was construed at the time the offenses here were committed. Although acknowledging that the two crimes of which he was convicted have mutually exclusive elements and so neither is technically a lesser included offense of the other, the defendant contends that because both convictions are predicated upon the sаme conduct, the multiple convictions are nonetheless prohibited.
We turn first to the defendant’s State common law claim. The traditional rule in Massachusetts, as embodied by Morey v. Commonwealth,
The defendant argues, however, that the strict elements-based approach of Morey has been tempered somewhat over the years. He points, for example, to Commonwealth v. Woods,
. In support of this approach, the defendant points chiefly to Commonwealth v. Jones, 382 Mass, at 394, in which the Supreme Judicial Court determined that, although vehicular homicide is not technically a lesser included offense of manslaughter (that is, each offense contains an element the other does not), the defendant could not receive sentences for both, since, in the particular circumstances of that case, the two convictions were obtained through proof of exactly the same act, and, the court concluded on the basis of the legislative history of the former, the Legislature did not intend multiple punishments. The defendant also cites Costarelli v. Commonwealth,
In each of these three cases, the court departed significantly from the mechanical elements-based rule endorsed in the venerable Morey decision in favor of an analysis that focused on whether multiple convictions are, in essence, based on the same criminal act. If this standard applies here, the defendant admittedly would have a strong argument — neither the indictments nor the plea colloquy attempt to identify discrete acts to the individual offenses charged. However, we conclude that — at least as for punishments imposed in a single proceeding — the Supreme Judicial Court has abandoned the type of conduct-based approach endorsed in Costarelli, St. Pierre, and Jones, in favor of the Morey test.
In Commonwealth v. Crocker,
The Crocker decision,
The reasoning of Crocker was affirmed by the Supreme Judicial Court most recently in Commonwealth v. Alvarez,
Nothing in Commonwealth v. Sanchez,
We turn now to an analysis of the cognate Federal law. The defendant’s argument fares no better under the Federal double jeopardy clause. Admittedly, at the time the underlying offenses were committed here, the United States Supreme Court had adopted a double jeopardy rule that was more favorable to the defendant than the one currently in force. In Grady v. Corbin,
The holding in Grady was expressly limited to the context of successive prosecutions, leaving the eаrlier Blockburger rule in place with respect to cases of multiple punishments at a single trial. As the Supreme Court stated in Grady: “[T]he Double Jeopardy Clause bars a subsequent prosecution if, to establish an essential element of an offense charged in that prosecution, the government will prove conduct that constitutes an offense for which the defendant has already been prosecuted” (emphasis supplied). Grady v. Corbin,
The notion that the Grady decision was directed only at situations involving subsequent prosecutions was further under
One last point: We are aware that our analysis leads to the conclusion that Massachusetts today enforces precisely the same double jeopardy rule as that adopted by the United States Supreme Court in Grady — i.e., a potentially conduct-based standard in instances of successive prosecution, but an elements-based approach in the context of multiple punishments imposed at a single trial — a position that was repudiated later by the Supreme Court in United States v. Dixon,
In any event, further shifts in the Massachusetts approach to double jeopardy protection are not a matter for this court. It may be that the apparent differences between the treatments of cases involving successive prosecutions are entirely attributable to common-law principles of collateral estoppel (as the Supreme Court suggested in United States v. Dixon,
Order revoking probation and imposing prison sentence affirmed.
Notes
In recent years, the Supreme Judicial Court has engaged in increased speculation as to whether the Massachusetts double jeopardy rule is simply a common law protection or rather has a State constitutional grounding. As the Supreme Judicial Court stated in Commonwealth v. Forte,
“[T]he Fifth Amendment double jeopardy guarantee serves principally as a restraint on courts and prosecutors. The legislature remains free under the Double Jeopardy Clause to define crimes and fix punishments; but once the legislature has acted courts may not impose more than one punishment for the same offense and prosecutors ordinarily may not attempt to secure that punishment in more than one trial.” Brown v. Ohio,
The court, however, characterized use without authority аs a lesser included offense of larceny of a motor vehicle, because the elements that are placed in issue in the use without authority prosecution are generally also elements of the offense of larceny. Costarelli v. Commonwealth,
The court in both cases denied that it was departing from the Morey standard, but the court in Crocker determined that, in fact, it had done so in both instances. Id. at 361.
We note that, quite apart from Crocker, there are difficulties in relying on either Costarelli or St. Pierre as support for the defendant’s view. The Costarelli decision,
The same approach was used in Commonwealth v. Sullivan,
The Court stated in Dixon,
In the criminal context, collateral estoppel bars relitigation of any specific issues “necessarily decided” at a previous trial. “[WJhen an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.” Commonwealth v. Pero,
