49 Mass. App. Ct. 250 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2000
The defendant was convicted of unarmed robbery, larceny of a motor vehicle, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, based on evidence from which the jury could have found the following. The victim, Patricia Callahan, parked her minivan in a parking lot three feet, roughly, from a pay telephone. She turned the engine off, got out, leaving her keys in the ignition, and placed a call. As she stood at the telephone, she saw a thin man in his early twenties, five feet eight or nine, with dark, curly, sweaty hair to his ears, and several days’ stubble, enter the minivan and turn on the ignition. She dropped the phone, ran to the driver’s door, and
1. Required finding. The defendant moved for a required finding of not guilty; he makes three arguments on appeal from its denial. The first concerns the identification: not on the usual ground that it was suggestive, but on the ground that it was shown to have been unreliable because the photograph of the defendant had been taken ten days earlier. He cites Commonwealth v. Vaughn, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 40, 41-43 (1986), wherein we reversed a robbery conviction because the defendant, identified by somewhat shaky identification testimony, was in jail at the time of a second robbery, shown by videotape and by modus operandi evidence to have been committed by the same perpetrator. The case involved an exception to the usual rule that we do not second-guess the jury’s assessment of the strength of identification testimony, the exception applying to “cases which involve evidence indicative of innocence in the form of documents, photographs, or other physically-verifiable items, which an appellate court is in a position equal to that of the jury to consider.” Id. at 43. This is not such a case. Only the victim, Patricia Callahan, was in a position to assess the similarity between the photograph and the perpetrator (she ascribed the difference to two weeks of hair growth), and the question was one of credibility for the jury.
The second required finding argument concerns the conviction of robbery, by definition requiring a larceny of property from a person or from his immediate control. G. L. c. 265, § 19(b). The facts of this case fit the definition. The fact that Callahan was three feet outside the minivan, making a phone call, did not preclude finding that the van and its contents, including her purse,
2. The defendant’s presence during a supplemental instruction. After deliberations had begun, the jury requested reinstruction on the law of larceny of a motor vehicle. The judge gave the supplemental instruction in open court. The defendant contends that he was not present during the reinstruction, and has submitted an affidavit to that effect. Nothing in the record indicates whether or not the defendant was present at the reinstruction. The trial prosecutor submitted an affidavit stating that she had no recollection of the defendant’s being absent and that she would have remembered such a circumstance. Defense counsel did not object when the reinstruction was given, an indication that he noticed nothing amiss.
The parties jointly moved the trial court to settle the record pursuant to Mass.R.A.P. 8(e), as amended, 378 Mass. 934 (1979). The judge who had presided at the trial said that he could not specifically recall the circumstances but that he could “state without qualification that in every single instance where I
We have considered the other arguments, and they are without merit.
Judgments affirmed.
We agree with the defendant that the obvious object of the robbery indictment was not the keys and purse specifically, but the van and its contents gen
There is no merit whatever to the defendant’s third argument, that the proof was insufficient to show assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon. Even if the defendant’s purpose was not to injure but to get away with the minivan, accelerating with the victim’s arm caught in the window and her body bumping against the van was at least “the intentional commission of a wanton or reckless act . . . causing physical or bodily injury to another.” Commonwealth v. Ford, 424 Mass. 709, 711 (1997), quoting from Commonwealth v. Burno, 396 Mass. 622, 625 (1986).
The judge recognized that in an earlier case, Commonwealth v. DeJesus, 44 Mass. App. Ct. 349, 350 (1998), he had answered a jury question out of the presence of the defendant and his counsel. He distinguished that situation from the circumstances in the case at bar by pointing out that in DeJesus the jury had asked whether the defendant had pleaded guilty on three indictments, a point of factual information rather than a request for reinstruction on a point of law.