Commonwealth v. Delaney

416 N.E.2d 972, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 398, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 944
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 416 N.E.2d 972 (Commonwealth v. Delaney) 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. Delaney, 416 N.E.2d 972, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 398, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 944 (Mass. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

Delaney, seventeen years old during his trial (after transfer of complaints against him as a juvenile) was convicted on indictments charging him with (a) assault upon a young woman (the victim), with intent to rape her, and (b) assault and battery of the victim. Both offenses arose out of the same set of events, all alleged to have taken place on November 14, 1979. At a pretrial conference on January 28, 1980, the defendant agreed to notify the Commonwealth before March 1, “if an alibi defense . . . [was to] be offered,” and the district attorney agreed to notify Delaney’s counsel before March 1 of the names of the witnesses to be called by the Commonwealth to rebut any alibi defense.

*399 A notice of intention to offer an alibi defense was served on the district attorney on February 28, 1980. The notice stated that Delaney would claim he had been at the Holyoke Adult Learning Center (the Halo Center) at the time of the alleged offense and named two witnesses who would so testify. To these two names, two more were added on March 5. The Commonwealth specified only the victim as a witness to be called at trial.

At the pretrial conference, the parties left blank the space in a typed form of pretrial conference report for specifying the time, date, and place of the alleged offenses. There had been a probable cause hearing in a Juvenile Court on November 29, 1979, and a transfer hearing there on December 13, 1979, but the record does not reveal the testimony there adduced, or that any more precise designation (than the date November 14) was specified as the time of the offense then or at any conference or hearing prior to trial.

At trial the following facts, among others, could have been found. On November 14, about 5:30 p.m., the victim (twenty-five years old, who lived in West Springfield) had boarded a bus standing in front of the Holyoke City Hall. The City Hall Annex is only a block or two from the Halo Center. On the bus, when she entered it, were only two persons, the bus driver and a young man (later identified by her as Delaney). One Amuso, an older man who had known the victim for some months, testified that he boarded the bus after she did. The three were the only passengers and there was some conversation among them. The bus started about 5:45 p.m. bound for West Springfield. The victim left the bus at “roughly six o’clock” at Riverdale Road, West Springfield, near Prospect Street. Delaney left the bus at the next or the second stop after the victim herself left it. When he approached her on the street a few minutes later, the victim permitted him to walk about a mile with her to her house and to enter it for about seven minutes to make a telephone call and to use the bathroom. There was substantial opportunity for about an hour for the victim to observe Delaney, whom she had not known previously.

*400 The testimony indicated that Delaney first left the victim’s house and then, about ten minutes later, returned on the excuse that he had left his ring in the bathroom. The victim found no ring and thereafter the young man made an assault upon the victim and unsuccessfully attempted to rape her. The attack took place between 6:20 p.m. and 6:40 p.m. At the West Springfield police station on "November 15, the victim identified a photograph of Delaney as that of her assailant.

At trial, Delaney testified that, between 5:10 p.m. and 7 p.m. on November 14, he had been at the Halo Center. This testimony he gave late in the afternoon of the first day of trial. 1

The following morning the assistant district attorney (prosecutor) called a Holyoke policewoman to testify that she had seen Delaney on a street in Holyoke at 5:15 p.m. on November 14. Delaney’s counsel objected to allowing the witness to testify on the ground that the prosecutor admittedly had known of this testimony for some time and, until the preceding afternoon, had not given to him the officer’s name as a possible rebuttal witness. See Mass.R.Crim.P. 14(b)(1)(B), 378 Mass. 877 (1979).

The prosecutor represented to the judge that he had not intended to call the policewoman as a witness until he had heard Delaney testify, on the first day of trial, that he had been at the Halo Center all the time between 5:10 p.m. and 7 p.m. on November 14. Theretofore, so the prosecutor stated, all parties consistently had understood the offense to have taken place around 6:30 p.m. , and he had not supposed *401 that the alibi testimony was going “into the time period in which” the policewoman’s testimony would be relevant. The trial had started at 10:55 a.m. and, in his opening (probably about 11:15 a.m.), defense counsel had indicated that Delaney would testify that he was at the Halo Center from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The testimony of the victim had placed Delaney as on the bus at Holyoke City Hall as early as 5:30 p.m.

The trial judge permitted the policewoman to testify, despite the representations of Delaney’s counsel (and the witness’s later testimony) that she had been called on the morning of the first day of trial to report to the courthouse early that afternoon, thus indicating that the prosecution then at least was considering having her testify. Her presence, of course, casts doubt on the prosecutor’s explanation of his failure to notify defense counsel until he heard Delaney’s testimony late in the afternoon of the first day of trial. The judge afforded to Delaney’s counsel opportunity to talk with the witness for fifteen minutes before she took the stand. For this purpose a recess was taken, after which the judge heard defense counsel further on the issue of her testimony.

The policewoman then testified that she (while driving in an unmarked cruiser with another officer) had seen Delaney (whom she had known for two years) about 5:15 p.m. on November 14, at a point two miles from the Holyoke City Hall Annex (estimated by her as fifteen to twenty minutes by foot).

Delaney was found guilty. He appealed.'

1. The controversy at the close of the trial about the policewoman’s testimony may have arisen in part because of (a) the failure at the pretrial conference, see Mass.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(1)(C) and (a)(2)(A), 378 Mass. 863 (1979), to make any specification of the time at which the offense was alleged to have been committed, and (b) the Commonwealth’s failure carefully to adhere to the same steps required in the event of a motion under the special procedure, set out in Mass.R.Crim.P. 14 (b)(1)(A), (B), and (C), 378 Mass. 876 *402 and 877 (1979), for obtaining and affording discovery with respect to proposed alibi defenses. The information which the prosecutor had (about the policewoman’s observations and his knowledge of the substance of the testimony of witnesses to be called by him) should have led him, well in advance of trial, to give the policewoman’s name to defense counsel as a possible rebuttal witness on the alibi issue. His failure to do so (in the light of even the incomplete pretrial conference report) at the least was carelessness or an error of judgment which should not have occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
416 N.E.2d 972, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 398, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-delaney-massappct-1981.