COMMONWEALTH vs. DOMINGO CASTILLO.
No. 15-P-289.
Appeals Court of Massachusetts
January 20, 2016. - July 25, 2016.
89 Mass. App. Ct. 779 (2016)
Present: Trainor, Agnes, & Massing, JJ.
Suffolk. Controlled Substances. Practice, Criminal, Motion to suppress, Findings by judge, Interlocutory appeal. Probable Cause.
A Boston Municipal Court judge hearing the criminal defendant’s pretrial motion to suppress evidence erred in concluding that a police officer lacked probable cause to believe that the defendant had sold heroin to a third party, where the case law does not require a police officer to see the item exchanged in order to create a reasonable suspicion, or even probable cause, to believe that a drug transaction had occurred. [786-787]
COMPLAINT received and sworn to in the Roxbury Division of the Boston Municipal Court Department on July 25, 2013.
A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Debra Shopteese, J.
An application for leave to prosecute an interlocutory appeal was allowed by Geraldine S. Hines, J., in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk, and the case was reported by her to the Appeals Court.
Cailin M. Campbell, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
Bradford R. Stanton for the defendant.
TRAINOR, J. The Commonwealth appeals from the allowance of a motion to suppress evidence in the Roxbury Division of the Boston Municipal Court Department. The Commonwealth argues that three of the judge’s factual findings are clearly erroneous because they were not supported by the evidence presented at the suppression hearing. The Commonwealth also argues that the judge erred in
Background. “We summarize the facts found by the motion judge following the evidentiary hearing, supplemented where necessary with undisputed testimony that was implicitly credited by the judge.” Commonwealth v. Oliveira, 474 Mass. 10, 11 (2016).1
Officer Shawn Grant2 testified that on the afternoon of July 24, 2013, he saw two individuals, later identified as Cesar Caban and James Niemczyk, on Washington Street in the Roxbury section of Boston walking back and forth while talking on cellular telephones (cell phones). Officer Grant alerted other officers in the area of the behavior and parked his unmarked police vehicle on the same side of Washington Street as the two individuals. After about fifteen minutes, Officer Grant saw the defendant cross Washington Street walking toward Caban and Niemczyk, who were now standing near a tree, and place an item into a residential mailbox3 not more than twenty-five feet from the tree. The defendant then walked to the tree and took money that Caban had wedged into the branches. Caban then walked to and reached into the mailbox and removed an item from inside. Officer Grant reported what he had witnessed to the nearby officers. Based on his training and experience, he believed he had witnessed a drug transaction.
Officer Grant followed the defendant to where he entered the passenger side of a parked automobile while other officers observed Caban and Niemczyk. Officer Grant heard over the radio that the other officers had stopped Caban and had found one plastic bag containing heroin on him. After Officer Grant heard this, he stopped the automobile with the defendant in it and placed the defendant under arrest for distribution of a class A substance (heroin, in violation of
Discussion. a. Judge’s findings. When reviewing a motion to suppress, “we adopt the motion judge’s factual findings absent clear error.” Commonwealth v. Isaiah I., 450 Mass. 818, 821 (2008), citing Commonwealth v. Catanzaro, 441 Mass. 46, 50 (2004). “We take the facts from the judge’s findings following a hearing on the motion to suppress, adding those that are not in dispute, and eliminating those that, from our reading of the transcript, are clearly erroneous.” Commonwealth v. Wedderburn, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 558, 558-559 (1994). “A finding is clearly erroneous when ‘although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’” Green v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Mass., Inc., 47 Mass. App. Ct. 443, 446 (1999), quoting from Springgate v. School Comm. of Mattapoisett, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 304, 309-310 (1981).
The motion judge heard testimony from a single witness, Officer Grant. After counsels’ arguments, the judge made oral findings and rulings. She both explicitly and implicitly credited the testimony of Officer Grant and based her ruling on what she believed he had said.4 Here, the Commonwealth argues that the judge’s factual findings, upon which her legal conclusions are based, are clearly erroneous. See Commonwealth v. Thomas, 429 Mass. 403, 405 (1999) (“motion judge’s findings of fact are binding in the absence of clear error“).
1. Officer Grant’s view of the mailbox. The judge stated in her findings that “Officer Grant had a hunch that something was placed in the mailbox, but he stated candidly to the court that he could not see the mailbox from the position that he was parked in; he was between the store and the doorway where the mailbox is situated, apparently, or mailboxes, and he could not actually see into the doorway where the mail drop or mailboxes are, so he could not see whether the defendant put anything in the box, mailed anything, took anything from the box. Officer Grant
Defense counsel vigorously cross-examined Officer Grant regarding his ability to observe the mailbox and whether he could see exactly what the item was that the defendant placed into it and what later was removed from it. Defense counsel asked Officer Grant if he inspected the mailbox after the alleged buyer had removed the item placed there by the defendant. Officer Grant responded that he did inspect the mailbox and defense counsel followed by asking: “Then you went to — you went to the mailbox then?” Officer Grant responded, “No, [I] looked in the mailbox from my vehicle; I didn’t get out of my vehicle . . . [y]es, yes, I didn’t get out of my vehicle.” Defense counsel asked again, “Okay. And could you see the mailboxes?” Officer Grant responded, “I could see the mailboxes, yes.” This was the only testimony regarding the mailbox offered at the hearing.6
The fact that the judge’s finding was erroneous is clear, but equally significant is the fact that this testimony was not susceptible of more than one interpretation. The judge made an explicit credibility determination of Officer Grant’s testimony. See Commonwealth v. Alvarado, 423 Mass. 266, 268 n.2 (1996) (“The motion judge’s findings do not incorporate all the testimony of
2. Caban and Niemczyk’s view of the mailbox. The judge next found that “the other two individuals, Caban and the third individual, were not in a position to see the mailbox at that time either. There’s no evidence that they were near the mailbox or could view the mailbox.” While Officer Grant did not testify how far away Caban and Niemczyk were from the mailbox, he did testify that they were on the same side of the street as the mailbox, “f[a]rther away from the mailbox . . . standing near a tree that was planted on the sidewalk.” He then testified that he was “[p]robably fifteen feet” away from the tree. He testified further that he could clearly see that it was “money” that Caban put in the tree and that this occurred about “[t]wo seconds” after the defendant put the item into the mailbox. The entire transaction observed and described by Officer Grant occurred in one to two minutes and consisted of the defendant placing an item in the mailbox, Caban placing money in the tree, the defendant walking to the tree and retrieving the money, and Caban walking to the mailbox and retrieving the item. The defendant and Caban had to be standing close to each other in order to complete the transaction within the time frame described by Officer Grant.
3. Sequence of events. Finally, and relatedly, the judge found that she did “credit that the money was put in the tree, between the tree branches, but . . . I don’t know where the tree branches were, really, what the location, whether the defendant was simply
In allowing the motion to suppress, the judge concluded that her
“primary concern [was] that the officer did not see the defendant place any item in the mailbox and that the other two individuals did not see the defendant place any item in the mailbox, nor were the individuals on the phone with each other confirming any kind of drop-off or anything of that nature.
“So, anything the officer did at that point was based on his hunch that a transaction had occurred, and the stop exceeded the permissible scope.” (Emphasis added.)
The basis for the judge’s allowance of the motion to suppress is not only clearly erroneous but also directly contradicted by the only evidence she heard, and credited, and which makes up the entire record.
Commonwealth v. Jones-Pannell, 472 Mass. 429 (2015), instructs us that we may only supplement a judge’s findings when “additional facts [are] necessary to support the judge’s conclusion, such as where the judge found the witnesses’ testimony truthful and accurate.” Id. at 437 (quotation omitted). Generally, we may not “revise a judge’s subsidiary findings of fact,” id. at 438, in order to reach a conclusion contrary to that reached by the judge. “[T]he mere absence of contradiction is not enough to
In consideration of these clear and explicit directives, and notwithstanding the singular and unique circumstances of this case, we are compelled to remand this matter for the motion judge to correct these errors.
There is nothing in Officer Grant’s testimony that is either ambiguous or susceptible of a different interpretation. The judge specifically credited the testimony of the witness, and then made findings unsupported by that testimony. There is no question of the credibility or the weight given to the witness’s testimony and there is no contradictory testimony to which to compare it. The testimony stands on its own and in stark contrast to the judge’s actual erroneous findings. Under these unique circumstances, we are directing the judge to correct these errors, upon remand, to comport with the clear, unambiguous, uncontroverted and credited evidence offered at the hearing.9
Conclusion. Because the judge’s findings were clearly erroneous based on the uncontroverted evidence at the suppression hearing, the suppression order must be vacated and the matter remanded. On remand, the judge shall make findings that comport with the hearing testimony she credits, and she shall make explicit any testimony she does not credit.
So ordered.
