Commonwealth v. Perez

89 N.E.3d 1205, 92 Mass. App. Ct. 1106
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 2017
Docket16-P-914
StatusPublished

This text of 89 N.E.3d 1205 (Commonwealth v. Perez) 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. Perez, 89 N.E.3d 1205, 92 Mass. App. Ct. 1106 (Mass. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

The defendant was indicted for trafficking in twenty-eight or more grams of heroin, and a related school zone violation. The alleged heroin was discovered by a State trooper through a patfrisk of the defendant following an exit order issued during a routine traffic stop. A Superior Court judge allowed the defendant's motion to suppress the alleged heroin, ruling that it was the product of an unjustified exit order and an unjustified patfrisk.2 This court reversed that order in an unpublished memorandum and order issued pursuant to our rule 1:28. See Commonwealth v. Perez, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 1115 (2015). We remanded the case for the judge to consider certain additional arguments that the defendant had made to her, but that she had not reached in her initial ruling. The issues to be considered on remand included, among others, whether the trooper exceeded the permissible scope of a patfrisk.

On remand, the judge addressed the additional unresolved issues, ruling in the Commonwealth's favor on the scope of the patfrisk. However, her primary focus was the correctness of this court's memorandum and order regarding the propriety of the exit order and of the initiation of the patfrisk. She used the remand as an opportunity to state her view that this court both misinterpreted her factual findings and improperly made its own findings in violation of the principles enunciated in Commonwealth v. Jones-Pannell, 472 Mass. 429, 436-438 (2015) (discussing limitations on an appellate court's supplementation of a trial court judge's findings).3 The judge reaffirmed her earlier ruling that both the exit order and the initiation of the patfrisk were invalid, and she once again allowed the motion to suppress on that basis.

After obtaining permission from a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court, the Commonwealth brought a second interlocutory appeal. In this appeal, the Commonwealth argues that this court resolved the propriety of the exit order and the initiation of the patfrisk in the earlier appeal, and that the judge was not free to revisit those issues on remand. According to the Commonwealth, the judge exceeded the scope of the remand and in effect "overruled" this court's earlier decision.

In response, the defendant urges us to conclude, based principally on Jones-Pannell, that it was our court that overstepped its institutional bounds in the earlier appeal, and that the motion judge did not overstep her authority in making supplemental findings of facts on remand. He also argues that even to the extent that our earlier ruling established the "law of the case," we may revisit that ruling so as to avoid "manifest injustice" and to square the ruling with case law that was published in the interim. See King v. Driscoll, 424 Mass. 1, 7-8 (1996) (discussing when an appellate court can revisit an issue already decided in the same case). In the end, we need not resolve this particular debate between the parties, because we affirm the judge's order allowing the motion to suppress on different grounds.4

Background.5 During the afternoon of February 27, 2011, State Trooper Joseph Gray was on routine patrol in the vicinity of Edward Everett Square in the Dorchester section of Boston. He randomly ran the license plate of the car in which the defendant was a passenger (a Honda) and learned from Department of Motor Vehicle records that that license plate was assigned to a different make of car.6 This raised the possibility that the car was unregistered, and the trooper thus had the driver pull over. The driver, who was unable to produce a valid registration certificate, explained that his wife had just purchased the vehicle, and he produced a bill of sale documenting its purchase six days earlier. See G. L. c. 90, § 2, fifth par. (allowing the purchaser of a motor vehicle to transfer the registration of an existing motor vehicle that he no longer possesses to the newly acquired one, and establishing a seven-day grace period under which one can operate the vehicle using a bill of sale as documentation of the intended transfer). The trooper acknowledged at the motion to suppress hearing that he was aware of this newly-acquired vehicle provision, but he maintained that the driver did not produce a bill of sale or any other documentation to him (apart from his driver's license). The judge discredited the trooper's testimony on this point and instead found that the driver did provide the trooper a bill of sale.7

Asserting that the vehicle had to be towed because it was unregistered, the trooper ordered the defendant out of the vehicle and pat frisked him. On remand, the judge made the following findings regarding the patfrisk, none of which the Commonwealth challenges as clearly erroneous:

"In the course of the pat frisk, [the trooper] felt the front pocket of the defendant's jacket, and the defendant tensed up. [The trooper] felt something hard in the pocket, although it did have some 'give' to it. [The trooper] reached into the pocket and retrieved what was inside. The 'feel' of the object was not sufficiently definite for [the trooper] to form a reasonable belief that the object was drugs nor was it consistent with the feel of a sharp object, like a knife, that could be wielded as a weapon."

The object that the trooper retrieved from the defendant's pocket turned out to be "a bag containing a white powdery substance," the alleged heroin for which the defendant eventually was indicted.

Discussion. For purposes of our analysis, we assume arguendo that both the exit order to the defendant and the trooper's initiating a patfrisk of him were justified. We turn to an issue that the parties agree was properly before the judge on remand: whether the trooper exceeded the permissible scope of a patfrisk.8

A patfrisk is "a carefully limited search of the outer clothing of [a detained person who poses a safety threat] in an attempt to discover weapons which might be used to assault [the officer]." Commonwealth v. Torres, 433 Mass. 669, 675 n.6 (2001), quoting from Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 30 (1968). As a matter of constitutional law, a patfrisk must be "confined to what is minimally necessary to learn whether the suspect is armed and to disarm him should weapons be discovered."9 Commonwealth v. Wilson, 441 Mass. 390, 396 (2004). "Only after the pat-down gives indication that a weapon is present do the police have the privilege to search further." Commonwealth v. Silva, 366 Mass. 402, 408 (1974).10

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Related

Terry v. Ohio
392 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1968)
Commonwealth v. Fraser
573 N.E.2d 979 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1991)
Commonwealth v. Silva
318 N.E.2d 895 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1974)
Commonwealth v. Johnson
602 N.E.2d 555 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1992)
Commonwealth v. White
12 N.E.3d 348 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2014)
Commonwealth v. Jones-Pannell
35 N.E.3d 357 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2015)
King v. Driscoll
673 N.E.2d 859 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1996)
Commonwealth v. Torres
745 N.E.2d 945 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2001)
Commonwealth v. Wilson
805 N.E.2d 968 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2004)
Commonwealth v. Washington
869 N.E.2d 605 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 N.E.3d 1205, 92 Mass. App. Ct. 1106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-perez-massappct-2017.