Commonwealth v. Mazzone

770 N.E.2d 547, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 345, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 840
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 27, 2002
DocketNo. 00-P-1095
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 770 N.E.2d 547 (Commonwealth v. Mazzone) 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. Mazzone, 770 N.E.2d 547, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 345, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 840 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Lenk, J.

After a jury-waived trial, the defendant Richard Mazzone was found guilty of multiple counts of rape of a child under the age of sixteen, (G. L. c. 265, § 23), and of indecent assault and battery upon a child both before and after the child had attained the age of fourteen (G. L. c. 265, §§ 13B, 13H). On appeal, the defendant asserts error in the admission of certain evidence and challenges the judge’s determination that he had [346]*346knowingly and voluntarily waived Ms rigM to a jury trial.1 We reverse.

Background. The complainant and the defendant met in 1990 when the former was ten years old and the latter was about twenty-one years old. The two spent considerable time together over the next four years, with the defendant informally acting as the complainant’s proverbial “big brother,” until in late 1994 or early 1995, they came to a parting of the ways. The complainant renewed contact with the defendant in August, 1996, when, over a period of several days, he left tMeatening phone messages and later physically threatened, robbed and assaulted the defendant. When explaining this criminal behavior to police after a warrant had issued for his arrest, the complainant accused the defendant of having sexually abused him numerous times, in different ways, and at a variety of locations in the period of time when he was between eleven and fifteen years of age. The defendant denied that any sexual activity had ever taken place during their relationship.

At trial, the complainant testified that he and the defendant had engaged in acts of fellatio, masturbation and anal penetration (digital, pemle and oral) on an almost daily basis over a four-year period beginnmg when he was eleven years old. (The indictments charge acts occurring between September 1, 1990, and October 31, 1994.) The sexual activities took place in the defendant’s bedroom at his parents’ home, in the defendant’s own later-acquired apartment, in the defendant’s car, on a mattress in the back room of a convemence store that the defendant had briefly owned in 1991, in the studio apartment of the defendant’s girlfriend, and in the batMoom of a Florida hotel room.

Since the defendant demed all alleged sexual activity and his defense was in essence to characterize the abuse allegations as the fabrications of a habitual liar seeking to evade criminal liability, the central issue at trial was credibility. M addition to [347]*347the complainant, the Commonwealth presented three fresh complaint witnesses (who corroborated that, at different times in 1995, the complainant had made a complaint of abuse to them), three police officers (one testified to certain statements that the defendant had made after his arrest; one testified as to the defendant’s failure initially to identify the complainant as his assailant when reporting the August, 1996, incident; one testified to seeing a mattress in 1996 in the store the defendant owned in 1991) and two experts (a psychologist and a pediatrician who testified as to behavioral and physical symptoms of sexual abuse).

The defense offered testimony geared to establishing the utter implausibility of the complainant’s account. The defendant’s former girlfriend, his parents, and his two sisters each contradicted key details of the complainant’s testimony. The defendant testified in the same vein, denying that he had ever slept in the same bed with or engaged in sexual contact with the complainant, calling attention to the complainant’s prior dishonesty and long-term substance abuse, and attributing the dissolution of their friendship to the complainant’s drug use. It is against this backdrop that we analyze the defendant’s claims of error at trial.

Discussion. The defendant contends that the judge erred in admitting (a) a letter written by the complainant after he faced criminal charges for the August, 1996, incidents; (b) the fresh complaint testimony of the complainant’s mother, brother and counselor; (c) police testimony concerning the mattress; and (d) expert testimony bolstering the complainant’s credibility. We consider each in turn.

The letter. The defendant objects for the first time on appeal to the admission of a letter written by the complainant several weeks after his arrest and approximately two years after the last charged act of sexual abuse. The letter, written to “no one in particular,” is a subjective recounting of the complainant’s relationship with the defendant over the years and leading up to the complainant’s August, 1996, criminal acts, and includes graphic details of the pair’s sexual and drug activities. At trial, when his direct examination as to much the same thing was about over, the complainant read the letter aloud to the judge. The judge first made inquiry of defense counsel as to whether he had an objection; he replied that he did not.

[348]*348Even if arguably relevant on the question whether the complainant’s allegations of abuse were concocted to escape criminal liability, the letter in question is textbook inadmissible hearsay. It was not admissible under any exception to the hearsay rule. See Liacos, Massachusetts Evidence, § 8.2.6 (7th ed. 1999). The letter was not admitted, as the Commonwealth now suggests, for the limited purpose of showing the complainant’s state of mind (even if it were relevant for that purpose, itself a questionable proposition), but was instead introduced to prove the truth of its contents, i.e., that events happened as therein described. The admission of the letter in evidence “permitted the complainant to corroborate [his] own testimony and bolster [his] own credibility.” See Commonwealth v. Quincy Q., 434 Mass. 859, 869 (2001). It should not have been admitted.2

That being said, the error was not preserved by objection and we must determine whether it created a substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice. We are quite mindful that this was not a jury trial. See Commonwealth v. Colon, 33 Mass. App. Ct. 304, 308 (1992) (judge is presumed to apply correct legal principles as trier of fact). Nonetheless, the prosecution placed great emphasis on the letter’s probative value3 and the complainant’s credibility was central to the trial. Were this the only eviden-tiary misstep, though the question would be close, we would [349]*349not think it so prejudicial as to require the reversal of the conviction. There are, however, other evidentiary problems.

Fresh complaint. Having declined to rule in limine on the proffered fresh complaint testimony of the complainant’s mother, brother and counselor, the judge admitted such testimony over objection at trial.4

The mother testified in essence that the complainant expressed suicidal thoughts to her in February, 1995, before disclosing that he had been abused by the defendant when he was eleven years old. The complainant was fifteen at the time of the disclosure, which took place about four months after the last charged sexual act.

The complainant’s brother testified that in June, 1995, the complainant told him that the defendant molested him when he was eleven years old. This disclosure occurred almost eight months after the last charged sexual act.

A counselor whom the complainant began seeing in June, 1995, testified as to two episodes of disclosure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
770 N.E.2d 547, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 345, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mazzone-massappct-2002.