Commonwealth v. Labare

416 N.E.2d 534, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 370, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 935
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 416 N.E.2d 534 (Commonwealth v. Labare) 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. Labare, 416 N.E.2d 534, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 370, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 935 (Mass. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

Labare and his codefendant Tatro were convicted on indictments charging (1) breaking and entering a dwelling in the nighttime with intent to commit a felony, armed robbery (i.e., armed burglary under G. L. c. 266, § 142); (2) assault and battery by means of a dangerous [371]*371weapon; and (3) attempted armed robbery and assault while masked. Each of them objected (a) to the failure of the trial judge at their trial on November 7 through 9,1979, to énter a required finding of not guilty (Mass. R. Crim. P. 25 [1979], 378 Mass. 896 [1979]), and (b) to a portion of the judge’s charge. See note 3, infra. Each objection related only to the indictment under § 14. Labare and Tatro were each sentenced to a term of not more than twelve years nor less than ten years on the armed burglary charge. From these sentences they each appealed.

From the somewhat confused evidence, the jury could have made the following findings. On the evening of May 24, 1979, Labare, Tatro, Donald Pierce, and Barry Woodward were drinking in a bar. In the late evening, they all went to Pierce’s house in Warren. One of them had learned that one Richard Albert had sold his automobile that day and had about $1,500 in his possession. On Tatro’s suggestion, the four “decided to go over . . . and hit” Albert. They “got a knife” and cut up four nylon stockings to be used as masks. The four in the early morning hours then left for Albert’s apartment in Ware. Linda LaPlante and her two sons lived in Albert’s apartment. Because Albert and LaPlante knew Tatro and Pierce, the latter two remained at the bottom of the stairs leading to the apartment. Labare and Woodward, wearing the stocking masks, went upstairs. Woodward knocked on the door and kept knocking when there was no answer.

LaPlante had been asleep when she heard the knocking. She asked, “Who is it?” The answer was, “Al.” LaPlante asked, “Al who?”, which was answered “Allen.” LaPlante then said, “Allen who? I’m not going to answer this door until you tell me who.” “[S]omeone in the background” said, “Gerry.” LaPlante testified that “I had a brother [named] Gerry, so I opened the door.”

[372]*372Woodward and Labare then “pushed . . . [their] way in.” Labare “put the knife to . . . [LaPlante’s] stomach and she started to scream, called to her boyfriend,” Albert. Labare then “went in the bedroom where her boyfriend was,” and told Albert, “I want the money.” Albert, by then also armed with a knife, said he “didn’t have any.” At this point, LaPlante managed to “push” Woodward out the door. She locked him out, leaving Labare locked inside. She then ran to the back door and screamed to a neighbor to call the police.

Woodward joined Tatro and Pierce. The three ran across the street, and one of Albert’s neighbors chased them out of his yard. Tatro told Woodward to go back and get Labare. The three separated, but were soon apprehended together by the Ware police near Tatro’s parked automobile.

At some point, Labare also left the apartment. A police officer later saw Labare running down a street nearby, staggering, and thought Labare was drunk. The officer found a “dagger” and a “knife” in Labare’s pocket.

The defendants (by their objections to the denial of a required finding and to the charge) present really only a single issue, viz., whether, on the essentially undisputed facts, there was a “breaking” of the apartment within the meaning of G. L. c. 266, § 14 (n.l). The defendants contend that what is sometimes referred to by the text writers as a “constructive breaking” has not been a part of the law of Massachusetts. We do not agree.

The portion of the trial judge’s charge to which objection was made appears in the margin.3 The trial transcript in[373]*373dicates that the judge thought that a “constructive breaking” constituted a “breaking” within the meaning of § 14 (note 1, supra), and that this view appears to be at least one reason for his denying the motion for a required finding of not guilty.

The Massachusetts case closest to the present one is Commonwealth v. Lowrey, 158 Mass. 18 (1893), an opinion by Mr. Justice Holmes. In that case, one count of an indictment charged two defendants with breaking and entering a building and stealing therein. Lowrey’s codefendant, Johnson, “in pursuance of a preconcerted scheme” made “a pretense of a wish to purchase an article,” and persuaded the night clerk of a drug store “to let him into the company’s shop . . . about midnight.” The clerk went to the cellar to procure the article sought by Johnson. “Johnson unbolted the door . . . and let in . . . Lowrey, who concealed himself and remained behind when Johnson left, and afterwards “committed a theft.” The opinion then said (at 19): “It [374]*374was not necessary that Lowrey should have touched the door if he procured himself to be let in by an accomplice and entered with felonious intent. He might have been convicted, even if the hand which he made use of was innocent, as in case of a servant or constable.” The opinion then relies upon several decisions and other authorities which state the principle of “constructive breaking.” Among authorities so cited were LeMott’s case, J. Kel. 42 (1,664), 89 Eng. Rep. 1073, and 4 Blackstone, Commentaries 226-227 (8th ed. 1778). The opinion then proceeds. “The accomplice inside the house is guilty of the same offence . . . .” The facts in the Lowrey case may not have required the adoption in that case of the doctrine of “constructive breaking.” The circumstances leading to the conviction of both defendants, however, viewed as a whole, involved sufficient elements of trickery and subterfuge to make it natural for the court to rely upon the authorities which support the doctrine. The case must be viewed as recognition of the doctrine.

Blackstone’s Commentaries reasonably may be said to represent this aspect of the common law as it existed at and just after the American Revolution. Of burglary, Blackstone wrote, 4 Blackstone, Commentaries 226-227 (8th ed. 1778), “As to the manner of committing burglary: there must be both á breaking and an entry to complete it ... . There must in general be an actual breaking; not a mere legal clausum fregit (by leaping over invisible ideal boundaries, which may constitute a civil trespass) but a substantial and forcible irruption. As at least by breaking, or taking out the glass of, or otherwise opening, a window; picking a lock, or opening it with a key; nay, by lifting up the latch of a door, or unloosing any other fastening which the owner has provided. But if a person leaves his doors or windows open, it is his own folly and negligence, and if a man enters therein, it is no burglary: yet, if he afterwards unlocks an inner or chamber door, it is so. But to come down a chimney is held a burglarious entry; for that is as much closed, as the nature of things will permit. So also to knock at a door, and upon opening it to rush in with a felonious intent; or, [375]*375under pretence of taking lodgings, to fall upon the landlord and rob him; or to procure a constable to gain admittance, in order to search for traitors, and then to bind the constable and rob the house-, all the entries have been adjudged burglarious, though there was no actual breaking: for the law will not suffer itself to be trifled with by such evasions, especially under the cloke [sic] of legal process.

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Bluebook (online)
416 N.E.2d 534, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 370, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-labare-massappct-1981.