Commonwealth v. LeClair

840 N.E.2d 510, 445 Mass. 734, 2006 Mass. LEXIS 7
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 840 N.E.2d 510 (Commonwealth v. LeClair) 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. LeClair, 840 N.E.2d 510, 445 Mass. 734, 2006 Mass. LEXIS 7 (Mass. 2006).

Opinion

Greaney, J.

The defendant was indicted for murder in the first degree in connection with the stabbing death of his wife. A jury in the Superior Court convicted him of murder in the second degree. On this appeal, he argues that a written incriminating statement he gave to State police investigators should have been suppressed, and that his request for a voluntary manslaughter instruction was improperly denied because he had acted in heat of passion caused by a third person, his wife’s brother. We granted the defendant’s application for direct appellate review and affirm his conviction.

The jury could have found the following facts. In December, 1997, the victim and the defendant were experiencing marital conflict. The couple had been married for twelve years and had one son. The victim also had a son from a previous relationship who had lived with the defendant since the age of six months and whom the defendant treated as a son. The victim decided to leave the defendant because he was too controlling. She left their Charlton home on December 25, and did not tell the defendant where she was staying. Although the defendant hired a private agency to investigate her whereabouts and to ascertain whether she was having an affair, the defendant was not able to locate her. A few days prior to the killing of the victim, the defendant told the victim’s older son that his mother would be coming home and that he should “take a picture of her because you might not see her again.”

The victim returned home on the morning of January 4, 1998. The victim’s brother arrived shortly thereafter and found the victim and the defendant talking in the kitchen. On her brother’s arrival, the victim went outside on the back deck to smoke a cigarette. The defendant was irritated to see his brother-in-law and said, “She’s not dead yet.” The victim’s brother then joined his sister on the deck. After about five minutes, they both went back inside the house, and the victim told the defendant that she [736]*736was going to leave him. The defendant became upset. The defendant and the victim then asked her brother to go outside and wait while they finished their conversation. While outside, the victim’s brother could not discern what was being said indoors, but could hear that the conversation in the kitchen was “getting loud.” At some point, the victim grabbed her cigarettes, lighter, and keys, and rejoined her brother on the deck. The defendant, now visibly upset, followed. He pointed inches from his brother-in-law’s face and said, “I don’t want you on my fucking property.” The victim’s brother responded, “[Ajfter everything that I heard that’s going on, you don’t want to mess with me.” The defendant then swung at the victim’s brother but missed. The two men wrestled, and the victim’s brother eventually pinned the defendant to the ground. Her brother yelled to the victim to telephone the police. The two boys, now on the deck, screamed for the men to stop. The family dogs were barking and biting at the two men. The victim, who had gone into the house to telephone the police, ran back outside to urge her brother to let the defendant go.

The victim’s brother, who had planned to hold the defendant until the police arrived, released him when the defendant said, “Just lay off, I’m not going to do anything. I’m not going to do anything.” Once released, the defendant went quickly into the kitchen and picked up a knife. The victim, who was in the kitchen on the telephone with the police, screamed, “Oh my God, he’s got a knife .... Oh my God, he’s going to stab me.” The defendant grabbed the victim and, while her brother and sons looked on, raised the knife and brought it straight down into her upper arm. He then held the knife to the victim’s throat and dragged her down the hallway. As the two boys ran to a neighbor’s house, the defendant went toward his brother-in-law with the knife and said, “I’ll fucking kill her if you don’t get out of the house.” The victim’s brother then ran outside to wait for the police. When the police arrived, they found the defendant kneeling on the floor beside the victim, a cocked revolver at his temple. One officer told him to put the weapon down, and the defendant complied. The defendant was handcuffed and placed in the back of a police cruiser. A sergeant of the Charlton police department advised him of his Miranda [737]*737rights. The defendant told the sergeant that he and the victim’s brother had argued; that the victim stood between them during the argument; and that he (the defendant) had grabbed a knife and stabbed her. The victim was pronounced dead that afternoon at a hospital.1

The jury also could have found that, later at the Charlton police station, after again being advised of his Miranda rights, the defendant gave a written statement to State police investigators admitting that he had stabbed the victim. In his statement, the defendant recounted his fight with the victim’s brother and stated that he had been “so mad something snapped.” When asked whether he stabbed his wife to prevent her from talking to the police, the defendant responded, in his statement, that “the snap happened because I knew at that point that the relationship was over and she created that with her brother.” The defendant further explained that he “grabbed the knife to defend myself against her brother, but when I heard her on the phone, I snapped and went after her. . . . [Sjince she wanted the relationship over then I was going to really end it by stabbing her.”

The defendant did not testify at trial. In his defense, he presented evidence that he had struggled with depression in the months leading up to the killing and that he had set up an appointment with an attorney for a divorce consultation for the day after the killing. A neighbor testified that she and the defendant had planned to discuss school bus arrangements at a neighborhood dinner scheduled to take place on the afternoon of the killing. The defendant argued to the jury, essentially, that the Commonwealth’s evidence did not support a finding of deliberate premeditation so that he could not be found guilty of murder in the first degree.

1. A judge in the Superior Court allowed the defendant’s motion to suppress his written incriminating statement to State police investigators, because the judge, relying on Edwards v. Arizona, 451 U.S. 477 (1981), determined that the defendant had been interrogated after he had clearly invoked his right to [738]*738counsel in conversations with the Charlton police and had not reinitiated further communications. The Commonwealth applied for leave to take an interlocutory appeal from the suppression order, and the defendant cross-appealed. See Mass. R. Crim. P. 15 (a) (2), as appearing in 422 Mass. 1501 (1996). A single justice of this court allowed the application, and the appeal proceeded to the Appeals Court. In a published opinion, that court reversed the order suppressing the defendant’s written statement, Commonwealth v. LeClair, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 238 (2002), and this court denied the defendant’s application for further appellate review. 437 Mass. 1111 (2002). Thereafter, the defendant was tried and convicted of murder in the second degree and now, on this appeal, brings into issue the correctness of the Appeals Court decision vacating the suppression order.

We need not restate the factual background of the motion to suppress, which is set forth in the opinion of the Appeals Court. Commonwealth v. LeClair, supra at 239-242.

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Bluebook (online)
840 N.E.2d 510, 445 Mass. 734, 2006 Mass. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-leclair-mass-2006.