COMMONWEALTH v. IRVIN I., a juvenile.
This text of 100 Mass. App. Ct. 33 (COMMONWEALTH v. IRVIN I., a juvenile.) 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.
Opinion
COMMONWEALTH vs. IRVIN I., a juvenile.
100 Mass. App. Ct. 33
April 13, 2021 - July 13, 2021
Court Below: Juvenile Court, Plymouth County
Present: Ditkoff, Singh, & Englander, JJ.
Rape. Juvenile Court, Delinquent child. Delinquent Child. Practice, Criminal, Juvenile delinquency proceeding, Transfer hearing, Probable cause hearing. Probable Cause. Witness, Credibility. Evidence, Credibility of witness.
In the circumstances of a transfer hearing held pursuant to G. L. c. 119, § 72A, with regard to a juvenile who was nearly twenty-one years old when the proceedings commenced, a Juvenile Court judge erred in dismissing a delinquency complaint issued against the juvenile, where the evidence was sufficient to support a finding of probable cause that the juvenile had committed the charged offense of rape, in that the victim's testimony made out a prima facie case despite some inconsistencies and lapses of memory; accordingly, this court entered a finding of probable cause as a matter of law and remanded the case to determine whether a criminal complaint should issue against the juvenile as an adult, or whether discharge would be consistent with the protection of the public. [35-39]
COMPLAINT received and sworn to in the Plymouth County Division of the Juvenile Court Department on April 24, 2019.
The case was heard by Kathryn A. White, J.
Carolyn A. Burbine, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
Maryellen Cuthbert for the juvenile.
SINGH, J. Following a hearing pursuant to G. L. c. 119, § 72A, which governs juvenile transfer hearings, a Juvenile Court judge found no probable cause to believe that the juvenile [Note 1] committed the crime of rape of a child with force or any lesser included offense, and dismissed the delinquency complaint issued against him. On appeal, the Commonwealth contends that the evidence was sufficient, as a matter of law, to meet its burden of establishing probable cause. The juvenile contends that the judge acted
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within her discretion in assessing the weight and credibility of the evidence to find no probable cause. After review, we reverse and remand the matter for further consideration.
Background. In April 2019, a delinquency complaint issued against the juvenile, charging him with rape of a child with force, alleged to have occurred some years prior, when he was a juvenile. See G. L. c. 265, § 22A. Because the juvenile was nearly twenty-one years old when the proceedings commenced, and thus no longer subject to the jurisdiction of the Juvenile Court, a transfer hearing was held to determine whether the juvenile could be prosecuted as an adult or would not be prosecuted at all. See G. L. c. 119, § 72A.
The alleged victim, whom we shall refer to as Maya, was the sole witness, and her testimony was the only evidence offered at the transfer hearing. According to her testimony, Maya first came to know the juvenile when she moved to an apartment complex with her mother and younger sister; the juvenile was "one of the first people that . . . showed [them] around." Eventually, the juvenile began "dating" Maya's mother and so would be at their apartment on a daily basis and sometimes overnight.
On one occasion, when Maya was eleven or twelve years old, the juvenile and others came over to Maya's apartment to watch a football game. [Note 2] After the game ended, everyone else went to sleep. Maya and the juvenile remained on the living room couch next to one another and talked a bit as Maya drifted off to sleep. The juvenile then got on top of Maya and pulled down her pants and underwear. He was "trying to have sex with [her]," attempting to "actually put [his penis] in[to her vagina]." Maya felt the juvenile's penis making contact with her vagina. Although the penis was erect, "[j]ust the tip" entered her. Maya was saying "oh, no, . . . this hurts" and "kept asking him to stop." When Maya told the juvenile to "stop, because it hurt," the juvenile told Maya that she "sounded like [her] mother," and persisted in his assault. After about a half hour, the juvenile got off of Maya, who then went to her bedroom.
Maya first reported that she had been raped in 2018, when she was seventeen years old, after her aunt discovered text messages from the juvenile on Maya's cell phone.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the Commonwealth requested that if the judge did not find probable cause on the charge of rape
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of a child with force, the judge "consider finding probable cause for the lesser included [offenses], indecent assault and battery and assault and battery." The judge, ruling from the bench, did "not find probable cause for the complaint or any of the lesser included [offenses]" and dismissed the matter.
Discussion. On appeal, the Commonwealth argues that the judge erred in dismissing the case because there was adequate evidence presented to support a finding of probable cause as a matter of law. [Note 3] In response, the juvenile argues that the adversarial nature of a § 72A transfer hearing requires that a judge assess the "weight and the credibility of the evidence" in determining probable cause, and that an appellate court should defer to that assessment absent an abuse of discretion.
"[T]he purpose of § 72A is, in part, to give the Juvenile Court jurisdiction over cases where a juvenile offender is not apprehended until after his [nineteenth] birthday, and if public interest requires, transfer the case" for prosecution in the District or Superior Court. [Note 4] Matter of a Juvenile, 485 Mass. 831, 832-833 (2020), quoting Commonwealth v. Nanny, 462 Mass. 798, 804 (2012). See Commonwealth v. Mogelinski, 473 Mass. 164, 171 (2015) (§ 72A "confers jurisdiction in circumstances where . . . a defendant otherwise would face no possibility of prosecution"). The judge makes two determinations at a transfer hearing. "The first is whether there is probable cause to believe that the defendant committed the charged offense. If the judge concludes that there is probable cause, the second determination is whether the defendant should be tried as an adult on the criminal charge or be discharged, thereby ending the prosecution" (citation omitted). Matter of a Juvenile, supra at 833.
The issue on appeal concerns the first determination, that is, the
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precise standard by which probable cause is to be determined in a § 72A transfer hearing, and, by implication, the standard by which an appellate court reviews that determination. See Matter of a Grand Jury Investigation, 427 Mass. 221, 224-225, cert. denied sub nom. A.R. v. Massachusetts, 525 U.S. 873 (1998) (reviewing varying formulations of "probable cause" in different contexts). The probable cause portion of the transfer hearing in the Juvenile Court "serves the same function as a bind-over probable cause hearing in the District Court." Ulla U. v. Commonwealth, 485 Mass. 219, 228 (2020), citing Nanny, 462 Mass. at 805. See Commonwealth v. Ortiz, 393 Mass. 523, 533 (1984) ("adult and juvenile probable cause hearings serve identical purposes"). See also G. L. c. 218, § 30. That function is "the screening out of an erroneous or improper prosecution" (quotation and citation omitted). Lataille v. District Court of E. Hampden, 366 Mass. 525, 530 (1974).
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