Commonwealth v. Senbatu
This text of 644 N.E.2d 256 (Commonwealth v. Senbatu) 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.
Opinion
We are compelled to reverse the defendant’s conviction upon an indictment charging him with trafficking in cocaine of a net weight of more than twenty-eight grams but less than one hundred grams. G. L. c. 94E, § 32E(6)(2)(1992 ed.).
In executing a search warrant for the defendant’s apartment, the police confiscated two packets of a white powdery substance from the defendant’s vest pocket. An additional (third) packet was discovered in a man’s jacket hanging over a chair in the kitchen, near where a woman had been sitting. A police officer testified that the defendant acknowledged that the jacket was his. Laboratory analysis revealed that the substance in the three packets was cocaine and that the total net weight of the cocaine in the three packets was 34.3 grams. The defendant objected unsuccessfully to the admission of the cocaine on the ground that the packets were not individually weighed. Possession of the third packet was actively contested by the defendant. The defense theory at trial was that the third packet could have [905]*905been slipped into his jacket by the woman present in the apartment at the time of the search.1
Because there was no evidence as to the weight of the individual packets (it was also not made clear which packet came from the jacket pocket), if the jury were persuaded by the defendant’s argument that he did not possess the third packet, they had no way of determining the weight of the remaining two packets. Nevertheless, given that the three packets weighed close to twenty-eight grams and two of the packets could have weighed less than twenty-eight grams, the defendant could have been charged with possession with intent to distribute cocaine.2 See G. L. c. 94C, § 32A (1992 ed.); Commonwealth v. Chappee, 397 Mass. 508, 523 (1986). Contrast Commonwealth v. Tata, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 23, 26 (1989). Unfortunately, the jury were not given the option to make a finding on that charge. The verdict slip in this case indicated that the defendant had been charged with trafficking in over twenty-eight grams of cocaine and gave the jury the option of finding the defendant (1) not guilty, (2) guilty of the offense as charged, or (3) guilty of the lesser included offense of simple possession of cocaine. As noted, the jury chose option (2).
Had there been evidence of the weight of the individual packets, the jury would also have been warranted in finding the defendant guilty of violating G. L. c. 94C, § 32(A)(1) (1992 ed): trafficking in more than fourteen but less than twenty-eight grams of cocaine. In the absence of such evidence, any conclusion that there were between fourteen and twenty-eight grams of cocaine in two of the packets would have been based on speculation, and an instruction (or verdict slip option) based on § 32E(A)(1) in this case was inappropriate. In instructing the jury, however, the judge informed the jury that possession of over fourteen grams of cocaine could constitute trafficking.3
[906]*906A bench conference at the conclusion of the main charge did not eliminate the confusion. The prosecutor stated, “[0]n the instructions, Judge, you indicated fourteen grams or more.” The judge responded, “No, possession of cocaine, it is fourteen or more, Okay?” The prosecutor answered, “[Tjhe trafficking is twenty-eight grams. Maybe I’m misunderstanding. But in order to find him guilty, let’s say the enhanced penalty, I think the jury has to find twenty-eight grams or more.” The judge responded, “[T] hat’s as charged. The indictment says twenty-eight grams or more. I told them guilty as charged.” Shortly thereafter, the judge said he would explain this to the jury. What the judge in fact did was to explain the verdict slips, outlining the three options for the jury: not guilty, guilty of the offense as charged — “that means possession of cocaine over twenty-eight grams” — or possession of cocaine. The judge did not deliver a supplementary instruction that, in order to prove trafficking, it was the Commonwealth’s burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant possessed an amount of cocaine over twenty-eight grams but less than one hundred grams. The confusing reference to trafficking in over fourteen grams was left uncorrected, and, thus, the jury had no way óf reconciling the judge’s explanation of the verdict slips with the jury instructions on trafficking.
Under the instructions as given, the jury may have believed that they could convict the defendant of trafficking even if they found that the defendant had possession of less than twenty-eight grams of cocaine. This is especially so given the circumstance, discussed above, that the jury were not given any option on the verdict slip of a verdict that the defendant intended to distribute less than twenty-eight grams of cocaine.4
The above errors were compounded when the judge told defense counsel, in the presence of the jury, “And there’s no evidence at all that your client was a user.” As the defense was predicated in part on the theory that the defendant was a consumer of cocaine, not a dealer, the judge’s remark comes perilously close to amounting to an interference with the jury’s fact-finding function.
In the circumstances presented here, there is ample ground for a determination that the defendant did not receive a fair trial.
Judgment reversed.
Verdict set aside.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
644 N.E.2d 256, 38 Mass. App. Ct. 904, 1995 Mass. App. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-senbatu-massappct-1995.