We review in this case an order of the Appeals Court that denied an award of attorney’s fees and costs. The attorney’s fees and costs were sought by the defendant’s attorney pursuant to Mass. R. Crim. R 15 (d), as appearing in
The background of the dispute is as follows. The defendant was charged in the Superior Court with trafficking in cocaine in violation of G. L. c. 94C, § 32E (b). He filed a motion to suppress evidence seized as a result of the stop and search of the motor vehicle in which he was traveling. The judge held an evi-dentiary hearing and, in a written decision, allowed the motion to suppress. A single justice of this court granted the Commonwealth leave to pursue an interlocutory appeal to the Appeals Court from the order granting suppression. See Mass. R. Crim. P. 15 (a) (2), as appearing in
1. We reject the Commonwealth’s argument that an order denying a defendant his attorney’s fees and costs under rule 15 (d) cannot be appealed by the defendant. As we shall explain, rule 15 (d) requires such a payment. An order denying payment to a defendant of attorney’s fees and costs (as distinguished from an order allowing payment) is a final order that deprives the defendant and his attorney completely of a payment required by the rule. Because rule 15 (d) is an integral part of rule 15, which concerns interlocutory appeals, it logically follows that an order denying a defendant his attorney’s fees and costs after
2. Rule 15 (d) reads as follows: “(d) COSTS UPON APPEAL. If an appeal or application therefor is taken by the Commonwealth, the appellate court, upon the written motion of the defendant supported by affidavit, shall determine and approve the payment to the defendant of his or her costs of appeal together with reasonable attorney’s fees to be paid on the order of the trial court upon the entry of the rescript or the denial of the application” (emphasis added). The Reporters’ Notes state that “[t]his subdivision was drafted to dispel any uncertainty concerning the defendant’s right to reimbursement of his or her costs of appeal and attorney’s fees. The appellate court is to determine the amount to be paid to the defendant, which payment is to be received from the Commonwealth. ” Reporters’ Notes to Mass. R. Crim. R 15 (d), Mass. Ann. Laws, Rules of Criminal Procedure at 182 (Lexis 1997). In Commonwealth v. Murphy,
3. The Commonwealth has not disputed the reasonableness of the amount requested by the defendant’s attorney for fees and
4. So much of the order of the Appeals Court dated February 12, 1999, which denies the defendant his attorney’s fees and costs, and the order dated February 25, 1999, affirming that denial after reconsideration, are vacated. The case is remanded to the Appeals Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion to determine the reasonable attorney’s fees and costs due to the defendant under rule 15 (d), and for the entry of an appropriate order of payment.
So ordered.
Notes
Defense counsel in the Superior Court was also privately retained.
In its memorandum filed in the Appeals Court in opposition to the motion of the defendant’s counsel for attorney’s fees and costs, the Commonwealth argued that the application should be denied because its interlocutory appeal was not “frivolous.” In its brief to this court, the Commonwealth adds to that argument the assertion that rule 15 (d) is subject to the statement in Mass. R. Crim. R 2 (a),
