Commonwealth v. Kartell

20 Mass. L. Rptr. 134
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedOctober 25, 2005
DocketNo. 19990655
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Mass. L. Rptr. 134 (Commonwealth v. Kartell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Kartell, 20 Mass. L. Rptr. 134 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Lowy, David A., J.

In 1999, the defendant, James Kartell, was indicted for first-degree murder after fatally shooting his wife’s lover twice during a fight between the two men at the hospital bedside of the defendant’s wife, Suzan Kamm. The defendant contends that he acted in self-defense. In 2000, after a trial,1 the jury convicted the defendant of voluntary manslaughter. On direct appeal, that judgment was affirmed. Commonwealth v. Kartell, 58 Mass.App.Ct. 428, rev. denied, 440 Mass. 1102 (2003).

The defendant now moves for a new trial on several grounds. First, the defendant asserts that the admission of hearsay statements made by Kamm to a hospital employee and police officer, where Kamm was unavailable to testify at trial, violated his state and federal constitutional rights to confront witnesses under the Supreme Court’s ruling in Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 68 (2004).2 The defendant’s remaining arguments in support of his motion relate to three alleged errors in his trial which he raised on direct appeal, but now reframes as violations of his federal constitutional rights. I have conducted three hearings on the motion, the final one to receive arguments in the aftermath of the Supreme Judicial Court’s interpretation of Crawford in Commonwealth v. Gonsalves, 445 Mass. 1 (2005). After an examination of the transcripts from the trial and pre-trial motions as well as consideration of the arguments and materials presented at the hearings on the motion for new trial, the Court denies the defendant’s motion.

BACKGROUND

In 1998, Kamm, who had been married for thirty-three years to the defendant, became romantically involved with Janos Vajda and moved in with him. The defendant became depressed as his reconciliation efforts failed. In mid-December of 1998, the defendant learned that Kamm had contracted herpes and told friends that he wanted to sue Vajda. Kamm had, at that point, considered returning to the defendant, but when she told the defendant that she had changed her mind, the defendant became so distraught that he thought of using his gun on himself and on Vajda. In Januaiy of 1999, while at a supermarket, the defendant discussed with an acquaintance Kamm’s relationship with Vajda. The defendant, appearing extremely unhappy, told the acquaintance that he could kill Vajda. In mid-Februaiy 1999, Kamm asked the defendant for a divorce.

In late February of 1999, Kamm was hospitalized at Holy Family Hospital in Methuen, suffering from pneumonia. At approximately 6:15 p.m., Kamm was being examined by Dr. Davor Kvatemik, who found Kamm to be fatigued and febrile. Vajda was visiting Kamm at that time. The defendant arrived and told Vajda to leave. Kamm told the defendant that if he did not act in a civilized way, she would call the police and obtain a restraining order. At approximately 6:30 p.m., Dr. Kvaternik completed his examination and left the room. The defendant again asked Vajda to leave. When Vajda did not, he pushed Vajda and threw Vajda’s jacket towards the door. Vajda returned the push, and the two men began to hit each other. Kamm screamed for them to stop. At one point, Vajda struck the defendant in the back of his head, and when the defendant turned around, Vajda hit him in the face dislodging his glasses.3

What transpired next was the subject of testimony at trial by several witnesses. The defendant testified that Vajda continued to punch and kick him all over his body and that he was terrified that Vajda was going to kill him. The defendant was able to reach into his pocket, remove his gun and point it at Vajda, who struggled for it and pulled the defendant close to him. The defendant, without saying a word, pulled the trigger, firing a shot into Vajda’s abdomen. (Tr. Vol. 10, p. 62.) The defendant testified that Vajda then grabbed him, threw him to the area of the floor between the bed and the window, pounced on top of him, then banged the defendant’s head on the floor and the legs of a chair. (Tr. Vol. 10, p. 64-65.) The defendant testified that somehow he was able to free his right arm and fire the gun a second time without knowing where the bullet went, and that Vajda then ceased his assault. (Tr. Vol. 10, p. 68.) At that point, the defendant unloaded the gun, put it on the bed tray table, and tried to hug Kamm, who told him to get out and said, “Don’t touch me. You killed him.” (Tr. Vol. 10, p. 70.) The defendant walked into the corridor and stood outside a room near Kamm’s.

Several hospital employees also testified. Michael Cook, a unit support aide who was in the hallway about ten to fifteen feet from Kamm’s room, first heard sounds like furniture being moved coming from Kamm’s room and a woman screaming “Stop it.” Cook went to the doorway of Kamm’s room, looked inside and saw Vajda and the defendant standing, facing each other and fighting. Cook glanced away for a second, and when he looked back into the room, the defendant was kneeling on the floor on his left knee, and Vajda, standing about two feet to the defendant’s left, punched the defendant in the forehead and tried to kick the defendant.4 Cook watched Vajda back up with his hands raised, and then saw the defendant reach to his hip and remove a gun, saying, “Now you’re going to get it” or “Now you’ve done it.” (Tr. Vol. 6, pp. 37-38.) Cook ran out of the room for help, yelling that the man had a gun, and when he got about 10 feet away, he heard a gunshot. He continued to run around the [136]*136corner to the nurses’ station, but before reaching it he heard a second gunshot within two to ten seconds of the first gunshot. (Tr. Vol. 6, pp. 40 and 55.)

A charge nurse, Donna McCarthy, also heard a man in Kamm’s room angrily say, “Now you’re going to get it.” While approaching Kamm’s room, McCarthy heard a gunshot and, within what she estimated to be two or three more seconds, a second gunshot. She ran to the nurses’ station to call for assistance.

Dr. Kvaternik, who had left Kamm’s room only three minutes earlier, was at the nurses’ station when he heard the commotion coming from Kamm’s room. He ran toward the sounds and as he neared Kamm’s room he heard a gunshot. He continued into the room and stood about three or four feet away from the defendant and Vajda for about ten seconds. (Tr. Vol. 6A, pp. 30-31.) In that brief period he saw Vajda motionless on his knees with his head against the floor and his feet entwined with the defendant’s feet. (Tr. Vol. 6A, pp. 28-29, 31.) According to Dr. Kvaternik, the defendant was “at the other side of Mr. Vajda” and holding a gun against or within two inches of the back of Vajda’s head. (Tr. Vol. 6A, p. 30-32.) In response to a question about what type of movement he saw the defendant make, Dr. Kvaternik testified that “(t]he only motion I sawagain, we’re talking about ten seconds hereis Dr. Kartell, the hand . . . being pointed with the gun to his skull in a brief, brief fraction of the time before the shot came out.” (Tr. Vol. 6A, p. 33.) At about the same time as Dr. Kvaternik saw the shot being fired, Michael Bryant, a patient care associate, pushed Dr. Kvaternik toward the vestibule of the room. (Tr. Vol. 6A, p. 32.) Dr. Kvaternik then called out in the hallway for assistance and returned to Kamm’s room, where Kamm was crying and yelling at the defendant, “You killed him.” Dr. Kvaternik commenced CPR on Vajda, but stopped after about thirty seconds, when a nurse offered to take over after she called the doctor’s attention to the blood all over his hands. (Tr.

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