After the defendant was tried in the Superior Court, convicted of several offenses, and sentenced, he appealed from Ms sentences to the Appellate Division of the Superior Court. See G. L. c. 278, § 28B. The Appellate Division modified one of Ms tMee sentences.
1. The governing statute, G. L. c. 278, § 28B, expressly states that the decisions of the Appellate Division “shall be final.” The Commonwealth concedes that it could not have appealed as a matter of right to the appellate courts from the Appellate Division’s decision. The fact that the Commonwealth could not appeal as a matter of right does not necessarily mean that it is entitled to review by way of this court’s extraordinary power of general superintendence. Commonwealth v. Snow,
2. The single justice correctly determined that this is not the rare case requiring superintendence review. The Commonwealth first claims that reduction of the sentence by the Appellate Division was improper because the record before it was too sparse — in comparison to the record that was before the trial judge — to allow it to make a determination that the original sentence was too harsh.
3. The single justice also correctly declined to employ the extraordinary power of general superintendence to address the Commonwealth’s second claim, that the Appellate Division ought to be required to provide an express
4. Finally, the Commonwealth represents that statutes in some other jurisdictions allow the State to appeal from sentences that it believes are too lenient. That is not the law in Massachusetts. The single justice was not obligated to tackle that issue as a matter of general superintendence.
5. The Commonwealth has not demonstrated that the single justice clearly erred as a matter of law or abused her discretion. See Commonwealth v. Samuels, supra at 1027 n.1 (“The present appeal is strictly limited to a review of that ruling; it is not an opportunity for the Commonwealth simply to present the same arguments to this court that it pressed unsuccessfully in the county court”).
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The defendant was sentenced in the trial court to (i) a term of from nineteen and one-half to twenty years in State prison for his conviction of voluntary manslaughter; (ii) a term of from eight to ten years for his conviction of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, to be served from and after the sentence for the manslaughter; and (iii) a term of from four to five years for his conviction of unlawfully carrying a firearm, to be served from and after the sentence for voluntary manslaughter and concurrent with the sentence for assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon. The Appellate Division reduced the sentence for assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon to from four to five years. It left the other two sentences intact.
The transcript of the hearing before the Appellate Division makes it clear that the judges of the Appellate Division correctly understood their role, and we think it implicit in their decision to reduce one of the sentences that they determined the sentence was too harsh. Nothing in any rule, statute, or the Constitution required them to make an express finding to that effect. Cf. Gavin v. Commonwealth,
The Guidelines for Appellate Division Proceedings specify a variety of types of information, from different sources, that the Appellate Division may consider. Massachusetts Rules of Court at 1493-1494 (West 2011). The Commonwealth does not contend that it was denied an opportunity to supply relevant information called for by the Guidelines. Moreover, the Commonwealth did not even argue before the Appellate Division the point that it is making now: that the record before the Appellate Division was inadequate for it to grant the relief the defendant was seeking.
Nor is there anything in the Commonwealth’s argument or in the record suggesting an issue of systemic concern warranting general superintendence review. For all that appears, the Commonwealth is simply dissatisfied with the Appellate Division’s decision in this particular case to reduce one of the three sentences. Compare Commonwealth v. Samuels,
