Commonwealth v. Gauthier

586 N.E.2d 34, 32 Mass. App. Ct. 130, 1992 Mass. App. LEXIS 141
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1992
Docket91-P-454
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 586 N.E.2d 34 (Commonwealth v. Gauthier) 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. Gauthier, 586 N.E.2d 34, 32 Mass. App. Ct. 130, 1992 Mass. App. LEXIS 141 (Mass. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Kass, J.

Joseph Gauthier, seventeen years old at the time of the offense, was convicted by a jury of indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of fourteen (G. L. *131 c. 265, § 13B). 1 There are two grounds of appeal: (1) that the judge erroneously prevented defense counsel from putting to the complaining witness the question: “Have you ever masturbated, [Martin]?” 2 ; and (2) that the court did not permit defense counsel to examine the school records of the complaining witness. We affirm.

Martin was thirteen years old when the events he complained of were said to have occurred. His family and that of the defendant lived in the same neighborhood and there had been frequent social interchange between the parents and the children of the two families. February 8, 1990, the day of the incidents charged, was snowy. Martin, who was on the borderline of mental retardation, had bicycled over to the Gauthier house to play. There was a snowball fight during which the defendant, who was then seventeen, said to Martin, “Let’s run,” and led him into adjoining woods. 3 At a spot where the trail in the woods ended, the defendant took off his leather jacket and put it on the ground. With the considerable command of someone four years older, he instructed Martin to pull down his pants; Martin declined. If Martin did not comply, he, the defendant, would punch him. Martin complied and the defendant also pulled his pants down. The next demand upon Martin was for manual masturbation of the defendant. Again Martin declined and, under threat, complied. Martin spoke of being similarly bullied into acts of fellatio and anal intercourse. Passing by the details testified to, what Martin described was a sordid afternoon.

When the defendant and Martin headed out of the woods, from whence they emerged close to 7 p.m., they at once encountered Martin’s distinctly irate father. He had been searching for the boys for some hours. Once Martin was in *132 side his truck, the father asked Martin what he and the defendant had been doing in the woods. Martin told what had gone on.

His father took Martin to the Foxborough police station. After the police interviewed Martin, they escorted him to Norwood Hospital for a physical examinaton. The physician who looked at Martin noted a one inch by one-half inch abrasion on the boy’s penis.

1. Limitation of cross-examination. The defendant urges that the judge was thrice mistaken in excluding the question, “Have you ever masturbated, [Martin]?” First, the question was admissible as an exception stated within the rape-shield statute, G. L. c. 233, § 2IB; second, despite the rape-shield statute, the question was admissible to explain Martin’s otherwise not-to-be-expected familiarity with the sexual conduct about which he testified; and, third, the question was admissible to indicate a motive for Martin to fabricate his testimony.

It is a sufficient answer to the points raised that, before defense counsel asked the particular question which was excluded, he had already been permitted to explore the subject with which the question dealt, viz., Martin’s prior sexual experience. After Martin had testified that the defendant had demanded Martin “go up and down on his dick,” defense counsel asked, “And had you ever done this with Joey before?” The very next question was: “Had you ever done this with anyone before?” Some four pages later in the transcript came the question: “And you had never done any of these type of things before, you say?” After Martin had testified about the defendant demanding fellatio, defense counsel asked: “And you had never done that before?” and “That was the first time you’d done anything like this, what you were doing with Joey?” Finally, just before defense counsel put the excluded question, he had asked Martin, “Had anyone ever done that [referring to the defendant’s having placed his hand on Martin’s penis] before?” On top of those questions, asking Martin if he had ever masturbated was not *133 only superfluous but introduced vocabulary likely to flummox a boy of low intelligence..

A trial judge may, in the exercise of discretion, exclude an otherwise permissible question if the subject with which the question treats has been brought adequately to the jury’s attention by earlier examination. Commonwealth v. Hogan, 7 Mass. App. Ct. 236, 241 (1979). Add to this the more general principle that the judge, in the exercise of sound discretion, may control the length and limits of cross-examination, and the conclusion emerges that the judge lawfully excluded the proposed question. See Commonwealth v. Dominico, 1 Mass. App. Ct. 693, 715 (1974).

Even taken on their own terms, the defendant’s claims of error are unpersuasive. Although G. L. c. 233, § 21B, as inserted by St. 1977, c. 110, permits introduction of “evidence of recent conduct of the victim alleged to be the cause of any physical feature, characteristic, or condition of the victim” (here the relevant condition was the penile abrasion), a party wishing to introduce such evidence may do so only after written motion and an offer of proof requesting an in camera hearing on the proposed evidence. No written motion preceded the question in issue. This was no trifling procedural omission; the sharply limited exception to the rape-shield statute is not to be made available on the basis of surprise and snap reaction by a trial judge. 4

Nor was the excluded question admissible on the basis of the principle described in Commonwealth v. Ruffen, 399 Mass. 811, 814-815 (1987), that if a child displays knowledge of sexual matters beyond her or his years, evidence of prior sexual experience may be received to show that the knowledge could have been acquired from occasions other than the one complained of involving the defendant. Martin was thirteen years old at the time of the incident and fourteen at the time of trial. Throughout his testimony he used words such as “dick,” “butt,” “bum,” and “white stuff” to *134 describe what had transpired between him and the defendant. That vocabulary, even in the mouth of a “slow” fourteen year old, “cannot reasonably be viewed as ‘extraordinary.’ ” Commonwealth v. Rathburn, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 699, 708 (1988).

Finally, defense counsel had already elicited testimony from Martin that he was supposed to be home before dark, that his father sometimes punished him severely, that he knew his father was angry, and that he was afraid of his father. That was enough to demonstrate that Martin had a motive to lie. Asking the excluded question would not materially have altered the picture.

2. Access to the complainant’s school records. This case was tried before publication of the decision in Commonwealth v. Stockhammer, 409 Mass. 867 (1991).

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Bluebook (online)
586 N.E.2d 34, 32 Mass. App. Ct. 130, 1992 Mass. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-gauthier-massappct-1992.