Commonwealth v. Strother

378 N.E.2d 958, 375 Mass. 462, 1978 Mass. LEXIS 1007
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 20, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 378 N.E.2d 958 (Commonwealth v. Strother) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Strother, 378 N.E.2d 958, 375 Mass. 462, 1978 Mass. LEXIS 1007 (Mass. 1978).

Opinion

Quirico, J.

The defendant was indicted for the alleged murder on July 2, 1972, of Robert Brown (the victim). The defendant’s principal defense was one of not guilty by reason of insanity. The judge submitted the case to the jury with instructions that they could return one of the following verdicts: not guilty, not guilty by reason of insanity, guilty of murder in the first degree, or guilty of murder in the second degree. The judge instructed the jury fully on the elements of the crime of murder in the first degree committed with deliberately premeditated malice aforethought, and murder in the first degree committed with extreme atrocity or cruelty. G. L. c. 265, § 1. The jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree.

The defendant’s trial counsel seasonably claimed an appeal, but he filed no assignment of alleged errors. The defendant’s present appellate counsel, pursuant to leave granted by a single justice of this court under G. L. c. 278, § 33D, filed such an assignment on December 30, 1976.

Although the assignment sets forth fourteen alleged errors, only three of which are described as based on exceptions saved, the defendant has argued none of these errors in his brief; they are therefore all treated as waived. Commonwealth v. Flynn, 362 Mass. 455, 480 (1972). S.J.C. Rule 1:13, as amended, 366 Mass. 853 (1975). The defendant has elected instead to argue a single issue, stated in his brief to be the following: “Whether this Court should exercise its powers under G. L. c. 278, § 33E to order a new trial based upon the psychiatric evidence of the defendant’s insanity adduced at trial.”

Having considered the “whole case . . . [on the basis of] the law and the evidence,” as required by § 33E, 1 we con- *464 elude that the defendant is entitled to no relief from the judgment.

The following is a brief summary of the evidence of the events, mostly undisputed, relating to the alleged murder of the victim on July 2, 1972. About October 6, 1970, the defendant, then twenty-eight years old, was indicted for two alleged murders unrelated to the present case. Except as otherwise stated below, he was, from that time, continuously in custody at the Suffolk County jail awaiting trial on those two indictments, 2 and was still in custody on the date of the alleged murder involved in the present case. Sometime in October, 1970, he was transferred to the Bridge-water State Hospital (Bridgewater) for psychiatric treatment. He returned to the jail approximately a month later. About midnight of an unspecified date in February, 1971, he attempted to strangle his cell mate at the jail, and he was again committed to Bridgewater for a period of time. On May 7, 1971, when he was back at the jail, the defendant assaulted and beat a different inmate who was then his cell mate. The latter was found lying in a pool of blood. The defendant was again committed to Bridgewater. He returned to the jail on December 14, 1971. Each of the cell mates beaten by the defendant was seventeen or eighteen years old.

*465 On June 22, 1972, the victim, then eighteen years old, became the defendant’s cell mate. They were the only occupants of the cell. It was equipped with two cots, a sink and a toilet bowl. About 2:40 a.m. on July 2, 1972, a jail guard making his rounds observed both prisoners apparently asleep in their cots, and about 3:30 a.m. another guard making his rounds made the same observation. Sometime between 3:45 a.m. and 4 a.m. several guards who were in the guard room in the rotunda of the jail heard one or more strange noises described as thumps or thuds coming from the direction of the defendant’s cell, which was located about sixty feet away. The first guard to arrive at the cell saw the defendant lying on his cot hitting the wall with his arm. The victim appeared to be asleep in his cot with the covers pulled up over his head. The guard asked the defendant if there was anything wrong and the defendant said that he was “OK.” The guard returned to the guard room to get coffee for the defendant and while there he again heard a strange noise coming from the cell. When the guard returned to the cell, the defendant blocked the guard’s view of the victim. There was a moan and a gurgle coming from the victim’s cot. At that time a radio over the victim’s cot was playing at a low volume and the defendant turned up the volume. When the guard asked whether the victim was “all right,” the defendant replied that he was, and when the guard asked, “Are you sure?”, the defendant answered, “I’m sure. But what is it to you, you . . . [foul language not repeated].”

The guard returned to the guardroom where the captain of the guard called the police, and they then returned to the cell. They found the defendant washing his hands. They asked him to get away from the victim so they could take the victim out of the cell. The defendant said to them, “No, he’s no good to you, because I killed the . . . [the same foul language not repeated].” The defendant then pulled the covers off the victim exposing the latter’s body lying in a pool of blood. The police had then arrived and a guard went to the cell and found that the defendant had pushed his cot *466 against the cell door to prevent it from being opened, and that he was in the cell holding a broomstick and a rolled up towel. At the guard’s request the defendant pulled his cot back from the door and the guard entered the cell, checked the victim for a pulse, found none, and removed the body to the aisle outside the cell. Much blood was flowing from the back of the victim’s head. The removal of the body exposed a large blood stain covering much of the upper part of the victim’s cot, and there were some spatterings of blood on the wall at one side of the cot. The defendant remained in the locked cell where he cried and said, “Oh, my God, why do I do these things? Why did I kill him?”

About one-half hour later the guards heard loud noises coming from the defendant’s cell. When they went there they found that the cell door had been forced open. The defendant was standing outside the cell with a broomstick in one hand and a toilet seat in the other. The toilet seat, which had been pulled off its hinges, was made of cast iron and weighed about fourteen pounds. About 6 a.m. the defendant was moved to another cell. A criminalist who examined and tested some “reddish-brown stains” on the toilet seat determined that “they were [stains by] blood of human origin.”

The medical examiner testified that his examination disclosed that the victim had suffered “numerous depressed fractures — that is, fractures that were pushed inward — in the right parietal, right temporal and occipital regions . . . [that t]he total area involved with these fractures measured four by four inches . . . [and that o]ne loose fragment which measured one and a half by two inches, from the right temporal bone . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
378 N.E.2d 958, 375 Mass. 462, 1978 Mass. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-strother-mass-1978.