Commonwealth v. A.B.

887 N.E.2d 1107, 72 Mass. App. Ct. 10, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 612
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 9, 2008
DocketNo. 06-P-1383
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 887 N.E.2d 1107 (Commonwealth v. A.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. A.B., 887 N.E.2d 1107, 72 Mass. App. Ct. 10, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 612 (Mass. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Mills, J.

The defendant was convicted by a jury of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, G. L. c. 265, § 15A. He appeals from his conviction, claiming that it was error to fail to hold a competency hearing before his trial began. He also appeals from the denial of his motion for a new trial, claiming that his counsel was constitutionally ineffective as to both a potential insanity defense and the defendant’s competency to stand trial. We conclude that a new trial is required for the reasons set forth below.

1. Background facts. We recite the facts the jury could have [11]*11found, reserving further details for discussion of specific issues raised. On the afternoon of January 26, 2002, Maria Albassan was with her friend Janell Correia, in a bar in New Bedford. They saw the defendant, who made some remarks mainly directed toward Correia. Albassan saw the defendant drink some beer, and she then left the bar for an errand. Correia stayed inside while the defendant followed Albassan outside, where an argument escalated to physical altercation. The defendant punched Albassan in the face, and Albassan struck the defendant in return.

Later that evening, Albassan, Correia, and Louis Fernandes went to another bar. When Albassan and Correia exited, the defendant was outside and started following Albassan. She kept turning in different ways so that the defendant would not know where she lived, and when she arrived at home she left a message with the bar to please tell Fernandes to wait for her outside because she and Correia were planning to return.

They did return and went inside. The defendant was on the other side of the bar, and Fernandes was playing pool. The defendant tapped Albassan on the shoulder and yelled at her, “You’re mine, you’re mine,” whereupon Albassan yelled back, “No, I’m not. I’m not yours.” Then, as Fernandes walked by a pool table, the defendant hit him on the back, saying, “You, I kill you. I cut you, you piece of shit.”

At around 11:30 p.m., Fernandes left the bar to go home. As he started walking to his car, the defendant, who was standing in the doorway of the bar next door, came at him with a knife and said something like, “I kill you.” The defendant started swinging at Fernandes with the knife, and Fernandes put his hands up to defend himself. His thumb was cut, and the defendant struck Fernandes on the head. The defendant’s leg was caught, and he fell down. Throughout this time the defendant continued to swing at Fernandes, cutting his face and nose.

A crowd of people assembled and began hitting the defendant, and “banging him trying to get the knife off him.” Police Officers Paul Patota and Terrance O’Shea arrived and, after securing the knife, received a description of the assailant from Fernandes, which was broadcast over the police radio. Based on the description, Officer Kevin LaPalme, one of the officers [12]*12called to the scene, observed the defendant staggering on a sidewalk, bleeding from his head. The defendant was taken to the hospital for treatment.1 There, both Albassan and Correia identified him as the man who had attacked Fernandes.

2. The defendant’s mental illnesses. The motion for new trial was decided by the trial judge. Submissions by both parties with respect to the defendant’s motion for new trial included, in addition to the motion judge’s earlier decision on the defendant’s motion to suppress (see note 1, supra), affidavits of three attorneys (one of whom was trial counsel), and various mental health evaluations and summaries by personnel at both the Taunton and Bridgewater State Hospitals (TSH and BSH). Additional mental health evaluations had been filed (under seal) prior to the defendant’s November 30, 2004, trial. These documents, the authenticity of which is not at issue, included recitations of the defendant’s family history, the extent of his psychiatric hospitalizations, various diagnoses of his mental illnesses, and medications prescribed (as well as administered to him) while he was hospitalized at various times over the course of the ten years prior to his trial.

[13]*13The submissions indicated, as the judge acknowledged, that the defendant had a significant history of mental illness dating back to 1993, and had been confined at BSH at least five times.2 In 2003 and 2004, while being held awaiting trial, the defendant continued to suffer from very serious mental illnesses. He fired attorneys whom he believed to be conspiring against him,3 and he was committed to BSH on September 25, 2003. From September, 2003, through March, 2004, he was determined incompetent to stand trial. In March of 2004, the same BSH psychologist who had determined the defendant incompetent opined that he “no longer demonstrates significant deficits in those abilities usually associated with competence to stand trial.” In ruling on the motion for new trial, the judge construed this language as an opinion that the defendant was competent to stand trial. The psychologist surmised that the improvement in the defendant’s mental health status was, most likely, a function of his compliance with his antipsychotic medical treatment.4

Subsequent to the March, 2004, evaluation, the defendant was not returned to jail to await trial, but instead was committed to TSH because he posed a threat and danger to others.5 He remained there from March 12, 2004, throughout the course of the [14]*14pretrial proceedings, including the hearing on his motion to suppress, held in July, 2004, until November 30, 2004, the date of his jury trial. While at TSH he was diagnosed as suffering from continued paranoid schizophrenia and was found to have a long history of a psychotic disorder with a significant history of medication noncompliance resulting in “psychotic decompensations and violence . . . .” He was further noted to have “marked paranoid and persecutory delusions and a belief system regarding the American legal system, also delusional beliefs that people are following him, has [ric] a conspiracy against him.” Further, while at TSH, it was noted that the defendant “has no insight or understanding about his illness or his legal charges secondary to his psychotic illness. He has been noncompliant with his medications out in the community, and per history he becomes assaultive when he decompensates.” Additionally, in June of 2004, while at TSH, the defendant was diagnosed with mild mental retardation.

3. Discussion. The failure of the attorney to request a competency determination by the judge, reasonably contemporaneous with the trial, was ineffective representation, and the judge’s conclusion to the contrary was error.6 Further, regardless of the [15]*15attorney’s inaction, the trial of the defendant without a timely competency determination was error warranting a new trial.

“It is axiomatic that the trial, conviction, or sentencing of a legally incompetent person violates that person’s constitutional right to due process.” Commonwealth v. Simpson, 428 Mass. 646, 649 (1999). It is the Commonwealth’s burden to “prove the defendant’s competence at the time of trial by a preponderance of the evidence.” Id. at 654. The question of a defendant’s competency at the time of trial may be presented in a motion for new trial. See ibid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
887 N.E.2d 1107, 72 Mass. App. Ct. 10, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-ab-massappct-2008.