Commonwealth v. Coleman

322 N.E.2d 407, 366 Mass. 705, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 1131
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 322 N.E.2d 407 (Commonwealth v. Coleman) 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. Coleman, 322 N.E.2d 407, 366 Mass. 705, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 1131 (Mass. 1975).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

Tried by a Suffolk County jury upon an indictment for first degree murder, the defendant was found guilty of murder in the second degree and sentenced to imprisonment for life. On this appeal subject to G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G, assignments of error upon timely exceptions attack the trial judge’s denial of motions for production of grand jury minutes and for a directed verdict. The defendant also assigns error upon various rulings and instructions at trial, and upon parts of the prosecutor’s *707 closing argument to the jury, but no exceptions were taken at the time. It is the defendant’s present submission that the very failure of his then counsel to object goes part of the way to establish that he was deprived of effective assistance of counsel, and he urges us so to find on the whole record. We are also asked in the interest of justice under our § 33E power to reverse for a new trial or to direct entry of a judgment of guilty of manslaughter in lieu of the present judgment. We first summarize the evidence.

On the evening of June 18, 1971, an all night card game got under way on the third floor of the defendant’s house in Roxbury. Such games took place every weekend. The four-room third floor was nearly exclusively given over to these games, the other two floors being used as living quarters. The defendant testified that the games were his “concession”; he took his cut from the pot. On the particular night the number of players varied from time to time but there were about eight. There was some drinking; apparently the defendant was sober but the victim, Anderson (“Baybra”) Walker, may have been affected by alcohol. In the early morning of June 19, the defendant left to pick up his wife. He returned to find a commotion. Anderson Walker (hereafter Walker) had been accused of cheating by one of the players, Henry Lee. Perhaps $20 was at issue. Walker got up to attack Lee and in the ensuing fracas Walker was grabbed by his brother T. C. Walker and a number of other players and restrained from striking Lee. The defendant, entering at this point, joined in subduing Walker. There was a fierce struggle, for Walker was enraged, but apart from some testimony that Lee drew a knife, it appears that weapons were not used. The fight moved to a sideroom off the gambling room. There, in much confusion, the defendant was punched in the nose by Walker, and blood flowed. The defendant left the fray and went into the third floor bathroom to wash up. Several minutes later, Walker, calmed down by T. C. Walker, returned with him to the gambling room to resume play. The defendant was then in the third floor bathroom or kitchen. After several more minutes, but before the game *708 could fully resume, Walker got up and went toward the kitchen. He was unarmed then as previously.

The layout now becomes relevant. The gambling room, dominated by the gambling table, is at the front of the third floor; off to one side is the room into which the fight had spilled. At the left rear corner of the gambling room there is an open doorway through which one passes after perhaps two steps to the left front corner of the kitchen. Immediately to one’s left there is a sink at the left wall of the kitchen and a stove further along near that wall. In the center of the kitchen is a table. The rear wall has two windows with a small table between, on which stands a coffee pot. At the rear right corner of the kitchen (diagonally opposite the entry from the gambling room) is an open doorway leading immediately to a back staircase. Alongside the right wall is a couch. Near the right comer of the front wall of the kitchen is a door opening on a bathroom that apparently occupies a narrow space between the rear wall of the gambling room and the front wall of the kitchen.

As Walker stepped into the kitchen, he said — this is according to T. C. Walker, who was sitting at the gambling table near the doorway to the kitchen — “Frank, I had no quarrel with you. What you got? I know you got a little popgun for me. I ain’t got no beef with you.” In this version, the defendant answered, “I’m tired of you all breaking up my games. I make my living this way. Stop, Baybra. Don’t come any further. If you do, I’ll kill you before death gets to you.” T. C. Walker said he then heard a single shot. He saw Walker, shot in the chest, fall near the sink. The defendant was standing by the coffee pot at the rear wall of the kitchen with a gun in his hand. T. C. Walker said, “Frank, you didn’t have to shoot him. I had quieted him down before it was over. If he lives or dies, I’ll get you.”

T. C. Walker’s testimony about the location of the body and as to where the defendant was standing just after the shooting was corroborated by Lee who had been sitting at the gambling table somewhat farther than T. C. Walker from the entrance to the kitchen, had run into the kitchen after the shot, and fled the apartment through the kitchen *709 back stairs. But Lee could not make out the words spoken before the shot; he recalled only something like “get back” repeated by the defendant, and perhaps a scuffling sound like someone moving. Walker’s wife claimed also to have heard “Go back” but she was downstairs at the time. Jack Bennett, who had been dozing on the couch in the kitchen, could recall nothing, but confirmed T. C. Walker’s account of where the body was.

In his testimony the defendant told a different story, evidently disbelieved by the jury, in which he claimed that he shot in self-defense. In his version, he was standing at or in the bathroom door when Walker, standing in the kitchen between the bathroom door and the kitchen entrance, grabbed his arm; the defendant snatched it loose and backed up, backing until he reached the rear wall of the kitchen, and asking Walker to get back. When Walker kept advancing, the defendant was afraid he would be killed, so he took out his gun and fired, without aiming, solely to scare Walker. Walker fell, said the defendant, not near the sink or entrance, but between the doorway to the gambling room and the bathroom door. The defendant admitted fleeing to Arkansas after the incident, but said he did so because of T. C. Walker’s threat to get him; he later returned and gave himself up.

1. Assignments upon timely exceptions, (a) Denial of directed verdict. “[Wjhere competent evidence has been introduced in support of all the material allegations of an indictment, the weight and sufficiency of such evidence are ordinarily for the jury.” Commonwealth v. Hollis, 170 Mass. 433, 436 (1898). The defendant says there was insufficient evidence of malice to support a finding of murder, but considering T. C. Walker’s testimony about the defendant’s statement to Walker, “I’m tired of you all breaking up my games,” Walker’s disruption of the game and the ensuing fight, the defendant’s bloody nose, and the defendant’s use of a gun (see Commonwealth v. Kendrick, 351 Mass. 203, 209 [1966]; Commonwealth v. Leate, 352 Mass. 452, 456 [1967]), we cannot say the jury were wrong in disbelieving the defendant’s assertion that he meant *710 only to frighten Walker.

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Bluebook (online)
322 N.E.2d 407, 366 Mass. 705, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-coleman-mass-1975.