365 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1974
Richard Ferguson, convicted by a jury of the crimes of robbery while armed with a dangerous weapon, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, the weapon specified under each charge being a knife, takes his appeal under the provisions of G. L. c. 278, § § 33A-33G. He assigns eleven errors and argues ten of them. We affirm the judgments.
It will be convenient to summarize the story as told by the victim Donald Merowitz and police lieutenant Thomas Moran, called by the prosecution, and then to indicate the line taken by the defendant and his wife, the witnesses for the defence.
Merowitz asked Lulu, in the presence of the defendant, whether she wanted to “cop,” that is, buy heroin. Lulu indicated that she did. Merowitz and Lulu started to walk together toward Edgerly Road, while the defendant headed in another direction. Reaching a rooming house at 22 Edgerly Road, Merowitz and Lulu entered and went to a common hallway bathroom where Merowitz sold her three bags of heroin for $30 and Lulu “shot” the drug. Merowitz placed the $30 with the $170 already in his wallet in his back pocket. He had still on his person two or three bags of the bundle of twenty-five bags that he had been selling. Shortly Merowitz left the building with Lulu, the two turning to their right and walking in the middle of the street on Edgerly Road toward Westland Avenue. This was about 8:30 p.m. to 8:45 p.m.
Merowitz then heard footsteps of three persons running behind him in apparent pursuit. Alarmed, he started to run, continuing in the same direction on Edgerly Road and then commencing to turn at the comer of Norway Street. At that moment Merowitz felt the impact of a thrown knife entering his left lower back. Evidently the blow forced him into a leaning position on a parked car. He screamed, “Take the knife out”; one or perhaps two of the three
At about 9:15 p.m. Lulu appeared at the fourth district police station at Warren and Berkeley Streets and told Lieutenant Moran of a knifing at Norway Street comer. Lieutenant Moran drove Lulu to the spot and observed blood on the sidewalk. He then proceeded to the hospital but was unable because of Merowitz’s condition to interview him at that time, nor was he able to do so for two weeks thereafter. When finally the interview took place, Lieutenant Moran, in the presence of another officer, showed Merowitz six or seven pictures,
On October 6, 1972, Merowitz, while riding in a friend’s car on Washington Street in Boston, saw the defendant standing outside the Novelty Bar. Merowitz and his friend entered the bar and Merowitz observed the defendant there for several minutes. He was sure this was the man. He left the bar and telephoned the police who came and made the arrest.
Turning to testimony for the defence, Lulu said that though the defendant was present when Merowitz asked whether she wanted to “cop,” he had not heard or understood the question, and she had led him to think that Merowitz had inquired where he, Merowitz, could “cop.” She walked with the defendant to a “Chicken-a-Go-Go” on Westland Avenue where the defendant put in an order; she said she would wait outside; she stepped out and accompanied Merowitz to 22 Edgerly Road where she bought the heroin. (She said she misled or evaded the defendant because he was trying to break her of the habit.) She said that three men pursued Merowitz: she recognized the LaChardy brothers and the third was a “junkie” whom she knew only by sight. She was twenty-five to thirty feet from Merowitz when the knife was thrown, and ten to fifteen feet from the person who took the knife out. Merowitz slumped to the ground, his hands on a parked car.
The knife was in so deep, according to Lulu, that William LaChardy had to kick Merowitz in the back to get it out. She said (on cross-examination) that it was a “big,” “good sized knife,” like a carving knife and the size of a carving knife, something you would use in cutting up a roast. The blade was “probably maybe that long, six, seven inch blade.” She didn’t know if it had a wooden handle. It wasn’t simply a jackknife or a pocket knife.
Lulu testified that the sight of the knifing made her hysterical; she cried out for someone to give Merowitz
The defendant, testifying in his own defence, denied any personal knowledge of the stabbing. He had been at “Chicken-a-Go-Go.” He said Lulu had not told him any details. She had not mentioned the LaChardy brothers to him. She had not told him who did it. He did not know she had gone to Lieutenant Moran. He had not connected Merowitz with the stabbing, nor had he recognized him at the Novelty Bar.
1. The judge’s denial of the defendant’s pre-trial motion to suppress the photographic and later identifications is assigned as error (assignment 1). We need not state separately the evidence on the motion as it did not differ in substance from that emerging at trial, as recounted above; the witnesses on the motion called by the defendant were only Merowitz and Lieutenant Moran. The defendant says that the showing of his picture at the hospital was impermissibly suggestive, whence it would follow, he argues, that any later identifications, in court or out, were tainted. The judge did not say whether he thought the showing in the hospital was suggestive, holding rather that there was “no identification through photograph on the evidence”; it will be recalled that Merowitz wanted to see the man in the flesh before he would commit himself. There is no indication in the record that Merowitz was pointed or nudged toward the defendant’s photograph, see Commonwealth v. Ross, 361 Mass. 665, 673 (1972); Simmons v. United States,
2. If the man who pulled out the knife was properly identified as being the defendant, then there was sufficient evidence to indicate that he joined with two others to rob Merowitz. We need not necessarily infer that Lulu “set up” Merowitz for the defendant and any whom he might invite into the enterprise. But there was testimony indicating that the defendant knew Merowitz’s whereabouts and movements around the time of the crime, and knew that Merowitz was selling heroin and would have at least Lulu’s contribution and probably more in his pocket. It is suggested in argument that the defendant may not have been one of the pursuers and may have arrived independently at the place to perform only the act of removing the knife. But considering especially the very short time span between Merowitz’s awareness that he was being waylaid and the consummation of the robbery, there was good ground for the jury to conclude that the defendant was not an outsider but an actor in the plot.
The Commonwealth, therefore, might readily have pro
The probability that the defendant had “knowledge”
“[Wjhere competent evidence has been introduced in support of all the material allegations of an indictment, the
3. Coming to the judge’s charge, his instruction as to the requirement of proof of “knowledge” accorded with his position on the law set out above, which we need not repeat. The defendant apparently did not object to the judge’s instruction in principle, and a number of his exceptions addressed to details of the judge’s statement, and to his refusal to elaborate as suggested in defendant’s requests to charge, seem inconsequential (assignments 8 and 10).
The defendant excepted to the judge’s instruction that the jury could, though they were not obliged to, infer knowledge from the size of the knife as bearing on ease of concealment (assignment 9). This instruction, the defendant now argues, placed undue emphasis on one feature of the evidence, and intimated an opinion on the part of the judge unfavorable to the defendant. We do not find error, recalling Cahalane v. Poust, 333 Mass. 689, 693 (1956), where we said that “it is within the wide discretion of the judge to determine what parts of the evidence should be referred to. Inevitably there will be emphasis by selection
4. The question is raised whether the Commonwealth may not have been erroneously relieved of some part of its proper burden of proof by the judge’s instructions relating to credibility and the degree of certitude needed to convict. The instructions might well have been differently phrased, but we do not think they involved material error. Prior convictions of the defendant for unlawful possession of drugs were used by the Commonwealth to impeach the defendant as a witness.
The jury were told that they could find the defendant guilty only if they were convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, but the further commentary by the judge (assignment 7) was not helpful, though apparently it has been quite usual. He said the minds of the jury must be brought to the level of conviction they would want
5. At the opening of the second day of trial, counsel
Judgments affirmed.
Most of the time Merowitz was seated next to the defendant in a car. Merowitz and the defendant were serving as intermediaries in the sale of a drug to a friend of Merowitz, who was driving the car.
Apparently Merowitz in testimony prior to the motion to suppress had indicated the number was three, but he later concurred with Lieutenant Moran.
The testimony suggests there was a change of the defendant’s appearance (presence of goatee and moustache) between the date of the picture and July, 1972.
The defendant complains that these records may have had a prejudicial effect on the jury which overcame their probative value, and so should have been excluded (assignment 2), but we do not agree.
Including opportunity for the defendant to withdraw from the venture in the light of that knowledge.
We think the judge acted correctly in his denial of the original motions for directed verdicts as well as the renewed motions at the close of the case. See G. L. c. 278, § 11. Thus we do not reach, and express no opinion about, a situation where the evidence at the close of the Commonwealth’s case is such that a directed verdict of acquittal could then have been properly granted but was in fact denied, and the defendant, choosing not to rest on the Commonwealth’s case, offers evidence which supplies deficiencies in the Commonwealth’s case and supports a conviction. See LaFave & Scott, Criminal Law, § 8, pp. 53-55 (1972); A. B. A. Standards Relating to Trial by Jury, § 4.5, pp. 107-108 (Approved Draft 1968); but see Cephus v. United States, 324 F. 2d 893 (D. C. Cir. 1963); Comment, 70 Yale L. J. 1151 (1961). Cf. Commonwealth v. Lussier, 333 Mass. 83, 88 (1955).
The instruction did not stop with the possible inference of knowledge from the size of the knife but also spoke of a likelihood that weapons would be carried by those combining to commit robbery. The judge also stated that the jury were not to be affected by the fact that he might single out particular parts of the evidence for comment.
There was no objection to a slip by the judge when he said that “various witnesses” had held up their hands to indicate “eight to ten inches or seven to ten inches, but it is your memory.” Lulu was the only witness; she had mentioned six or seven inches but also referred to the size of a carving knife (apparently using gestures to demonstrate).
The prosecutor read off the prior convictions from the original records instead of introducing certified copies, which is the more usual practice. Assignment 5 seeks to make something of this, but relies upon the quite separate rule that prior convictions cannot be proved by eliciting admissions about them in cross-examination of the witness being impeached. See Commonwealth v. Walsh, 196 Mass. 369 (1907); Commonwealth v. Connolly, 356 Mass. 617, 627 (1970); Ford v. Kremer, 360 Mass. 870 (1972). The requirement is that the records themselves must be used, and that was done here.
The level one would ‘ ‘want’ ’ may be higher than that upon which one would be “willing to act,” a phrase that has appeared often in the cases.
The judge also said he was not too fond of the expression that a reasonable doubt is one to which you can assign a reason, though that had been used by judges (see Commonwealth v. Gerald, 356 Mass. 386 [1969]; Commonwealth v. Bumpus, supra, at 682, for a person seeking a reason could always find one.
The defendant had also objected to being put in the dock, as to which see Commonwealth v. Jones, 362 Mass. 497, 500-501 (1972).
Some of the expedients available in such a situation are described in O’Shea v. United States, 400 F. 2d 78 (1st Cir. 1968), cert. den. 393 U. S. 1069 (1969), and United States v. Larkin, 417 F. 2d 617 (1st Cir. 1969).