Commonwealth v. Daniels

837 N.E.2d 683, 445 Mass. 392, 2005 Mass. LEXIS 575
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 23, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 837 N.E.2d 683 (Commonwealth v. Daniels) 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. Daniels, 837 N.E.2d 683, 445 Mass. 392, 2005 Mass. LEXIS 575 (Mass. 2005).

Opinion

Marshall, C.J.

A Superior Court jury convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree on a theory of felony-murder. G. L. c. 265, § 1. The principal issue on appeal is whether a judge in the Superior Court, who had presided at trial, erred in denying the defendant’s request for posttrial discovery. The request concerned newly discovered information that defense counsel asserted cast serious doubt on the credibility of the identification of the defendant made by the sole eyewitness. The reliability of that testimony is central because, as the trial judge noted in a different ruling, the “Commonwealth’s evidence against this defendant [was] based almost entirely upon the [393]*393testimony of one eyewitness who had only a split second opportunity to view the offender, and with minimal if any corroboration of the defendant’s presence at the scene.”

The murder took place during an armed robbery and home invasion by three men — two masked, one unmasked — in an apartment in Springfield. The victim’s girl friend identified the defendant as the unmasked accomplice months after the event, and only after her cousin suggested the defendant’s name to her as someone who “h[u]ng[] around” with James Brown, a man she knew the police had arrested as the masked shooter. Brown was later acquitted.1

After deliberating over the course of three days, the jury convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree. He also was convicted of armed robbery, assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, and unlawful possession of a firearm. The defendant appeals from these convictions and from the denial of his motions for postconviction discovery of exculpatory evidence and for a new trial.

In his postconviction motions and now in this consolidated appeal, the defendant claims that the Commonwealth withheld exculpatory evidence that he had specifically requested before the trial, which he claims would have materially aided his defense. In addition, he asserts that the judge improperly denied those motions without a hearing. The defendant also requests that we exercise our power under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to order a new trial or reduce the murder verdict.

With full cognizance of a trial judge’s broad discretion in deciding postjudgment discovery motions, Commonwealth v. Tucceri, 412 Mass. 401, 409 (1992), we are compelled by the unusual circumstances of this case to conclude that the judge should have allowed the motion for posttrial discovery. As we shall explain, the Commonwealth had in its possession evidence [394]*394specifically requested by the defendant that was clearly helpful to his defense. The evidence suggested that a person other than Brown was the masked shooter. If the masked shooter was not Brown, then the eyewitness’s identification of the defendant as an accomplice of Brown, which was prompted by her learning that the defendant was an acquaintance of Brown, loses credibility and the integrity of the defendant’s convictions is compromised. We therefore reverse the denial of the defendant’s motion for postconviction discovery. If postconviction discovery so warrants, the defendant may file a renewed motion for a new trial and a motion for a hearing. The defendant may file a motion for costs for the preparation and presentation of such a motion. Mass. R. Crim. P. 30 (c) (5), as appearing in 435 Mass. 1501 (2001).

1. Factual background. The extraordinary circumstances of this case require us to discuss its factual and procedural history in some detail.

a. The murder. We begin with the facts as the jury could have found them. Wanda Brady was the eyewitness who identified the defendant as the unmasked accomplice. Brady testified that shortly after 10 p.m. on August 31, 1998, she returned home to 87 Quincy Street in Springfield with the victim, her daughters (aged seven and nine years), her nephew (aged six years), and the victim’s son (aged four years). The victim soon left to purchase some groceries. While alone in the apartment with the four children, Brady heard a knock at her front door. On her inquiry, a male voice twice identified himself as “Chandler,” a friend of the victim whom Brady knew. She opened the door. A masked assailant grabbed Brady, held her head down, commanded her not to look at him, and twice hit the back of her head with a gun. With her head down, Brady saw two pairs of feet enter her apartment behind the masked assailant. She saw one set of feet enter her daughters’ bedroom, then heard her daughters crying for her.

The masked assailant forced Brady into her bedroom, asked her where “the money was at,” and hit her again. She opened the “top drawer” where she knew the victim kept money, and [395]*395the man took what Brady testified could have been over $1,000.2 Still holding her head down, the assailant brought her down the hall to the bathroom, where the two boys were in the bathtub. Brady pointed to the bathroom ceiling, where she knew the victim sometimes hid money.

Finding no money in the ceiling, the masked assailant took Brady back to the living room, sat her in a chair, and called to the second masked intruder to bind Brady with duct tape. He taped her hands behind her back and taped her mouth by winding tape around her head. The masked assailant then directed his masked accomplice to wait for the victim outside the rear door, and Brady saw or heard nothing further from that accomplice. As she remained bound in the living room, Brady could hear the masked assailant lifting the toilet tank cover. She could also hear the third intruder in her children’s bedroom, where all the children were now gathered, clicking a gun; the children were crying.

At trial, Brady testified that the masked assailant then took her toward the children’s bedroom, removed the tape from her mouth, pushed her head into the room, and told her to keep the children quiet. Although her head was down, Brady could see the four children sitting on the bottom bunk bed. For a brief period, she testified, she saw the face of the third, unmasked man standing by the door.3 Her trial testimony was to the effect that she “got a good look at him.” She later described him to police as light-skinned. She did not recognize him.

Soon thereafter, the victim returned from his errand and knocked on the door. The masked assailant took Brady to the door, forced her to kneel down, and demanded she ask who was [396]*396there. The victim replied, “Me.” The masked assailant told Brady to tell the victim, “[T]his is payback,” and then the unmasked accomplice came from the children’s bedroom and opened the door.4 The masked assailant grabbed the victim by his neck, pushed him back into the hallway, and shot the victim in the head. The two men then ran out the front door. The victim never regained consciousness and died one week later from the gunshot wound.

b. Brady’s various descriptions of the unmasked accomplice. When the police arrived in response to Brady’s call, she described the unmasked assailant as about five feet tall, between eighteen and twenty-three years old, light-skinned, and wearing a tan hat.5 She did not tell the police that she had seen his face, see note 3, supra, nor did she describe the unmasked accomplice as having a large nose.6 She did not tell the police that she recognized the unmasked accomplice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
837 N.E.2d 683, 445 Mass. 392, 2005 Mass. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-daniels-mass-2005.