Commonwealth v. Barry
This text of 742 N.E.2d 584 (Commonwealth v. Barry) 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.
Opinion
This is an appeal by the defendant, Robert Barry, from an order in District Court denying his motion pursuant to Mass.R.Crim.P. 30(b), 378 Mass. 900 (1979), to withdraw his guilty plea. We vacate the order and allow the motion. There was a fatal error in the conduct of the colloquy between judge and defendant leading to the plea.
On August 5, 1994, and October 26, 1994, respectively, the defendant was complained of in Waltham District Court, No. 9451 CR 2091, for larceny over $250, and in No. 9451 CR 3053, for writing a forged instrument, forgery, larceny over $250, and larceny under $250.
[10]*10On the date set for trial, January 30, 1995, the defendant appeared in Cambridge District Court with his appointed counsel present. The presiding judge, addressing herself to the defendant, went through several questions conventionally put to persons intending to plead, and the defendant made responses as expected. When the judge said the Commonwealth had facts it would present if the case went to trial, and she wanted the defendant to listen to those facts, the prosecutor interposed and said, “Counsel will stipulate to the base of the complaints.” The judge to the defendant: “Do you understand what the complaints are, sir?” She then recited the charges, “One complaint is larceny of property over $250; do you understand that?” and so for the other complaint with the four additional charges. To each complaint, the defendant said, “Yes.” The judge said, “All right, you’re willing to stipulate to the facts?” Defendant: “Yes, I am.” Judge: “And you understand, sir, by doing so, and by entering a plea of guilty, you are admitting that the facts so stated are true.” Defendant: “Yes.” After a further conventional question, the judge accepted the plea, which was followed by discussion and imposition of sentence.1
The judge began on the right line when she said she wanted the defendant to hear a statement of the facts the Commonwealth would present at trial if the defendant did not plead — i.e., the defendant’s acts comprising each of the offenses charged. Upon the Commonwealth’s interposition, the defendant heard only a recitation of the names or titles of those crimes, and was taken to have “stipulated” to unstated facts supposed to “base” the complaints.
Our decision in Commonwealth v. Correa, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 714 (1997), controls. In that case the judge asked counsel “if they would waive the reading of the facts into the record, to which they assented, agreeing to ‘plead to the faces of the complaints as they exist and appear before the court.’ ” Id. at 715. The procedure used in the present case differs only in inconsequential detail from that in Correa, and the vice in both was that the judge “failed to ascertain that [the defendant] had knowledge of the elements of the charges against him .... Nothing more need be shown to establish the inadequacy of the colloquy for constitutional purposes.” Id. at 719, citing Hender[11]*11son v. Morgan, 426 U.S. 637, 645-646 (1976), and other authority.2
The Commonwealth notes that in Correa it was the judge, not the prosecutor, who initiated the faulty procedure, but this can hardly serve as a ground for “distinguishing” Correa. The Commonwealth seems to suggest that, as defense counsel was present during the colloquy, it should be assumed he had fully apprised the defendant. Such an assumption is unwarranted. Cf. Correa at 717 n.5.
The order denying the defendant’s motion to withdraw the guilty plea is vacated, and an order shall enter allowing the motion. The judgments are reversed and the findings are set aside.
So ordered.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
742 N.E.2d 584, 51 Mass. App. Ct. 9, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-barry-massappct-2001.