COMMONWEALTH vs. MAURICE BOLDEN.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
December 17, 2014
Hampden. October 9, 2014. - December 17, 2014.
470 Mass. 274 (2014)
Present: GANTS, C.J., SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, DUFFLY, LENK, & HINES, JJ.
This court vacated the criminal defendant’s conviction on one of two indictments arising from the breaking and entering of one dwelling, set aside the verdict on that indictment, and dismissed it, where the language of
A criminal defendant was not entitled to relief from the judgment of conviction of burglary on an indictment that had been amended to name correctly the person assaulted during the course of the burglary, where, given that the name of the person assaulted was not an essential element of the crime, the amendment was one of form rather than substance, and where the defendant suffered no prejudice from the amendment. [281-283]
INDICTMENTS found and returned in the Superior Court Department on July 15, 1993.
A motion to correct illegal sentences, filed on February 7, 2011, was heard by Bertha D. Josephson, J.
After review by the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial Court granted leave to obtain further appellate review.
William W. Adams for the defendant.
Dianne M. Dillon, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
CORDY, J. In the summer of 1993, the defendant broke into several homes in the Springfield metropolitan area, attacking the inhabitants and carrying off their possessions. At trial, he was convicted on seventeen indictments, including three counts of aggravated burglary that form the basis of this appeal. Two of the three counts arose from the burglary of a dwelling in Agawam
The convictions on those indictments were affirmed. 42 Mass. App. Ct. 1105 (1997). The defendant filed in the Superior Court a motion for postconviction relief seeking to correct illegal sentences, contending that the two Agawam indictments were duplicative and that an amendment to the Springfield indictment as to the person assaulted rendered that conviction unconstitutional, in violation of
With respect to the Agawam indictments, we agree with the defendant that
1. Background. The following facts are drawn from testimony before the grand jury and are supplemented by testimony at trial. In the middle of the night on June 29, 1993, the defendant opened the unlocked rear door to a house on Winthrop Street in Springfield, entered the dwelling, pilfered a key to a 1989 Mercury Merkur automobile parked in the driveway, and — while in the dwelling attempting to abscond with a television — was confronted by one of the occupants, Sandra Goodrow. The defendant struck Sandra in the head, fled the dwelling, and escaped in the Merkur. Carmella Goodrow, her mother-in-law and owner of the dwelling, reported the break-in and assault to the Springfield police.
Late in the evening on July 2, 1993, the defendant drove the Merkur to a street near the home of Stanley and Alice Glogowski in Agawam. The defendant walked up to their home, opened a
Alice, on hearing the commotion, went to the top of the cellar stairs, where she observed the defendant standing over Stanley, who was unconscious and lying on the floor. This prompted her to shut the door to the cellar and place the weight of her body against it. The defendant forced the door open and grabbed Alice, striking her in the face and sending her tumbling down the stairs, before kicking open and escaping through the rear door from which he had entered. Stanley called the police, who, on arrival, found the blood-spattered piece of lumber impressed with the defendant’s fingerprint.
The defendant was apprehended by the Springfield police and confessed to the break-ins. A grand jury convened in Hampden County and heard excerpts from the defendant’s statement to the police, as well as the testimony of a Springfield police officer: “On 6/29/93 Carmello [sic] Goodrow of . . . Winthrop Street reported that her home had been broken into and that during the break the subject had slapped her across the head before fleeing the house . . . .” The grand jury returned the Springfield indictment, which provided, in pertinent part:
“MAURICE BOLDEN . . . did break and enter the dwelling house in the nighttime of Carmella Goodrow . . . with intent therein to commit a felony, or after having entered with such intent, did break such dwelling house in the nighttime, the said Carmella Goodrow being then lawfully therein, and the said Maurice Bolden did make an actual assault on said Carmella Goodrow, a person lawfully therein.”
The grand jury also returned the two Agawam indictments, premising one on the armed assault of Stanley and the other on the armed assault of Alice.
Prior to trial, the Commonwealth filed a motion to amend the Springfield indictment to change the name of the assault victim from Carmella Goodrow to Sandra Goodrow. The defendant consented to the amendment, the judge allowed the motion, and the indictment was duly amended. The defendant was tried by jury on the Springfield and Agawam indictments, each resulting
The defendant filed a motion in the Superior Court pursuant to
2. Discussion. a. The Agawam indictments. “Under the double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Massachusetts common law, no person may be convicted twice for the same offense.” Commonwealth v. Horne, 466 Mass. 440, 449 (2013). Where, as here, a defendant is convicted twice under the same statute, we endeavor to “examine the statute and ask what ‘unit of prosecution’ was intended by the Legislature as the punishable act.” Id. at 449-450, quoting Commonwealth v. Rabb, 431 Mass. 123, 128 (2000). This inquiry is informed by the language and purpose of the statute, as well as the rule of lenity, which requires us to resolve any ambiguities in the defendant’s favor. Horne, supra at 450.
The crime of aggravated burglary is defined in
The Appeals Court agreed, framing its analysis around the two
The second clause embraces the various methods by which common-law burglary may be aggravated into a violation of
The Commonwealth attempts to distinguish the Gordon case on its facts, pointing out that the present case involved separate and
The language of
Alternatively, the Commonwealth asks us to overrule the Gordon case and adopt a victim-based unit of prosecution. We decline that invitation. In addition to the historical accuracy and commonsense appeal of the Gordon court’s analysis, we are persuaded by the Legislature’s placement of
Once a person has broken and entered any part of the dwelling, at night, and with intent to commit a felony therein, the predicate offense of burglary as to that dwelling is complete.3 Because arming oneself with a dangerous weapon and assaulting the inhabitants of that dwelling merely aggravate that singular predicate offense, the Commonwealth may not aggregate such actions into multiple units of prosecution under
There is no question that, on the evening of July 2, 1993, the defendant committed the predicate offense of burglary in Agawam; nor is there any question that the defendant aggravated that offense by arming himself with a dangerous weapon and assaulting the lawful inhabitants of the burgled dwelling. However, the defendant cannot stand twice convicted for this singular violation of
b. The Springfield indictment. The defendant next challenges the amendment of the Springfield indictment, hearkening back to our pronouncement in the case of Commonwealth v. Blood, 4 Gray 31, 32 (1855):
“Nothing can be more clear than the duty of the Commonwealth to prove the identity of the offence charged in a complaint or indictment, with that on which it seeks to convict the party charged before the jury of trials. The fundamental principles of our government require this as an essential safeguard to the rights and liberty of the citizen. If it were not so, the constitutional privilege of a party, before he is held to answer to an offence, to have it ‘fully and plainly, substantially and formally described to him,’ and to be secure from arrest until ‘the cause or foundation of the warrant be previously supported by oath or affirmation,’ might be violated at the pleasure of prosecutors.”
We think that the concerns articulated in the Blood case, since refined through the development of our statutory and common law, have been satisfied in this case.
One of those refinements occurred by way of the Legislature’s enactment of
The crime charged in the Snow case was extortion, carried out by a threat against the person and property of one Nora Downs. Id. at 599. The question posed was whether the grand jury’s indictment could be modified, consistent with
Although we agree that the Snow case is controlling here, that will be cold comfort to the defendant. As we explain today,
Absent such constitutional concerns, a judge may amend an
3. Conclusion. The order denying the defendant’s motion to correct illegal sentences is affirmed as to indictment nos. 93-1181 and 93-1183, and reversed as to indictment no. 93-1182.
So ordered.
