Baran v. Estate of Conway

27 Mass. L. Rptr. 259
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJuly 29, 2010
DocketNo. 100106
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 259 (Baran v. Estate of Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baran v. Estate of Conway, 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 259 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Kern, Leila R, J.

INTRODUCTION

The plaintiff, Bernard Baran, filed this action against the defendants, the estate of Leonard Conway, David O. Burbank, and Cain, Hibbard, & Myers, P.C., in January of 2010 alleging criminal malpractice.2 The matter is before this court on defendants David Burbank and Cain, Hibbard, & Myers, P.C.’s Motion to Dismiss. For the reason discussed below, the motion is DENIED.

BACKGROUND

Bernard Baran, a teacher’s assistant at the Early Childhood Development Center (“ECDC”) was convicted on January 30, 1986 of three counts of child rape and five counts of indecent assault and battery on a child. He maintained his innocence throughout the trial. Mr. Baran was sentenced to three concurrent life sentences as well as five concurrent sentences of eight to ten years. The children were between two and five years old at the time of the alleged incidents and testified at trial three months after complaining of sexual abuse. Attorney Leonard Conway represented Mr. Baran during the trial and attorney David O. Burbank’s services were rendered on appeal.

Boy A was the first to accuse Mr. Baran of molestation.3 The father of Boy A, however, had complained to ECDC about Mr. Baran’s homosexuality only three weeks before his arrest. While the ECDC Board of Directors did discuss the concerns regarding a homosexual in the classroom and his possible termination, it is unclear if they took any action. After the allegations surfaced, Boy A was brought to the Berkshire Medical Center on October 6, 1984, for an examination. That same night, the mother of Girl B, a board member of ECDC who had herself been abused, was informed about the accusations and reported to the police that her daughter may have been molested. Mr. Baran was arrested the next day on two counts of indecent assault and battery, which stemmed from accusations by both children.

The arrest was widely publicized and ECDC sent several letters to parents about the accusations, hosted a “good touch, bad touch” puppet show, and arranged for support groups for parents and children. Thereafter, four more children made allegations: Boys C and D, and Girls E and F. Each child was interviewed multiple times by parents, DSS investigators, police officers, therapists, rape crisis center workers, and prosecutors. The interviews, some lasting up to forty minutes, were videotaped. The grand jury, however, was only presented with seven minutes of substantially edited video testimony that did not show the children stating that Mr. Baran had not abused them, accusing others of abuse, or claiming that others witnessed the alleged acts. The unedited tapes also display the children being distracted, re-focused by suggestive questioning, and assisted by their parents.-4

Before trial, the prosecutor filed a certificate of discovery listing thirty-eight prospective witnesses. Mr. Baran’s trial attorney, Mr. Conway, filed only a bill of particulars and motions to sever and dismiss, all of which were denied on January 18, 1985, three days before the start of trial. On that same day, the court conducted an in-chambers hearing regarding the competency of the child complainants and Mr. Conway waived Mr. Baran’s presence at this hearing.

At trial, the Commonwealth called twenty-nine witnesses and Mr. Baran’s trial counsel had not interviewed any of them. Boy A, one of the original complainants, was dismissed from the trial for his inability to relate any incriminating information after being found to have had gonorrhea; Mr. Baran had no history of the disease and tested negative for it. Trial counsel, however, made no motion for a mistrial and did not move to strike the testimony of any witnesses who supported only Boy A’s allegations.

Six “fresh complaint” witnesses testified on behalf of Girl B, but limiting instructions were only given [260]*260contemporaneously In conjunction with two of the witnesses and were inadequate. Defense counsel did not object to or ask for limiting instructions regarding the fresh complaint witnesses who testified on behalf of Boy C and Girls E and F.

Mr. Baran, through his third attorney to represent him in this matter, filed a motion for new trial on June 18, 2004 contending that he did not receive a fair trial. On June 13, 2006 this court (Fecteau, J.) vacated the sentences and ordered a new trial. Commonwealth v. Baran, No. 18042-51, slip op. (Mass.Super.Ct. June 13, 2006). Mr. Baran’s new counsel claimed ineffective assistance of counsel stemming from a multitude of failures and missteps by trial and appellate counsel, including but not limited to Mr. Conway’s

failure to properly investigate the alleged offenses, his failure to seek meaningful discovery from the Commonwealth and any assistance from experts in child psychology, [his failure] to properly prepare for trial, [and his failure] to develop evidence that would support the defense that the evidence was unreliable and was the creature of an unfair climate of hysteria, homophobia and suggestion. The defendant also claims that trial counsel failed to assert Mr. Baran’s constitutional right to a public trial. There are other complaints that, while particular to certain children and not common to all, the effect of which is suggested as unmeasurably prejudicial and damaging on all counts, such as that counsel failed to attempt to exclude the inflammatory evidence that one child had contracted gonorrhea, and failed, after the indictments concerning that child were dismissed, to request a mistrial or to strike or remove from the jury’s consideration the inflammatory evidence regarding gonorrhea.

Baran, No. 18042-51 at 30-31. Mr. Baran also pointed out that trial counsel failed to object to the substitution of an undisclosed witness, to request proper fresh complaint limiting instructions, to object to improperly excessive or repetitive fresh complaint testimony, to assert Mr. Baran’s right to a probable cause hearing or meaningful discovery, and to take advantage of inconsistencies in the evidence.

This court (Fecteau, J.) found that the central issue and sole defense at trial was the credibility of the child witnesses. Trial counsel, however, made no effort to explain to the jury that multiple interviews and leading questions may influence testimony or to object to the parents giving fresh complaint testimony immediately after accompanying his or her child to the witness stand. Furthermore, the apparent inconsistencies between each child’s multiple statements were not addressed.

' This court further found that trial counsel erred in multiple respects. Most notably, Mr. Conway failed to obtain or use the unedited videotape testimony of each child. On cross examination of the witnesses, he made no use of the children’s repeated denials of any alleged wrongful conduct nor did he mention the leading nature of the questions. Even without any questioning from counsel, showing the unedited tapes at trial would have impacted the credibility of the child witnesses and would have had a profound effect on the jury and the trial. Trial counsel also failed to retain an expert who would have been able to identify the leading questions, explain their harmful nature, question the use of anatomically correct dolls, and challenge opposing testimony on the capacity of children to tell the truth.

The two experts the Commonwealth brought in to testify on the credibility of minor complainants also testified as fresh complaint witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Mass. L. Rptr. 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baran-v-estate-of-conway-masssuperct-2010.