Commonwealth v. Hatzigiannis

88 Mass. App. Ct. 395
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 2015
DocketAC 13-P-1970
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 Mass. App. Ct. 395 (Commonwealth v. Hatzigiannis) 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. Hatzigiannis, 88 Mass. App. Ct. 395 (Mass. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Cohen, J.

After a District Court jury trial, the defendant, an oral surgeon, was convicted of indecent assault and battery of a sixteen year old female patient, in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 13H. The charge resulted from a report by the defendant’s surgical assistant that she witnessed the defendant cupping his hand on the patient’s breast while the patient was sedated. The sole issue on *396 appeal concerns the admission, over the defendant’s objection, of prior consistent statements made by the surgical assistant shortly after the incident. We agree that the admission of these statements was prejudicial error and that, therefore, the judgment must be reversed.

Background. 1. The incident. The evidence concerning the episode in question may be summarized as follows. In November, 2010, Orsella Aquino worked as a surgical assistant at Lynn Oral Surgery, one of several offices of an oral surgery practice group in which the defendant was a partner. The defendant rotated into the Lynn office on Monday and Tuesday, every three weeks. Aquino had no difficulties with the defendant; to the contrary, she liked working with him, and found him to be a nice, friendly, and “huggable type of person.”

On November 16, 2010, Aquino assisted the defendant when he extracted the wisdom teeth of the patient in question — a high school student described by Aquino as a “[yjoung, pretty girl.” The procedure had been scheduled the previous day when the patient and her mother came in for a consultation. The patient’s mother testified that during that initial meeting the defendant sat very close to the patient, touched her on the knee, and made a comment about her being “attractive.” The patient testified that the defendant was “flirty.”

The surgery took place in one of the operatories. The patient received intravenous sedation, which was common practice, and which was administered by the defendant. In addition to Aquino, another employee also assisted. When the surgery was concluded, the other assistant left the room to attend to other tasks, leaving the defendant and Aquino with the patient.

Aquino testified that, at that point, she called the patient’s name to wake her, and the patient opened her eyes and asked if the procedure was done; however, Aquino also explained that a patient can be awake while coming out of sedation, but still not fully aware of what is happening. The patient testified that her first postoperative memory was of waking up in the recovery room.

Aquino proceeded to detach and remove various items that had been used in the patient’s care: the intravenous line, a blood pressure cuff, leads to monitors, and a bib. After wrapping up the leads and putting them away, Aquino turned and glanced over her left shoulder to look back at the patient. She saw the defendant standing close to the patient’s right side and observed that his *397 right hand was cupping the patient’s left breast. Aquino turned back around because she was “in shock.” She did not think that the defendant saw her looking at him, and said nothing to him. She was afraid that confronting the defendant would cause her to lose her job.

Aquino remained turned around for about “a minute,” when the defendant then asked her to leave the room to get ice packs for the patient. Aquino thought this was strange, because he had never asked that a patient receive ice packs in the operatory; typically, ice packs were given to the patient in the recovery room. Aquino left the room only when the defendant became insistent — asking her two or three more times to get the ice packs. Feeling that she had no choice, she went down the hall to the room where the ice packs were kept. When she returned, the defendant was facing away from the patient and making notes on the chart. Aquino took the patient to the recovery room, and retrieved the patient’s mother from the waiting room so she could sit with her daughter.

2. The prior consistent statements. Prior to trial, the Commonwealth moved in limine to admit statements made by Aquino to her office manager, Renee Tatis, shortly after the incident. The Commonwealth proffered that Tatis would testify that Aquino stated, “I just saw [the defendant] touch a patient on the left breast”; that Tatis then asked Aquino, “Are you sure?”; and that Aquino replied, “A hundred percent.”

Unpersuaded by the Commonwealth’s argument that the statements were admissible as excited utterances, and concerned that this was an attempt to buttress the credibility of Aquino with hearsay, the judge ruled that the statements could not be introduced during the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief. He indicated, however, that he would reconsider his ruling if an issue such as fabrication or recent contrivance arose. He also ruled that the Commonwealth could ask Tatis to describe Aquino’s demeanor when she (Aquino) approached Tatis.

During cross-examination of Aquino, defense counsel focused on whether she was mistaken about what she saw. He probed inconsistencies between her trial testimony and statements that she made during a deposition conducted one month after the incident, including one statement that she “didn’t believe what [she] saw.” He also probed her failure to confront the defendant and her decision to leave the patient alone with him while getting the ice packs. On redirect examination, the prosecutor elicited that Aquino was sure that she saw the defendant cupping the patient’s breast, even if, at first, she “didn’t believe [it].”

*398 Tatis then took the stand and testified that she saw Aquino shortly before lunch, while the patient was still in the recovery room. She described Aquino as “physically shaking and out of breath.” Defense counsel cross-examined Tatis briefly, eliciting that Tatis had no personal knowledge of what occurred in the operatory, that Aquino only came to speak with her after the patient went to the recovery room and not when Aquino was getting the ice packs, and that after Aquino spoke with her, Tatis did not speak with the defendant.

The prosecutor then asked for a sidebar conference, the content of which was unable to be transcribed except for the judge’s noting of the defendant’s objection. 1 As a result of the sidebar conference, the Commonwealth was allowed to question Tatis about her conversation with Aquino. Tatis testified exactly as the Commonwealth had proffered at the motion hearing, stating that Aquino told her that she had seen the defendant touch the patient’s left breast; that Tatis said, “Are you sure?”; and that Aquino said, “Yes, one hundred percent.” Tatis also testified that Aquino asked Tatis not to tell anybody because she (Aquino) could not lose her job. The prosecutor then asked what Tatis did with that information, and Tatis replied that she sent an electronic mail message to her practice manager stating that she needed to discuss something very serious with her.

On recross-examination, defense counsel elicited that Tatis did not actually speak to her practice manager for another three days, and that two days after Aquino reported the incident to her, Tatis drafted a “To whom it may concern” letter.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Mass. App. Ct. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-hatzigiannis-massappct-2015.