Commonwealth v. Alvarez

740 N.E.2d 610, 433 Mass. 93, 2000 Mass. LEXIS 766
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 21, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 740 N.E.2d 610 (Commonwealth v. Alvarez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Alvarez, 740 N.E.2d 610, 433 Mass. 93, 2000 Mass. LEXIS 766 (Mass. 2000).

Opinion

Sosman, J.

After her conviction of murder in the first degree and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, and while her appeal to this court was pending, the defendant filed a motion for a new trial based on ineffective assistance of counsel. We remanded the motion to the Superior Court. After a three-day evidentiary hearing, the motion judge1 granted the defendant’s motion. The Commonwealth has now appealed. We affirm the motion judge’s order granting the defendant a new trial.

1. Background. We summarize the relevant facts. On April 8, 1993, the defendant went to Bernard’s Café in Holyoke. The [94]*94defendant became argumentative with another patron and with the bartender, Susan Brown. Despite repeated warnings, the defendant persisted in trying to solicit drinks from other customers, in violation of the bar’s rules. Ultimately, Brown and a bouncer escorted the defendant outside. The defendant returned shortly thereafter to retrieve her jacket from behind the bar, and resumed an argument with Brown and the bouncer. The victim, Jose Correa, who had previously bought the defendant a beer, attempted to help get the defendant off the premises by offering to buy her a couple of beers somewhere else if she left Bernard’s. The defendant pushed him away and told him to wait while she got her brother. As Correa turned away, the defendant took out a folding knife and stabbed him.

The defendant was indicted on May 19, 1993, and counsel was appointed to represent her. Counsel retained Dr. Bernard Katz, a forensic psychiatrist, to evaluate the defendant. Dr. Katz provided counsel with his report, dated May 12, 1994, in which he referenced the defendant’s history of psychiatric disturbances, including her reports of hallucinations and voices. Those claimed hallucinations included seeing the victim in her jail cell. She also had various delusions, including “the active delusion that the police department is against her and that some type of plot has been concocted since she didn’t think that she really has killed anyone.” The defendant also had a lengthy history of severe alcohol and substance abuse, and her psychotic disorder was exacerbated when under the influence of alcohol.

As part of her history, the defendant also reported to Dr. Katz that she had been in a serious automobile accident in 1985, following which she had been in a coma for six months. She told Dr. Katz that, while in her coma, she had seen and talked to God and had seen her sister’s suicide. She also reported that she had a “metal plate” put in her head as a result of the 1985 accident.

Dr. Katz’s report made repeated reference to the fact that the defendant was a “poor historian,” making it difficult to get a rehable picture of her background:

“Ms. Alvarez’s personal history is somewhat garbled since the patient is a very poor historian. In her prior workups that were included in the material you sent me, the history of this woman as obtained by other evaluators was similarly vague.
[95]*95(<
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“As noted in earlier reports, the patient was a poor historian and was vague and contradictory throughout much of the interview. She found it difficult to focus as fully as necessary. She showed looseness of association, circumstantial and tangential thinking patterns, preoccupation with suicide, and active auditory and visual hallucinations. She was also delusional.”

After his examination of the defendant and his review of some materials from other evaluators, Dr. Katz diagnosed the defendant with “[m]ixed psychotic disorder with organic, paranoid, and affective features.” Noting that the defendant had, notwithstanding the severity and duration of her psychiatric illness, never received any active treatment and that she had only been placed on antipsychotic medications while in jail awaiting trial, Dr. Katz opined that the defendant was not presently competent to stand trial, but that more aggressive antipsychotic medication might render her competent in the future.2 He further opined that the defendant was not criminally responsible for her actions at the time of the stabbing because of her underlying psychotic disorder, a disorder that had been further exacerbated by alcohol on the night in question.

Based on Dr. Katz’s report, defense counsel filed a notice of intent to rely on a defense of lack of criminal responsibility because of a mental disease or defect.

At no time prior to trial did defense counsel obtain or provide to Dr. Katz any of the hospital records concerning the treatment of the defendant for the injuries she claimed to have sustained in her 1985 automobile accident. Shortly before trial, the Commonwealth’s expert, Dr. Martin Kelly, asked to review the records of that 1985 hospitalization. After consultation with defense counsel, the prosecution requested a court order to obtain the records from Baystate Medical Center. The court issued such an order on September 15, 1994, noting that the record request was “[ajllowed by agreement.” The records, a stack of papers approximately one foot high, were delivered to the clerk’s office on September 21, 1994, the day before jury selection began. The prosecutor called defense counsel, advising him that the [96]*96records had arrived and that they were quite voluminous. The prosecutor reviewed only the five-page discharge summary, and he sent that discharge summary to defense counsel and to the Commonwealth’s expert witness later that same day. Defense counsel did not provide Dr. Katz with the discharge summary, nor did he let Dr. Katz know that the records were available for review. At no time prior to or during trial did either of the attorneys or either of the expert witnesses review any portion of the defendant’s extensive medical records other than the discharge summary.

The presentation of evidence at trial commenced on September 23, 1994, and the prosecution rested its case on September 26. The next day, September 27, Dr. Katz came to the court house to testify for the defense. Approximately thirty to forty minutes prior to taking the stand, Dr. Katz was in the men’s room with defense counsel. While in the men’s room together, defense counsel handed Dr. Katz a copy of the Baystate Medical Center discharge summary from the defendant’s 1985 hospitalization. This was the first time Dr. Katz had seen any portion of any medical record pertaining to the defendant’s 1985 accident. At that time, Dr. Katz did not review the summary with care but only, in his words, “somewhere between glanced [at] and read it.”

On direct examination, Dr. Katz opined that the defendant’s mental illness, aggravated by her consumption of alcohol, had rendered her incapable of forming a specific intent to kill and incapable of appreciating the wrongfulness of her conduct. Dr. Katz testified that the defendant’s illness caused her tb suffer delusions and hallucinations, and he explained the defendant’s inability to appreciate the wrongfulness of her conduct with reference to a hypothetical about a person hallucinating that she was under attack.

Dr. Katz testified that the defendant was suffering from “a mixed psychotic disorder,” which he described as having both “organic” and psychological features. Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
740 N.E.2d 610, 433 Mass. 93, 2000 Mass. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-alvarez-mass-2000.