COMMONWEALTH vs. ALEXANDER JOHNSON (and two companion cases1).
Nos. 17-P-58, 17-P-59, & 17-P-70.
Appeals Court of Massachusetts
November 1, 2017. - December 12, 2017.
Milkey, Blake, & Singh, JJ.
Norfolk. Assault and Battery by Means of a Dangerous Weapon. Evidence, Joint venturer. Practice, Criminal, Dismissal, Indictment.
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Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court Department on March 24, 2016.
Motions to dismiss were heard by Beverly J. Canone, J.
Varsha Kukafka, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
Kathleen E. McKay for Alexander Johnson.
Neil V. Madden for Jordan Williams.
John M. Brinkman, for Michael Leary, was present but did not argue.
Johnson moved to dismiss so much of the ABDW-SBI indictment as alleged serious bodily injury, on the grounds that the evidence presented to the grand jury failed to establish probable cause that such injury occurred. See generally Commonwealth v. McCarthy, 385 Mass. 160, 162-163 (1982). Williams and Leary moved to dismiss the ABDW-SBI indictments against them in toto, arguing that the evidence befоre the grand jury failed to establish probable cause that they aided and abetted Johnson‘s striking the victim with the glass. Before us now is the Commonwealth‘s appeal from the Superior Court order allowing all three McCarthy motions with respect to the ABDW-SBI indictments.3 For the reasons that follow, we reinstate the ABDW-SBI indictments against each defendant.
Background.4
The bar fight.
The three defendants worked for a liquor wholesaler in Kingston. On October 3, 2015, a Saturday, the company held its annual party at a Plymouth restaurant. The party featured an “open bar,” and the defendants had a considerable amount to drink.5 Together with other partygoers, they then went to another local restaurant, the Waterfront Bar & Grille, to continue the festivities. The bar area оf this restaurant was especially crowded that night, and transit through it therefore was difficult.
At one point, the victim tried to make his way to the dance floor to join his wife. To do this, he had to engage in “the old slip and slide” through the crowd, while excusing himself to those whom he passed along the way. When the victim reached the area where the defendants had congregated (directly next to the bar itself), Williams refused to move even after the victim placed his hand on Williams‘s back. When the victim then proceeded “just try[ing] to get through,” Williams stuck his leg out to trip him. This prompted the victim to stumble while exclaiming, “Really, dude?” Williams said, “Hey, watch yourself, old man,”6 to which the victim responded with an expletive. Leary joined the fray, pushing his shoulder into the victim from behind.7 He also engaged in an escalating war of words, “taunting [the victim] to fight.” At that point, as the victim was moving away, a man -- later identified as Johnson -- slammed a heavy, pint beer glass onto the victim‘s head. The blow, which was done with such force that the glass shattered, caused the injuries detailed below. The victim responded by head-butting Leary.8 Williams then grabbed the victim, and the two men tangled for a short period of
The victim‘s injuries.
The blow to the victim‘s head caused extensive lacerations, totaling twenty-one centimeters in length. These lacerations, in turn, caused the victim to bleed profusely, with his blood spilled on Williams and Leary and throughout the bar area. The lacerations required approximately forty stitches to close. Graphic photographs of the stitched wounds were provided to the grand jury and, during his testimony, the victim pointed to the resulting scar. He also described a dent to his head that did not exist before the incident and that still hurt to the touch several months later.
As documented both by medical records before the grand jury and by live testimony, the victim suffered a concussion from the blow to his head, as well as a wide variety of postconcussion consequences. These included, among others, vision problems, dizziness, headaches and other pain, and motor impairment (e.g., in walking and in reaching for objects). The victim testified that he suffered a fractured skull from the incident, and “was bleeding out.”9 As a result of his injuries, the victim missed one and a half months of work. Additional evidence regarding the victim‘s injuries is reserved for later discussion.
Discussion.
Serious bodily injury.
The statute defines “serious bodily injury” as “bodily injury which results in a permanent disfigurement, loss or impairment of a bodily function, limb or organ, or a substantial risk of death.”
In assessing whether the evidence here was sufficient to support the indictment, we must, of course, keep in mind the applicable standard of review. The question posed by a McCarthy motion is whether the grand jury were presented with “sufficient evidence to establish the identity of the accused and probable cause to
Applying this standard, we conclude that the grand jury readily could have found probable cause that the victim suffered serious bodily injury. Indeed, probable cause was established for all of the “three distinct routes for establishing serious bodily injury.” Scott, supra at 357. First, the grand jury could have found probable cause that the attack caused the victim to have a permanent disfiguring scar on his head. Second, the grand jury could have found probable cause that the victim suffered impairment of a bodily function, such as the vision problems that the victim was experiencing. See Commonwealth v. Marinho, 464 Mass. 115, 118-119 (2013) (recognizing that significant vision impairment can constitute serious bodily injury). Third, in light of the evidence thаt the victim bled so profusely from his injuries, the grand jury could have found probable cause that the injury caused a substantial risk of death. The judge erred in dismissing the serious bodily injury portion of Johnson‘s ABDW-SBI indictment.
In ruling in Johnson‘s favor, the judge focused in great part on the fact that some of the victim‘s specific claims of injury were not supported by medical records, or perhaps even were contradicted by them. For example, she highlighted that the medical records appear to indicate that while there initially was cause for concern that the victim had suffered a skull fracture, follow-up imaging of the victim‘s head appears to indicate that no such fracture occurrеd.10,11 Resolution of a McCarthy motion does not
Of course, to convict Johnson of the crime charged, the Commonwealth, inter alia, will need to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the victim‘s injuries rose to the level of significance required of serious bodily injury. But that is a question appropriately resolved by the petit jury based on a full trial record and proper instructions. The grand jury -- by contrast -- serves as “an investigatory and accusatory body only,” Brunson v. Commonwealth, 369 Mass. 106, 120 (1975), and it “is not the appropriаte forum for reconciling subtle gradations of offenses, such as we have here.” Commonwealth v. Goldstein, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 863, 868 (2002) (quotation omitted). Such issues were not for the judge to resolve based on her own evaluation of the grand jury evidence on a McCarthy motion. See Bell, supra at 64 (“A judge considering a motion to dismiss should not confuse the question of probable cause . . . with questions more properly resolved by the fact finder at trial“).
Williams‘s criminal liability.
We turn next to whether the grand jury could have found probable cause that Williams aided and abetted Johnson‘s actions. At trial, the Commonwealth will need to prove “beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant knowingly participated in the commission of the crime charged, with the intent required to commit the crimе.” Commonwealth v. Zanetti, 454 Mass. 449, 467 (2009). The question before us is whether the grand jury could have found probable cause of such liability.
This is not a case where the evidence indicates that, prior to Johnson‘s hitting the victim with the glass, Williams was a mere bystander. Contrast Commonwealth v. Lopez, 80 Mass. App. Ct. 390, 396-397 (2011) (affirming dismissal of indictment charging felony-murder as a joint venturer, where there was no evidence before the grand jury that the dеfendant was anything “more than a bystander until the moment the robbery [of the decedent]
To be sure, to prove Williams guilty of ABDW-SBI at trial, the Commonwealth will need to prove beyond a reasonable dоubt that Williams knew that Johnson was “armed” with the glass. See Commonwealth v. Gorman, 84 Mass. App. Ct. 482, 489 (2013) (in cases that depend on a coventurer‘s use of a dangerous weapon, the defendant‘s “knowledge of [the] weapon is an element of the Commonwealth‘s proof” [citation omitted]). However, the grand jurors could have inferred probable cause of such knowledge from the circumstances presented, which included the well-established fact that the defendants were drinking together while standing at the bar. See generally Commonwealth v. Lee, 460 Mass. 64, 69-70 (2011) (knowledge that a coventurer is armed may be inferred from circumstantial evidence).
Contrary to the motion judge‘s premise,17 it was not necessary
Leary‘s criminal liability.
Leary‘s situation is very close to that of Williams, with one potentially significant exception, which pertains to Leary‘s actions following Johnson‘s blow to the victim‘s head. Specifically, there does not appear to be any showing that Leary continued to attack the victim after that occurred. Rather, the evidence was that directly after Johnson used the glass, the victim head-butted Leary, and Leary then turned away from the combat.
Nevertheless, given the relatively low bar applicable to establishing probable cause at the grand jury stage, we conclude that the judge erred in dismissing the ABDW-SBI indictment even with respect to Leary. Although the confrontation between the defendants and thе victim unfolded rapidly and with little evidence
Disposition.
We vacate so much of the judge‘s December 1, 2016, order as allowed the dismissal of the serious bodily injury portion of the ABDW-SBI indictment against Johnson and that indictment is reinstated in full. We also vacate so much of the December 1, 2016, order as allowed the dismissal of the ABDW-SBI indictments against Williams and Leary, and those indictments are reinstated. The December 1, 2016 order is otherwise affirmed.
So ordered.
