59 Mass. App. Ct. 231 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2003
The defendant, having been indicted for murder, G. L. c. 265, § 1, was convicted by a jury of murder in the second degree. His motion for a new trial was denied, and his appeal therefrom was consolidated with his previously filed direct appeal. This court affirmed both the conviction and the order denying the new trial motion in an order and memorandum of decision issued pursuant to Appeals Court Rule 1:28.
The defendant filed a post-appeal motion for a new trial, asserting that the trial judge had mischaracterized the Commonwealth’s burden of proof on the issue of provocation in contravention of the principles set forth in Commonwealth v. Acevedo, supra at 716, and Commonwealth v. Boucher, 403 Mass. 659, 661-663 (1989). In a parallel argument, the defendant contended that the failure both of trial counsel and of prior appellate counsel to identify and challenge the erroneous instruction constituted ineffective assistance of counsel and requires a new trial.
1. Material facts. The jury could permissibly have found the following. On November 14, 1993, the defendant rode his bicycle to the house of his girlfriend, Christina Arsenault, arriving at about 1:00 a.m. He left the bicycle in the back yard and spent the night. Leaving the next afternoon at about 12:30 p.m.,
The defendant followed the victim into the hallway of the next house, where he observed the victim apparently working on the bicycle and noticed that several of the bicycle’s accessories had been removed. An argument erupted, the defendant and the victim moving from the hallway to the porch. The victim claimed initially that the bicycle belonged to him. When the defendant stated that he had papers proving his ownership, the victim then asserted that he had found the bicycle and had fixed and cleaned it.
The defendant stepped off the porch and began to leave. The victim followed, offering to sell the bicycle to him for twenty dollars. The defendant refused to pay to purchase his own bicycle, and the two exchanged profanities. The defendant then decided to forget about the bicycle and simply leave. As he resumed walking away, he held onto a knife that was in his pocket, while the victim followed, swearing at him. When the defendant turned to say something in return, the victim punched him at least once, and possibly twice, on the head or in the face. There was evidence that the victim was twenty-eight years old; five feet, eleven inches in height; and about 220 pounds in weight.
Upon being struck by the victim, the defendant responded by taking the knife from his pocket and stabbing the victim once each in the abdomen and in the back. The defendant testified that he stabbed the victim because he was coming “like he was attacking me again.” Other testimony was conflicting as to whether the victim was approaching the defendant, the victim was retreating, or the two were moving toward each other, when the stabbings occurred. A third person separated the men, and the defendant and his girlfriend drove from the scene in her automobile. The entire episode occurred in less than one minute.
2. Discussion. The Commonwealth argues that the defendant has waived any objection to the instruction on provocation by failing to object at trial and then by failing to raise the issue in his direct appeal
At the threshold, it must be determined whether the evidence entitled the defendant to an instruction on provocation at all. The principal theory of the defendant at trial was that he acted in self-defense. The judge’s instructions on self-defense, including the use of excessive force in self-defense, were accurate, and the jury obviously rejected the theory. That, however, does not by itself validate the instructions on provocation. These are different, not mutually exclusive, defenses. Assuming that there is evidence that supports a finding that the defendant struck in a
Here, the judge concluded (correctly, we believe) that the evidence of reasonable provocation and of the defendant’s reactian in the heat of passion was sufficient to require an instructian on the subject. In our decision in the defendant’s first appeal, we stated that there was evidence that could have supported either self-defense or provocation.
One of the judge’s instructions to the jury contained the Acevedo error.
Therefore, given that there was an error in an instruction to which the defendant was entitled, we decide whether the error created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. The aftermath of Acevedo has featured a collection of appellate efforts to determine whether the error in a given instance requires a new trial. A representative selection is set forth in Commonwealth v. Rodriguez, 58 Mass. App. Ct. 610, 614-616 (2003), and nothing is gained by repeating the analysis of that and earlier cases. Some have concluded that, on the instructions as a whole in the particular case, the jury could not have been misled. See Commonwealth v. Niemic, 427 Mass. 718, 722 (1998); Commonwealth v. Fickling, 434 Mass. 9, 20 (2001). Others have determined that “the center of gravity of the provocation instructions was strongly on the side of misstatement.” Commonwealth v. Acevedo, supra at 717.
Our task is to evaluate the error “in the context of the charge as a whole, so that [we] can assess the possible impact of the error on the deliberations of a reasonable juror.” Commonwealth v. McLaughlin, 433 Mass. 558, 560 (2001), quoting from Commonwealth v. Repoza, 400 Mass. 516, 519, cert. denied, 484 U.S. 935 (1987). Here, the judge first gave a comprehensive and correct charge on the elements of murder in the first and second degrees. He then instructed correctly on self-defense, including that a finding of excessive force in self-defense will support a manslaughter verdict. Next he turned to the other mitigating circumstance that may reduce murder to voluntary manslaughter; explained that “mitigating circumstances operate to negate the element of malice,” see Commonwealth v. Acevedo, supra at 716; and detailed what is meant by provocation,
The Acevedo error then materialized.
We are satisfied that that risk is not present in this case. The judge’s careful instructions on murder left no doubt that the jury could not return a verdict of murder in the second degree without a finding of malice on the part of the defendant, and
We observe further that the instructions as a whole were otherwise unexceptionable. The error was located in a portion of the charge that was plainly separate from the instructions on murder, thereby making it highly unlikely that the jury would have combined the conflicting concepts, and the error was not repeated. Contrast Commonwealth v. McLaughlin, 433 Mass. at 562; Commonwealth v. Grant, 49 Mass. App. Ct. 169, 173 (2000).
The jury would not have been confused or misled with respect to its obligation to find malice as a necessary element of murder in the second degree. The “center of gravity” of the instructions was not on the side of misstatement. See Commonwealth v. Acevedo, 427 Mass. at 717. The likely effect of the error in this
Order denying motion for new trial affirmed.
-rhe defendant had argued that (1) the trial judge instructed the jury incorrectly on the subjects of self-defense and manslaughter, specifically with regard to the use of excessive force in self-defense; (2) he was denied effecfive assistance of trial counsel because counsel “failed to advance a cognizable theory of self-defense, and . . . neglected to pursue an argument that
The trial judge having retired, the defendant’s motion was heard and acted on by another Superior Court judge. That second judge had also presided over the defendant’s first motion for a new trial.
The victim’s weight was taken during the autopsy and had been increased by fluids given the victim in an effort to save his life.
As indicated above, the defendant did submit a letter in his first appeal referring to the Acevedo decision, that case having been decided after the filing of the defendant’s brief.
The practice continued in some cases even after the Acevedo decision was returned. See Commonwealth v. Rodriguez, 58 Mass. App. Ct. 610, 612 (2003).
Couching the claim as one based on ineffective assistance of counsel adds nothing. “Our recent opinions have eliminated this problem by equating the ineffective assistance of counsel standard to the substantial risk standard in cases where waiver stems from an omission by defense counsel. ... If we determine that an error has been committed, we ask whether it gives rise to a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice — ineffectiveness is presumed if the attorney’s omission created a substantial risk, and disregarded if it did not.” Commonwealth v. Randolph, 438 Mass. at 295-296.
The statement was made in response to the defendant’s contention that his trial counsel had been ineffective with respect to his pursuit of these two defenses.
This is not contested by the Commonwealth.
The error emerged in the following formulation: “[I]f. . . you find that the Commonwealth has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the circumstances preceding or attending the killing were caused by adequate and reasonable provocation by the deceased or by an act of sudden combat against the defendant of a kind so as to reasonably excite in him the passion of anger, fear, nervous excitement, or heat of blood and that thereupon the defendant under the influence of such passion and before the cooling of the blood killed the deceased, then you must find the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter. If the Commonwealth has not met this burden of proof then you must find the defendant not guilty of voluntary manslaughter.”
Isolated, as it was in this charge, in a way that could not have affected the jury’s understanding of the concepts associated with murder, the error actually increased the Commonwealth’s burden of proof by adding another element to the crime of manslaughter. See Commonwealth v. Ware, 53 Mass. App. Ct. at 242.