Commonwealth v. Roderiques

940 N.E.2d 1234, 78 Mass. App. Ct. 515, 2011 Mass. App. LEXIS 5
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 2011
Docket08-P-1392
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 940 N.E.2d 1234 (Commonwealth v. Roderiques) 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. Roderiques, 940 N.E.2d 1234, 78 Mass. App. Ct. 515, 2011 Mass. App. LEXIS 5 (Mass. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

McHugh, J.

A Bristol County grand jury returned two indictments charging the defendant, Elizabeth Roderiques, with offenses that resulted in severe injuries to her infant child. The first indictment charged her with committing an assault and battery upon a child under fourteen years of age causing substantial [516]*516bodily injury. See G. L. c. 265, § 13J(¿>), second par. The second charged her with wantonly and recklessly permitting an assault and battery upon a child that caused the child substantial bodily injury. See G. L. c. 265, § 13J(¿>), fourth par.1 At the defendant’s request and with the Commonwealth’s agreement, the trial judge charged the jury that reckless endangerment of a child, see G. L. c. 265, § 13L, was a lesser included offense of the offense charged in the second indictment.

After trial, a Superior Court jury acquitted the defendant of the two offenses charged in the indictments but found her guilty of reckless endangerment of a child. The defendant then filed a motion to vacate the conviction, claiming that reckless endangerment was not a lesser included offense and that the charge she had requested was erroneous and should not have been given. The judge denied the motion and the defendant appeals, asserting that (1) reckless endangerment is not a lesser included offense of wantonly or recklessly permitting an assault and battery on a child causing substantial bodily injury; (2) there was no rational basis in the evidence to present the charge of wantonly or recklessly creating a risk of serious bodily injury to a child; and (3) the Commonwealth’s expert impermissibly offered an opinion on an ultimate issue in the case. We affirm.

Facts. When the record is viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, Commonwealth v. Latimore, 378 Mass. 671, 676-677 (1979), the jury could have found that, in December, 2003, the seventeen year old defendant lived with her boyfriend, Shawn Cambria, and her infant son in a New Bedford apartment. On the afternoon of December 23, 2003, the defendant took the baby, then seven weeks of age, to a pediatrician because he was displaying flu-like symptoms and had kept her awake throughout the previous evening with his fussiness and refusal to eat. The treating physician gave her some medication, and she returned [517]*517to her apartment. Apart from the flu symptoms and a small bruise on his cheek, nothing out of the ordinary about the infant was discovered during the visit.

During the night of December 23 and the early morning hours of December 24, the defendant, Cambria, and the baby were alone in the apartment. At some point, the defendant fell asleep with Cambria on a pull-out sofa in the apartment’s living room. The baby was in a recliner on the floor close by the defendant’s head. Several times during the night, the baby awakened the defendant with his fussing, and she got up to feed and change him. At one point, the defendant was awakened by the baby, who was crying because he had lost his pacifier. The defendant asked Cambria to put the pacifier back in his mouth. Cambria complied, although he told the defendant that the baby was a “crybaby” and told the infant to “stop fussing.”

At approximately 9:00 a.m. on December 24, the defendant telephoned her father and, in an hysterical voice, told him that the infant’s arm had been dislocated. The father and his girlfriend’s daughter arrived at the apartment within minutes of the call and discovered the infant lying on a bed crying, with Cam-bria sitting beside him. The baby’s arm was bent and red. They rushed him to a local hospital where he was examined and later airlifted to Boston Children’s Hospital.

Before the airlift, two New Bedford police officers observed the baby and saw that he had a large red bruise on his upper right arm, a bruise on his nose, a bruise on his left cheek that extended to his left ear, and bruising on his abdomen and upper thighs. When the infant was finally examined at Children’s Hospital, doctors discovered that he had suffered a fracture of the right upper arm, or humerus; multiple fractures to both legs; rib fractures; a compression fracture of the spine; and a fractured clavicle.

The infant’s injuries fell into at least three distinct categories. The break in his right lower right leg was a so-called “bucket handle fracture,” produced by a forceful pulling or twisting at the end of the limb and a frequent component of what is known as shaken baby syndrome. The compression fracture to the spine was produced by a force that traveled along the spine vertically, such as the force generated when a child is slammed down on his buttocks. The remaining fractures were of general [518]*518traumatic origin. All of the injuries would have required a significant amount of force and would have produced significant pain, producing an outcry from the baby and making him difficult to console.2

When interviewed by the social workers and the police, the defendant first said that the baby had slept in his bassinet that night, that she fed him at 2 a.m. and 6 a.m., and that she noticed nothing out of the ordinary until she awoke up at 9 a.m. and discovered the significant bruising on his arm. Later, the defendant said that she had slept on the sofa bed with Cambria and that the infant had been in a recliner on the floor near her head. When asked by a State police investigator if she knew who had injured the baby, the defendant responded “something to the effect of ‘It wasn’t me. It must have been Shawn’ ” (Cambria), who, she indicated, had been yelling at the baby that evening to stop crying and sometimes would “handle the baby a little more aggressively than appropriate.”

For his part, Cambria said that the defendant must have hurt the baby because he had not done so. However, he did say that he had been playing “air drums” with the baby on the evening of December 23, describing “air drums” as a maneuver in which he grabbed the infant’s arms and waved them around in the air as if the baby were playing drums. Cambria, who claimed to suffer from periodic blackouts, also said that it was possible that he had stepped on the baby on the recliner when he got up during the evening to use the bathroom or get a drink of water, though he did not think that had happened.

Discussion. Against that backdrop, the defendant first argues that reckless endangerment of a child, an offense requiring proof that the defendant “wantonly or recklessly engage[d] in conduct that create[d] a substantial risk of serious bodily injury . . . to a child or wantonly or recklessly fail[ed] to take reasonable steps to alleviate such risk where there is a duty to act,” G. L. c. 265, § 13L, inserted by St. 2002, c. 322, § 2, is not a lesser included offense of G. L. c. 265, § 13J(¿»), fourth par., the [519]*519offense with which the defendant was actually charged in the second indictment.3

Although the Commonwealth and the defendant are sharply divided on the question, we find it unnecessary to resolve it. In our view, even if the trial judge erred in giving the instruction because § 13L is not, strictly speaking, a lesser included offense of any of the offenses set out in § 13J(¿>), the defendant invited the error, and no substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice arose when the judge accepted the invitation.4

We have discussed the concept of invited error in earlier decisions. In Commonwealth v. Knight,

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Related

Commonwealth v. Roderiques
968 N.E.2d 908 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2012)
Commonwealth v. Roderiques
940 N.E.2d 1234 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
940 N.E.2d 1234, 78 Mass. App. Ct. 515, 2011 Mass. App. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-roderiques-massappct-2011.