Commonwealth v. Eakin

685 N.E.2d 1195, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 693
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1997
DocketNo. 96-P-672
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 685 N.E.2d 1195 (Commonwealth v. Eakin) 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. Eakin, 685 N.E.2d 1195, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 693 (Mass. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Greenberg, J.

Tucked off Norwood Avenue, on a small lot in a residential area of Newton, a two-family house at 74 Harvard Street would become one of the city’s worst nightmares.

On August 29, 1991, Walter B. Adams, the commissioner of the city’s inspectional services department (department), wrote to the owners, quoting from a survey board report: “it is apparent that the owner of the premises has failed to take adequate measures to make the dwelling safe and to remove dangerous [694]*694conditions that affect the habitability of the dwelling as well as the safety of the neighbors . . . .”

The property belongs to the defendants, Martha Jean Eakin and her husband (and contractor) Jeff Buster. Work had slowly progressed in fits and starts since a building permit for renovation of the structure had issued in 1981. Over the two years before the commissioner’s last letter, attempts to get the defendants to complete an overhaul of the house had come to naught. By the summer of 1990, the project remained largely incomplete. Code inspectors found that the residence had fallen into general disrepair, portions of it had been abandoned and exposed to the elements, the basement was flooded, and the land around the house had begun to subside.

Concerned about the safety risk posed by the structure, a building inspector for the city had written to Eakin on September 7, 1990, advising her that the property was in violation of the State building code and demanding that she enclose the property with a fence and complete construction expeditiously. The defendants apparently took no action to improve conditions on the site in response to this letter.

On July 24, 1991, the defendants received the first in a series of letters from the commissioner ordering them to stop all work on the site and to arrange with the commissioner for an immediate inspection of the property. In addition, the letter directed the defendants to devise a plan for improving safety conditions on the site by (1) shoring up the excavation, (2) girding the temporary supports under the house, (3) erecting a fence around the site, and (4) covering exposed portions of the building to make it weathertight. The letter cautioned, however, “that none of these . ; . activities [is] to take place without the specific approval of the Inspectional Services Department.”

Shortly thereafter, the site was inspected, and, on August 2, 1991, the defendants each received identical letters styled “Notice to Remove or Make Safe.” In essence, the letters again informed the defendants that unsafe conditions existed at 74 Harvard Street, contrary to the provisions of the building code. The defendants were advised that they had twenty-four hours either to carry out the safety improvements specified in the letter of July 24, 1991 (which were restated), or to demolish the building. Again, the defendants were unmoved, or, at least, failed to move.

On August 28, 1991, the building inspector wrote to the [695]*695defendants, stating that “[i]t is the intention of this department to seek criminal complaints against you in the Newton District Court for violations of the Massachusetts State Building Code.” Attached to the letter was “a list of violations observed at the . . . site,” which extended over eight pages. The list, however, consisted only of references to certain sections of the State building code (780 Code of Massachusetts Regulations), without any indication of the precise infractions observed at the site. Also absent from the letter was any mention of specific measures that the defendants might take to cure those defects in order to avoid prosecution.2

On August 29, 1991, the defendants received a letter from the commissioner captioned “Final Notice to Remove or Make Safe.” This missive informed the defendants of the statutory penalties that they faced for the alleged violations of the building code. In addition, the commissioner again requested that the defendants undertake the safety improvements first outlined in the July 24, 1991, letter. The defendants were advised that they had forty-eight hours to complete those tasks before the city would undertake them on the defendants’ behalf.

On December 9, 1991, the Commonwealth obtained 129 separate criminal complaints — thirty-nine naming Eakin and ninety naming Buster. With the exception of two “omnibus” complaints,3 in which it was alleged generally that the defendants did “unlawfully alter, reconstruct and repair a building contrary to the provisions of the State Building Code,” each of the complaints apparently was based upon a different building code violation.4 Nearly four years passed before a trial was completed in the primary session of the Newton District Court. The judge joined all of the complaints for trial, a proceeding that spanned thirty-one days (spread out over two and one-half years from March, 1993, to October, 1995). By the time the first trial was completed, the city had obtained an order to demolish the house, and the house was demolished on July 1, 1994. On October 24, 1995, Eakin was convicted on twenty-six [696]*696of the complaints and Buster on fifty-two, for a total of seventy-eight separate convictions. The defendants appealed to the Cambridge District Court seeking a de novo trial in the jury session.

Several weeks before commencement of the jury trial, the defendants moved to dismiss all of the complaints. At the hearing on December 23, 1995, the defendants argued three grounds: (1) they did not receive proper notice under G. L. c. 143, § 51; (2) the city gave them no opportunity to cure the alleged code violations as required by statute; and (3) the demolition of the property hampered their defense. The motion was denied. Understandably, their counsel complained about having to defend against so many complaints. The judge denied the Commonwealth’s motion to join the separate complaints in a single proceeding; rather, he ordered that the complaints would be tried separately in serial trials before different juries. As the basis for his ruling, the judge cited the strong probability that, if all of the complaints were tried together, a jury would infer guilt based solely on the large number of individual charges.

In what it is reasonable to infer was an effort to mitigate the strategic setback inflicted by the judge’s ruling on the joinder issue, the Commonwealth elected to proceed on the basis of the two “omnibus” complaints. In this way, despite the severance of the individual complaints, the Commonwealth would be entitled at trial to introduce evidence of all of the alleged violations, any one of which would support a conviction. In the end, however, the Commonwealth did not present evidence of all of the infractions charged in the complaints, limiting its presentation to (1) lack of proper fencing; (2) inadequate temporary supports; (3) lack of shoring for the excavation; (4) exposure to the elements; (5) the presence of a flooded pit in the basement; (6) exposed rusted elements in the poured concrete foundation; (7) improper access ramps; (8) overloaded floor supports; (9) improperly vented heating fixture; and (10) work in excess of the building permit. The first four of these violations were those addressed in the letters of July 24, August 2, and August 29, 1991. The remaining apparently were subsumed within the long list of alleged regulatory violations set out in the letter of August 28, 1991. On that evidence, after a four-day trial, a jury of six [697]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
685 N.E.2d 1195, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-eakin-massappct-1997.