Commonwealth v. O'Kane

760 N.E.2d 291, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 466, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 1302
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedDecember 27, 2001
DocketNo. 00-P-525
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 760 N.E.2d 291 (Commonwealth v. O'Kane) 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. O'Kane, 760 N.E.2d 291, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 466, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 1302 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

A six-person jury in Fitchburg District Court found the defendant, Casey O’Kane, guilty of assault and battery on his girlfriend, April Lepage. He appeals from the judgment of conviction.

The defendant defended at the trial by urging that he lacked criminal intent, that what the Commonwealth characterized as his intentional punch to April’s face was in fact his slapping her cheeks in an attempt to bring her to consciousness from what he took to be an overdose of drugs. The jury by their verdict rejected the defendant’s version. The defendant did not request [467]*467a jury instruction on a defense of so-called “necessity,” which in some narrow situations allows a person to commit a breach of law in order to respond to an exigent danger. On this appeal the defendant argues that he was entitled on the record to an instruction on necessity, that his oversight in failing to request it should be forgiven, and that he should be accorded a new trial in which he may secure the instruction — a remedy to avert, so he says, a “substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice,” Commonwealth v. Freeman, 352 Mass. 556, 563-564 (1967).

After recounting the facts as revealed at the trial, we deal with the defendant’s argument and some further points and conclude that the conviction should be affirmed.

1. The jury could see the Commonwealth’s case thus. In the year 1999, the complaining witness, April Lepage, and the defendant, Casey O’Kane, were living together at the home of April’s sister, Betty Ouellette, at 79 City Hall Avenue, Gardner. April was an alcoholic and O’Kane at least a heavy drinker. On the morning of March 17, 1999, St. Patrick’s Day, the defendant borrowed $10 from Betty and went out and bought vodka and beer to supplement the liquor on hand. It was. after 1:00 p.m. when he returned home. During the afternoon, soon after Betty left to go to work, Nancy, sister of April and Betty, arrived with her son, Michael. The four — April, Nancy, Michael, and the defendant — sat on the porch, talking, with April and the defendant drinking. In the late afternoon, the defendant drove Nancy and Michael to their house on Cross Street. Then the defendant dropped by his friend Twyla’s residence. There he continued his drinking.

Returning home after 7:00 p.m. (there is uncertainty about times), the defendant met April downstairs. When he admitted visiting Twyla, April upbraided him angrily, both for not remaining with her and for consorting with Twyla. April was suggesting that he was having an affair with Twyla, to which he answered that another man was present during his visit. April stormed upstairs to their bedroom. The defendant followed. The recriminations continued. The defendant pinned April by her wrists, then punched her in the face. This split or otherwise injured her inner upper lip and she bled from her mouth. She went downstairs and so was not present when the defendant did [468]*468damage to objects in the bedroom- and broke through the glass of the room window.

About 11:00 p.m., Betty came in from work. April — by Betty’s observation crying, her lips swollen, bleeding from the mouth — told Betty what had happened, that the defendant had punched her. When Betty encountered the defendant downstairs, she invited him to talk to her; she wanted his side of the story. They sat down in the kitchen and conversed for a while.

By 4:00 a.m. the defendant, having made his way outside to the rear porch of the house, was beating upon the door. Finally he broke through its plastic panel. At this point Betty called the police.

Officer James Trifiro at the police station, 31 City Hall Avenue, responded to a call of an ongoing breaking and entering at Betty’s house. In a matter of seconds, he reached the rear of the house and saw a man, the defendant, seemingly trying to hide behind some railings of the back porch. The defendant, evidently drunk, responded with some difficulty to an order to come forward. After handcuffing him, Trifiro turned him over to backup Officer Fowler. Trifiro entered the house and spoke to Betty. He observed April: she was very upset, crying, in need of assistance; her lips were swollen; blood was coming from her mouth. He took two pictures of her face, received in evidence, showing blood stains on the upper lip. She said there had been an altercation and the defendant punched her in the face. Trifiro then placed the defendant under arrest. Trifiro saw the disturbance and broken window of the bedroom.

Later in March, April received a letter from the defendant, reproduced in part in the margin.1 He wrote he loved her and implored her to save him from jail and give only the district at[469]*469tomey an account of the episode as he then set it out. “This just may work.” April testified the letter was a he that the defendant was asking her to tell.

The defendant testified in his own behalf. His testimony corresponded with his letter sent to April. In the early afternoon he borrowed from Betty, bought liquor, and returned home. The drinking on the porch and visit by Nancy and Mike ran to 5:30 p.m., and, after driving them to Cross Street, he visited with Twyla, where he drank and also took two hits of crack cocaine. He arrived home at 7:00 or 7:30 p.m. April ranted at him for fifteen minutes, accusing him about Twyla. She ran upstairs. He sat in the parlor before the television set for forty-five minutes, then went upstairs. He found April lying on the bed in underwear and socks. Her drink was gone. On the dresser a pillbox of Xanax was open, he could not tell how far gone. He grabbed April by the arms, shook her, and called her name, without response. He slapped her cheeks trying to snap her out of it. Then he turned on the cold water in the bathtub, removed April’s underwear and socks, and started to lift her, when she started to come out of it. She was upset, she yelled, she said, “I’m bleeding.” She got dressed, yelled, “Why don’t you go back to that whore,” and started throwing punches at his chest. He backed up and in the turmoil his head and shoulder broke the window glass. “[Y]ou broke Betty’s window,” she said. He said, “I’m out of here. I’m leaving.” It was about 9:30 p.m. He remembered nothing after that.

2. The defendant argues that upon this record he was entitled, had he asked for it, to an instruction on the defense of necessity. We think he was not so entitled, and further on we show that the verdict and outcome would have been the same if that instruction had been given.

The necessity defense is available only “under very limited circumstances” (per Liacos, C.J., dissenting in Commonwealth v. Hutchins, 410 Mass. 726, 733 [1991]). A passage in Commonwealth v. Brugmann, 13 Mass. App. Ct. 373, 379 (1982), [470]*470since adopted also by the Supreme Judicial Court,2 described these “circumstances” in terms of the following three essentials, each and all to be satisfied in order to achieve the defense: “(1) the defendant is faced with a clear and imminent danger, not one which is debatable or speculative; (2) the defendant can reasonably expect that his action will be effective as the direct cause of abating the danger; (3) there is no legal alternative which will be effective in abating the danger . . . ,”3

The recent case of Commonwealth v. Pike, 428 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
760 N.E.2d 291, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 466, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 1302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-okane-massappct-2001.