COMMONWEALTH vs. SHABAZZ AUGUSTINE.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
March 11, 2015
470 Mass. 837 (2015)
Suffolk. October 10, 2013. - March 11, 2015.
Present: SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, GANTS, DUFFLY, & LENK, JJ.
This court concluded that an indigent criminal defendant was not entitled to the payment of attorney‘s fees under
INDICTMENT found and returned in the Superior Court Department on July 29, 2011.
Following review reported in 467 Mass. 230 (2014), a motion to award appellate attorney‘s fees was filed in this court on February 28, 2014.
The case was submitted on briefs.
Matthew R. Segal & Jessie J. Rossman for the defendant.
Cailin M. Campbell, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
BOTSFORD, J. Following our decision in Commonwealth v. Augustine, 467 Mass. 230 (2014), the defendant filed a request for attorney‘s fees pursuant to
Procedural background. The defendant was indicted in 2011 for the murder of Julaine Jules. In November, 2012, he moved to
After we issued our opinion, and before we issued the rescript to the trial court, the defendant filed his motion seeking fees associated with the appeal, pursuant to
Facts. The defendant was arraigned in the Superior Court in September, 2011, at which time attorney Steven J. Sack was appointed by the Committee for Public Counsel Services (CPCS) to represent him. Mr. Sack eventually filed the motion to suppress that ultimately resulted in the Commonwealth‘s interlocutory appeal. Augustine, 467 Mass. at 234. He also represented the defendant before the single justice in the county court when the Commonwealth applied for leave to appeal from the Superior Court‘s allowance of the motion to suppress, and he continues to represent the defendant in the underlying case in the trial court. However, Mr. Sack did not represent the defendant before the full court when we heard the Commonwealth‘s interlocutory appeal. Rather, for purposes of the appeal before the full court, CPCS appointed attorney Ruth Greenberg, who, we take judicial notice, has represented numerous criminal defendants in appellate cases in both this court and the Appeals Court for more than twenty years. Ms. Greenberg filed her notice of appearance promptly after the single justice allowed the Commonwealth‘s appeal to proceed.
Shortly after the case was entered in the full court, however, two attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Massachusetts - Matthew R. Segal and Jessie J. Rossman - filed notices of appearance indicating that they would be representing the defendant in the full court case,5 and Ms. Greenberg withdrew her appearance. The circumstances by which Mr. Segal and Ms. Rossman came to represent the defendant, and the reasons why Ms. Greenberg withdrew, are not clear from the materials that are before us. What is clear and undisputed, however, is that Mr. Segal and Ms. Rossman never intended to charge, and in fact did not charge, the defendant any fee for their services. Mr. Segal expressly acknowledges in his affidavit that their agreement was to represent the defendant “at no cost to him.”6
The defendant requests payment to him of fees in the amount of $12,000 for the services rendered by Mr. Segal in his behalf. Mr. Segal indicates in his supporting affidavit that he expended more than 120 hours of time on the full court case, and that he seeks payment at the rate of one hundred dollars per hour. He represents that “[a]s an exercise of billing discretion” he is not seeking payment for the hours he spent in excess of 120, nor an hourly rate in excess of one hundred dollars even though a higher rate “might reasonably be charged by an attorney with [his] background and experience with criminal appeals.” No fees are sought for the work of Ms. Rossman, although Mr. Segal states in his affidavit that she also spent substantial time on the appeal. Nor are fees sought for the work performed by the defendant‘s court-appointed counsel, Mr. Sack, when the Commonwealth‘s application for leave to appeal was before the single justice.
Discussion.
Although
Here, an indigent defendant was furnished with capable, experienced counsel by CPCS for the defense against the Commonwealth‘s interlocutory appeal. Then, as was his right, the defendant engaged private counsel to replace his appointed counsel. He did not incur any fees for this private representation, however, nor did he legally obligate himself to pay fees, because his new private counsel expressly agreed to represent him “at no cost.”9
The fee provision in
By contrast, the fee provision in
designed to encourage attorneys to take on small cases or to provide representation for those who cannot afford it. If a criminal defendant is indigent and entitled to counsel, representation will be provided by counsel assigned or appointed by CPCS, as it was here.
Being indigent, the defendant was entitled to receive, and did receive, appointed counsel to represent him in both the trial court and on appeal at no expense to him. He also was entitled to discharge his appointed counsel and retain private counsel on such terms as he was able, which he did. What he is not entitled to, however, is to have the Commonwealth pay him for private counsel fees that he did not actually incur and was not legally obligated to pay. If that were the case, indigent defendants always would be able to engage private counsel of their choice, in lieu of their court-appointed counsel, at the Commonwealth‘s expense. There is no such right.12
Finally, we acknowledge the argument made by the defendant that
Conclusion. For the reasons we have stated, the defendant‘s motion for appellate attorney‘s fees pursuant to
So ordered.
Notes
Moreover, Ms. Rossman confirmed to the prosecutor in an electronic mail message that “under our policy, we do not charge any client for our services and we cover the costs for indigent clients.”
“Rule 15 (d) provides a needed measure of protection to the rights of defendants by seeking to equalize the resources of the defendant with those of the Commonwealth. A defendant who is able to retain private counsel may not have the funds for an interlocutory appeal from a suppression motion on which he has prevailed. The lawyer should not be placed in the untenable position of either volunteering his services on the appeal or abandoning the defendant. These considerations are present in every case and especially operative when the case involves a significant constitutional issue on which the defense bar has an equal interest with the prosecution in establishing the law.”
Id. at 617.
