Commonwealth v. Johnson

802 N.E.2d 1025, 441 Mass. 1, 2004 Mass. LEXIS 40
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 802 N.E.2d 1025 (Commonwealth v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Johnson, 802 N.E.2d 1025, 441 Mass. 1, 2004 Mass. LEXIS 40 (Mass. 2004).

Opinion

Cowin, J.

A District Court jury convicted the defendant, Michael Johnson, of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon (belt and buckle), and assault by means of a dangerous weapon (motor vehicle).1 On appeal, the defendant, who testified in his own defense, claims that certain questions posed by the prosecutor during cross-examination were improper and created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. The Appeals Court, in an order and unpublished memorandum pursuant to its rule 1:28, concluded that some of the questioning was improper, but that it did not create a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice and affirmed. Commonwealth v. Johnson, 58 Mass. App. Ct. 1103 (2003). We granted the defendant’s application for further appellate review and affirm the convictions because we conclude that the prosecutor’s actions were not improper.

At trial, there was testimony that the defendant and Howard Lessman, the victim, had known each other for at least five years: In August, 2000, the defendant employed Lessman in his [3]*3tree-cutting business for a brief period.2 The defendant terminated this arrangement when he learned that his insurance company would not provide coverage for Lessman. On September 8, 2000, at approximately 6:30 p.m., Harold Lessman and his girl friend, Kelly Gorman, were walking home on Houghton Street in North Adams, when the defendant approached them in a vehicle. An altercation ensued.

The parties agree on very little about the incident. Lessman testified that the defendant nearly hit him and his girl friend as the defendant approached in a Chevrolet Blazer truck; the defendant got out of the truck, threatened to beat up the couple because they were “running [their] mouths,” and then attempted to get back in the truck so he could run over Lessman. According to Lessman’s testimony, during the incident the defendant removed his belt and used it to strike Lessman before getting back in the truck and driving away. Gorman testified that the defendant said that she was “shooting [her] mouth off about [the defendant’s former wife],” and that his former wife wanted to “kick [Gorman’s] ass.”

The defendant, on the other hand, testified that Lessman forced him to stop the car by standing in the street, and then beating on the hood. The defendant further testified that he was not wearing a belt that day, that he did not threaten or attack Lessman, and that in fact Lessman attacked him. The defendant claimed that Lessman had been harassing his family since August, and so on this occasion he told Lessman to “stay away from my family and leave us alone.” He testified that he was referring to Lessman’s “bothering my eight year old daughter [and] wife.” Neither the defendant nor the Commonwealth offered a detailed explanation as to the underlying cause or causes of the fight.

Lessman immediately reported the incident to the police and sought hospital treatment. Later that evening, the defendant was arrested at his home.

The defendant’s principal contention is that the prosecutor’s questions concerning his motive for the attack created a [4]*4substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.3 The defendant claims that the prosecutor lacked an evidentiary basis for his questions and therefore expected the defendant to answer in the negative. By this means, the defendant asserts that the prosecutor was attempting to place before the jury the suggestion of a motive without any evidentiary foundation, and improperly to introduce evidence of unrelated prior bad acts by the defendant toward his daughters.

A prosecutor may not cross-examine a witness “in bad faith or without foundation.” Commonwealth v. Christian, 430 Mass. 552, 561 (2000), quoting Commonwealth v. White, 367 Mass. 280, 284 (1975). It is therefore an improper tactic for a prosecutor to “attempt to communicate impressions by innuendo through questions which are answered in the negative . . . when the [prosecutor] has no evidence to support the innuendo.” Commonwealth v. White, supra, quoting ABA Standards Relating to the Prosecution Function § 5.7(d) (Approved Draft 1971). See P.J. Liacos, M.S. Brodin, & M. Avery, Massachusetts Evidence § 3.2, at 52 (7th ed. 1999) (“It is improper for the cross-examiner to ask a question that implies the truth of a proposition he knows to be false . . .”). When the prosecutor cross-examines a witness, he must have a basis for asking the question, and be prepared to disclose that reason to the judge. [5]*5Commonwealth v. Christian, supra at 561, citing Commonwealth v. White, supra at 285.

We most recently discussed this issue in Commonwealth v. Christian, supra, where the prosecutor asked the defendant a series of questions regarding a conversation. The questions all elicited denials. The prosecutor had some evidence of such a conversation, but never offered the evidence at trial. Commonwealth v. Christian, supra at 561-563. We concluded that “[i]t was permissible for the judge to permit the prosecutor to ask the defendant one question about [the defendant’s] alleged conversation,” but when the defendant consistently denied having the conversation, the judge should either have curtailed further questioning, ordered a voir dire of the witness to the alleged conversation, or sought assurance from the prosecutor that evidence of the conversation would be forthcoming (i.e., ask the prosecutor to disclose her basis for asking the question). Id. at 562.

The Appeals Court, in its unpublished memorandum, concluded that the prosecutor’s failure to lay a foundation before questioning the defendant about his motive for the attack was itself improper. However, we did not state in the Christian case, nor do our other cases hold, that the prosecutor must lay an evidentiary foundation before asking such questions. The prosecutor is required only to have a basis for the questions, and to be prepared to disclose that basis to the court. Commonwealth v. Christian, supra at 562, citing Commonwealth v. White, supra at 285.

The questioning at issue in the present case was proper only if the prosecutor possessed, and was prepared to disclose, some reasonable basis for knowing that tension between the defendant and his daughters was known to Lessman, and that Lessman’s comments on that subject may have been at the heart of the altercation. We are unable to ascertain whether the prosecutor possessed a reasonable basis4 for. asking the questions at issue for he was never requested to make such a basis known. The [6]*6defendant only objected to one question, which directly addressed the defendant’s relationship with his daughters. This objection was sustained by the judge. The defendant did not object to the further questioning regarding what Lessman might have said. Gorman’s testimony and the defendant’s own statements suggest some hostility between the defendant’s family on the one hand, and Lessman and Gorman on the other, and that the defendant was upset that Lessman and Gorman were “running their mouths” on some unspecified subject. In addition, although Lessman testified that he did not know why the defendant might have attacked him, it was the defendant who raised the issue of Lessman’s interaction with and relationship to his family.

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Bluebook (online)
802 N.E.2d 1025, 441 Mass. 1, 2004 Mass. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-johnson-mass-2004.