Commonwealth v. Stanton

455 N.E.2d 464, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1490
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 455 N.E.2d 464 (Commonwealth v. Stanton) 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. Stanton, 455 N.E.2d 464, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1490 (Mass. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinions

Kaplan, J.

Reading this transcript critically, one could wish for more circumspection on the part of the trial judge, but one emerges, nevertheless, with the clear view that no such error was committed as could call for reversal of the judgment.

The defendant Lawrence E. Stanton was charged by indictment with (i) assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, to wit, a tire iron, upon Aaron Soltes; (ii) assault with a dangerous weapon, an automobile, upon Soltes; (iii) the same, upon Joshua Hurwitz; and (iv) going away and failing to report after a motor vehicle collision on a public highway. A jury found the defendant guilty of the first and fourth charges, and acquitted him of the second and third. The judge sentenced him on the first offense; the conviction on the fourth charge was placed on file.

The jury could have found the facts as testified to by the Commonwealth’s witnesses, notably Soltes and Hurwitz. On November 1, 1980, about 3:00 p.m., Soltes was driving his 1970 Dodge Dart, with Hurwitz in the passenger seat, in [3]*3a northerly direction on South Street, Waltham.1 Traffic was stopped at a crossing because of construction work, and Soltes was obliged (as were other drivers in line) to do a U turn and proceed in an opposite direction on the same two-lane road. Shortly Soltes had to halt to allow two elderly people to cross. As he did so, the car behind, a 1966 Buick LeSabre driven by the defendant, began loud and repeated honking. Soltes left his vehicle, approached the defendant, and asked what was the problem. The defendant, without leaving his car, said this was not a parking lot. Soltes mentioned the elderly couple and returned to his car and drove off. The defendant followed. A half minute later, the defendant “gunned” his car and passed Soltes. A quarter of a mile further, the defendant’s car was at rest or slowed in the middle of the road, so Soltes had to go around the vehicle. Again the defendant gunned his car and passed Soltes. At the junction of Rivers Street (a continuation of South Street) and Summer Street in Weston, the defendant turned left on Rivers while Soltes went to the right on Summer. Perceiving this, the defendant stopped, backed his car, and followed Soltes on Summer. Coming alongside Soltes, the defendant crowded him and sideswiped the left front fender of his car, denting it. Soltes stopped; the defendant passed him and stopped ten or twelve yards ahead.

Leaving his car with a tire iron in his right hand, the defendant approached Soltes’s car on the driver’s side. Soltes and Hurwitz ran up the car windows. At close quarters, the defendant threw the tire iron against the driver’s window shattering it and striking Soltes in the area of his left eye. The defendant, going back to his car, turned down the license plate so as to conceal the license number. Then he drove away.

Hurwitz, who was a physician, after inspecting Soltes’s eye, took over the driving and brought Soltes to the Waltham Hospital. A plastic surgeon applied some thirty su[4]*4tures to the lacerations above and below the eye. Fragments of glass had lodged in the forehead and scalp. At the time of trial Soltes still complained of an impairment of sight and some numbness of his forehead.

Soltes and Hurwitz had in fact seen and were able to record the license number of the defendant’s car (which, as it later appeared, was registered to the defendant). The police showed them, separately, an array of mugshots of seven or eight men and each selected the defendant’s picture. The tire iron was found in Soltes’s car.

Such was the substance of the Commonwealth’s case. The defendant took the stand to tell a different story beginning with an account of insulting remarks by Soltes at the South Street encounter; describing differently the movements of the cars; suggesting that Soltes was responsible for any collision; and protesting that the defendant’s tracking of Soltes was for the purpose of getting him to stop and exchange papers about the damage to the defendant’s car (the defendant spoke of two contacts, the first early in the sequence). The defendant admitted he had thrown the tire iron at the closed window. He had been “antagonized,” he said, by Soltes’s refusal to stop and parley. He admitted turning the license plate.

Ralph Kouyoumjian, who from boyhood knew the defendant, was one of three passengers in the defendant’s car. Called by the defense, he gave a muddled account of the course from South Street. According to this witness, the defendant had walked toward Soltes swinging the tire iron and it was by accident that it struck the car window.

1. It is first contended on the appeal that the defendant was denied a fair trial because various pleasantries by the judge created an atmosphere of levity that could have led the jury to make undeserved findings of guilt. No objection was taken, but the defendant points to the likely embarrassment of counsel in mentioning such a grievance to an offending judge. See Commonwealth v. Fitzgerald, 380 Mass. 840, 846 (1980) (also suggesting the possibility of objection out of the jury’s hearing). We have examined the [5]*5transcript with abundant care and believe the complaint to be much overdrawn. The judge at several points made humorous sallies of the robustious type that could have scored with the jury, although they might easily have resisted the impulse to be amused.2 But it seems to us unlikely in the extreme that the jury became so intoxicated by the fun as to fail in their duties. Indeed the judge reminded them repeatedly of the importance of their fact-finding function.

2. Over objection, a full face, “sanitized” picture of the defendant, the one selected by Soltes and Hurwitz, was received in evidence at the instance of the Commonwealth. The defendant argues that this was unnecessry, as the parties were prepared to stipulate to the fact of such selection and there was no issue of identification. Cf. Commonwealth v. Rodriguez, 378 Mass. 296, 309 (1979). The record colloquy about a stipulation seems unclear. The sense of it may have been that the array need not be introduced; only the chosen picture would be. However, we need not dwell on the matter in detail. The claimed prejudice to the defendant must arise from the picture’s suggesting, despite its being sanitized, that the defendant had a criminal record. But the defendant chose to testify and his criminal convictions were offered on cross-examination to impeach his credibility.3 Thus any possible prejudice on account of the picture fell away. See Commonwealth v. Whitehead, 379 Mass. 640, 660 (1980). It cannot be supposed on the present record that the defendant was somehow impelled to take the stand because of the introduction of the picture.

3. On cross-examination of Kouyoumjian, he was asked whether he had reported “the accident” to the police. There was objection (overruled) on the ground that, as a passenger, not the driver, this witness was not bound under [6]*6the statute to make a report, and the question was misleading because it suggested that he was so bound. The Commonwealth argued that the question was proper as bearing on the witness’s bias.

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Bluebook (online)
455 N.E.2d 464, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-stanton-massappct-1983.