Commonwealth v. Lee

350 N.E.2d 739, 4 Mass. App. Ct. 453, 1976 Mass. App. LEXIS 754
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 350 N.E.2d 739 (Commonwealth v. Lee) 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. Lee, 350 N.E.2d 739, 4 Mass. App. Ct. 453, 1976 Mass. App. LEXIS 754 (Mass. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*454 Hale, C.J.

The defendant was tried before a judge and jury in the Superior Court on separate indictments charging rape, an unnatural and lascivious act, and kidnapping. He was acquitted on the first two charges, convicted on the third, and sentenced. The two assignments of error argued by the defendant are grounded on the judge’s denial of motions for a mistrial. We find no error and affirm.

It appears from the evidence that in the early morning of May 21,1974, the defendant entered a building in Cambridge in which the victim lived, made his way up a flight of stairs, and entered the victim’s room. The victim awoke with a scream. The defendant told her who he was and that she “had done him an injury.” 1 He then forced her to leave the building with him, only allowing her to put a raincoat on over her nightgown. He told her to tell the two other occupants of the house not to interfere or “someone would be hurt.” The victim complied and told the others not to become involved. She was then taken to the defendant’s car and told to get in. As the defendant drove to Boston, he told the victim he was going to hurt her because of the “injury.” He also said he would shoot her. The victim was eventually taken to an apartment in Brighton which was occupied by one Marcia Greenwood, a business associate of the defendant. The victim testified in detail as to what took place in that apartment and as to what she had observed Greenwood doing during that time. The victim claimed she was forced into sexual acts, in between which she was further intimidated by the defendant’s display of a pistol which he had requested Greenwood get for him. The next day the defendant took the victim back to her home in Cambridge and told her that if she went to the police, he would kill her.

*455 Greenwood testified for the defendant and contradicted the victim’s claim that she had been the unwilling companion of the defendant. Greenwood’s testimony, if believed, supported the defendant’s own testimony that the victim had been in the apartment of her own free will and had voluntarily slept with him. Greenwood also testified that there had been no firearm in the apartment.

On cross-examination by the prosecutor, Greenwood was asked several questions which were directed to a showing of bias on her part. Following those questions the witness was asked about the visit to her apartment of a police officer who had informed her that his purpose was to inquire about a matter which had happened in the apartment on the morning of May 21, 1974. She denied that she had refused to admit the officer, and that she had told him that she knew nothing about what had happened on that morning. She also denied having told the officer she was not in the apartment at that time.

Greenwood was then questioned about the officer’s return to the apartment on the following day with other officers. During the cross-examination that followed the witness’s affirmative answer to a question as to whether the officer had come the next day with a warrant (charging her as an accessory to certain crimes), the prosecutor posed questions to Greenwood about her own individual sex life. Pertinent parts of the cross-examination are set out in the margin. 2 At a bench conference which followed *456 that questioning, the judge strongly admonished the prosecutor that such questions were not proper and that he should limit his inquiry to matters tending to show bias or prior inconsistent statements.

The defendant then moved for a mistrial, asserting that the prejudicial effect of the questions coupled with the other evidence which had been introduced could not be cured by any instruction to the jury.

Following the bench conference the judge asked the jury to disregard the question and instructed them, as he had previously in his preliminary remarks, that questions are not evidence and that unless questions were answered, they should not be a factor in the jury’s consideration.

The prosecutor then twice asked whether anyone else was arrested with Greenwood. The judge sustained objections to both questions and promptly told the prosecutor not to direct his questioning in “that general area.” At *457 the conclusion of that cross-examination the defendant renewed his motion for a mistrial, which was again denied.

Officer Gentile, of the Cambridge police, who had arrested Greenwood, was called as a rebuttal witness for the Commonwealth. After giving testimony which contradicted in many respects that of Greenwood as to what had happened in her apartment on the two occasions when he had been there, he testified further. Pertinent parts of that testimony are set out in the margin. 3 At the end of a bench conference that followed, the judge denied *458 the defendant’s second motion for a mistrial. He then instructed the jury at length on ways in which witnesses may be impeached. He also instructed: “Whatever Miss Greenwood was doing at the time of the arrest, whoever the gentleman was in her apartment, and whether he or she was arrested for that, is absolutely and positively irrelevant to any proceeding in this case. It certainly does not go to the substantive issues of the crimes... [of] which the defendant stands charged, nor does it go to the matter of the credibility of Miss Greenwood.”

The motions for mistrial were and are particularly appropriate vehicles by which to raise the effect of the prosecutor’s excesses. See and compare Commonwealth v. Red *459 mond, 370 Mass. 591, 593-596 (1976). While the irrelevant material disclosed by those questions and answers, viewed separately, might be regarded as harmless, their cumulative effect causes us concern.

The defendant contends that the intent and purpose of the cross-examination were to discredit Greenwood by suggesting to the jury that she was a woman of easy virtue, if not a prostitute. The prosecutor, despite the admonitions of the judge, persisted in lines of inquiry which were bound to elicit information which could not have been properly admitted for the purpose of impeaching Greenwood or showing bias on her part. Other questions sought answers which were relevant rebuttal but were inflammatory in nature and well beyond the scope permitted by the judge. On several occasions the judge acted to overcome the improper prejudicial effect of what was disclosed or suggested. He gave detailed instructions to the jury concerning information that might properly be elicited on cross-examination and informed them that what they had heard could not be considered as evidence bearing on the defendant’s guilt or on Greenwood’s credibility. While it would have been preferable for the judge to have given more succinct and positive instructions (compare Commonwealth v. Paradiso, 368 Mass. 205, 206, n.2 [1975]), we cannot assume that the instructions did not have their intended effect. Commonwealth v. Eagan, 357 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
350 N.E.2d 739, 4 Mass. App. Ct. 453, 1976 Mass. App. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-lee-massappct-1976.