Commonwealth v. Haraldstad

453 N.E.2d 472, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 565, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1444
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 453 N.E.2d 472 (Commonwealth v. Haraldstad) 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. Haraldstad, 453 N.E.2d 472, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 565, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1444 (Mass. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Kass, J.

Robert B. Haraldstad and Michael J. Purcell, the defendants, were convicted by a jury of the rape of Cathie A. and of assaulting her by means of a dangerous weapon. The victim set the incident during the early hours of July 5, 1980, near Fort Revere in Hull. She charged a third man as joining in the sexual assault. 2

The defense was that the incident simply did not occur; that the defendants were elsewhere when the victim said they raped her; and that her story was a fabrication. In support of that view of the case the defendants called as a witness Dr. D. Colm Armstrong, a specialist in obstetrics and gynecology, who had examined the victim after she had complained that she had been raped. Dr. Armstrong testified that no sperm were seen in the patient. Did he have an opinion based on medical certainty, the defendant Purcell’s counsel asked Dr. Armstrong, whether, assuming that two or more men had ejaculated into the victim’s vagina within ten hours of the examination and that she had not douched or bathed in the interim, “sperm would be present in her vagina?” Dr. Armstrong replied, “I don’t have an opinion with certainty.”

That answer came as a discomfiting surprise to the examining lawyer, whose next question was, “Pardon me?” A noon recess mercifully intervened seven questions later, but by that time counsel had concluded his direct examination. Following brief cross-examination by the Commonwealth, counsel for Purcell undertook to have Dri Armstrong clarify *567 and correct his testimony. There had been a misunderstanding. Dr. Armstrong had been thinking in terms of motile sperm (i.e., having the power to move). As to the significance of the absence of motile sperm, he was not prepared to venture an opinion with reasonable medical certainty. He was prepared to testify, it developed on an offer of proof, that he would, with reasonable medical certainty, expect to find nonmotile or dead sperm, given the facts posed in the hypothetical question, all of which had a basis in the record.

The Commonwealth objected to putting questions to Dr. Armstrong on redirect to iron out the confusion. The ground for objection was that the defense was taking a second bite at material covered by the direct examination without the prosecution’s having inquired into it in cross-examination. Certainly, the evidence in question was significant. The credibility of the victim and the defendants was very much in issue. In addition to Dr. Armstrong, Haraldstad and Purcell took the stand and sixteen witnesses called by the defense gave exculpatory testimony, but those witnesses were in varying ways connected with the defendants by friendship or by blood. Objective medical evidence, therefore, carried more than ordinary weight.

Whether clarification of Dr. Armstrong’s testimony was so critical to the defendants that its exclusion, standing by itself, deprived them of their right to present their case fully 3 is a question we need not decide because of later developments in the case related to the excluded evidence.

During the course of closing argument, the prosecutor said:

*568 “A lot is made of the fact that no sperm was found in Cathy [A]’s vagina by the doctor. Well, you heard the doctor testify. . . . [T]he critical thing that Dr. Armstrong told you is that when asked whether or not you would expect to have sperm, he said [he] would not have an opinion based on certainty. And then when asked again — I can’t recall exactly the question — but when asked again, he said [he] wouldn’t have an opinion."

For some fifteen additional lines of transcript, the prosecutor mined that vein. In so doing he exploited the absence of evidence he had succeeded in excluding, a practice we held to be fundamentally unfair in Commonwealth v. Mosby, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 8-9 (1980). See Commonwealth v. Nordstrom, 364 Mass. 310, 316 (1973); Commonwealth v. Burke, 373 Mass. 569, 574-575 (1977). It is a tactic equally reprehensible when engaged in by a defendant. Commonwealth v. Dias, 14 Mass. App. Ct. 560, 564-565 (1982). Such conduct may be relatively harmless if the excluded evidence is without much significance or if, as in Commonwealth v. Fitzgerald, 376 Mass. 402, 418-419 (1978), the point sought to be made may be inferred from other evidence which has been received. Here, however, the proffered testimony of Dr. Armstrong about the import of the absence of sperm cannot be written off as insignificant. This was not a case in which the government’s evidence was overwhelming. Exclusion of the corrected testimony, when coupled with the prosecution’s references to the uncorrected testimony of Dr. Armstrong, constitutes reversible error. The point was adequately preserved by counsel for Purcell, who called the problem specifically to the attention of the trial judge and requested that he instruct the jury that they were not to draw any inferences from Dr. Armstrong’s unwillingness to express an opinion about the meaning of the absence of sperm. The judge declined so to do.

*569 Several other issues which the appellants have argued on appeal are likely to recur at a new trial and, therefore, we consider them.

1. Argument and charge on consciousness of guilt. In closing argument, the prosecutor said:

“What about the statements [by Purcell] to Detective Yannizzi [the arresting officer] that [Purcell] denied on the stand but you heard Detective Yannizzi testify to them. And that’s in his report. First of all, he denied even being in Hull on July 4th and 5th. What’s the significance of that? Well, I would submit to you, ladies and gentlemen, it’s what we call consciousness of guilt. Something happened up there that he didn’t want to admit. The reason that he lied to Yannizzi about that is because he didn’t want to get in to that. I wasn’t even in Hull that night. It’s the classic lie.”

However unintended, this was a distortion of the evidence. As for Yannizzi’s report, it had never been admitted in evidence. Yannizzi’s testimony was that, upon showing Purcell the arrest warrant, explaining the charges against him and giving him the Miranda warnings, he had asked Purcell “if he was in Hull at the forts that night.... [Purcell] told me he didn’t know what I was talking about.” In context that was not a denial by Purcell that he had been in Hull. Indeed, the prosecutor pressed the point by asking Detective Yannizzi, “And he responded that he was not in Hull that night?” Yannizzi answered, “He said he didn’t know what I was talking about.” On cross-examination the following exchange took place:

Q. “And he said initially he didn’t know — Did you tell him that he was under arrest for rape, by the way?”

A. “I don’t remember. He was showed the warrant. I don’t remember if I said that or not.”

Q. “But the warrant said on it, what?”

A. “Rape.”

*570

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Bluebook (online)
453 N.E.2d 472, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 565, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-haraldstad-massappct-1983.