Commonwealth v. Lamb

360 N.E.2d 307, 372 Mass. 17, 1977 Mass. LEXIS 881
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 360 N.E.2d 307 (Commonwealth v. Lamb) 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. Lamb, 360 N.E.2d 307, 372 Mass. 17, 1977 Mass. LEXIS 881 (Mass. 1977).

Opinion

Quirico, J.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Superior Court holding that the defendant is a sexually dangerous person (SDP) within the meaning of G. L. *18 c. 123A, § l, 1 and committing him to the treatment center at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Bridge-water for an indeterminate period of one day to life under G. L. c. 123A, § 6.

A brief review of the prior proceedings will place the appeal in proper context. In 1963, the defendant was convicted of abuse of a female child. In 1968, the defendant was convicted on pleas of guilty of assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon and mayhem arising from an assault on a four-year-old girl whose abdomen was repeatedly burned with a cigarette and whose genitals were battered.

In 1972, the defendant was adjudicated an SDP and committed to the treatment center. In Commonwealth v. Lamb, 365 Mass. 265 (1974), we agreed in part with a decision of the Appeals Court, 1 Mass. App. Ct. 530 (1973), sustaining exceptions to the defendant’s commitment. We held that commitment was.invalid because it had been partially based on the admission of privileged communications between the defendant and a psychotherapist (see G. L. c. 233, § 20B), who had not warned the defendant that his disclosures could be used at commitment hearings.

The defendant was therefore committed to Bridgewa-ter for the statutory sixty-day period of examination and diagnosis. G. L. c. 123A, § 6. In a report submitted to the Superior Court, dated July 19, 1974, by Dr. Robert F. Moore and Dr. Earl M. Wedrow, Dr. Moore stated that the defendant appeared to be an SDP on the basis of his record and Dr. Wedrow stated without qualification that the defendant was an SDP. The Commonwealth then sought commitment of the defendant to the treatment center as an SDP for one day to life.

*19 The defendant meanwhile sought a writ of habeas corpus from a single justice of this court, which was ultimately denied in Lamb, petitioner, 368 Mass. 491 (1975). We noted that the commitment proceeding initiated in the Superior Court was still pending, and that the defendant was entitled to a prompt hearing to determine whether he was an SDP.

The Commonwealth then continued with the commitment proceeding initiated by the 1974 psychiatric report. In January, 1976, a judge of the Superior Court heard two days of testimony from Commonwealth witnesses. The defendant presented no evidence.

Dr. Moore, a consultant to the Department of Mental Health, had attempted to examine the defendant on several occasions, but the defendant had declined interviews on the advice of his attorney. Dr. Moore’s opinion was therefore based on his review of the records kept at the treatment center. He was reluctant to reach a definitive conclusion whether the defendant was an SDP without an interview, but nonetheless stated that the defendant appeared to be an SDP. Dr. Moore said that the defendant’s 1968 offenses were sadistic and compulsive acts of a sexual nature. The likelihood that the defendant was an SDP was estimated to be “in the neighborhood of three or four” on a scale of zero to ten.

The defendant also declined to be interviewed by Dr. Wedrow, the Commonwealth’s second expert witness. Dr. Wedrow nonetheless made a diagnosis on the basis of the defendant’s file at Bridgewater, and based his conclusion on items in the record apart from the interview with Dr. Cohen which this court found inadmissible in Commonwealth v. Lamb, 365 Mass. 265 (1974). Dr. Wedrow stated that the defendant was an SDP who did not have control of his impulses, and would very likely commit further sexual misconduct if not committed. Dr. Wedrow concluded that the defendant’s offenses revealed an inability to distinguish between the reality of human beings and inanimate objects.

At the close of the evidence, the trial judge ordered an *20 examination of the defendant by two psychiatrists under circumstances where his psychiatric privilege would be waived. Two weeks later, the court received a letter from a psychiatrist reporting that the defendant declined to submit to psychiatric interviews under these circumstances. The judge then heard final arguments, and later ordered the defendant committed to the treatment center from one day to life as an SDP.

1. Admission of psychiatric opinion. The defendant argues that the trial judge erred in admitting psychiatric opinion based on an impermissible foundation. There was no error.

While it is difficult to determine what documents or records are at issue, both doctors testified that, in the absence of interviews with the defendant, they based their opinions on study of the defendant’s records maintained at the treatment center. The argument has focused on the doctors’ reliance on a stenographic record of a staff conference in 1970. Dr. Moore stated that the meeting was a discussion of the defendant by all members of the staff of the treatment center including the two committing physicians, the doctor who supervised the center, and psychologists and social workers. Dr. Wedrow described the report as “a stenographer’s report of a conference which is not a psychiatric conference. It was simply a conference at the Treatment Center where social workers, the guards and other personnel... discussed their impressions of the patients.”

In Commonwealth v. Lamb, 365 Mass. 265, 270 (1974), we held that the statutory privilege of G. L. c. 233, § 20B, established a patient’s right to “keep privileged any communications made to a court-appointed psychotherapist in the case of a court-ordered examination, absent a showing that he was informed that the communication would not be privileged and thus, inferentially, that it would be used at the commitment hearing.”

The defendant argues that because the Commonwealth did not show that the 1970 conference summary was not based on privileged communications, the psychiatrists *21 could not render an opinion based on that report. Yet there is no showing that confidential communications protected by the statutory privilege were involved in the staff summary; what we have before us is equally susceptible of the interpretation that the staff analyzed the probation and court records and discussed their personal observations of the defendant. Furthermore, many of the staff would not appear to be psychotherapists as defined in G. L. c. 233, § 20B, and the statute on its face would not apply to conversations between the defendant and those individuals. See Matter of Pappas, 358 Mass. 604, 607 (1971) , aff’d sub nom. Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665 (1972) . Commonwealth v. Lamb, supra, did not erect a comprehensive exclusionary rule for all reports and records gathered by the treatment center, but rather called for particularized suppression of those confidential communications protected by the psychotherapist-patient privilege established by G. L. c.

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Bluebook (online)
360 N.E.2d 307, 372 Mass. 17, 1977 Mass. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-lamb-mass-1977.