JAMES GREEN, petitioner.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
October 4, 2016
475 Mass. 624 (2016)
Suffolk. March 10, 2016. - October 4, 2016.
Sex Offender. Evidence, Sex offender, Expert opinion. Practice, Criminal, Sex offender, Instructions to jury.
This court concluded that, in a proceeding on a petition seeking release from civil commitment as a sexually dangerous person, the qualified examiner‘s statutory role is not limited to that of gatekeeper and that, to prevail at trial, the Commonwealth may not rely solely on the fact that the qualified examiner has satisfied his or her gatekeeping responsibility. [629-630]
A Superior Court judge properly denied the Commonwealth‘s motion for a new trial following a jury trial in which the petitioner was found to be no longer sexually dangerous, where, given the centrality of the qualified examiner‘s role in sexually dangerous person proceedings, the jury instruction to the effect that a finding of sexual dangerousness must be based, at least in part, on credible qualified examiner opinion testimony was essential to, and did not usurp, the informed exercise of the jury‘s fact-finding function. [630-631]
PETITION filed in the Superior Court Department on August 11, 2011.
The case was heard by Laurence D. Pierce, J., and a motion for a new trial was heard by him.
The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for direct appellate review.
Mary P. Murray for the Commonwealth.
Michael A. Nam-Krane for the petitioner.
Joseph M. Kenneally, for Committee for Public Counsel Services, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
HINES, J. This is an appeal from the denial of the Commonwealth‘s motion for a new trial after a jury found the petitioner, James Green, no longer sexually dangerous in a proceeding brought pursuant to
We granted direct appellate review to clarify the reach of Johnstone, petitioner, 453 Mass. 544 (2009), where we interpreted
Background.5 After being convicted of three separate sex offenses between 1991 and 2002, Green volunteered for treatment while incarcerated. After being convicted of another sex offense in 2006, he was transferred to the Massachusetts Treatment Center in 2007. Prior to his scheduled release, the Commonwealth filed a petition6 to commit Green as an SDP.7 In July, 2011, after a jury trial, Green was found sexually dangerous. Two months later, in August, 2011, Green filed a petition for discharge pursuant to
During pretrial hearings in March, 2015, the judge informed the parties of his intention to instruct the jury that they may not find the petitioner to be sexually dangerous unless they credited the testimony of a qualified examiner who so opines. See Johnstone, 453 Mass. at 553. The judge provided a written copy of the instructions, and the Commonwealth renewed its objection.
The judge instructed the jury as follows:10
“In order to find that Mr. Green is a sexually dangerous person you must credit the opinion of Dr. Nancy Connolly, who testified in her capacity as a qualified examiner and opined that Mr. Green is a sexually dangerous person as defined in the law at the present time. It is not required that you accept all of the reasons given by Dr. Connolly for her opinion. You might find support for the opinion anywhere in the evidence, including the testimony of Dr. Angela Johnson, the CAB representative. However, you cannot find that Mr. Green is a sexually dangerous person today unless you give credit to the opinion of Dr. Connolly that Mr. Green suffers from a mental condition that causes him serious difficulty in
controlling his sexual impulses at the present time.”
On the second day of the jury‘s deliberations in this case, the Appeals Court issued its decision in Souza, petitioner, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 162 (2015), concluding in dicta that a nearly identical instruction was erroneous in “suggesting the relative weight the jury can or should assign to the various Commonwealth experts.”11 The Appeals Court added that the judge‘s instruction was “not compelled by Johnstone” because ”Johnstone held only that the Commonwealth cannot continue to pursue SDP confinement of someone unless at least one of the two assigned [qualified examiners] concludes that the person is an SDP.” Id. In this case, relying on Souza, the Commonwealth moved to reinstruct the jury. After a telephone hearing, the judge denied the motion, reasoning that the parties were informed before trial that the instruction would be given; seven hours of deliberation had already occurred; and reinstruction would lead to confusion and distract from the jury‘s fair consideration of the evidence. That same day, the jury returned their verdict that Green was not an SDP.
On the day of the defendant‘s anticipated discharge, the Commonwealth moved for a new trial or, in the alternative, for a stay of discharge pending appeal. The judge denied the motion for a new trial but reserved decision on the motion for a stay in order to determine whether the probation department could supervise the defendant after release.12 After further hearings, the judge also denied the Commonwealth‘s motion to stay the petitioner‘s discharge pending appeal but stayed the effective date of discharge
After a single justice of the Appeals Court granted the Commonwealth‘s motion for stay, Green appealed that decision to the full Appeals Court and filed an application for direct appellate review by this court. The Commonwealth also filed a separate appeal from the jury‘s verdict and an application for direct appellate review. Both applications for direct appellate review were granted, and the appeals were consolidated for hearing by this court. Thereafter, Green filed a motion to vacate the stay in the county court. On April 28, 2016, this court ordered that Green be discharged effective May 2, 2016. Green‘s motion pending in the county court was thereafter dismissed as moot on May 18, 2016.
Discussion. 1. Standard of review. We review jury instructions for legal error resulting in prejudice to the moving party.13 See Commonwealth v. Kelly, 470 Mass. 682, 687-688 (2015); Kelly v. Foxboro Realty Assocs., 454 Mass. 306, 310 (2009). A “charge is to be considered as a whole to determine whether it is legally correct, rather than tested by fragments which may be open to just criticism” (citation omitted). McHoul, petitioner, 445 Mass. 143, 156 (2005), cert. denied, 547 U.S. 1114 (2006). Instructions that convey the proper legal standard, particularly when tracking model jury instructions, are deemed correct. Commonwealth v. Young, 461 Mass. 198, 210 (2012). Because the judge‘s instruction is derived from our ruling in Johnstone, we review it within that context to determine if it was error.
2. The principle of Johnstone. As noted, Johnstone, 453 Mass. at 545, established a gatekeeper role for the qualified examiner in an SDP proceeding, mandating discharge of the petitioner before trial unless at least one qualified examiner opines that the petitioner remains sexually dangerous. Underlying the Commonwealth‘s challenge to the jury instruction is an interpretation of Johnstone that limits the qualified examiner‘s statutory role to that of gatekeeper. We disagree that Johnstone should be interpreted so narrowly.
The thrust of Johnstone is that because a person may be involuntarily and indefinitely committed as an SDP, due process
3. The propriety of the qualified examiner instruction. The statutory imperative undergirding Johnstone would be nullified if the jury were permitted to find a person sexually dangerous by relying on evidence that we have concluded is insufficient to meet the Commonwealth‘s burden. See Johnstone, 453 Mass. at 545 (testimony of CAB member and accompanying CAB report insufficient to avoid directed verdict). A jury verdict finding the petitioner sexually dangerous based on evidence other than the qualified examiner‘s opinion is a distinct possibility where qualified examiner and CAB testimony are both presented but the jury are not informed of the qualified examiner‘s centrality to the proceeding. To avoid this result, the jury must, in some fashion, be guided in distinguishing the role of the qualified examiner from that of the CAB members who testify at trial. A jury instruction that the qualified examiner‘s opinion must be found credible to warrant a finding of sexual dangerousness satisfies this
We address briefly the Commonwealth‘s argument that any instruction directing jurors to credit a specific expert‘s opinion interferes with the jury‘s function. See Commonwealth v. Cowen, 452 Mass. 757, 762 (2008) (“The matter of how much weight is to be given a witness, particularly an expert witness, is a matter for the trier of fact, not an appellate court“). This argument is unavailing. The instruction at issue does not usurp the jury‘s function because it does not dictate the weight to be given to the qualified examiner‘s opinion. It merely instructs the jury that they must determine it to be credible in order to find a person sexually dangerous. Our decision today does not remove a jury‘s ability to decide for themselves whether a witness‘s opinion is credible.14 The jury remain free to credit or discredit an expert‘s opinion testimony. See Commonwealth v. Blake, 454 Mass. 267, 275 (2009) (Ireland, J., concurring) (“appropriate remedy for a fact finder who views an opinion as baseless is to disregard it“). To the contrary, we reinforce the jury‘s role by declining to sever the pivotal function of the qualified examiner from the Commonwealth‘s duty to present sufficient evidence of a petitioner‘s sexual dangerousness.
Conclusion. The judge‘s instruction appropriately preserved the centrality of qualified examiners in proceedings to determine sexual dangerousness. Accordingly, there was no error in the judge‘s instructions to the jury, and we conclude that there is no basis on which to grant a new trial.
Order denying motion for a new trial affirmed.
