The defendant, Andre Cote, appeals from convictions by a jury of six in a District Court of use of unmetered gas without the written consent of the supplier, the city of Holyoke Gas and Electric Department (company), G. L. c. 164, § 126, and larceny, G. L. c. 266, § 30. He asserts that his motion to suppress evidence of observations made by company employees, who discovered an unauthorized unmetered gas hookup on his premises, was improperly denied; alleges defects in the complaint procedure which were the subject of motions to dismiss denied by the motion and trial judges; and maintains that there was error in both the procedural handling and disposition of a motion for required findings of not guilty made upon the close of the Commonwealth’s evidence. He also contends that the trial court improperly excluded an exculpatory statement and incorrectly instructed the jury as to the proof of intent neces
A hearing on the motion to suppress was held approximately two months prior to trial. Although the judge who heard the motion made no written findings (as he should have), our review of the transcript of the hearing discloses the following substantially undisputed facts. On June 3, 1981, Paul Pin, a meter reader for the company, was in the basement of Cote’s Holyoke apartment block for the purpose of reading electric meters. Pin entered by use of a key which had been supplied for that purpose. While in the process of reading the building’s approximately twenty-five electric meters with the aid of a flashlight, he heard a boiler start up near him in a sealed-off area behind a locked door. The door was constructed of slats with three to four-inch spaces between them. Playing his flashlight through the door, Pin observed the back of the boiler and some gas piping. He could see no gas meter. From the sound and smell of the burner, he concluded that gas was in use. He checked a book which he carried which indicated that there was no gas meter for the boiler on the premises. Pin then removed the door hinges with a pocket knife and entered the closed-off area. He confirmed that there was no meter. The boiler supplied hot water to the building’s apartments. He noticed that the boiler had both an oil burner and a gas burner and that the oil line from an oil tank to the burner was turned off. He operated an aquastat on the boiler and observed the gas burner ignite. Pin then called a company foreman, Gordon Scott, who came to the scene immediately with another company employee, entered the area where Pin had been, took photographs and made observations. Scott called the Holyoke Police Department and two officers were sent to the building. One of the officers testified that they briefly surveyed the area and left during the time that Scott was present. Scott turned the gas off inside the building and it was later shut off in the street.
Complaints were issued upon the application of the company’s manager. The testimony at trial of the observations
1. Cote asserts that evidence of the observations by company employees of the unauthorized gas hookup should have been suppressed because it was obtained in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. We disagree.
The Fourth Amendment’s protections are “triggered only when either the Federal or State government is significantly involved in the search, either participating in it or directing it in some way.”
District Attorney for the Plymouth Dist.
v.
Coffey,
Cote’s reliance on
Camara
v.
Municipal Court,
Looking at all the circumstances in this case, we think the following considerations are significant. The company personnel involved were not even occasionally engaged in a law enforcement capacity or in the administration of a local code. To the extent that they had a legal right to be on the premises, it was under a statute which allows access only for enumerated proprietary purposes (even when resort is had to its warrant procedures when access has been “hindered”). They were employed by an arm of government which, in
2. Cote asserts that his motions to dismiss both complaints, based in part on assertions of irregularities in the complaint procedure, should have been allowed. We find no error in those procedures.
Cote first argues that he was not afforded the written notice or opportunity to be heard before process issued to which he was entitled by G. L. c. 218, § 35A. Those rights are conferred by that statute, as appearing in St. 1945, c. 293, in cases of “a complaint for a misdemeanor,” with certain exceptions not material here. “The implicit purpose of the § 35A hearings is to enable the court clerk to screen a variety of minor criminal or potentially criminal matters out of the criminal justice system through a combination of counseling, discussion, or threat of prosecution . . . .” Snyder, Crime and Community Mediation — The Boston Experience: A Preliminary Report on the Dorchester Urban Court Program, 1978 Wis. L. Rev. 737, 746 (quoted with approval in
Gordon
v.
Fay,
Cote also argues that “the complaint was based entirely on hearsay evidence and on an unsworn statement of a person who had no actual knowledge of the case, and [who] signed the request for a complaint without discussing the matter with the person he refers to in his request for complaint.” Both the “Request for Complaint” and the complaints themselves were signed by the company’s manager, George E. Leary. That portion of the “Request for Complaint” form which provides for a clerk-magistrate to attest to the fact that the complainant has made the statements contained therein under oath was not completed. The complaints were signed under oath.
Leary’s lack of first-hand knowledge of the facts alleged in the application does not undermine the validity of the complaints. “As a general rule there is no requirement that the subscriber to a complaint must have observed the incident complained of at first hand.”
Commonwealth
v.
Daly,
Cote asserts'that the complaints issued without probable cause. He bases this contention on the following facts: The complaints allege that the offenses occurred between June 12, 1972, and June 3, 1981; Cote did not obtain ownership of the property until sometime in 1980; and he was hospitalized on June 3, 1981, at the time the hookup was discovered. He contends that these facts indicate that he was charged
3. When the Commonwealth rested its case at approximately 11:00 a.m. on the second day of trial, Cote moved, pursuant to Mass.R.Crim.P. 25(a),
Little need be said about the sufficiency of the evidence of Cote’s knowledge. The Commonwealth’s evidence, viewed under the pertinent standards, see
Commonwealth
v.
Latimore,
The procedural handling of the motion presents different problems. Rule of criminal procedure 25(a) clearly provides that “[i]f a defendant’s motion for a required finding of not guilty is made at the close of the Commonwealth’s evidence, it shall be ruled upon at that time.” The rule is consistent with the principle that “in a criminal case, the defendant’s rights [become] fixed at the time that the Commonwealth restfs] and the defendant’s motions for directed verdicts [are] denied, even though the defendant [chooses] thereafter to present further evidence.”
Commonwealth
v.
Kelley,
The remaining question is whether the judge should have directed Cote over objection to start his case before the Commonwealth had completed its evidence after reopening. Although there is some precedent for this procedure on the Federal side, see
United States
v.
Sisack, supra,
10
we think, in view of the express language and considered purposes of rule 25, that Cote should not have been compelled to go forward. The error, however, does not require reversal. Cote did not rely upon any evidence of consent. Cote
4. Cote attempted, under the statement against penal interest exception to the hearsay rule, to put in evidence an out of court statement supposedly made by his brother, Neil Cote, to two company employees to the effect that “[y]ou shouldn’t blame my brother for this, I did it.” The trial judge excluded the statement on grounds of insufficient corroboration. Cote asserts on appeal that the statement is corroborated because it was made to company employees, because one of those employees thought Neil Cote was the owner of the property and called him when the illegal hookup was discovered, and because the company had listed Neil Cote as owner at one time.
None of these circumstances corroborate the trustworthiness of the alleged exculpatory statement. At best, they indicate only that the statement was made and that Neil Cote was believed at some prior time to have owned the property. Massachusetts has adopted the Federal rule of evidence that “[a] statement tending to expose the declarant to criminal
5. Finally, Cote argues that it was error for the judge to refuse to instruct the jury that the Commonwealth was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense charged under G. L. c. 164, § 126, was committed wilfully and fraudulently. He asserts that unless the statute is so construed, it would not adequately describe a crime.
The statute is written in the disjunctive and describes a number of discrete crimes. See note 4,
supra.
Our conclusion that the words “wilfully or fraudulently,” which appear in the statute’s first clause, are meant to modify only that clause is indicated by the fact that the word “fraudulently” is repeated in a separate disjunctive clause, and by the absence of both words from the statute’s remaining clauses. The portion of the statute with which we are concerned is set off from the rest of the statute by the word “or” and prescribes a punishment for one who, “without the written consent of [a gas] company, uses or causes to be used, any gas supplied by such company, unless the same passes through a meter set by the company . . . .” Those words state no particular mens rea requirement in the sense argued by the defendant. To the extent that a finding of scienter may be required, we note that the judge instructed the jury in clear terms that actual knowledge of the unauthorized use of gas is an essential element of proof of the crime. See
Commonwealth
v.
Wallace,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
We find no nexus between the State and the search in the fact that two Holyoke police officers arrived at the site at the company’s request. The record indicates that the officers arrived well after the illegal gas connection was discovered and neither instigated nor directed the search. They were merely called to observe what Pin had found. “No real purpose is served by precluding police examination of what has already been discovered.”
Commonwealth
v.
Weiss,
There is no claim that the company’s officials acted to prevent an emergency.
In light of our conclusion that, due to the lack of significant State action, the search does not implicate Fourth Amendment protections, it is not necessary to address issues going to the reasonableness of the search. We, therefore, express no opinion as to the effect of any technical non
This statute, as appearing in St. 1961, c. 284, provides in pertinent part that “[wjhoever wilfully or fraudulently injures, disconnects, removes or otherwise interferes with, or suffers to be injured, disconnected, removed or otherwise interfered with, any meter, pipes or fittings belonging to a gas company or to any person, or prevents a meter from duly registering the quantity of gas supplied through the same, or in any way hinders or interferes with its proper action or just registration, or fraudulently burns or wastes the gas of such company or of any person, or whoever attaches a pipe or any appliance to a main or pipe belonging to a gas company, or, without the written consent of such company, uses or causes to be used any gas supplied by such company, unless the same passes through a meter set by the company, or uses or causes to be used, any gas charged to any person without his written consent, shall be punished . . . .”
This statute provides: “A defendant in a criminal prosecution, relying for his justification upon a license, appointment, admission to practice as an attorney at law, or authority, shall prove the same; and, until so proved, the presumption shall be that he is not so authorized.”
The opening outlined evidence which the defendant asserted would show that he had no knowledge of tampering with the gas line. The exhibits consisted of a hospital record and a deed both admitted to support the defendant’s claim of lack of knowledge. The testimony of the oil supplier was directed to the same contention.
This Federal rule reads, in pertinent part:
“(a) Motion Before Submission to Jury. Motions for directed verdict are abolished and motions for judgment of acquittal shall be used in their place. The court on motion of a defendant or of its own motion shall order the entry of judgment of acquittal of one or more offenses charged in the indictment or information after the evidence on either side is closed if the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction of such offense oroffenses. If a defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal at the close of the evidence offered by the government is not granted, the defendant may offer evidence without having reserved the right.
“(b) Reservation of Decision on Motion. If a motion for judgment of acquittal is made at the close of all the evidence, the court may reserve decision on the motion, submit the case to the jury and decide the motion either before the jury returns a verdict or after it returns a verdict of guilty or is discharged without having returned a verdict.”
The predominant view in Federal practice under Fed.R.Crim.P. 29 is that a defendant who introduces evidence after the denial of a motion for “judgment of acquittal” (in Federal parlance) made at the close of the prosecution’s case waives any error in the denial of the motion. See, e.g.,
Jackson
v.
United States,
The fact that the parties might have sought to clarify the question at the pretrial conference, see Mass.R.Crim.P. 11,
In
Sisack,
the trial judge “took the motion under submission and subsequently, over defense objection, granted the government’s motion to reopen the case” to produce omitted evidence.
The judge here was motivated by the laudable purpose of conserving valuable court time. In a case of a rule 25(a) motion, however, the practice of pushing ahead over a defendant’s objection and in the face of the rule’s express language can, as this case demonstrates ultimately prove to be penny wise, but pound foolish. The integrity of rule 25 is best served, if a trial judge decides to allow the Commonwealth to reopen, by insisting (unless the defendant agrees otherwise) that the Commonwealth complete its case and by then ruling on the motion before ordering the defendant to proceed.
