Commonwealth v. Bonds

823 N.E.2d 816, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 163, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 224
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMarch 11, 2005
DocketNo. 04-P-111
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 823 N.E.2d 816 (Commonwealth v. Bonds) 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. Bonds, 823 N.E.2d 816, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 163, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 224 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Brown, J.

After a jury trial in the Superior Court, the defendant was convicted of rape. On appeal, the defendant claims that the judge improperly allowed in evidence unduly prejudicial testimony that aspects of the complainant’s limited mental capacity included the tendency to trust naively those whom she did not know. Accordingly, the defendant contends that that evidence impermissibly suggested the complainant’s propensity to be victimized.

The jury could have found the following facts. On February 15, 2000, Stephanie Hoch visited the complainant at her home. [164]*164At that time, the complainant was nineteen years old and lived with her mother and father. She had graduated from Brockton High School in 1999, where she had been a special needs student. After high school she worked at various jobs, but she was not working at the time of the trial and was receiving Supplemental Security Income benefits, which were available to her because of her mental disabilities.

Hoch was an acquaintance of the complainant, with whom she talked frequently on the phone. While Hoch was at the complainant’s home, she used the complainant’s telephone to call the defendant. When she was on the telephone, she told the complainant that the defendant wanted to speak to her. The defendant told the complainant that he wanted to “mess around with [her],” which the complainant interpreted to mean that he wanted to have sex with her. The complainant also testified that the defendant said he “wanted to fuck [her].” The complainant said no and that she was “only going to hang out there with just a friend” and got off the phone with him.

In order to convince the complainant to accompany her to visit the defendant at his boarding house, Hoch promised the complainant that she would protect her and that “she was going to make sure nothing was going to happen to [her].” Because the complainant “trusted her,” she agreed to go with Hoch. Upon their arrival, the defendant opened the door to the boarding house and brought the two women into his sparsely furnished single room. The complainant had never met or spoken to the defendant prior to this day.

The defendant began to talk to the complainant, while Hoch sat on the floor and watched television. The defendant asked the complainant if she remembered “talking shit on the phone.” When the complainant looked at the door, the defendant locked it, and then grabbed her by the arms and pushed her onto the bed. Despite the complainant’s repeated protestations, the defendant took off the complainant’s pants and underpants. She continued to tell the defendant “no,” but the defendant said he “was going to do it anyways,” and he put his fingers into her vagina. When the defendant told the complainant he was going to put his penis inside her, she told him to put on a condom. The complainant hoped that she could escape in the time it took [165]*165the defendant to obtain a condom, but because he had one in his pocket, she was unable to flee. After he put the condom on, the defendant inserted his penis into the complainant’s vagina. The complainant testified that she was scared and that she felt like she had no choice. The complainant told the defendant to stop many times, but he did not do so until about ten minutes had passed. Throughout the incident, Hoch sat on the floor in the defendant’s room and watched television.

Immediately after the incident, the complainant put on her clothes and took the defendant’s telephone into the hallway of the boarding house and called Rob Archer, the man she was dating. She told him she had been raped. The defendant came out into the hallway, grabbed the telephone, and went back inside his room, slamming the door in the complainant’s face as he did so. The complainant left and walked directly to the police station, which was only a short distance from the boarding house. Hoch accompanied her.

At the station, the complainant told police that she had been raped; she was then taken to Brockton Hospital, where she repeated to hospital personnel what had happened to her. The subsequent examination and collection of evidence in the rape kit were treated by the parties as having revealed no significant physical findings.1 The complainant also called her mother from the hospital and told her that she had been raped. Brockton police Officer Stanley David and the complainant’s mother testified as fresh complaint witnesses for the Commonwealth.

The defense theory was one of consent. According to the defendant, who testified at trial, the complainant had been the one who initiated the telephone conversation about sexual intercourse, and she had been the one who initiated the sexual activity at the defendant’s apartment. Stephanie Hoch also testified for the defense and corroborated the defendant’s version of events.

In rebuttal, the Commonwealth called Officer David and the [166]*166complainant’s mother, both of whom had talked to Hoch on the day of the incident. Officer David testified that he had interviewed Hoch at the police station when she arrived with the complainant. She told Officer David that when the defendant opened the door to his room, he grabbed the complainant by her arms and threw her on the mattress. Hoch told him that the defendant removed the complainant’s pants and underwear and that she “witnessed the rape occur.” The complainant’s mother testified that she had twice spoken to Hoch shortly after the incident. Hoch gave the complainant’s mother the defendant’s name and his place of employment, but told her that she would not testify because the defendant had threatened her.

The defendant argues that the judge erred in admitting, over objection, testimony from the complainant’s mother about the overly trusting nature of the complainant, along with specific examples of prior instances illustrating this characteristic.2

According to the defendant, the testimony was impermissible [167]*167character evidence that invited the improper inference that the complainant, being overly trusting, had a propensity to be victimized. In response, the Commonwealth contends that the evidence was not character evidence, but rather proof of the complainant’s ongoing mental and emotional incapacity resulting from problems related to brain functioning that began at an early age. The Commonwealth also asserts, as it argued at trial, that the evidence was relevant to show why the complainant went to the defendant’s boarding house, despite his explicit prior sexual advances to her on the phone.

The difficulty with the Commonwealth’s argument is that the reason the complainant went to the defendant’s home was, at best, only indirectly relevant to whether the complainant consented to the intercourse, the only live issue at trial. While the entire sequence of events concerning the rape is certainly relevant to a determination whether the intercourse was without the complainant’s consent, the focus of the inquiry must be on [168]*168the time of the act. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. White, 27 Mass. App. Ct. 789, 796 (1989). Here, the objected-to evidence only related to the complainant’s state of mind as she approached the defendant’s rooming house and as such is only tangentially probative of whether she consented to intercourse once inside the defendant’s room.

Apart from its general lack of probity, there are other serious defects in the mother’s testimony.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Bonds
840 N.E.2d 939 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
823 N.E.2d 816, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 163, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bonds-massappct-2005.