53 Mass. App. Ct. 576 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2002
The defendant William Melanson appeals from his
1. Outline of the scheme as proved. Star Market Company (Star Market) operates many retail grocery stores in Massachusetts. John Curtis was a longtime employee working as “facilities manager” in the maintenance division of the company and so was responsible for the purchase and installation of refrigeration equipment for the frozen food displays and cases in the stores. One supplier was M & S Heating and Air Conditioning (M & S), a small sole proprietorship owned and operated by the defendant, William Melanson,
As a prototype of the working out of the conspiracy charged in the indictments as having occurred from April to September, 1995,
Meanwhile, Harry See’s Day Supply actually furnished to the Hyde Park store the refrigeration equipment called for by the M & S contract. See, however, did not submit any Day Supply invoice for that equipment; rather he invoiced Star Market on May 5, 1995, for freon (a coolant in refrigeration systems), purportedly delivered to the Hyde Park store. The amount claimed was $81,950 and Curtis approved the payment to Day Supply. Star Market paid Day Supply by check. In fact Day Supply had not delivered any freon.* ***
The net result of the foregoing maneuvers was that Star Market paid roughly twice for the refrigeration equipment, with illicit gains of $84,593.30 by Curtis and $2,500 by the defendant through M & S.
To round out the story, Curtis submitted an invoice to M & S for refrigeration equipment Curtis himself supposedly furnished to M & S — this corresponding in description and amount with the M & S service contract with Star Market and M & S’s invoice submitted thereunder. Of course, no goods were
In the margin we mention episodes involving the Norwood, Allston, and Gloucester stores similar to the prototype. These occurred in the April-September, 1995, interval.
The record chronicles the unraveling of the scheme. As early as mid-1991, Dennis Carsno, a Star Market employee, questioned Curtis, then his superior, about Day Supply invoices for materials that Carsno knew had not been received by Star Market: Curtis had passed these invoices to Carsno to be processed for payment. Curtis answered, “Not to worry. I’ve taken care of it. It’s all set.” Carsno backed off for a while.
From late 1994 through August, 1995, Carsno noticed Day Supply invoices for large amounts of freon — about $40,000 per month — in fact not received, as he well knew because he was then responsible for processing vendor-supplied equipment within Star Market’s maintenance division. The purchase orders for the freon, presumably approved by Curtis, were missing from the Star Market file for Day Supply — eventually these were found locked in Curtis’s office. Carsno in late 1994 or early 1995 informed Star Market’s president and other executives of his forebodings; after an internal investigation, the company referred the matter to the Attorney General, and grand jury action followed against the defendant and others. Curtis did not testify at the defendant’s trial, but See did on the part of the Commonwealth under a plea agreement.
“The heart of a conspiracy is the formulation of the unlawful agreement or combination.” Commonwealth v. Cantres, 405 Mass. 238, 244 (1989), quoting from Commonwealth v. Pero, 402 Mass. 476, 478 (1988). But a conspiracy rarely wears its heart on its sleeve. Thus we have no explicit proof of the defendant’s “agreeing” in so many words with Curtis to join in the scheme, although we have much about transactions with M & S, the defendant’s company. Agreement, however, may be instinct in the situation as a whole, and proved by circumstantial means. See Commonwealth v. Nelson, 370 Mass. 192, 200-201 (1976); Commonwealth v. Cook, 10 Mass. App. Ct. 668, 675 (1980). It is enough if the parties come even tacitly to an understanding, and this may be inferred from a course of conduct having a common design. See Direct Sales Co. v. United States, 319 U.S. 703, 714 (1943). Finally, “[t]he step from knowledge to intent and agreement may be taken. There is more
In our view, the evidence brought forward by the Commonwealth was clearly sufficient to raise for the jury the issue whether the defendant was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of conspiring with Curtis to achieve a larcenous purpose (with accompanying falsification of records). Nor, on the strength of the record, did the jury have to reach far to bring in verdicts of guilty: the behavior, repeated with near identity from episode to episode, could hardly have occurred without conspiratorial agreement.
3. Admission of statement. A conspirator’s extrajudicial statement made in the course of and in furtherance of the conspiracy is admissible against a fellow conspirator provided the conspiracy is shown by independent evidence. See Commonwealth v. White, 370 Mass. 703, 708-709 (1976); Commonwealth v. Cruz, 430 Mass. 838, 844 (2000); Commonwealth v. McLaughlin, 431 Mass. 241, 248 (2000). When the defendant objected to testimony about the “Not to worry” remark by Curtis, the judge ruled at sidebar that the evidence would be received de bene: the defendant could move at the close of the Commonwealth’s case to strike the testimony for failure of independent evidence. This procedure is well recognized; it relieves the judge of having to make a preliminary finding that a conspiracy is shown as a condition of admitting the statement. See Commonwealth v. Colon-Cruz, 408 Mass. 533, 543-544 (1990); Commonwealth v. Collado, 426 Mass. 675, 681-682 (1998).
The defendant had doubted the statement could be held to have been made in furtherance of the conspiracy as it was ut
Independent proof of the conspiracy was of course brought forward, and the statement was plainly in furtherance as it was probative of Curtis’s purpose to reassure and quiet Carsno and discourage further investigation or inquiry on Carsno’s part.
4. Prosecutor’s closing speech. Closing to the jury, the prosecutor said: “Star Market spoke clearly, each representative, each employee, from technician upward through Hank Wolfson [a senior manager]: no, it’s not lawful. Hank Wolfson, I believe, said, that’s absurd. That doesn’t make sense. The only person that doesn’t want to acknowledge that fact is William Melanson. The only person that doesn’t want to acknowledge that he was misrepresenting to Star Market . . . .” Defense counsel moved to strike these remarks, and the prosecutor interjected he wished to withdraw them. At sidebar the judge denied a motion by the defendant for a mistrial. Counsel then asked for a prompt cautionary instruction, but added, “I don’t want the court to say that the defendant has a right to remain silent .... I do not want to highlight that.” The judge admonished the jury, “[T]he last remarks by the prosecutor are to be totally disregarded by you and put it out of your mind completely.”
Counsel did not object to or criticize the judge’s admonition at the time, and, in the conference with counsel after the judge’s final instructions, responding to the judge’s request for reactions, defense counsel answered, “I have nothing to say.” On the present appeal, however, counsel suggests that the admoni
The prosecutor’s rhetorical questions came after he had summarized the Commonwealth’s view of the evidence and in context could readily be understood simply in the sense of setting up a contrast between the strength of the Commonwealth’s case and the manifest weakness or vacuity of the defendant’s case.
A prosecutor may “emphasize the strong points of the Commonwealth’s case and the weaknesses of the defendant’s case, even though he may, in so doing, prompt some collateral or passing reflection on the fact that the defendant declined to testify.” Commonwealth v. Feroli, 407 Mass. 405; 409 (1990). “The question is whether the challenged remark, when viewed ‘in the context of the entire argument,’ is ‘directed more at the general weakness of [the defendant’s] defense than toward the defendant’s own failure to testify.’ ” Ibid., quoting from Commonwealth v. Storey, 378 Mass. 312, 324 (1979), cert, denied, 446 U.S. 955 (1980). At most we have in the present case an “oblique reference” to the defendant’s failure to testify, Commonwealth v. Walker, 413 Mass. 552, 560 (1992). See Commonwealth v. Sherick, 23 Mass. App. Ct. 338, 343-346 (discussing cases on either side of the line of permissibility of prosecutors’ comments), S.C., 401 Mass. 302 (1987), and Commonwealth v. Buzzell, ante 362, 366-369 (2001).
The judge’s admonition was prompt and as strong as might be expected in light of counsel’s stated preference. So also the jurors were told preliminarily and finally how to consider attorneys’ arguments, and charged strongly on the presumption of innocence.
The judgments of conviction are affirmed.
So ordered.
The two related offenses were tried together pursuant to defendant’s motion allowed by the judge. See Mass.R.Crim.P. 9(e), 378 Mass. 861 (1979).
The effect of concurrent sentences on the three offenses was to sentence the defendant to one year in a house of correction, three months to be served, balance suspended, with probation for three years commencing on his release from the committed part of the sentence; he was also required to make restitution of $8,500.
Evidently the company’s address coincided with the home address of the defendant’s parents, and the defendant operated the business out of a garage on the premises.
The Commonwealth presented evidence of an additional twenty transactions between December, 1991, and March, 1995, similar to those in the later
Over the course of dealing, Day Supply in the aggregate apparently paid more for the refrigeration equipment it furnished Star Market than it received for the freon invoiced but not delivered. About June, 1995, See told Curtis, “I have to either get the jobs the regular way or just not at all.” Curtis said there would be just one more. This turned out to be the Gloucester job, mentioned infra.
The pattern in each instance followed the prototype. The M & S invoices to Star Market that initiated the scam were dated, respectively, May 30, June 16, and August 8, and the defendant through M & S wound up with a pourboire of $2,000 in all but the one case where it was $2,500.
Fending against the implications of criminality in the scheme, the defendant offers two explanations that he thinks “plausible” but we think not credible on the record: that he did “substantial duct work” for which he was entitled to be compensated by Star Market, and that he was “returning money” to Curtis which he believed to be Star Market’s for material supplied by See.
The defendant on this appeal attacks the sufficiency of the evidence on the two conspiracy charges, but does not challenge the larceny charge on that ground.
For an elaborated Federal procedure in these matters, see United States v. Ciampaglia, 628 F.2d 632, 638 (1st Cir.), cert, denied, 449 U.S. 956 (1980); Bourjaily v. United States, 483 U.S. 171, 180-181 (1987); Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E).
Defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied but appeal evidently was not taken from the order thereon.