APPEALS COURT
COMMONWEALTH vs. MICHAEL W. TYSON
| Docket: | 23-P-229 |
| Dates: | February 14, 2024 – September 30, 2024 |
| Present: | Vuono, Massing, & Toone, JJ. |
| County: | Plymouth |
| Keywords: | Assault and Battery on Certain Public Officers and Employees. Resisting Arrest. Police Officer. Intent. Arrest. Practice, Criminal, Dismissal. |
Complaint received and sworn to in the Brockton Division of the District Court Department on August 26, 2019.
A motion to dismiss was heard by Honor Kerry Segal, J.
Karen A. Palumbo, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
Peter J. Brewer for the defendant.
MASSING, J. The defendant, Michael W. Tyson, moved to dismiss a criminal complaint charging him with assault and battery on a police officer in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 13D; resisting arrest in violation of G. L. c. 268, § 32B; and disorderly conduct in violation of G. L. c. 272, § 53, for lack of probable cause. A District Court judge allowed the motion as to all three charges. The Commonwealth appeals, but only as to the charges of assault and battery on a police officer and resisting arrest. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
Background. We describe the facts as set forth in the arresting officer's police report filed in support of the application for the complaint.
In August 2019, the arresting officer, a detective from the Brockton police department, responded to the scene of a stabbing to canvass the area and look for evidence. The officer wore plain clothes but displayed his badge on his chest. After knocking on a few doors and obtaining no helpful information, the officer noticed a black sedan with tinted windows parked on the street near the scene of the stabbing with the engine running. The defendant was sitting in the driver's seat.
The officer approached and asked the defendant to please roll down the window. The defendant replied, "[W]hat for?" The officer said that he was a police officer investigating a crime and talking to everyone on the street. The defendant ignored two requests by the officer to roll down his window. The officer then opened the driver's door and repeated that he was investigating a crime that had just occurred nearby. The defendant responded, "I don't give a fuck" and "pulled the door into the left side of [the officer's] body forcefully."
In response, the officer struck the defendant on the left side of his head and pulled him from the car. The defendant "squared off" with the officer "with clenched fists." The officer told the defendant that he was under arrest and ordered him to stop resisting. The defendant "attempted to pull away but [the officer] handcuffed him." The officer attempted to place the defendant in a sitting position, at which point the defendant reached toward his front right shorts pocket. The officer "grabbed his hand to make sure that he didn't have any weapons and determined that he was reaching for a cellular phone." Because, in the officer's words, the handcuffed defendant continued to be "resistive," the officer then "physically placed him in a sitting position and told him to cross his legs." The defendant refused to cross his legs or to identify himself. The officer radioed for backup and held the defendant until another officer arrived.
A police dispatcher ran the license plate of the defendant's car and determined that it was owned by a woman who lived nearby. The officer went to her house, and she identified herself as the defendant's mother. The officer told her that "we were in the area for a stabbing and that when [he] approached the car[,] her son acted suspiciously, refused to identify himself[,] and was combative with me." The mother stated that she had watched the incident and her son would not have acted like that. The defendant was transported to police headquarters.
Discussion. A motion to dismiss a complaint for lack of probable cause is decided from the information within the "four corners of the complaint application" (citation omitted). Commonwealth v. Humberto H.,
1. Assault and battery on a police officer. The Commonwealth contends that the judge erred in dismissing the charge of assault and battery on a police officer under G. L. c. 265, § 13D, first par.[1] To establish assault and battery, the Commonwealth must prove that the defendant touched the victim "without having any right or excuse to do so and that the defendant's touching . . . was intentional." Commonwealth v. Mitchell,
The Commonwealth based its assault and battery charge on the allegation that, after the officer opened the defendant's car door, the defendant "forcefully" pulled the door into the officer's body. Although the officer unlawfully opened the door, and we understand the defendant's attempt to resist the officer's intrusion, we are constrained to conclude that the application alleged probable cause to believe that the defendant committed assault and battery on a police officer.
Preliminarily, the application established probable cause to believe that the officer was "engaged in the performance of his duties" at the time. G. L. c. 265, § 13D. Notwithstanding the officer's unlawful conduct, the record before us does not present "the sort of egregious abuse of authority that would be required to strip an officer's actions of their official character." Commonwealth v. Montes,
There was similarly probable cause to believe that the defendant knew that the person who approached his car and spoke to him was a police officer engaged in the performance of his duties. The defendant argues that because it was nighttime and his car windows were tinted, there is a "fair inference" that he did not know or believe that it was a police officer who had approached his car. But we are constrained to draw inferences favorable to the Commonwealth. The officer reported that he was wearing a badge and told the defendant that he was a police officer investigating a crime. Those allegations suffice to establish this element of the offense.
The allegations also established a "touching" without the officer's consent. See Commonwealth v. Porro,
Assault and battery requires a touching that is intentional, not simply the result of an intentional act. See Porro,
Finally, we must address whether the defendant had a right or excuse to intentionally use force against the officer to close his car door after the officer unlawfully opened it. It is well established that police officers "may make inquiry of anyone they wish and knock on any door, so long as they do not implicitly or explicitly assert that the person inquired of is not free to ignore their inquiries." Commonwealth v. Murdough,
Even taken in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the facts do not establish any constitutionally recognized justification for the officer's intrusion. He was not checking on the defendant's health or safety. See Commonwealth v. Evans,
But that freedom does not extend so far as to privilege the use of force to counteract an unlawful intrusion by a police officer engaged in his official duties. "Notwithstanding the high value accorded the right to personal privacy, the modern view is to abolish or sharply curtail the use of force to resist police action." Gomes,
2. Resisting arrest. The Commonwealth also appeals from the dismissal of the charge for resisting arrest.
"A person commits the crime of resisting arrest if he knowingly prevents or attempts to prevent a police officer, acting under color of his official authority, from effecting an arrest of the actor or another, by: (1) using or threatening to use physical force or violence against the police officer or another; or (2) using any other means which creates a substantial risk of causing bodily injury to such police officer or another."
G. L. c. 268, § 32B (a).
The statute provides that the crime of resisting arrest is "committed, if at all, at the time of the 'effecting' of an arrest." Commonwealth v. Grandison,
"[W]hether the crime of resisting arrest has been made out is an intensely factual, nuanced inquiry that must consider the nature of the defendant's conduct or actions and the sequence of those actions in relation to corresponding action by the police officers involved." Commonwealth v. Hart,
In cases involving a defendant's attempt to move away during arrest, courts have upheld convictions under G. L. c. 268, § 32B (a), where that act of avoidance placed the officers at substantial risk of injury. In Commonwealth v. Montoya,
Conclusion. So much of the judge's order dismissing the charge of assault and battery on a police officer is reversed, and the complaint as to that charge is reinstated. The order of dismissal is affirmed in all other respects.
So ordered.
TOONE, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part). Judges must exercise vigilance to protect individuals from criminal complaints that are not supported by probable cause because proceeding in those circumstances imposes unnecessary burdens on the individuals and wastes judicial resources. See Commonwealth v. Humberto H.,
I agree with my colleagues that there is no probable cause to believe that the defendant resisted arrest. The fact that the officer struck the defendant in the head and pulled him from the car was inadequate to make "a reasonable person in the defendant's circumstances" understand that he was being arrested. Commonwealth v. Grant,
I respectfully disagree that there is probable cause to believe that the defendant committed an assault and battery by closing his car door after the officer unlawfully opened it. To establish a violation of G. L. c. 265, § 13D, the Commonwealth must prove, among other things, that the defendant touched the public employee "without having any right or excuse to do so" and that the defendant's touching was intentional. Commonwealth v. Mitchell,
Relying primarily on Commonwealth v. Gomes,
This case is not controlled by Gomes, Moreira, or any other case involving a defendant's intentional resistance to an officer's arrest or entry (lawful or not) because the facts here are fundamentally different. As the majority acknowledges, the defendant was not acting in a suspicious manner when the encounter began. Ante at . Sitting in his mother's car outside her house, he was approached by the officer, who asked him to roll down his window and answer questions pertinent to the officer's investigation. The defendant's refusal to answer the officer's questions or otherwise respond was protected behavior. See Commonwealth v. Warren,
The majority believes it can be fairly inferred that "the defendant struck the officer with the door intentionally," ante at , based on the officer's allegation that, after he improperly confronted the defendant, the defendant "pulled the door into the left side of [the officer's] body forcefully." But that statement tells us nothing about what the defendant intended. Every object set in motion is done so "forcefully," regardless of what the mover intends. Even if we were to, generously, interpret "forcefully" to mean "intentionally," we would still be left with only a conclusory assertion, not "reasonably trustworthy information sufficient to warrant a reasonable or prudent person in believing" that the intent element of the offense is satisfied. Humberto H.,
In applying the standard of probable cause, "we are guided by the factual and practical considerations of everyday life on which reasonably prudent [people], not legal technicians, act" (quotation and citation omitted). Coggeshall,
Although the majority asserts that the defendant can argue at trial that he lacked the requisite intent for this offense, he should not face the burdens of trial at all.[1] Because there is no probable cause to find either that the defendant intended to use force against the officer or that he closed his car door "without having any right or excuse to do so," Mitchell,
footnotes
[1] This paragraph of the statute governs assault and battery committed against "any public employee." Other paragraphs in G. L. c. 265, § 13D, authorize more severe penalties for defendants who attempt to disarm a police officer or cause serious bodily injury, but those offenses do not fall within the jurisdiction of the District Court and are not at issue here. See G. L. c. 218, § 26.
[2] Because the assault and battery charge is limited to the allegation that the defendant pulled his car door into the officer's body, we do not consider the officer's subsequent actions in this analysis, including his decision to strike the defendant in the head and pull him from the car.
[3] Because the officer did not identify any injury he suffered as a result of the incident, much less one that was "more than transient and trifling," Commonwealth v. Burno,
[4] Although the Commonwealth argued at the motion hearing that under G. L. c. 90, § 25, the operator of a motor vehicle must "identify himself to police upon being requested to do so," there is no allegation that the officer made such a request while the defendant was in his car. Rather, the officer alleged that the defendant "refused to identify himself" only after he was arrested, handcuffed, and sitting on the ground.
[5] Specifically, the Commonwealth acknowledged at oral argument that the allegation that the defendant "squared off" with the officer "with clenched fists," after the officer struck the defendant in the head and pulled him from the car, may not be considered as a basis for the charge because it occurred before "the point of arrest." Nor do we consider the defendant's touching of the officer by forcefully attempting to close the car door.
[6] The officer's characterization of the defendant as being "resistive" after being handcuffed does not establish probable cause. See Hart,
[7] The defendant's attempt to reach for an object in his pocket, after he had been handcuffed, seated on the ground, and was under the officer's control, did not give rise to a substantial risk of bodily injury to the officer. Nor did the defendant's refusal to identify himself or cross his legs.
footnotes for concurring
[1] While I agree with the majority that "the remedy for unlawful governmental intrusion (unaccompanied by excessive force) upon one's personal privacy and autonomy is through the courts," ante at , this matter is in court; and dismissal is the proper remedy where, as here, the complaint application fails to allege facts adequate to establish probable cause as to each element of the charged offenses. See Commonwealth v. Russo,
