Commonwealth v. Tejeda

32 Mass. L. Rptr. 426
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 4, 2014
DocketNo. SUCR201210410
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Mass. L. Rptr. 426 (Commonwealth v. Tejeda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Tejeda, 32 Mass. L. Rptr. 426 (Mass. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Sanders, Janet L., J.

This case arises from a robbery gone awry. As the Commonwealth’s evidence at trial showed, the defendant Robinson Tejeda and two others planned to hold up a drug dealer, only to have the target of the robbery kill one of the robbers, Christopher Pichardo. The defendant and the other surviving accomplice, Stephane Etienne, were both charged (among other things) with armed robbery and [427]*427with the murder of Pichardo, the Commonwealth proceeding under the felony murder rule. The two cases were severed for trial, and the case against Tejeda proceeded to a jury trial first before this Court.

Despite grave misgivings, the Court followed the most recent Supreme Judicial Court homicide instructions and told the jury that, if it were to find the defendant guilty of armed robbery, robbery as a matter of law was an inherently dangerous felony, so that the only remaining element that the Commonwealth had to satisfy in order to find the defendant guilty of murder was to demonstrate that Pichardo was killed during the commission of the robbery. The jury did indeed find the defendant guilty of armed robbery (and this Court sees no basis on which to disturb that conclusion). Since there was little question that Pic-hardo had been killed during the robbery, it was of no surprise that the jury went on to find the defendant guilty of murder. At sentencing, however, this Court set aside the guilty verdict on the murder charge, since I was convinced that, if the SJC were to confront this issue today, it would follow the majority of jurisdictions as well as its own precedent and conclude that the felony murder rule does not apply where one’s accomplice in the underlying felony is killed by the victim. This Memorandum explains this Court’s reasoning.

BACKGROUND

Viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the evidence against the defendant was as follows. Frederick Reynoso was known by the defendant and others to sell marijuana among other drugs. Codefendant Etienne set up a meeting with Reynoso, ostensibly to purchase marijuana from him. Instead, according to the testimony at trial, Etienne together with the defendant and Pichardo (known as “Chino”) decided to “catch a lick” or rob the drug dealer. Pic-hardo had a gun and the defendant had the car that was needed to drive the three to the location where the drugs were stashed. In the early afternoon of January 14, 2012, they picked up Reynoso in Malden and proceeded to 23 Trull Street in Dorchester. Reynoso’s cousins, Jonathan and Luis Santiago, lived at that address.

Reynoso entered the front door of the house, and proceeded to the basement with Jonathan Santiago.1 The defendant parked his car on a side street and remained there.

Pichardo, carrying a gun in his pocket, and Etienne walked to a side door of the house leading to the basement and were admitted by Jonathan Santiago. Inside the basement, Santiago, with Reynoso standing beside him, pulled out the marijuana and began to weigh it. Suddenly, Pichardo pulled his gun out of his pocket and announced: “You know what time it is?” It turned out, however, that Reynoso too was armed. He fired his weapon, striking Pichardo in the chest. Pic-hardo released a volley of gunshots, striking the walls of the basement. He then collapsed near the basement door as Santiago fled upstairs.

Etienne ran back to the car to get the defendant. They tried to pull Pichardo out of the basement but were unsuccessful: Pichardo was unconscious. Etienne retrieved Pichardo’s gun as well as his phone and the two men fled. At some point, they called 911. Pichardo was pronounced dead within minutes of his arrival at the hospital.

Reynoso, Etienne and the defendant were all charged with felony murder in the second degree, among other charges. As to the murder charge against Reynoso, the underlying felony was unlawful possession of a firearm, with which he was also charged. All three cases were severed and Reynoso went to trial in December 2013. On the charge of murder, he argued that he acted in self-defense and the jury was so instructed. The jury acquitted him of the murder charge and found him guilty on the firearms charge as well as a drug charge. The court (Fabricant, J.) sentenced him to two to four years in prison, with probation from and after that period of incarceration.

The defendant then went to trial before this judge. In addition to murder, he was charged with two counts of armed robbery (one count identifying Santiago as the victim and the other Reynoso), home invasion, possession with intent to distribute a Class D controlled substance and unlawful possession of a firearm. As to the murder charge against him, the underlying felonies upon which the Commonwealth relied were armed robbery and possession of a firearm.2 Defense counsel throughout the trial argued that the felony murder charge was not properly before the jury and made motions both at the close of the Commonwealth’s case and at the close of the evidence for a required finding of not guilty on that charge. Although this Court found merit to the defense arguments, I decided that the safer course was to present the case to the jury and deal "with the issue raised by those motions if and when it became necessary.

The jury acquitted the defendant of one count of armed robbery and of the firearms charge. They found him guilty on the second count of armed robbery (that count that identified Jonathan Santiago as the victim), home invasion, possession of a class D substance with intent to distribute it, and felony murder, second degree. As to the murder charge, the verdict slip required the jury to be unanimous as to the underlying felony; they found that to be armed robbery, not the firearms charge. The defense renewed its motion for a required finding of not guilty on the murder charge. After extensive briefing, this Court allowed the motion and set aside the guilty verdict on that charge. The defendant was sentenced to six to eight years on the armed robbery, and three years’ probation on the home invasion and drug charges. The Commonwealth filed a notice of appeal.

Etienne is scheduled to go to trial July 2014.

[428]*428DISCUSSION

The concept of felony murder has its origins in the English common law, dating back some one thousand years to a time when all felonies were punishable by death. As one commentator noted, it was therefore of no particular moment whether the condemned was hanged for the initial felony or for any death that occurred in the course of the felony. Hitchler, The Killer and his Victim in Felony Murder Cases, 53 Dick.L.Rev. 3 (1948). Nevertheless, the historical record suggests that no English court ever applied the felony murder rule to hold a felon guilty where his co-felon was killed by the intended victim. Prevezer, The English Homicide Act: a New Attempt to Revise the Law of Murder, 57 Col.L.Rev. 624, 634 (1957). That remained true in America even as the number of felonies increased. Although it was widely recognized that the intent to commit the underlying felony supplied the malice required for murder, the rule was applied through the 1800s solely to situations where the felon or his confederate did the actual killing. Comment, 24 Rutgers L.Rev. 591, 600-01 (1970).

It was thus unsurprising that the SJC in 1863 took the position that it did when confronted with an issue similar to that faced by this Court. In Commonwealth v. Campbell, 89 Mass.

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State v. Severs
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People v. Washington
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Bluebook (online)
32 Mass. L. Rptr. 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-tejeda-masssuperct-2014.