Commonwealth v. Miller

865 N.E.2d 825, 68 Mass. App. Ct. 835, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 495
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 4, 2007
DocketNo. 05-P-1252
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 865 N.E.2d 825 (Commonwealth v. Miller) 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. Miller, 865 N.E.2d 825, 68 Mass. App. Ct. 835, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 495 (Mass. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Berry, J.

The principal issue on appeal in this case involves the obligation of a trial judge to conduct an evidentiary hearing and to enter a preliminary ruling concerning the admissibility of a defendant’s confession, precedent to placement of that confession before the jury, where there is squarely framed a substantial question concerning the voluntariness of that confession. See Commonwealth v. Tavares, 385 Mass. 140, 150-151, cert. denied, 457 U.S. 1137 (1982). Before a confession is spread on the trial record before the jury, such an evidentiary hearing, followed by a preliminary determination by the trial judge that the confession was voluntary, is constitutionally required.1 The [836]*836requirement that there be an evidentiary hearing outside the presence of the jury, followed by a judicial decision on voluntariness, applies even when, as here, the confession was obtained, not by government law enforcement, but rather by private investigators.

In this case, tried to a jury in the District Court, it was very much a live issue whether the defendant’s confession was of free will and rational intellect, or instead was elicited by oppressive interrogation techniques of the in-house investigators of the defendant’s employer, Home Depot. “Once a defendant has presented evidence that the statements at issue were made involuntarily, the burden is on the Commonwealth to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the statements were made voluntarily.” Commonwealth v. Selby, 420 Mass. 656, 663 (1995). Notwithstanding troubling evidence concerning isola[837]*837tian and coercive questioning — enhanced in effect by the defendant’s mental condition and distraught reactions — the trial judge did not conduct an evidentiary voir dire hearing, and did not independently assess the voluntariness of the confession. Instead, the judge reasoned, such issues were to be left for the jury’s deliberation.

In the absence of the defendant’s confession, the Commonwealth’s proof of the defendant’s guilt was far from strong, and from all that appears in the record, the defendant’s confession was integral to conviction. Because the confession was critical evidence, perhaps outcome determinative, we reverse.

1. The inchoate trial evidence and the impact of the confession. We briefly reference the trial evidence to provide the backdrop against which to measure the impact of the defendant’s confession. We then turn to the evidence concerning the manner in which the interrogation of the defendant was conducted by the in-house investigators.

The Commonwealth’s theory of proof on the larceny over $250 charge was that some $1,000 was missing from the defendant’s cash register after she finished working her shift at Home Depot on February 20, 2003, and that missing paperwork reconciling cash in, general receipts, and transfers out of the defendant’s cash register drawer pointed to the defendant as the most likely pilferer of the money. The defendant’s confession was pivotal in locking in the prosecution’s theory of proof. However, there was counterpointal evidence suggesting that another person or persons may also have had the opportunity and means to take the money. Specifically, the evidence showed that there were a number of other employees who might have been involved in the process of transferring cash from the registers and that these other employees may also have had access to the vault to which the cash was transferred. The wider universe of persons with potential access to cash taken in through the defendant’s register also encompassed persons with access to the accounting paperwork, including so-called “slips” generated in connection with transfers of cash from a particular register to the vault, and this access could again potentially lead to paperwork being diverted from the main accounting stream and disappearing before being reconciled in the final day’s accounting for a register.

[838]*838The system for the transfer of cash from a register to the vault, the attendant paperwork, and the accounting therefor may be briefly described as follows. Cashiers wrapped large amounts of cash (over $500) in their registers into “strips.” The cash so stripped and packaged was forwarded with a two-part slip to the vault via a pneumatic tube system. A bookkeeper in the vault then separated one copy of the slip and returned the second copy to the originating cashier to be placed in the register to account for the cash taken out and transferred.

At day’s end, the cashier was to turn over her remaining cash in the register; prepare a till sheet, recording the day’s cash receipts and other transactions; and compile all financial records, including all slips for strips of cash sent through the pneumatic tube system. In connection with the case against the defendant, Home Depot’s bookkeeper testified that on February 21, 2003, she discovered a shortfall of $1,000 for the defendant’s cash register for the prior day, February 20, 2003, and that bookkeeping did not have a slip for a $1,000 strip of cash transferred from the defendant’s register to the vault.

The pneumatic tube system, however, had points of vulnerability. John Skafidas, a former department manager at the Home Depot store, testified that the pneumatic tube system sometimes caused the cash to get stuck. When that happened, another Home Depot employee, acting alone, would have to fix it. In such instances, there was an opportunity for conversion. Skafidas also testified about how the bookkeepers in the vault sometimes left the safe open, with cash readily accessible. He noted that at least six people in the store could access the vault with their keys, and that the access keys were from time to time passed around to others in the store. There was also testimony by the defendant that strips of cash sent by the pneumatic tube system sometimes ended up at other cash registers instead of the vault.

At trial, the defendant flatly denied that she stole the $1,000, and said that she only signed the written confession and a restitution form because she was fearful and distraught.2 The defendant stated that the paperwork relating to strips did not [839]*839always come back from bookkeeping the same day, and that sometimes, she could not “balance [her] paperwork at the end of [her] shift.” According to the defense, that there was not immediate reconciliation of the defendant’s cash drawer on the day of the loss was important because had the paperwork from bookkeeping been reconciled with the cash transfers from the defendant’s register at the end of her shift, there would have been a better chance of tracing the loss and demonstrating that it was not the defendant who took the money. On that point, Skafidas stated that when a cashier’s register is short, the matter is addressed immediately with the cashier. That was not done here. Indeed, the defense notes that, consistent with her profession of noninvolvement in the missing $1,000, the defendant was allowed to run her register for five days after it was discovered that cash was missing. Given the absence of an immediate accounting of the defendant’s cash drawer, there was only what the defense characterizes as a “delayed” investigation, which improperly and exclusively targeted the defendant, while leaving other potential suspects afoot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
865 N.E.2d 825, 68 Mass. App. Ct. 835, 2007 Mass. App. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-miller-massappct-2007.