The defendant, Alvin T. Cobb, was convicted on two indictments charging armed robbery. The Appeals Court reversed the convictions and ordered a new trial,
The relevant facts are as follows. On June 22, 1982, a Suffolk County grand jury returned three indictments against *106 the defendant charging him with committing three separate armed robberies at the same liquor store in Dorchester. The robberies occurred on March 23, April 6, and April 22, 1981.
On December 1, 1982, the defendant filed a motion pursuant to Mass. R. Crim. P. 9
(d)
(2),
On appeal, the defendant argues that: (1) the trial judge erred in his instruction to the jury regarding the inference that may be drawn from the defendant’s failure to call certain witnesses, as well as other instructions; (2) it was error to deny his motion for severance of the indictments; and (3) he was denied his right to a fair trial by the trial judge’s refusal to require the Commonwealth to justify its peremptory challenges of three black jurors. We reverse the conviction on the first ground and remand for a new trial. Neither of the other issues is likely to arise at the defendant’s new trial. We need not address the severance issue because the defendant was found not guilty on one of the indictments for which he had argued severance and the remaining two indictments are indisputably ripe for joinder. The defendant does not argue otherwise.
The principal defense in this case was misidentification. John McCarty, an employee of the liquor store, was the victim of both robberies in April for which the defendant was convicted. Approximately two weeks after the second April robbery, detectives assigned to the case requested McCarty to review a series of photographs. From these photographs McCarty identified a picture of the defendant. McCarty identified the defendant a second time in May of 1982 when the defendant was brought to the Dorchester District Court for a probable cause hearing.
At trial, McCarty once again identified the defendant. He also testified that during each of the April robberies there was *107 another store employee on the premises (though it was a different employee on each date). McCarty was the only eyewitness called to testify for the Commonwealth regarding the April robberies.
In closing argument, defense counsel commented on the absence of any testimony from McCarty’s two co workers. 1 The prosecutor in turn responded to defense counsel’s remarks during his own closing argument. 2 In his charge to the jury, the judge instructed the jury on absent witnesses, as set out in the margin. 3 We address ourselves to that part of the instruction in which the judge stated: “Where a witness is equally available to either party, and the Defendant fails to call the witness, an inference . . . may be drawn that the testimony . . . would have been unfavorable to the Defendant where the evidence against *108 him is so strong that, if innocent, he would be expected to call the missing witness.” The defendant argues that there was no evidence that these absent witnesses were available to him, or that they had any material testimony to offer, and therefore the judge erred in giving an instruction which singled out the defendant and allowed the jury to draw an inference adverse to him for failing to produce the other store employees. We agree that this quoted portion of the judge’s instruction was not an accurate statement of the law and that, under the circumstances, it was error to permit the jury to draw an inference adverse to the defendant.
We have said that “[w]hether an inference can be drawn from the failure to call witnesses necessarily depends . . . upon the posture of the particular case and the state of the evidence.”
Commonwealth
v.
O’Rourke,
In
Commonwealth
v.
Franklin,
There was nothing during the course of this trial to suggest that the defendant had witnesses available or within his control, see
Commonwealth
v.
Franklin, supra
at 293, who were not brought forward to testify. Compare
Commonwealth
v.
DeCaro,
We note that the defendant did not object to this erroneous instruction. In such circumstances, we may still find reversible error. However, we will do so only upon a showing of a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.
Commonwealth
v.
Daigle,
The judgments of the Superior Court are reversed, the verdicts set aside and the case is remanded for a new trial.
So ordered.
Notes
Defense counsel stated: “Who was in the store with Mr. McCarty? A co-worker named Kimball. Kimball is not here. What would Kimball have told us? . . .
“Then we get to April 22nd, 1981, 9:00 p.m. Mr. McCarty is by the register again. This time his co-worker is Edward Morris; where — his wallet was taken. Where is Edward Morris? Why is he not here? Why can he not confirm or elaborate on what Mr. McCarty said? He is an eyewitness; he is right there.”
The prosecutor argued: "There was some claim as to what witnesses were not here; well, Commonwealth would ask you: what witnesses were here? And witnesses are available to everybody to bring for you to hear and listen to. So you can believe some of what they say, all of what they say or none of what they say. You do not even have to believe them.”
“Now, we have heard comment about absent witnesses; we have heard names of people who have not been here. If a witness who could have given material testimony on an issue in this case was peculiarly within the power of one party to produce, and that one party did not call the witness, and the absence has not been sufficiently accounted for or explained, then you may, if you deem it appropriate, infer — what was the inference? Permissible deduction — you may infer that the testimony of the witness would have been unfavorable to the party which failed to call him.
“However, unless it appeared that the witness was within the power of the party to produce, you should place no significance on the witness’s failure to appear.
“Where a witness is equally available to either party, and the Defendant fails to call the witness, an inference — a permissible deduction — may be drawn that the testimony of the witness would have been unfavorable to the Defendant where the evidence against him is so strong that, if innocent, he would be expected to call the missing witness.”
