Commonwealth v. Daley

789 N.E.2d 1070, 439 Mass. 558, 2003 Mass. LEXIS 445
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 16, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 789 N.E.2d 1070 (Commonwealth v. Daley) 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. Daley, 789 N.E.2d 1070, 439 Mass. 558, 2003 Mass. LEXIS 445 (Mass. 2003).

Opinion

Cordy, J.

Christopher Daley was convicted of indecent assault and battery by a jury sitting in the Cambridge Division of the District Court Department. The only witnesses at trial were the victim and the defendant. Their respective accounts of what occurred between them differed markedly, and the outcome clearly depended on the jury’s assessment of the credibility of their testimony. A divided panel of the Appeals Court reversed the conviction, Commonwealth v. Daley, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 88, [559]*55994 (2002), on the ground of prosecutorial misconduct. It concluded that the prosecutor had presented the defendant “as a ‘crack’ cocaine-dealing, drug- and alcohol-abusing thief” during the trial, and had then, in her closing, both invited “the jury to consider the defendant’s character,” and disregarded “the judge’s explicit order to refrain from argument about the defendant’s supposed guilty conscience.” Id. at 89. For these reasons, and in the absence of what it deemed to be adequate curative instructions, the court ruled there had been prejudicial error requiring reversal. Id. at 94. The case is before us on the Commonwealth’s application for further appellate review.

We affirm the conviction on the basis of our conclusion that the defendant, not the prosecutor, affirmatively introduced the evidence on the very subjects about which he now complains, and to the extent there was prosecutorial misconduct during closing argument, the judge took adequate steps, including a pointed and strong curative instruction, to ensure that the trial was fair.

The Commonwealth’s Case.

The victim, who stood four feet, eleven inches tall, testified that on the day of the incident she came into contact with the defendant, whom she had never seen before, on three separate occasions. In the late morning, while she was sitting on a park bench with a friend enjoying the October weather, the defendant approached and asked her for a cigarette. After she gave him one, he remained in the area. A few hours later, while she walked her dog, the defendant approached her again and engaged in some small talk. While the victim testified that she thought the defendant to be “a little strange,” and did not wish to engage him in conversation, being cordial, she did so for a few minutes. Finally, at 7 p.m., when she left her home to walk to a restaurant to pick up some take-out food for her daughter, the defendant came up to her and grabbed her face so tightly that “I had cuts inside my mouth from my teeth.” He then shoved her toward a bench and “was trying to stick his tongue in my mouth.” As he did so, the victim struggled and he told her that he had a “piece,” which she took to mean “a gun or a weapon.” She began kicking her legs furiously. A couple happened by and called to her to see if she was “all right,” she [560]*560responded that she was not, and the defendant fled. She thanked the couple, ran to her apartment, and telephoned the police. She testified that she was traumatized by, and terrified during, the assault.

After the police arrived, they took her to a homeless shelter located in the building next door to her apartment building. There she identified the defendant who “was crouched in the comer, you know, down” by a Coca-Cola machine. He was arrested and found to have a serrated knife in his possession.

This was the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief. There was no evidence introduced about the defendant’s drag dealing, drug use, drinking, or anything else of a derogatory nature except, of course, that he had committed this frightening assault.

The Defense.

The defendant took the stand in his own defense. He did not deny that he had approached the victim multiple times on the day in question, that there had been some sort of physical contact between them, that a couple had happened by and asked if the victim was “all right,” that she had responded, “No. I’m not,” and that he then left the scene. He contended, however, that the victim (whom he had not previously known) had given him a “hug” after he told her that it was his birthday. In the course of telling his story, the defendant testified that he was unemployed, had been panhandling outside a liquor store, received his meals at the Salvation Army (where he must have “grab[bed]” the serrated knife while trying to get something to eat), was on probation for selling cocaine, and was using crack cocaine and drinking liquor during the day of the incident to celebrate his birthday. He testified that at the time of the incident he was “buzzed,” and that although he told the victim that he had “a piece” on him, he meant a piece of crack cocaine that he was offering to share with her. He believed she would be interested in the cocaine, because the person he had seen her with in the park earlier that day, he claimed, was someone he knew from his own experience to be a “crack dealer.”

At the conclusion of the defendant’s direct examination, the prosecutor, not surprisingly, cross-examined him on some of these subjects. She began by countering the defendant’s assertion that he believed the victim would be interested in crack [561]*561cocaine because the victim’s friend was a drug dealer, by asking him whether he was “the crack dealer” in this story and not the person who had been sitting with the victim in the park. When he equivocated, she pointedly asked him whether in fact he had been the one convicted for selling cocaine, something he had already testified to on direct examination. The prosecutor then got the defendant to admit that he had begun drinking alcohol and smoking crack cocaine around 1:30 p.m. on the day of the assault, and was “heavily intoxicated” at the time he claimed it was the victim who hugged him. She also proceeded to cross-examine him on why a couple might have approached them and asked if the victim was “all right,” why the victim would have responded, “no,” and why he would have fled if this was a hug she had initiated. Finally, the prosecutor questioned the defendant about an additional motive to lie about what happened and avoid a conviction because he was on probation.

Closing Argument.

In her closing, defense counsel argued that the defendant’s testimony was worthy of belief because he took the stand when he did not have to and “[laid] his flaws out here,” “laid it all out for you, clear, straight.” She went on to argue that, because the defendant was willing to disclose all these bad things about himself, things that otherwise would never have come before them, “[t]hat says something about him; he’s telling the truth.”

The prosecutor responded to this argument about how the jury should assess the defendant’s credibility in the following words:

“Now, ladies and gentlemen, this [is a] case which comes down to credibility, credibility of the witnesses. And I would suggest to you that you make credibility assessments in your daily lives every day, every single day. For instance, you might bring your car into the shop. Your mechanic will tell you, you need a brand new transmission. You make an assessment, you make an assessment about his credibility. And sometimes it’s not what he said, but how he said it. You make determinations about someone’s credibility.
“I’m asking you to draw on your life experiences, draw [562]*562on your own every day experiences in this case, and make determinations about credibility here today.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Jeffrey Hanson.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2024
Commonwealth v. Luis Angel Torres.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2024
Commonwealth v. Nicco-Kawon Pledger.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2024
Commonwealth v. Souza
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2023
Commonwealth v. Jose J. Rodriguez.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2023
Commonwealth v. Hinds
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2021
Commonwealth v. McDonagh
102 N.E.3d 369 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Imbert
97 N.E.3d 335 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Larocque
94 N.E.3d 438 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2017)
Commonwealth v. Jones
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2017
Commonwealth v. Cadet
40 N.E.3d 1015 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2015)
Commonwealth v. Alcantara
31 N.E.3d 561 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2015)
Commonwealth v. Almonte
988 N.E.2d 415 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2013)
Commonwealth v. Ferreira
933 N.E.2d 685 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2010)
Commonwealth v. Stewart
911 N.E.2d 161 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2009)
Commonwealth v. Despees
70 Mass. App. Ct. 645 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2007)
Commonwealth v. Bonds
840 N.E.2d 939 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2006)
Commonwealth v. Correia
836 N.E.2d 517 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2005)
Commonwealth v. Bly
830 N.E.2d 1048 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2005)
Commonwealth v. Bonds
823 N.E.2d 816 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
789 N.E.2d 1070, 439 Mass. 558, 2003 Mass. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-daley-mass-2003.