Commonwealth v. Claudio

634 N.E.2d 902, 418 Mass. 103, 1994 Mass. LEXIS 319
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 14, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 634 N.E.2d 902 (Commonwealth v. Claudio) 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. Claudio, 634 N.E.2d 902, 418 Mass. 103, 1994 Mass. LEXIS 319 (Mass. 1994).

Opinion

Greaney, J.

A jury in the Superior Court convicted the defendant, Pedro Claudio, Jr., of breaking and entering a dwelling in the night time with intent to commit a felony and assaulting a person lawfully therein, see G. L. c. 266, § 14 (1992 ed.), and murder in the first degree by reason of felony-murder. 1 The defendant is represented by new counsel on appeal. We reject his argument that an unlawful breaking and entering into a dwelling in the night time, with intent to commit an armed assault on a lawful occupant of the dwelling, which is followed by an actual assault, cannot serve as the predicate for a conviction of murder in the first degree under the felony-murder rule. However, we accept the defendant’s contention that omissions in the jury instructions concerning joint venture and the elements of the underlying felony require reversal of both convictions and a new trial.

The jury could have found the following background facts. On the night of June 14, 1991, on Summer Street in Lawrence, two men, one of whom was Gregory Fernandez, began to fight. The defendant, a friend of Fernandez, attempted to keep others from interfering with the fight. In doing so, the defendant became involved in an argument with two other *105 men, Felix Figueroa and Samuel Abreu, the victim, who tried to break up the fight in response to a plea for assistance made by Fernandez’s wife. Figueroa threw a rock at the defendant’s automobile, breaking a window.

After threatening to return to the place of the fight, the defendant drove away. About twenty minutes later, he returned with six companions. Figueroa, who was outside, ran into the building in which his apartment was located, pursued by the defendant and two of his companions. The victim was already inside the apartment. Figueroa indicated that he and the victim briefly attempted to hold the door (which opened into the apartment) against their pursuers, and then abandoned the attempt. Figueroa ran through the apartment and out a back door, hiding until he saw the defendant and his companions drive away. Shortly after the defendant and his companions pushed their way into Fernandez’s apartment, the victim was found near the front door, with the single stab wound to his chest which caused his death.

1. Felony-murder and the merger doctrine. The defendant argues that his conviction of murder in the first degree must be reversed because the felony established by G. L. c. 266, § 14, of breaking and entering a dwelling in the night time with intent to commit armed assault on an occupant of the dwelling, and commission of such an assault, 2 cannot predicote a conviction of murder in the first degree by reason of felony-murder. The defendant contends that, when an armed assault culminates in a homicide, even when that assault is preceded by an unlawful breaking and entering into a dwell *106 ing in the night time, “the conduct which constitutes the felany [is not sufficiently] ‘separate from the acts of personal violence which constitute a necessary part of the homicide itself,’” Commonwealth v. Quigley, 391 Mass. 461, 466 (1984), cert, denied, 471 U.S. 1115 (1985), quoting W.R. Lafave & A.W. Scott, Jr., Criminal Law § 71, at 559 (1972), to predicate felony-murder. In essence, the defendant contends that, in these circumstances, the armed assault with which he is charged “merges” with, or is an element of, the homicide. See State v. Branch, 244 Or. 97, 100 (1966), quoted with approval in Commonwealth v. Quigley, supra (“[C]ourts . . . have held that where the only felony committed [apart from the murder itself] was the assault upon the victim which resulted in the death of the victim, the assault merged with the killing and could not be relied upon by the state as an ingredient of a ‘felony murder’ ”). 3 We have not had occasion to consider whether an assault culminating in a homicide, preceded by an illegal breaking and entering into a dwelling in the night time that had as its purpose the commission of an armed assault, satisfies the requirements of the Commonwealth’s felony-murder rule. Other courts that have considered the question have differed on whether, on facts like those present here, the felony-murder fuie may be applied.

The minority view is represented by People v. Wilson, 1 Cal. 3d 431 (1969), in which the Supreme Court of California considered a case where the defendant, estranged from his wife, broke into his wife’s apartment and shot her. The instructions given to the jury permitted them to find that the defendant had entered “with an intent to commit an assault with a deadly weapon and thereby committed a burglary, in the course of which he killed his wife and thus committed first degree felony murder.” Id. at 439. The court concluded that a jury should not be instructed that “the intent to as *107 sault makes the [illegal] entry burglary and that the bur-glory raises the homicide resulting from the assault to first degree murder without proof of malice aforethought and premeditation.” Id. at 441. The court went on to state the following: “To hold otherwise, we would have to declare that because burglary is not technically a lesser offense included within a charge of murder, burglary constitutes an independent felony which can support a felony-murder instruction. ... [We think that] a burglary based on intent to assault with a deadly weapon is included in fact within a charge of murder, and cannot support a felony-murder instruction.” Id. See also Parker v. State, 292 Ark. 421 (1987) (for purpose of Arkansas felony-murder statute, burglary must have objective independent of commission of assault which leads to murder).

The majority, and, in our opinion, better reasoned view is to the contrary. See 2 W.R. LaFave & A.W. Scott, Jr., Substantive Criminal Law § 7.5, at 230 (1986) (collecting cases). In the leading case of People v. Miller, 32 N.Y.2d 157 (1973), the New York Court of Appeals rejected the argument that a breaking and entering with the intent to commit an armed assault could not serve as the felony underlying a conviction for felony-murder. Under the Penal Law of New York, only certain enumerated felonies (which, in general, would be classified under the Commonwealth’s criminal law as felonies inherently dangerous to human life) may serve as the basis for a charge of felony-murder. Burglary, defined as an unlawful entry into a building with intent to commit a crime in the building entered, is one of these enumerated felonies. Id at 159. See N.Y. Penal Law § 140.20 (McKinney 1991).

In the Miller

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Bluebook (online)
634 N.E.2d 902, 418 Mass. 103, 1994 Mass. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-claudio-mass-1994.