Commonwealth v. Berry

727 N.E.2d 517, 431 Mass. 326, 2000 Mass. LEXIS 181
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 3, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 727 N.E.2d 517 (Commonwealth v. Berry) 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. Berry, 727 N.E.2d 517, 431 Mass. 326, 2000 Mass. LEXIS 181 (Mass. 2000).

Opinion

Cowin, J.

Jermaine Berry was indicted on a charge of murder [327]*327in the second degree in a stabbing death. At trial, the Commonwealth proceeded against Berry for causing the death of the victim either individually or as a joint venturer. The jury convicted Berry of voluntary manslaughter. The verdict did not specify whether the jury found the defendant guilty individually or as a joint venturer. Berry appealed and the Appeals Court affirmed the conviction. Commonwealth v. Berry, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 24 (1999).

We granted Berry’s application for further appellate review. Although Berry was charged with murder in the second degree, the judge sua sponte charged on voluntary manslaughter and the defendant was convicted of this lesser included offense. Berry seeks reversal of his conviction claiming (1) that he was entitled to a required finding of not guilty on the theory of joint venture liability because there was insufficient evidence at the close of the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief for a conviction based on such liability; (2) that the evidence was inadequate to support a manslaughter conviction and therefore the judge should not have submitted that issue to the jury; (3) that the judge erred in giving a manslaughter instruction over the defendant’s objection when the Commonwealth did not request the instruction; (4) that the manslaughter instruction given was erroneous; and (5) that prejudicial testimony was improperly admitted.1 There must be a new trial.

The Commonwealth’s case. A medical examiner testified that the victim died as a result of a stab wound to the chest. According to the Commonwealth’s witnesses, the events leading up to the stabbing were as follows. On the night of August 27, 1994, at approximately 10 p.m. the victim and his brother, Sean Mack (Sean), went to a social club in the Mattapan section of Boston. Inside the club, the victim argued with someone. At 1:45 a.m., security personnel escorted the victim from the club and refused to allow him to return. The victim waited outside the club until the 2 a.m. closing and gave his blazer, shirt, and cellular telephone to his friend, Renée Bailey. The victim was extremely angry and was preparing to fight with the person with whom he had argued. However, that other person never emerged from the club.

As the victim waited in front of the club, a group of people, including the defendant, approached from the opposite side of [328]*328the street. One of the members of the approaching group was “looking” at the victim; various people from the two groups, including the defendant and the victim, exchanged words; then the defendant and the victim began to fight. The defendant “charg[ed]” at the victim and Anton Warren, a friend of the victim, tried to stop the fight. Eventually, Warren left the victim’s side to help Sean, who was involved in a fight with a person Sean believed to be the defendant’s friend. The fight moved down the street as a crowd gathered. Police officers saw three or four separate groups fighting.2

Bailey observed the defendant fighting with the victim and heard Warren “tell him [the man fighting with the victim] to put the knife away, that he didn’t need it.” Bailey then noticed “a shiny object” in the defendant’s hand. About one minute later, Bailey saw the defendant throw his shirt and spit on the victim, who was on the ground bleeding. Sean saw the victim on the ground with blood on his shirt.

Both Sean and Bailey saw only the defendant fighting with the victim. When police arrived, Sean directed them to the defendant. After his arrest, the defendant told the officers that his name was “Barry” rather than Berry. Blood consistent with the victim’s blood type and inconsistent with the defendant’s blood type was found on the defendant’s shorts and sun visor and on a knife found at the scene.

Sean testified that he did not see a knife or any other weapon during the altercation and did not immediately realize that his brother had been stabbed. However, a police officer recalled that Sean was hysterical and had identified the defendant as having a knife and as “one of the two that were involved in the stabbing.” Another officer stated that Sean pointed to the defendant as “one of the ones who stabbed my brother.”3

The defendant’s case. Four defense witnesses testified that after the fight Isaac Wilkerson, the defendant’s cousin, admitted stabbing the victim. Nevertheless, the defendant stated on the stand that he never saw Wilkerson with a knife and that he (the defendant) had told the police that Wilkerson had not stabbed anyone. The defendant testified that, accompanied by his friend Kenneth McFadden and Wilkerson, he went to the club seeking the location of an “after hours party.” The defendant testified [329]*329that he and the victim established eye contact outside the club, insulted one another, and tried “to get at one another.” Someone grabbed the defendant’s shirt4; it was “torn down the seam” and the defendant “came out of it.” The defendant further stated that the victim hit someone in the eye and eventually the defendant hit the victim; the victim charged the defendant and the defendant ducked and swept the victim’s legs out from under him, causing the victim to fall. By this point, friends of the defendant and the victim, as well as onlookers, had become involved in the melee, with a number of different fights breaking out. The defendant agreed that he could have “walked away from [the fight] at any time.”

The defendant admitted that he was the last person to have contact with the victim and that he threw his shirt at the victim after the victim was on the ground because he was angry that his shirt was torn, but the defendant denied spitting on the victim. The defendant also denied stabbing the victim, having a weapon, knowing that anyone in the area had a knife, or hearing Warren say, “put the knife away.”

Wilkerson admitted involvement in the altercation, but denied stabbing the victim. Rather, he claimed that he had tried to break up the fight and that the defendant had been the last person to fight with the victim before the victim fell to the ground. McFadden also admitted that he was involved in the fighting but denied that he was the stabber. McFadden said that the victim swung at the defendant first and that then he, McFadden, swung at the victim. McFadden next tried to get the defendant and Wilkerson to leave but someone lunged at McFadden with a beer bottle. That person handed the bottle to another person who used it to hit the defendant in the chest.

Warren5 testified that he did not see the defendant with a knife, but that another person, whom he thought was with the defendant, was opening and closing a knife. With the defendant within earshot, Warren yelled to the person with the knife to put it away. After briefly leaving the victim’s side to assist Sean, Warren turned back toward the victim in time to see him fall to the ground and see the defendant throw his shirt on the victim and spit. The person Warren had seen with the knife had disappeared.

[330]*3301. Sufficiency of the evidence of joint venture. At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s case, and again at the conclusion of all the evidence, Berry moved for a required finding of not guilty on the theory of joint venture liability.

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Bluebook (online)
727 N.E.2d 517, 431 Mass. 326, 2000 Mass. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-berry-mass-2000.