Commonwealth v. Iago I.

931 N.E.2d 47, 77 Mass. App. Ct. 327, 2010 Mass. App. LEXIS 1025
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 5, 2010
DocketNo. 09-P-761
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 931 N.E.2d 47 (Commonwealth v. Iago I.) 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. Iago I., 931 N.E.2d 47, 77 Mass. App. Ct. 327, 2010 Mass. App. LEXIS 1025 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Brown, J.

After a jury trial in the Juvenile Court, the juvenile was adjudicated delinquent on a complaint charging him with burning a building.2 On appeal the juvenile claims that (1) expert testimony was improperly admitted and the judge failed to instruct the jury on the weight to be given expert opinion evidence; (2) prior bad act evidence should have been excluded and the failure to give a limiting instruction exacerbated the error; (3) the judge should have given a Ciampa instruction, see Commonwealth v. Ciampa, 406 Mass. 257, 266 (1989); (4) the prosecutor’s closing argument was improper; and (5) the cumulative effect of the errors requires relief.

Evidence at trial revealed the following. Sometime between 7:00 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., on June 9, 2008, the juvenile and Karen Smith3 entered an abandoned paper factory on Sargeant Street in Holyoke for the second time that day. The building was a mess, with paper, cardboard, cloth, trash, and machinery throughout the interior. While they were inside the building, the juvenile told Smith that he wanted to bum it down because “he might be getting locked up the next day.” The juvenile also said that he wanted to use gasoline but he did not have any. She saw him light some paper on fire with a lighter and then put it out. After they were inside the building for about twenty minutes, it began to get dark. Smith became frightened when she heard some banging noises coming from the opposite side of the building and she walked out. The juvenile remained behind.

When Smith got to the exterior corner of the factory, she called for the juvenile. He came out and urged her “just to go.” They walked away together and headed toward Sargeant Street. When Smith looked back about ten minutes later, she saw smoke [329]*329coming from the first-floor windows that were about six to ten windows away from where they had just been.4

After parting company with Smith, the juvenile met a friend, one Bill Jones,5 who was watching the fire from Main Street in Holyoke. Jones and the juvenile had been friends for about five years, and Jones knew him by the nickname “Nano.” The juvenile admitted to Jones that he had started the fire inside the building by “flighting] some papers.” The juvenile said that he and Smith had been inside the factory, but that she left before he did and claimed that she “did [no]t help him start the fire.” Jones also testified about several other fires. He claimed to have been with the juvenile when the juvenile broke the door to a South Street building, went inside, and then came out as the building “was bursting in fire.” Jones also testified that he had seen dumpsters “go on fire” when the juvenile was near them. State police Trooper David Percy was called to the scene to investigate the cause of the fire and by the time he arrived, he saw approximately 100 fire fighters, from eighteen or nineteen towns, battling the flames at the abandoned factory. Percy also saw the juvenile at the scene and spoke to him.6 Percy had spoken to the juvenile previously, and knew him by his nickname, Nano.

Trooper Michael Mazza, a twenty-year veteran of the fire and explosion investigation section of the State police, was also summoned to the scene. Mazza’s investigation included canvassing the neighborhood, talking to the fire fighters who arrived first to the fire, and examining the building and the fire progression.7 Mazza also testified that he had spoken with the [330]*330juvenile the day after the fire, and the juvenile denied being in the building during the time in question.

The juvenile claimed that the police were under tremendous pressure to find the culprit who started the fire because it occurred on the heels of thirty-one other suspicious fires in Holyoke that remained unsolved. Because of that pressure, the defense claimed, the police induced two youngsters to inculpate falsely the juvenile. The defense called three witnesses, each of whom outlined the initial contact police had with the juvenile at the scene where the police purportedly placed the juvenile, alone, into a vehicle for questioning, letting him go only after both his parents arrived at the vehicle and argued for their son’s release.

Discussion. 1. Expert testimony. The juvenile argues that the judge abused her discretion in permitting Mazza to give his opinion, over the juvenile’s objections, to the origin and cause of the fire. In support of this claim, the juvenile relies solely on the judge’s denial of the prosecutor’s request on the second day of trial to amend its witness list so that Mazza, who was already included on that list, would be designated an expert witness.8 See Mass.R.Crim.P. 14(a)(l)(A)(vi), as amended, 444 Mass. 1501 (2005). The juvenile argues obliquely that this ruling should have precluded the expert opinion evidence as a sanction for noncompliance with discovery rules.9

We discern no error in the admission of this evidence. See Commonwealth v. Hamilton, 426 Mass. 67, 70 (1997) (exclusion of evidence not warranted without a showing of prejudice when the late disclosure was not the result of bad faith on the part of the prosecutor). There was no basis upon which to exclude this testimony merely because the prosecutor had omitted the “expert” designation from the witness list. The defense had twice had the opportunity to hear and cross-examine Mazza at [331]*331the pretrial hearings. In addition, the defense had timely been given a copy of his report which set out his opinion.

Moreover, we think the record supports a “prior determination” by the judge that she found Mazza’s experience qualified him to render the opinion that the fire was intentionally set by an open flame coming in contact with the combustible material in the abandoned factory.10 See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Cantres, 405 Mass. 238, 246 (1989). See also Mass. G. Evid. § 702 (2010). There was no error in this determination.

Nor do we think the judge erred in omitting a specific instruction regarding the weight to be given an expert’s testimony, when none was requested. The judge properly instructed the jury to “determine which witnesses to believe and how much weight to give their testimony.” Commonwealth v. Dancy, 75 Mass. App. Ct. 175, 186 n.8 (2009).

2. Prior bad act evidence. Next, the juvenile claims that the judge should not have allowed the Commonwealth’s motion in limine to admit evidence connecting the juvenile to other fires in Holyoke. After determining that the evidence showed a modus operandi and evinced a special mark or distinctiveness, the judge found that the juvenile’s nickname spray painted near the sites of prior fires constituted a “pattern of conduct” and, therefore, was admissible. As a result, Trooper Percy testified at trial, without objection, that between March, 2008, and June, 2008, he investigated several other fires in Holyoke where he had observed the name Nano11 spray painted “in close proximity and on some of the buildings” where the fires occurred.12 Percy referred to this practice of putting a name or a sign on a particular location as “tagging.” In addition, photographs depict[332]*332ing the “tags” described by Percy were admitted in evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
931 N.E.2d 47, 77 Mass. App. Ct. 327, 2010 Mass. App. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-iago-i-massappct-2010.