444 Mass. 431 | Mass. | 2005
The defendants, Cong Due Le and Tung Ouoc Huynh, were convicted of assault and battery in the beating of Khanh Luong.
After being seen at the hospital, Luong went to the police to report the incident. A few days later, Detective Mario Módica interviewed Luong and Nguyen at the police station. Módica prepared an array of twelve photographs that contained a photograph of Huynh. Luong was the first to view the array. After viewing the array for a few minutes, Luong had not made any identification. He told Módica, “I can’t be sure.” Módica asked him to stop and to step outside. Módica observed that Luong’s left eye was swollen shut and tearing up, and that he appeared to be having difficulty with that eye.
Módica next showed the array to Nguyen. Módica testified
At trial, Luong made an in-court identification of Huynh as the man who had attacked him and an in-court identification of Le as the man who had attacked Nguyen at the same time.
Nguyen testified that as he and Luong were leaving the club, he heard someone call his name. He turned around, saw the defendants, and began speaking with Le.
Huynh testified that he had been at the club on the night of the incident, and he remembered seeing both Nguyen and Luong as they were leaving. He recalled that a fight broke out in the middle of the street, but he could not see who was being attacked. The fight ended after approximately two minutes, and the participants fled. He denied that he had had any involvement, and denied that he had struck Luong.
2. Discussion, a. Evidence of prior identification. Counsel for both defendants objected to Módica’s testimony concerning Nguyen’s alleged identification of the defendants as the perpetrators, and later requested that the judge give an instruction limiting that testimony to impeachment of Nguyen by means of a prior inconsistent statement. The judge declined to give any hmiting instruction. On appeal, the defendants contend that allowing the prior identification to be introduced as substantive evidence violated the restrictions placed on identification evidence in Daye. The Commonwealth argues that the facts of this case are distinguishable from Daye, or, in the alternative, that we should modify Daye to comport with modem precedent interpreting Fed. R. Evid. 801 (d) (1) (C).
In Daye, a police officer testified that two eyewitnesses to a shooting had viewed an array, selected the defendant’s photograph, and identified it as a photograph of the gunman. Id. at 57. However, one of the witnesses testified at trial that he had selected one or two photographs of persons who had been at the scene, that he did not know what the gunman looked like, and that he had not identified any photograph as that of the gunman. Id. at 58. The other witness testified that he had selected a few photographs of someone he “thought was the shooter,” but he was not asked to identify the photographs he had chosen, and testified that the gunman was not in the court room. Id. at 59.
The court recognized that evidence of a prior identification by a witness was admissible as probative evidence of identifica-
The Commonwealth’s attempt to distinguish the present case from Daye is unavailing. The fact that Nguyen testified that he selected two photographs does not qualify as “acknowledg-ement]” of the identification described by Módica — Nguyen testified that he identified those photographs as people who were merely present, and denied that he identified them as the perpetrators. Nguyen is, in all respects, the equivalent of the witness in Daye who acknowledged selecting one or two photographs of persons he had seen at the scene, but denied identifying any of the photographs as that of the actual shooter. Módica’s testimony that Nguyen identified Le as the one who had struck him and Huynh as the one who had struck Luong was testimony that “differ[ed] in material respects” from Nguyen’s version of the prior identification. Id.
However, we find merit in the Commonwealth’s contention that the limitations Daye placed on the use of extrajudicial identification evidence should be modified in light of subsequent jurisprudence on this subject. Proposed Mass. R. Evid. 801 (d) (1) (C) provides that a statement is not hearsay if “[t]he declarant testifies at the trial or hearing and is subject to cross-examination concerning the statement, and the statement is . . .
The argument that a literal reading of rule 801 (d) (1) (C) would violate the confrontation clause was later rejected by the United States Supreme Court. United States v. Owens, 484 U.S. 554, 559-563 (1988). There, the victim witness (who had suffered severe head injuries during the attack in question, resulting in significant memory loss) still had a memory of making a prior identification, but had no recollection of the basis for his identification, no recollection of even seeing the attacker, and no recollection of what had been said to him that might have made the prior identification of the defendant impermissibly suggestive. Id. at 556. Cross-examination efforts to refresh his recollection (including by means of hospital records indicating that the witness had at one point identified someone else as the perpetrator) were unavailing. Id. Despite these problems, the victim’s prior identification of the defendant was admitted in evidence. Id. On appeal, the defendant claimed that the victim’s memory loss was such that he had been denied an effective opportunity to cross-examine him on the subject of the identification, in violation of the confrontation clause and contrary to the requirement in rule 801 (d) (1) (C) that the witness be “subject to cross-examination concerning the statement” of prior identification. Id. at 561. The Court disagreed. As to the confrontation clause, all that was required was that the defendant have an opportunity to cross-examine the witness
Following United States v. Owens, supra, Federal courts have applied rule 801 (d) (1) (C) in a literal manner, and have allowed a witness who observed the prior identification to testify concerning that identification, even where the witness who allegedly made the identification denies or does not remember having made it. See United States v. Lopez, 271 F.3d 472, 484-485 (3d Cir. 2001), cert. denied, 535 U.S. 908, and cert, denied sub nom. Navarro v. United States, 535 U.S. 962 (2002) (officer permitted to testify to witness’s prior identification pursuant to rule 801 [d] [1] [C] where witness “denied making any such statement to the police”); United States v. Jarrad, 754 F.2d 1451, 1456 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 830 (1985) (witness testified that she had been shown photographic array but denied selecting any photograph; rule 801 [d] [1] [C] permitted Federal agent to testify that witness had selected defendant’s photograph and identified it as “similar to or reminded her of” perpetrator); United States v. Kaquatosh, 242 F. Supp. 2d 562, 563 (E.D. Wis. 2003) (evidence of prior identification may be introduced by third-party witness to identification even if
Consistent with these developments, more recent editions of the same treatise relied on in Daye, supra at 61 n.9, explain that rule 801 (d) (1) (C) allows an observer of the identification process to testify concerning that identification, even if the identifying witness disclaims having made such an identification. 5 J. Weinstein & M. Berger, Weinstein’s Federal Evidence § 801.23[1], at 801-40 (2d ed. 2003 & Supp. 2005) (prior identification is “admissible nonhearsay even if the witness disavows the earlier identification”); 4 J. Weinstein & M. Berger, Weinstein’s Evidence par. 801 (d) (1) (C)[01], at 801-222 (1993) (“if at the trial the eyewitness fails to remember or denies that he made the identification, the previous statement of the eyewitness can be proved by the testimony of a person to whom the statement was made, and the statement can be given substantive effect”). In short, the precedent on which Daye was based has itself been modified, and has long since discarded the limitation on Proposed Mass. R. Evid. 801 (d) (1) (C) that Daye imposed.
In Daye, the court also expressed concern that where there is a dispute as to whether the prior identification was made, “the evidential value of the prior identification is almost completely dissipated.” Daye, supra at 61, quoting Commonwealth v. Swen-son, 368 Mass. 268, 273 n.3 (1975). In light of more recent experience under the Federal rule, that pessimistic assessment of the value of disputed prior identification evidence is no longer warranted. As with any other situation where the jury are
The legislative history of Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(1)(C) confirms
Moreover, the issue is not whether the jury will be allowed to hear this evidence — under Daye, evidence of the prior identification would still be admissible for purposes of impeachment. Daye, supra at 61. The sole issue is whether the jury should be given an instruction limiting the use of that evidence to impeachment. Prior identification evidence is of substantive value, even in the absence of any in-court identification, because it has occurred under nonsuggestive circumstances and closer in time to the offense. See Commonwealth v. Weich-ell, 390 Mass. 62, 71 (1983), and cases cited. If the jury are convinced that a prior identification was made, their use of that identification should not be artificially limited merely because a witness the jury do not believe has denied making that identification.
Although the trial, as conducted, did not comply with the evi-dentiary rules as they then stood — Daye was still good law at the time, and the judge should have adhered to its restrictions — we do not see any unfairness in applying the modified rule retroactively in these circumstances. As indicated above, this change in our interpretation of the rule does not alter the evidence that is presented to the jury, but only takes away from the defendants a limiting instruction. Cf. Commonwealth v. Saunders, 435 Mass. 691, 692, 694 (2002) (where prior conviction improperly admitted, defendant entitled to new trial; new requirement applied prospectively). There was nothing erroneous, even under prior law, in the judge’s overruling the defendant’s objections to Módica’s testimony concerning Nguyen’s statements identifying the defendants as the perpetrators. That the jury did not hear an instruction telling them that they could consider that testimony only for purposes of assessing the credibility of Nguyen’s trial testimony would have had minimal — if any — impact on the jury’s weighing of the over-all evidence of identification in these cases (see note 8, supra). We thus see no unfairness in applying a literal interpretation of Proposed Mass. R. Evid. 801 (d) (1) (C) retroactively to this case.
b. In-court identifications. Prior to trial, the defendants filed a motion to preclude Luong from making any in-court identification, arguing that Luong’s attendance at prior hearings, during which he had seen the defendants, amounted to impermissibly suggestive identification procedures. See Commonwealth v.
Judgments affirmed.
The defendants were acquitted on charges of larceny. Charges of assault and battery, and assault with intent to rob, against another victim, James Nguyen, were dismissed.
In Commonwealth v. Daye, 393 Mass. 55, 65-75 (1984) (Daye), the court also addressed the substantive use of prior inconsistent statements made under oath. See Proposed Mass. R. Evid. 801 (d) (1) (A). That aspect of Daye is unaffected by our decision today. See Commonwealth v. Clements, 436 Mass.
At trial, Luong testified that he had seen some people he recognized in that array, and thought that he had seen a photograph of Le in the array. However, Le’s photograph was not in that array. Luong also testified that, at the time he viewed the array, he could see out of his right eye, but could not see out of his left eye.
Modica also made a notation on the bottom of the array, referencing Nguyen’s identification of Huynh “as the suspect that punched victim Khanh Luong.” Nguyen testified that the array was blank at the time he placed his initials on the photograph, i.e., his initials did not signal any confirmation of what Módica later wrote on the array.
There was no direct evidence that Le struck Luong. The Commonwealth argued that Le acted as a joint venturer in Huynh’s attack on Luong.
Nguyen also knew both defendants, having been friends with Huynh and his brothers for five or six years, and, more recently, seeing Huynh at clubs they both frequented. He had seen Le on one or two prior occasions.
Here, for example, the jury heard Luong’s testimony identifying the defendants as the assailants, including evidence of Luong’s prior exposure to the defendants that would form the basis for his alleged recognition of them. The jury also heard evidence that would tend to undermine the reliability of Luong’s identification, including his inability to identify Huynh from the photographic array and his mistaken belief that he had seen a photograph of Le in the array. The jury then heard evidence addressing what significance they should attach to Luong’s review of the array, given his visual impairment and his expressed desire to be “sure” before making an identification. The jury then heard Nguyen’s version, confirming that the defendants were present at the scene, but explaining that he did not know who struck him and that he had not seen who struck Luong. The jury also heard from Nguyen that he had nevertheless selected photographs of the defendants while at the police station for the purpose of assisting Luong in prosecuting “whoever beat him up,” and the jury could assess the credibility of Nguyen’s assertion that his selecting and initialing the photographs of the defendants was only meant to identify them as having been “present” but uninvolved in the assault. In assessing and weighing that assortment of identification evidence, surely it was helpful to the jury to have heard Módica’s version of what had transpired when Nguyen reviewed photographs at the station. The fact that Nguyen disagreed with
The failure to seek such measures at earlier hearings is unremarkable here, as Luong knew both defendants, and it was undisputed that both defendants were present at the scene immediately prior to the assault. Indeed, Huynh’s attorney contended in closing argument that Luong’s identification of Huynh was a deliberately false accusation —• Luong had belatedly decided to accuse Huynh because Luong had incurred some medical expenses as a result of his facial injuries, knew that Huynh had been present at the scene, and knew that Huynh’s family had a business (and could thus afford to make restitution). The issue was not whether Luong could identify Huynh and Le, but why he would accuse them of a crime that he ostensibly knew they did not commit.