The question we here consider concerns the application of this court’s decision in Johnstone, petitioner,
The petitioner in this case, John Mclntire, brings a direct appeal from an adverse judgment in a discharge proceeding that was tried in the Superior Court in 2002, long before the Johnstone decision (2002 discharge proceeding). The Commonwealth proceeded to trial although neither of the qualified examiners аppointed to examine the petitioner under G. L. c. 123A, § 9, had opined that he remained sexually dangerous. We agree with the petitioner that Johnstone applies to his direct appeal from the judgment in the 2002 discharge proceeding, and requires that the judgment be vacated. However, we disagree that as a result of a Johnstone error, the judgment in that case was void from inception; the judgment was voidable on account of error, but not void. Accordingly, we conclude that the judgments adverse to the petitioner in his subsequent discharge proceedings — tried in 2005, 2008, and 2010,
1. Background. We recite the facts relevant to this appeal, which are undisputed.
On January 31, 2000, the petitioner filed a petition pursuant to G. L. c. 123A, § 9, seeking discharge from the treatment center on the ground that he was no longer an SDP. During a jury trial in the Superior Court on the petition in June, 2002, the two appointed qualified examiners,
In a memorandum and order issued pursuant to its rule 1:28 in 2010, the Aрpeals Court concluded that the interpretation of G. L. c. 123A, § 9, set forth in Johnstone governed the petitioner’s appeal, and that, accordingly, the judgment must be reversed because neither qualified examiner had determined that the petitioner remained an SDP. Mclntire, petitioner,
2. Discussion, a. Application of Johnstone. The petitioner argues that our holding in Johnstone, 453 Mass, at 553, must be applied retroactively to invalidate the jury verdict and resulting judgment against him in 2002; for its part, the Commonwealth contends that the court can, and should, apply Johnstone only on a prospective basis to discharge petitions filed after the date of the Johnstone decision in 2009. We agree with the Appeals Court that a retroactive-prospective analysis is unnecessary.
“In general, changes in the common law brought about by judicial decisions are given retroactive effect.” Halley v. Birbiglia,
The question in Johnstone was purely one of statutory interpretation: whether, under G. L. c. 123A, § 9, at a discharge proceeding “in which both qualified examiners form the opinion that the petitioner is no longer sexually dangerous, the testimony of a CAB member and the accompanying CAB report constitute evidence that is sufficient for the Commonwealth to avoid a directed verdict.” Johnstone, 453 Mass, at 545. We construed § 9 to mean that the qualified examiners perform an essential gatekeeping function with respect to whether a person may be classified as an SDP.
The interpretation of c. 123A, § 9, set forth in Johnstone, therefore, is the one we apply in considering here the petitioner’s direct appeal from the judgment in the 2002 discharge proceeding. There is no dispute that both qualified examiners opined there that the petitioner no longer remained sexually dangerous. Given this fact, under § 9, the Commonwealth in this case was not entitled to rely on the CAB report and the testimony of the CAB’s chair tо meet its burden of proof with respect to the petitioner’s then current sexual dangerousness, see Andrews, petitioner,
We must decide whether the reversal of the judgment in the 2002 discharge proceeding currently entitles the petitioner to an order of discharge from the treatment center. While his aрpeal from the 2002 judgment was pending, the petitioner filed additional petitions for discharge pursuant to G. L. c. 123A, § 9, as the statute entitled him to do. See G. L. c. 123A, § 9, first par. (“Any person committed to the treatment center shall be entitled to file a petition for examination and discharge once in every twelve months”). Three such petitions went to trial in 2005, 2008, and 2010, respectively; at the conclusion of each, the petitioner was found to remain an SDP.
The petitioner contends that these post-2002 proceedings are irrelevant to the disposition of this appeal, because when the two qualified examiners “found him not sexually dangerous” in connection with his 2002 discharge petition, the Superior Court lost jurisdiction over him. As a result of the qualified examiners’ determinations, he claims, his immediate discharge is required on both statutory and substantive due process grounds. We disagree.
(i) The petitioner’s statutory claim is that under the reading of G. L. c. 123A, § 9, adopted by this cоurt in Johnstone, his petition for discharge should never have gone to trial in 2002 in light of the qualified examiners’ negative opinions on his sexual
“A void judgment is to be distinguished from an erroneous one, in that the latter is subject only to direct attack. A void judgment is one which, from its inception, was a complete nullity and without legal effect. In the interest of finality, the concept of void judgments is narrowly construed.” Harris v. Sannella,
The 2002 judgment was not void. Clearly, the Superior Court had jurisdiction over the petitioner and the subject matter of the case: G. L. c. 123A, § 9, expressly authorizes an SDP to file a petition for discharge and provides that it must be filed in the Superior Court; and the petitioner makes no argument that the Superior Court conducted the proceeding in a manner that failed to afford the petitioner the process that he was due. As previously discussed, what Johnstone establishes is that the failure of at least one qualified examiner to opine that a petitioner remains an SDP renders the Commonwealth unable to meet its burden of proof. Johnstone, 453 Mass, at 552. A judgment entered after a trial where the Commonwealth has not introduced sufficient evidence is not jurisdictionally flawed, but legally erronеous.
Where the underlying judgment is erroneous, it is voidable for error and not void, and is therefore “valid until reversed through the legal process.” Lynch, petitioner,
(ii) The petitioner also argues that his continued confinement following the qualified examiners’ opinions in 2002 thаt he was no longer an SDP violates principles of substantive due process; he claims that consistent with this court’s decision in Commonwealth v. Travis,
3. Conclusion. The judgment of the Superior Court dated July 3, 2002, is reversed, and the jury verdict set aside. In light of the judgments entered in 2005, 2008, and 2010, on subsequent petitions for discharge filed by the petitioner, he is not entitled to an order of discharge at this time.
So ordered.
Notes
Thе record includes references to the 2005 and 2008 proceedings. The petitioner indicates in his brief that in June, 2010, while this appeal was pending, another, later petition for discharge was tried in the Superior Court, and the petitioner was again found to be a sexually dangerous person.
The statutory scheme governing SDPs, set forth in G. L. c. 123A, supplies the context for this case. For a detailed description, see Johnstone, petitioner,
In December, 1984, the petitioner also received concurrent suspended sentences of from eight to ten years on the convictions of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon and kidnapping.
Pursuant to G. L. c. 123A, § 9, when a petition for discharge is filed, the judge is required to “order the petitioner to be examined by two qualified examiners, who shall conduct examinations, including personal interviews, of the person on whose behalf such petition is filed and file with the court written reports of their examinations and diagnoses, and their recommendations for the disposition of such person.” See Johnstone, 453 Mass, at 546-549. A “[qjualified examiner” is defined in G. L. c. 123A, § 1, as a licensed physician “who is either certified in psychiatry by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology or eligible to be so certified,” or a licensed psychologist, “provided, however, that the examiner has had two years of experience with diagnosis or treatment of sexually aggressive offenders and is designated by the commissioner of correction.”
See Johnstone, 453 Mass, at 552:
“The statutory scheme therefore expressly sets the qualified examiners apart from other sources of expert evidence. Indeed, the role of the qualified examiners within that scheme persuades us that the Legislature intended them to serve in a capacity similar to that of a gatekeeper, deciding whether a person warrants commitment as a sexually dangerous person. Implicit in this view is the conclusion that, if both qualified examiners determine that a person is not sexually dangerous, the Commonwealth cannot meet its burden of proof. Assuming without deciding that an opinion of current sexual dangerousness included in a CAB report constitutes expert evidence of the kind that we have required ... the CAB’s opinion cannot serve as a substitute for those of the qualified examiners under the statutory scheme created by G. L. c. 123A.”
In Commonwealth v. Poissant,
In Commonwealth v. Dagley,
In the Appeals Court, the Commonwealth filed a supplemental record appendix, placing before the court documents relating to the petitioner’s discharge proceedings held in 2005 and 2008. The petitioner moved to strike the Commonwealth’s filing because the documents were not part of the record of the 2002 discharge proceeding that was the subject of the appeal. The motion to strike was referred to the рanel designated to decide the appeal and was subsequently denied by the panel. The petitioner argues that the Appeals Court improperly considered materials outside the record, to his detriment. The documents apparently at issue are the qualified examiners’ reports prepared in conjunction with the 2005 and 2008 discharge petitions. We agree that these later reports are not part of the record in this appeal, but the Apрeals Court (and this court) may take judicial notice of the docket entries in the 2005 and 2008 cases, which include the judgments. See, e.g., Care & Protection of Zita,
Indeed, the petitioner’s argument logically fails on its own terms. In order for the petitioner validly to be discharged from the treatment center, a court with jurisdiction must enter the order of discharge. See G. L. c. 123A, § 9,
The petitioner asserts that Lynch, petitioner,
The petitioner’s reliance on Commonwealth v. Gillis,
It is important to note that despite the erroneous judgment in 2002, the petitioner continued thereafter to qualify as a “[sjexually dangerous person” as that term is defined in G. L. c. 123A, § 1, because, as a result of the 1984 trial, he had been convicted of sexual offenses and had been “previously adjudicated as [an SDP].” This case does not raise the issue whether a person validly adjudicated an SDP still qualifies as such if the conviction of a governing sex offense on which the SDP adjudication was based is later vacated.
In asserting that his continued commitment is fundamentally unjust and “in violation of ordered liberty,” the petitioner claims that his appeal took an unconscionable amount of time to reach the appellate courts for decision, and that he would have been better off if he had not exercised his right to bring petitions for discharge while his appeal from the judgment in the 2002 discharge proceeding was pending. That there were delays in the appeal of this case is obvious and unfortunate, although some portion of the delay appears to have been due to the fact that the petitioner, as he was entitled to do, moved for a new trial in January of 2007. It is true that if we were now deciding this direct appeal from the petitioner’s 2002 discharge proceeding with no discharge proceedings having been tried in the interim, he would be entitled to an order of discharge. But Johnstone was decided in 2009, and if the petitioner’s direct appeal had proceeded at a speedier rate, it is not clear that the issue decided in Johnstone would have been raised; the petitioner himself did not raise such a claim until July, 2007, in an amended memorandum in support for his motion for a new trial. Moreover, the petitioner did, in fact, exercise his right to petition for discharge, and in three separate trials in 2005, 2008, and 2010, he was found to remain sexually dangerous.
