67 Mass. App. Ct. 301 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2006
The defendant was convicted by a Superior Court jury of rape (two counts).
The chief disputed issue at trial was whether the complainant had consented to engage in sexual intercourse with the defendant; more specifically, whether the complainant, due to intoxication, had the mental capacity to consent. The Commonwealth took the position that the complainant, at the time of the alleged rape, was sufficiently under the influence of drugs and alcohol as to be incapable of consent.
The conflict surrounding this point was the subject matter of numerous discussions between the parties and the trial judge concerning the precise contents of the judge’s charge on the relationship between intoxication and consent. During the initial charge conference, which preceded closing argument (the relevance of which will become clear presently) the following exchange occurred:
*303 Defense counsel: “Are you charging, Judge, that by reason of a person being intoxicated they can’t give consent?”
The court: “No. It’s a fact [the jury] can consider in determining whether or not a person was able to give consent. They have to make that determination. That’s a question of fact, whether she — obviously there’s different degrees of drunkenness.”
Defense counsel: “That’s the point.”
The court: “And there are, there are. And if a person is so drunk that they’re not capable of consenting, then the jury can consider that on the issue. But they have to make that finding as to whether she was drunk and, if so, what degree of drunkenness or stupefaction or helplessness there was. That’s solely for them. I’m just going to tell them what the law is.”
Defense counsel: “What you just said now, is that how you will tell them?”
The court: “Basically.”
The judge, at least up to this point, had correctly articulated the governing law as it has existed in Massachusetts for more than 130 years. In determining whether a person is “incapable of consenting” to sexual intercourse as a result of intoxication, the inquiry focuses on whether that person is “wholly insensible . . . in a state of utter stupefaction . . . caused by drunkenness ... or drugs” (emphasis supplied), a formulation derived from Commonwealth v. Burke, 105 Mass. 376, 380-381 (1870). That is to say, the question is not merely whether a person is intoxicated, but whether due to intoxication, a person has been rendered physically or mentally “incapable of consenting.” Ibid. Where such a finding is made, a conviction for rape lawfully may be premised “on proof only of ‘such force as was necessary to effect the purpose.’ ” Commonwealth v. Helfant, 398 Mass. 214, 221 (1986), quoting from Burke, supra at 377. In conducting this inquiry, a jury necessarily must assess the degree of the complainant’s intoxication for the purpose of determining whether the high standard imposed by Burke, supra at 380-381, has been met.
In anticipation of a charge that, like the instruction recommended in Molle, supra at 627, and the instruction used in Sim-cock, supra, emphasized the jury’s duty to determine not merely whether the complainant was intoxicated, but whether she was so intoxicated as to be rendered “wholly insensible” and unable to consent, defense counsel readily conceded in his closing that the complainant had been drinking: “There’s no question that that night [the complainant] was drunk.” However, defense counsel then devoted virtually the entire balance of his closing to a meticulous rebuttal of the government’s suggestion that the complainant was so impaired as to be deemed “wholly insensible.” By way of example, defense counsel argued:
“[The government] would have you believe that at this point in time [the complainant] was out on her feet, she’s dead drunk and whatever. On the ride over to Sisón and Urban’s home, what do you hear? You hear out the window of Dr. Urban’s car, on the right-hand side, [the complainant] yells over to Cookie Paris driving Dr. Sisón’s car, because he’s drunk; she’s sober. She said she only had one drink that night . . . she said, she was the designated*305 driver that night: [The complainant] yells out the window, ‘Hey, Cookie, you shouldn’t be driving. You haven’t got a license.’ Now what does that tell you . . . about the mental acuity of [the complainant]? What does it tell you about whether or not she’s awake or asleep? What does it tell you about how drunk she is . . . ?”
Defense counsel continued in the same vein for much of the remainder of his argument, citing many specific examples from the evidence tending to suggest that the complainant, while intoxicated, was by no means “wholly insensible.”
However, when the judge thereafter instructed the jury on the relationship between intoxication and consent, she departed significantly from her earlier proposed instruction, stating simply:
“If, by reason of sleep, or intoxication, or drunkenness, or stupefication [szc], or unconsciousness, or helplessness, a person is incapable of consenting, an act of sexual intercourse occurring with that person during such incapacity, is without the valid consent of the incapacitated person.”
The defendant objected to the judge’s instruction:
Defense counsel: “We spoke of this earlier, judge, when you give the thing about the unconscious [szc], and all the rest of it, I asked you earlier, and I guess this is my objection to the charge that you gave, that you didn’t specify that the level of intoxication is for [the jury] to determine.”
The court: “Okay, I’ll say that [the jury has] to determine the level of intoxication, because some people could be drunk and still be capable of consenting.”
The judge subsequently gave a supplemental charge, but failed to augment her instruction on the crucial issue of consent as promised. Indeed, the judge said nothing about the disputed point. Again, defense counsel objected. The trial judge simply stated: “I’m not going to further instruct on the levels of intoxication, I think it was covered.” This was error.
Finally, and perhaps most important, the judge’s charge was defective insofar as it lacked any reference to the “wholly insensible” language derived from Burke, 105 Mass, at 380. See Molle, 56 Mass. App. Ct. at 626 (charge on incapacity to consent should include the “wholly insensible” language contained in Burke). While the failure to include this precise locution may be excused in particular cases, a judge is nonetheless required to emphasize through comparable words the high standard that must be met to support a finding of incapacity to consent based on intoxication. In Simcock, 31 Mass. App. Ct. at 194-195, for example, we deemed the phrase “utterly senseless so as to be unable to consent” a permissible alternate construction. However, we see no adequate substitute in the judge’s charge here for the traditional formulation from Burke, supra. Thus, even if the jury understood that they were required to assess the degree of the complainant’s intoxication in determining her capacity to consent — a dubious assumption as we have indicated already — we are not confident that the jury also appreciated the high degree of intoxication required to negate the capacity to consent; i.e., that the complainant must be “wholly insensible.” For all of the foregoing reasons, the disputed charge amounts to error.
In the first instance, the error ran to the central point in dispute at trial; viz., capacity to consent. Both sides acknowledged that the defendant and complainant had engaged in sexual relations. Likewise, both parties agreed that the complainant did not make any outward sign that the acts that gave rise to the charges here were anything but consensual. To prove lack of consent, the Commonwealth devoted a substantial portion of its presentation to establishing that the complainant was utterly incapacitated by drugs and alcohol and was, therefore, unable to consent. As the government argued in its closing with respect to the complainant’s condition at the time of the alleged attack: “She’s drunk, ladies and gentleman, and she’s helplessly drunk. She’s [sic] not, like I said to you, just a case of a man taking advantage of a woman who’s tipsy, she’s helpless” (emphasis supplied). The defendant, as noted already, likewise made this issue the centerpiece of his own summation. In these circumstances, we cannot say with confidence that the error was unlikely to have affected the jury’s deliberations.
Further, to the extent that the error in the charge might have relieved the Commonwealth of at least a portion of its burden of proof, the misstep implicates due process concerns. Proof of lack of consent is an element of rape, and a finding of incapacity satisfies that element as matter of law. To the extent that the jury might have misunderstood the judge’s charge to indicate that mere proof of intoxication, or proof of intoxication short of impairment that renders the complainant “wholly insensible,” satisfies the government’s burden in this regard, the instruction essentially redefined the crime of rape. Where an error in a jury charge eliminates a requisite element of an offense, at least where that element is contested, the conviction cannot stand.
This was a very close case, involving as it did a pure battle of credibility between the complainant and defendant. The judge’s instruction on a crucial issue — if not the crucial issue — was seriously flawed. The judge’s misstatements of the law did not merely confuse the legal standards with respect to the capacity to consent, it potentially imposed a burden-reducing presumption with respect to that important issue. Finally, by seriously misleading the defendant about the ultimate contents of her charge, the judge undermined a key component of the defense strategy. All of this could have been avoided had the judge merely followed the instructions approved in prior cases.
Judgments reversed.
Verdicts set aside.
The defendant’s convictions were obtained at a retrial. His first trial ended when the jury were unable to agree upon a verdict.
In view of the outcome here, it is not necessary to address the defendant’s
The Commonwealth also argued that the complainant generally had failed to consent.
In Molle, supra at 627, we concluded that the instruction, although unwarranted and incomplete, could not have given rise to a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice in that case.