COMMONWEALTH vs. KENNETH I. NORMAN.
No. 13-P-1978.
Appellate Court of Massachusetts, Worcester.
January 8, 2015. - May 8, 2015.
87 Mass. App. Ct. 344 (2015)
Present: GRAINGER, BROWN, & MILKEY, JJ.
Motor Vehicle, Operating under the influence, License to operate. License. Notice. Registrar of Motor Vehicles, Records. Practice, Criminal, Required finding.
At thе trial of an indictment charging operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor (OUI) while under a license suspension for a prior OUI offense, in violation of
INDICTMENTS found and returned in the Superior Court Department on November 14, 2012.
The cases were tried before David Ricciardone, J.
Nelson P. Lovins for the defendant.
Ellyn H. Lazar-Moore, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
MILKEY, J. Following jury and jury-waived trials in Supеrior Court, the defendant was convicted of operating while under the influence of intoxicating liquor (OUI) while under a license suspension for a prior OUI.1
Background. Given the limited nature of the defendant‘s appeal, we lay out only the evidence related to whether the defendant had notice of his license suspension. The longtime branch manager of the Worcester office of the Registry of Mоtor Vehicles (RMV) testified that the RMV had a system in place to provide drivers formal notice that their licenses had been suspended. Under that system, once an OUI conviction is entered into the relevant database, a suspension notice is automatically generated, and employees in the RMV mailroom then place the notice in an envelope and deliver it to the post office for mailing. The branch manager also produced from RMV files a “notice of suspension” letter (suspension notice) dated November 8, 2001. That suspension notice, which was addressed to the defendant at a mailing address on file with the RMV, stated that the defendant‘s license was being suspended for a ten-year period beginning October 15, 2004.
When the defendant was stopped by police in 2012 for his new OUI violation, he admitted to them that he did not have a license (while providing them his license number).2
Discussion. The defendant bases his insufficiency argument primarily on Oyewole, supra. We proceed to review that case in some detail.
When the driver in Oyewole was stopped by the police, he “had his license in his possession and gave it to the police officer.” Id. at 1017. Noting that drivers whо have their licenses suspended are legally required to surrender them to the probation department
The factual setting of the case before us is markedly different from that of Oyewole. Most important, as noted, the defendant here admitted to police that he lacked a license (while informing police what his license number was). Wе need not decide whether that admission alone provided sufficient proof that he had been notified that his license had been suspended, because of the other evidence that the Commonwealth produced.3 To be sure, the fact that a suspension notice existed in RMV files does not by itself prove that it was mailed to the defendant.4 The defendant argues that the Commonwealth cannot рrove that it mailed this particular
The Oyewole court was not presented with the question whether the Commonwealth could prove that a particular suspension notice in fact had been mailed by relying on testimony regarding the RMV‘s general notification practices. Moreover, at least some argument can be made that there is a material difference between evidence that the RMV has in place an administrative system for the mailing of suspension notices that were specifically generated for that purpose and the type of “regular practice” evidence deemed insufficient in Oyewole.
In the end, we need not resolvе whether the evidence regarding the RMV‘s mailing practices would have been sufficient on its own, because of the totality of the evidence on notice. As Justice Holmes observed long ago, “[e]vidence which would be colorless if it stood alone may get a new complexion from other facts which are proved, and in turn may corroborate the conclusion which would be drawn from the othеr facts.” Commonwealth v. Mulrey, 170 Mass. 103, 110 (1898). Here, the defendant admitted that he lacked a license, there was a suspension notice addressed to him produced from RMV‘s files, and there was some testimony regarding the RMV‘s systematic mailing рractices. We conclude that, taken together, this evidence provided a sufficient basis for a reasonable fact finder to conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendаnt had been notified that his license had been suspended.6
Judgments affirmed.
