Lead Opinion
A District Court jury convicted the defendant of violation of an abuse prevention order (one count), G. L. c. 209A, § 7, and of threats to commit a crime (two counts), G. L. c. 275, § 2. On appeal he argues that the evidence was insufficient to establish either offense; that the trial judge improperly admitted prejudicial evidence of prior bad acts; and that the judge wrongly excluded the testimony of a police detective and incorrectly denied a missing witness instruction concerning the detective’s absence. For the following reasons, we affirm the convictions.
Background. The evidence permitted the jury to find the following facts. The victim, Maria Monteiro, began dating the defendant, James Melton, when she met him in Malden in 2006. Two months later, the defendant moved in with Monteiro and her seven year old daughter. Their relationship soon deteriorated, and a pattern of abuse ensued.
During their time together, Monteiro suffered frequent beatings, threats of violence and sexual abuse, and continuous emotional intimidation. Monteiro testified that the defendant had used various weapons against her, such as a knife, stun gun, and belt, and detailed certain incidents of abuse.
Finally, on July 21, 2007, Monteiro moved from Malden to the Dorchester section of Boston. The defendant agreed to the separation in exchange for Monteiro’s promise to pay his rent and car insurance premiums. Despite the distance, they remained in contact. The defendant occasionally visited Monteiro’s Dorchester apartment for money, and once spent the night there.
However, after further friction, Monteiro on December 21,
On the evening of December 24, 2007, the defendant called Monteiro at her home in Dorchester. Without allowing her to speak, he asked “what was [she] doing” and “why did [she] go to the police.” He told her that, if she went to the police, she was “playing dirty” and said, “You want to play dirty, I’ll show you how to play dirty.” The victim asked the defendant, “What are you doing calling me; there’s a restraining order.” The defendant answered, “Oh, you got a restraining order . . . after all we’ve been through why would you do that. That’s how you want to do this.” Monteiro ended the conversation and called the police because she was afraid that the defendant was outside her home.
On December 25, 2007, the defendant called Monteiro again and asked, “Why you doing this ... do you know what you’re doing . . . momma, why you doing this after all we been through . . . you want to play dirty, I’ll show you; I’ll show you how to play dirty.” Upon hearing these words, Monteiro became fearful that the defendant “was going to come after [her], [to] finish the job.” Monteiro reminded the defendant of the restraining order; he responded by asking her why she was doing this after all they had been through and whether she knew what would happen if he went back to jail. Monteiro then called the police. An officer came to her apartment and observed her distress. She showed him the restraining order.
At trial, the District Court judge admitted evidence of the defendant’s prior abuse of Monteiro with a limiting instruction.
Analysis. 1. Sufficiency of notice of restraining order. The defendant argues that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of violating a restraining order because (1) he had not received service of the order at the time of the alleged offense, and (2) he lacked actual or constructive notice of the order or its terms. He contends also that without service or notice of the order, the conviction violates his due process rights.
In review of the denial of a motion for a required finding of not guilty, we assess the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Commonwealth v. Latimore,
“To establish a violation of G. L. c. 209A, § 7, the Commonwealth must prove that (1) a valid G. L. c. 209A order was entered by a judge and was in effect on the date of the alleged violation; (2) the defendant violated the order; and (3) the defendant had knowledge of the order.” Commonwealth v. Silva,
The defendant disputes the sufficiency of the evidence of his
The defendant claims that the telephone conversation between Monteiro and him on December 24, 2007, provided inadequate notice of the existence and terms of the restraining order issued on December 21, 2007. We disagree. During that call, Monteiro expressly asked him, “What are you doing calling me; there’s a restraining order.” (Emphasis supplied.) The defendant answered, “Oh, you got a restraining order . . . after all we’ve been through why would you do that. That’s how you want to do this.” In the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, a jury could have found that Monteiro’s statements put the defendant on notice of the existence of a restraining order against him and reasonably advised him that the order prohibited calling. See Commonwealth v. Mendonca,
Therefore, the evidence permitted the jury to find that the defendant had notice of the existence of a restraining order which, at the very least, prohibited him from calling Monteiro, and which he violated by calling her the next day. Because he had sufficient notice, no due process violation occurred.
In the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, sufficient evidence enabled the jury to determine that the defendant’s statement that he would “play dirty” with Monteiro constituted a threat as defined under the statutory and decisional law. The defendant expressly communicated his intent to “play dirty” with Monteiro in telephone calls on December 24 and 25 in 2007. Historically, the expression “play dirty” had been a precursor to serious physical violence and abuse of Monteiro by the defendant. Given the abusive nature of their relationship and the prior usage of the phrase to “play dirty,” Monteiro was justifiably apprehensive for her safety at the sound of those words.
3. Admission of prior bad acts. The defendant contends that the judge wrongly admitted evidence of his prior abuse of Monteiro because its prejudicial impact outweighed its probative value. “Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith.” Mass. G. Evid. § 404(b) (2010). However, where “evidence of prior bad acts is connected with the facts of the case and not too remote in time, it may be admitted to establish a course of conduct or state of mind . . . [so long as that] evidence [is] excluded when its prejudicial value substantially outweighs its probative effect” (citations omitted). Commonwealth v. Johnson,
Here, the pattern of prior abuse was necessary to establish that Monteiro was reasonably apprehensive of the defendant, who knew her address. The evidence showed that the defendant was capable of inflicting serious harm on Monteiro, that his use of the expression to “play dirty” preceded instances of violent
4. Trial judge’s exclusion of the detective’s evidence and denial of the requested “missing witness” instruction. The defendant maintains also that the judge wrongly denied the defendant’s request to have a police detective testify and incorrectly refused to provide the jury with a missing witness instruction for the detective’s absence. Neither ruling amounted to error.
“[A] trial judge has no discretion to permit a witness to appear before a jury for the sole purpose of properly invoking his or her privilege against self-incrimination” because allowing a witness to do so would invite improper juror speculation about the reasons for the witness’s invocation of the privilege. Commonwealth v. Gagnon,
Finally, we conclude that the judge correctly declined to give a missing witness instruction, “appropriate when a party ‘has knowledge of a person who can be located and brought forward, who is friendly to, or at least not hostilely disposed toward, the party, and who can be expected to give testimony of distinct importance to the case,’ and the party, without explanation, fails to call the person as a witness.” Commonwealth v. Saletino,
Conclusion. Sufficient evidence showed that the defendant had notice of the restraining order and its terms and that he threatened Monteiro. The judge properly admitted evidence of the defendant’s prior abuse of the victim and correctly denied
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Her testimony included graphic allegations. Once, the defendant, after picking Monteiro up and threatening to throw her off their back porch, brought her into the apartment where he attempted to gouge her eyes and throw her into a fish tank. Another time, the defendant tied Monteiro to a chair and threatened to bum the house down by waving a lighter in front of an oven. On another occasion the defendant held a heated, red-hot knife to her throat.
The police responded to Monteiro’s call and observed that she appeared afraid and upset.
This officer also testified at trial.
The defendant filed a motion in limine regarding these prior bad acts, which the judge denied, and objected at trial to the admission of the same evidence.
The judge sentenced the defendant to concurrent terms of imprisonment in the house of correction of two and one-half years (with credit for 112 days served) on the count of violating an abuse prevention order; and six months on each of the two counts of threatening to commit a crime.
We respect the cautionary reminder of the dissent that in the absence of
If we categorically hold that the testimony of the applicant cannot be sufficient to establish her notice to the accused violator of the no contact prohibition and therefore that it cannot establish his actual knowledge of the order, we would effectively withdraw from her the protection of the order during the volatile preservice period. The actual knowledge standard would serve little purpose in the generic situation. In particular the decision of Commonwealth v. Mendonca,
Here the applicant’s credibility gained weight from her calls for police assistance on two successive nights and police testimony verifying her distress on each occasion. Several details of her account increased its strength. In the call of December 24, the defendant showed his awareness that she had already contacted the police, a sign of her resort to official intervention. On both nights he allegedly scolded and threatened her for seeking help from the police and the court. The jury were entitled to believe her.
The defendant argues also that the conviction for the threat made on December 24 should be reversed because the complaint alleged that he had threatened the victim by stating, “I’ll burn the house down and shoot everyone that runs out,” not that he threatened to “play dirty” with her. We agree with the Commonwealth that this language constitutes a variance but that no error occurred because the essential elements of the crime were correctly stated and because he was not prejudiced in his defense. See Commonwealth v. Grosso,
Concurrence in Part
(concurring in part and dissenting in part). I agree that the defendant’s convictions of threats should be affirmed. I respectfully disagree that the evidence sufficed to establish that he had actual or constructive knowledge of the ex parte restraining order or its terms to support his conviction on that charge.
The dangers faced by those seeking the protection of a restraining order cannot be gainsaid. Indeed, the danger posed to Monteiro by this defendant is graphically set forth by the majority. Nevertheless, before a defendant may be convicted of violating a restraining order, he must have actual knowledge or fair notice of the order and its prohibitions. See Commonwealth v. Welch,
The defendant was not present in court when the restraining order issued, nor did the police serve the order prior to the violation alleged.
Unlike a police officer, a person granted protection under a restraining order is an interested party who has no authority to serve the order, much less advise the subject of the order as to its existence and terms. Compare ibid. Indeed, the Legislature has established that service of the order is to be made by “the appropriate law enforcement agency.” See G. L. c. 209A, §§ 4, 7, as appearing in St. 1990, c. 403, §§ 4, 8. It is neither safe nor wise to permit the recipient of a restraining order to become the recognized source of the subject’s knowledge of the order. Such reliance will make service of the order by authorities a less pressing need, expose the recipient to needless danger, and lead to contusion and misuse.
To the extent that the majority looks to dictum in Mendonca, supra at 688, as authority for the proposition that oral advice from the recipient to the subject of a restraining order suffices to establish the subject’s actual knowledge, such reliance is misplaced. In Mendonca, the defendant’s actual knowledge arose because he was present in court when the original order issued and was served subsequently. See ibid.
Such is not the case here. The defendant was not in court when the restraining order issued, nor was he presented with a copy of the restraining order by the police (or anyone else) or otherwise provided fair notice of existence of the order or its prohibitions. Contrast Commonwealth v. Delaney,
Even assuming that oral communication of the order and its terms from the recipient to the subject may suffice to establish actual knowledge or put the subject on fair notice, I do not
Monteiro’s description of the December 25 conversation adds little.
Given these deficiencies, and absent the defendant’s presence in court when the order issued, service of the order upon him, or communication of the order and its terms by a police officer, the actual knowledge or fair notice of the order and its terms that is requisite for conviction is lacking.
The parties stipulated that the restraining order was not mailed to the defendant until December 26, after the events that form the basis of violation.
Mendonca made no claim that he was unaware that the order had been extended. See Mendonca, supra at 688 n.10. Nor would such a claim have availed him. Because the original order provided notice that it might be extended, Mendonca was also on notice and, with reasonable inquiry, could have learned whether the order had been extended, and its content. See Commonwealth v. Delaney,
To the extent that Monteiro’s statements might put the defendant on notice, it is clear that the Boston Municipal Court was not in session at 7 p.m. on December 24, or any time on December 25, had the defendant chosen to investigate the existence of the order or its terms.
To convict the defendant of violating the order by telephoning Monteiro on December 25, he must have had the requisite knowledge prior to making the call or have acquired it during the call and persisted in his contact.
