Commonwealth v. Berry

710 N.E.2d 635, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 24, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 600
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 28, 1999
DocketNo. 97-P-629
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 710 N.E.2d 635 (Commonwealth v. Berry) 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. Berry, 710 N.E.2d 635, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 24, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 600 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Warner, C.J.

The defendant was indicted for second degree [25]*25murder in the stabbing death of Hazel Mack. A Superior Court jury convicted him of voluntary manslaughter, either on the theory that he was the stabber or that he was a joint venturer in the killing. The defendant argues on appeal that his conviction should be overturned because (1) the evidence did not warrant giving a voluntary manslaughter instruction, (2) there was insufficient evidence for a conviction on a joint venture theory, (3) the instructions on manslaughter were erroneous, and (4) prejudicial testimony was improperly admitted. We affirm the conviction.

The Commonwealth’s case. We summarize the evidence presented by the prosecution. At approximately 10 p.m the evening of August 27, 1994, the victim and his brother, Sean Mack, went to the Carter American Legion Post (Post), a social club in the Mattapan section of Boston. The victim had an argument with someone there. Security personnel escorted him out of the club at approximately 1:45 a.m. and would not allow him to return. He was extremely angry. When the Post closed at 2 a.m., the victim gave his blazer, shirt, and telephone to his friend, Rene’e Bailey, in preparation for fighting the person he had argued with earlier inside the Post. However, that person remained inside the club.

As the victim stood on the steps in front of the Post, a group of people, including the defendant, approached from the opposite side of the street. The defendant and the victim exchanged words, and the two attempted to fight. According to Sean, one of the victim’s friends, Anton Warren, tried to keep them apart as the defendant kept “charging” at the victim. Another person, whom Sean believed to be a friend of the defendant, approached the defendant and the victim. Sean began fighting with that person. The defendant and the victim continued to try to get at one another. Warren continued trying to prevent them from fighting, but then left the victim’s side to aid Sean.

The participants in the fight moved down the street in a group, and a crowd gathered. Rene’e Bailey saw “a lot of people . . . coming out everywhere, closing us in, more or less,” and “tussling,” and observed the defendant fighting with the victim.2 A police officer saw close to one hundred people at the scene, and [26]*26three or four groups fighting.3 Bailey heard Warren “tell [the defendant] to put the knife away, that he didn’t need it.” At that moment, Bailey noticed a shiny object in the defendant’s hand. About a minute later, she saw the victim lying on the ground, bleeding, and the defendant throwing his shirt at him and spitting at him.

Police officers had now arrived, and Sean, who had seen his brother on the ground with blood on his shirt, directed them to the defendant, whom they arrested. Upon his arrest, the defendant gave his name as “Barry,” rather than Berry. Type A blood, the victim’s blood type, was found on the defendant’s shorts and sun visor, as well as on a knife found at the scene. The defendant’s blood type is AB.

Sean testified that he never saw a knife or other weapon during the fray and did not realize at the time that his brother had been stabbed. However, a police officer testified that Sean, hysterical, had identified the defendant as “one of the two that were involved in the stabbing” and as having a knife. Another officer testified that Sean identified the defendant as “one of the ones that stabbed my brother.”

The defendant’s case. The defendant’s witnesses described the following course of events. The defendant, accompanied by his friend Ken McFadden and his cousin Isaac Wilkerson, went to the Post in search of an after-hours party. Testifying in his own defense, the defendant stated that he established eye contact with the victim as he approached the Post, and that the two began to have words. As they insulted and tried to get at one another, each was accompanied by companions who became involved in the fighting.4

Someone grabbed at the defendant’s shirt, and it came off. The victim hit someone in the eye. The defendant eventually hit the victim. As the victim charged toward him, the defendant ducked, grabbed the victim’s lower legs, and swept him off his feet. According to the defendant, spectators became involved in [27]*27the fight, and there was fighting in “every direction.”5 He acknowledged that he could have walked away from the fighting at any time.

Wilkerson and McFadden both admitted being involved in the fighting, Wilkerson claiming that he had tried to break up the fight. Both denied being the stabber. McFadden, the only witness who testified to having seen who threw the first punch, stated that the victim initially swung at the defendant and that he, McFadden, then swung at the victim. Noticing the defendant and Wilkerson standing near one another, McFadden tried to get them to leave, but as they were about to go, someone lunged toward McFadden with a beer bottle. That person then gave the bottle to the victim, who hit the defendant in the chest with it.

Anton Warren testified that he never saw the defendant with a knife but, rather, that he had seen a different person, whom he thought was with the defendant, opening and closing a knife. He yelled to that person to put the knife away.6 According to Warren, the defendant was then within five to seven feet, close enough to hear. After Warren left the victim’s side for a moment to help Sean, he turned back to the victim. He saw him fall to the ground and saw the defendant throw his shirt at him and then spit at him. The person with the knife was gone.

Wilkerson testified that the defendant had been the last to fight with the victim before he fell. The defendant acknowledged that he had been the last to have contact with the victim and that he had thrown his shirt at him. He testified that when the fighting died down at the sound of police sirens, he began to look for his shirt and visor. He found his shirt on the ground, soiled and torn, then turned back toward the victim and saw him falling. Angry at the damage to his shirt, he threw it at the victim, but did not spit at him. He denied having stabbed the victim, or having had a weapon, or knowing that anyone in the vicinity had a knife, or hearing Warren say “put the knife away.”

[28]*28The defense theory was that Isaac Wilkerson was the stabber, not the defendant. The defendant presented the testimony of four witnesses, friends of his, who stated that Wilkerson came to the apartment where they were gathered after the fight and admitted to stabbing the victim.7 Wilkerson, who brought a change of clothes to the defendant at the police station after the defendant’s arrest, denied having confessed to the slaying. On cross-examination, over the defendant’s objection, Wilkerson testified that the defendant had previously given his name as “Wilkerson” when he had been in trouble with the law concerning a weapons charge.

The defendant admitted that he never saw Wilkerson with a knife and that he had told the police that Wilkerson had not stabbed anyone. He further admitted that he had given his name to the police as “Barry” in order to deceive them.

1. Sufficiency of the evidence of voluntary manslaughter.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Berry
727 N.E.2d 517 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2000)
Holtje v. Waterman
11 Mass. L. Rptr. 89 (Massachusetts Superior Court, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
710 N.E.2d 635, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 24, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-berry-massappct-1999.