On appeal from his convictions on indictments charging him with two counts of rape and abuse of a child under sixteen years of age and five counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under fourteen years of age, the defendant
1. The evidence. We briefly summarize the testimony of the victim, Karen.
At some point during their relationship, Karen’s mother became pregnant by the defendant, and they married. However, the defendant continued to abuse Karen sexually until she was a little over eleven years old. Karen related that throughout this six-year period of abuse by the defendant, she once told her mother that the defendant had been “touching” her, but her mother chose not to believe her. When Karen later told her mother of the defendant’s acts, the mother confronted him. He denied the allegation, and the mother did nothing more.
In 1994, Karen disclosed the defendant’s abuse of her to a therapist, a clinical social worker, who, in turn, filed a mandatory child-abuse report with the Department of Social Services. About a week later, Karen was placed in a foster home where
In the months following her disclosure to the therapist, Karen was interviewed by people from the District Attorney’s office, the Concord District Court, and a children’s protective agency. In the meantime, Karen did not see the defendant from the time of her placement with her grandmother until the time of the defendant’s first trial.
Karen’s mother testified that Karen’s relationship with the defendant was “mixed,” that is, “[t]hey either loved each other or hated each other,” and that when she married the defendant, Karen seemed “upset.”
2. The statements in issue. During her testimony, Karen stated that she loved the defendant and always would, that “he was just like my dad, to me” but that “in some ways,” she “hate[dj” him. She acknowledged that she currently wanted “[t]o put him in jail” and stated that he “deserve[dj” to be incarcerated. However, Karen denied that she had told the defendant’s mother (Mrs. Tweedy) that she and her (Karen’s) family would “grind the Tweedy family into the ground.” When the judge sustained objections to the defendant’s questions concerning whether Karen had ever sworn at Mrs. Tweedy and whether Karen had ever told Mrs. Tweedy that she would never see her grandchildren again, the defendant attempted to make an offer of proof. The judge stood firm in his ruling and told defense counsel that the offer of proof could be made “at another time.”
During questioning of Mrs. Tweedy, defense counsel brought out the fact that she (Mrs. Tweedy) had received numerous
Staying within the limits of the judge’s ruling, defense counsel elicited from Mrs. Tweedy the facts that although she had not seen Karen after December, 1994, she had received numerous telephone calls from her, that during all these conversations, Karen had been “abusive,” that she had used “[v]cry bad language,” and that the nature of Karen’s statements made it “hard” for her to believe that Karen was the “little girl I loved so much.”
3. Restriction of evidence as to bias. It is the defendant’s argument that the judge erroneously deprived him of an evidentiary basis upon which to argue that Karen’s testimonial “expressions of love and magnanimity [for and toward the defendant] were disingenuous.” The defendant claims that he was denied the right to show that Karen had a bias against him.
Although a defendant has a right to show the bias of an adverse witness, that right is not without some limitation. As stated in Commonwealth v. Hicks,
We see no error in the judge’s ruling. In the first instance, he did not preclude all inquiry on the issue of bias against the defendant on the part of Karen and her family. Compare Commonwealth v. Civello,
We think the judge’s ruling was within the broad range of his discretion. Our conclusion is based upon the facts that Karen and her mother demonstrated feelings of extreme animosity toward the defendant and his family throughout their testimony and that all of the statements in issue allegedly made by Karen were made after the defendant had been indicted. In short, and as we read the defendant’s offer of proof (Mrs. Tweedy’s notes concerning Karen’s statements to her), the judge reasonably excluded only the exact wording of Karen’s allegedly “foul” and “abusive” language.
There is yet another statement contained in the offer of proof
In the first instance, Karen’s alleged taunt of the defendant was never brought to the attention of the judge. Defense counsel never asked Karen or Mrs. Tweedy about this particular statement during his questioning of either witness. Although we do not suggest that defense counsel was required to put the question to Karen before he could offer extrinsic evidence of her bias through examination of Mrs. Tweedy, see Commonwealth v. Brown,
Even were we to conclude that an appropriate offer of proof had been made, we would also conclude that any erroneous exclusion of Mrs. Tweedy’s testimony concerning Karen’s taunting statement to the defendant does not require reversal of the defendant’s convictions. As earlier noted, the “fact of [Karen’s] bias was shown in other evidence and, therefore, the absence of the excluded evidence was not significantly prejudicial.”
The defendant’s final claim of error concerns the judge’s refusal to allow him to cross-examine Karen’s mother as to whether she had ever prevented the Tweedy family from seeing their grandchildren. He claims that the judge’s ruling infringed upon his right to “elicit evidence of [the mother’s] bias and the poisonous effect that it had on [Karen].”
Even assuming that the ruling was erroneous, we conclude that any error was harmless. Although the mother denied any feeling of bitterness toward the defendant and his family, there was ample evidence before the jury to show otherwise. As acknowledged by the defendant in his brief, Karen’s mother made it clear to the jury that she “hated” the defendant.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Karen, a pseudonym, was bom on December 28, 1981, and was almost sixteen years of age at the time of the instant trial. The defendant’s first trial, in 1996, ended in a mistrial due to the jury’s inability to reach a verdict.
Soon after the Department of Social Services became involved with Karen, the defendant told a friend that her removal from the home was due to the fact that one night she slipped into bed with him and her mother and that he mistook her (Karen) for her mother.
During her testimony, Karen’s mother made a vituperative outburst against the defendant.
Appropriate offers of proof should be allowed at the time of the request “unless the judge is sure of the cross-examiner’s purpose and satisfied that it is apparent from the record . . . .” Commonwealth v. Barnett,
At oral argument, the defendant seemed to suggest that Mrs. Tweedy’s notes were admissible to show that Karen had made a prior inconsistent statement, that is, that she did tell Mrs. Tweedy that her (Karen’s) family would “grind” the Tweedy family into the ground. Even were we to consider this claim, see Mass.R.A.P. 16(a)(4), as amended,
To the extent that the defendant argues on appeal that the judge’s ruling deprived him of the right to highlight or otherwise stress the inconsistency or contrast between Karen’s demeanor during her testimony and her abusive language during her telephone conversations with Mrs. Tweedy, we note that
Although the notes were dated in the chronological order in which Karen allegedly made the statements therein recounted, this particular entry, the November, 1996, taunt, is strangely interposed between entries dated August, 1997, and “[l]ater in August, 1997,” both of which described the substance of telephone calls from Karen to Mrs. Tweedy.
As earlier noted, Karen testified that she wanted “[t]o put [the defendant] in jail” and stated that he “deserve[d]” to be incarcerated.
It is therein stated: “As is clear from her testimony, [Karen’s mother] hated the defendant and she unabashedly vented these feelings at trial where she was, at times, nearly uncontrollable as a witness. Following several objections to her testimony by defense counsel, the judge stopped the trial to order the prosecutor to restrain her.”
