Commonwealth v. Mellone

508 N.E.2d 632, 24 Mass. App. Ct. 275, 1987 Mass. App. LEXIS 1976
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 4, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 508 N.E.2d 632 (Commonwealth v. Mellone) 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. Mellone, 508 N.E.2d 632, 24 Mass. App. Ct. 275, 1987 Mass. App. LEXIS 1976 (Mass. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

We affirm convictions of armed assault with intent to commit murder, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, and affirm also the trial judge’s denial of a postjudgment motion for a new trial.1

We outline the Commonwealth’s case in chief and the testimony for the defense. Then we have to consider a claim that the judge committed error in declining to permit a psychiatrist to give certain testimony.

Laurie Paesano, at a bar in Revere called “Jacob’s Ladder” with two female companions — it was “ladies’ night” — telephoned her boyfriend William Cameron (the eventual victim) at his place in East Boston and said she needed a ride home. Cameron responded quickly to the call and stayed at the bar with Paesano for ten to fifteen minutes until closing time at 1:30 a.m. (July 10, 1984). As Paesano and Cameron walked out the front door, they saw two men ahead of them; these were the defendant Michael Mellone and his friend Jeff Tanck. According to Paesano and Cameron, the defendant’s walk was unsteady through drink. In attempting to pass by the defendant, Paesano bumped into him; she said, “Excuse me.” The defendant spoke indistinctly and then called Laurie a “fucking slut.” Paesano said, “Excuse me, what did you say,” and she and the defendant moved toward each other. Cameron stepped between the two. With Paesano and Tanck standing by, the defendant and Cameron did some mutual pushing. Suddenly Cameron felt a tingling in his right forearm. Looking there he saw a “large flap” of skin with exposed tendons; he had suffered a deep cut. Realizing that he had been stabbed, Cameron said, “What are you, crazy?,” and started to back to the entrance of the bar. At the same time the defendant lunged and struck Cameron with a knife in the chest and again he attacked, and opened a wound on the right side of Cameron’s face. Cameron managed to get inside the bar. He was in serious [277]*277condition, hovering near unconsciousness. He had not been carrying a weapon of any kind.2

On the outside, Paesano was shouting and swinging her large (fifteen inch wide) pocketbook at the defendant, striking him in the face. He retreated and promptly left the area with Tanck.

By about 2:00 a.m. the two men were a mile and a half or so from Jacob’s Ladder at a public phone booth close by a fire station3 making some phone calls, one by the defendant to his wife.4 A fire lieutenant, Eugene Doherty, had them in view and hearing from the firehouse. They were laughing and yelling. Doherty heard the defendant say, boisterously, “I cut him. I cut him good,” this accompanied with a stabbing gesture. The defendant was carrying a bloodstained shirt or sweater. Doherty knew that a call had come in about a medical emergency at Jacob’s Ladder to which another fire station had responded. Through his dispatcher he learned more about the episode and, believing the pair at the phone booth might have been involved, he asked the dispatcher to call the police.

Revere police officer Michael Casoli arrived in a few minutes, quickly took in the scene, and called for information about the affair at Jacob’s Ladder. Thinking the two men likely were the actor in the fracas and his companion, Casoli led them into the firehouse. Paesano was brought from Jacob’s Ladder and instantly and positively identified the defendant — “He’s the one.” Doherty testified that the defendant may have been stumbling at the time of arrest, but that his speech was not slurred and he was not obviously or grossly intoxicated. Casoli testified that the defendant appeared to be “feeling pretty good” but was not overcome by drink.

[278]*278Revere officer Adam Dispasquale, searching the area around the entrance to the bar later that morning, found in shrubbery a folding knife, closed, with a four to five inch blade. The handle was covered with blood somewhat diluted by fallen rain. The defendant conceded that the knife was his.

The foregoing Commonwealth’s case was testified to by Cameron, Paesano, and the two officers. For the defense, there was testimony by the defendant and his wife. The defendant’s account ran thus. At 2:00 p.m., July 9, he left his job as an auto mechanic and went home to Medford. He worked around the house (using his knife), and had an early supper, consuming meanwhile three large (sixteen ounce rather than the usual twelve ounce) cans of beer. About 5:30 p.m. , two male friends showed up and all split a liter (a third larger than an ordinary commercial bottle) of homemade wine. Then they went fishing (the defendant carrying his knife). The three drank two more liters of wine while fishing; then they went to a restaurant and later to a friend’s house, with the defendant consuming at these places total of a glass and half of beer and three glasses of wine. At 11:00 p.m. the defendant returned home and drank two large cans of beer. Around 11:30 p.m. he left for Jacob’s Ladder with Tanck (his knife in his pants pocket). The defendant had a can of beer during the drive to the bar, and at the bar he drank beer and two “black Russians” (vodka and kahlua). The defendant remembered leaving the bar at closing time but his memory thereafter was sketchy when it was not blank. He said he recalled being punched in the face and knocked down just after leaving the bar.5 Further, he recalled someone yelling, “Look out. He’s got a straight razor,” and, later, a woman screaming at him at the firehouse. He said he recalled nothing more .of the events of the evening.

The defendant testified, as background, that during the summer of 1984 he was drinking heavily, often with his male friends. It was a circumstance leading to arguments with his [279]*279wife and to two separations from her, that he behaved as if single, not like a married man with a wife and child. He was charged with a number of offenses during the period and on one offense he received probation on condition that he get psychiatric treatment and attend Alcoholics Anonymous. His relations with his wife, he said, were improved at the time of trial. The defendant’s wife testified to the difficulties in 1984, to the improved condition of the marriage, and to the defendant’s general rehabilitation.

Cross-examination of the defendant was severe and sought to show that the defendant’s recall was selective, and his behavior — including his disposal of the knife, his flight, and his conduct at the firehouse — conscious or calculated, rather than lost in the haze of alcohol that he strove to picture through exaggeration of his drinking.

On the whole record a jury could readily find that the defendant was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the crimes charged. He does not argue to the contrary.6 Rather he submits that upon an offer of proof consisting, in substance, of a letter by Dr. Daniel M. Weiss to defense counsel, indicating what this psychiatrist would say if called, the judge should have allowed the testimony. This related, supposedly, to the issues of (a) the specific intent to kill required for conviction of the crime of armed assault with intent to murder, and (b) self-defense.

1(a). At the time of trial (July, 1985), it was already indicated, although it was not quite clear, that cogent psychiatric opinion might be received as relevant on the matter of the specific intent.

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Bluebook (online)
508 N.E.2d 632, 24 Mass. App. Ct. 275, 1987 Mass. App. LEXIS 1976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mellone-massappct-1987.