COMMONWEALTH vs. CHARLES FERRO, JR.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
April 13, 1977
372 Mass. 379
Suffolk. November 3, 1976. — April 13, 1977.
Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., QUIRICO, BRAUCHER, KAPLAN, WILKINS, & LIACOS, JJ.
produce sufficient facts and carry the burden of proof on the issue, not the defendant. Cf. 13 C.A. Wright & A.R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3611 (1975).
Obscenity. Equal Protection of Laws, Obscenity. Practice, Criminal, Mistrial. Evidence, Presumptions and burden of proof. Jurisdiction, Obscenity. Words, “Book,” “Magazine.”
The obscenity statutes,
At a trial of complaints charging the defendant with possession of obscene magazines with intent to disseminate them in violation of
At the trial of complaints charging the defendant with possession of obscene magazines with intent to disseminate them in violation of
COMPLAINT received and sworn to in the Municipal Court of the Brighton District on July 9, 1974.
On appeal to the Superior Court, motions to dismiss were heard by Tamburello, J., and the case was tried before him.
After review was sought in the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial Court, on its own initiative, ordered direct appellate review.
Louis A. Guidry for the defendant.
Kevin F. O‘Donnell, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
HENNESSEY, C.J. The defendant was convicted in August, 1974, on a complaint charging possession of six obscene magazines with intent to disseminate them in violation of
In July, 1974, a Boston police sergeant, observing certain publications he considered obscene in the defendant‘s bookstore, arrested the defendant for violation of
At trial, the arresting officer testified that he had placed the defendant “under arrest a couple of occasions.” The judge immediately instructed the jury to disregard this statement and denied a defense motion for a mistrial. In addition, the prosecution‘s witness repeatedly referred to the publications in evidence as “magazines.” The de
The defendant in his appeal attacks the constitutionality of the statutory scheme set forth in
1. The defendant maintains that the obscenity statutes,
Further, the defendant asserts that the distinction made in
The Legislature exempted educational organizations and their affiliates from criminal sanctions for dissemination of obscene materials, leaving criminal sanctions available for punishment of commercial disseminators of obscene materials. This decision may reflect a policy of protecting educational resources from use in obscenity litigation rather than social service while still proceeding to eliminate public availability of obscene matter. The Legislature may proceed one step at a time, addressing first problems it perceives to be most pressing. Mobil Oil Corp. v. Attorney Gen., 361 Mass. 401, 417 (1972). Railway Express Agency, Inc. v. New York, 336 U.S. 106, 110 (1949). Thus this classification, like the classification of materials into “books” and other matter, may have a rational basis and does not violate the equal protection provisions of the Massachusetts Constitution or the United States Constitution. See Commonwealth v. 707 Main Corp., 371 Mass. 374, 381-382 (1976).
In addition, the defendant contends that the statutory scheme is vague as applied to his case in so far as it fails to define “books” and therefore failed to inform him whether the matter he possessed constituted “books” or other matter. The appropriate classification of this matter, however, relates to the procedures statutorily provided for adjudication of its obscenity, not to the defendant‘s notice of potential liability for dissemination thereof. Such ambiguity does not render the statutory scheme unconstitutionally vague. See Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15, 27-28 n.10 (1973). At most the statutory failure to define “books” left the defendant uninformed of his right to contest prosecutorial failure to follow
2. The defendant claims that the various trial references to the “magazines” he possessed constituted prejudicial error which swayed the jury‘s decision on the proper classification of these publications and which requires reversal of his conviction. We find that these references, by a witness and by one of the publications at issue, even if erroneous, did not prejudice the defendant. As we explain below, the appropriate classification of materials as “books” or other matter for procedural purposes is a question to be decided by the judge, not by the jury. The jury decide only if the publication at issue is obscene, not if it is a book. See
The defendant also argues that his motion for a mistrial should have been allowed because the statement at trial concerning his previous arrests was incurable. The defendant concedes that the judge gave a prompt and forceful instruction to the jury to disregard this statement. In these circumstances the instructions sufficiently protected the defendant so that a mistrial was unnecessary. See Commonwealth v. Gibson, 357 Mass. 45, 49 (1970). We conclude that the motion for a mistrial was properly denied.
3. Finally, we turn to the defendant‘s contention that his motions to dismiss should have been allowed because the publications he possessed were books and the requirements of
The judge in this case erroneously believed that the proper classification of an allegedly obscene publication is a question of fact for the jury and therefore denied the defendant‘s motions to dismiss, sending this issue to the jury. However,
In any case where the judge‘s decision as to the motion to dismiss is, as it should be, made before trial, his decision would be appealable by the Commonwealth under
At the hearing on the motions to dismiss, the judge could receive evidence which, at a minimum, should include a copy of the alleged obscene “matter,” and might also include testimony such as was presented in the Zone Book case. The judge‘s decision is one of fact as presented by the evidence, and it might end up (as in Zone Book) as a pure question of law, particularly if the only evidence before him is the alleged obscene “matter.” The issue before him on such a motion to dismiss would be limited to the question whether the alleged obscene “matter” is a book, but not whether it is obscene. If the judge decides on the motion to dismiss that the alleged obscene “matter” is not a book, that issue should not be relitigated as part of the trial on the merits.
We think it is clear that the burden of proof rests on the defendant to show, in support of his motions to dismiss, that the publication is a book. See
The defendant, in the instant case, who moved to dismiss the proceeding and therefore had the burden of proving noncompliance with
So ordered.
KAPLAN, J. (dissenting). Believing the statute to be fundamentally unconstitutional, I dissent and would dis
LIACOS, J. (dissenting). For the reasons stated in my concurring opinion in Commonwealth v. Zone Book, Inc., ante, 366, 373 (1977), it is my position that any discrimination between books and other printed matter in terms of the degree of procedural protection, available by way of a mandatory in rem proceeding, is constitutionally impermissible. Accordingly, I would reverse the conviction outright and order the complaint dismissed due to the prosecution‘s failure to comply with the requirements of
