Commonwealth v. Tweedy

763 N.E.2d 1119, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 56, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 264
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2002
DocketNo. 99-P-789
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 763 N.E.2d 1119 (Commonwealth v. Tweedy) 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. Tweedy, 763 N.E.2d 1119, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 56, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 264 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Perretta, J.

On appeal from his convictions on indictments charging him with two counts of rape and abuse of a child under sixteen years of age and five counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under fourteen years of age, the defendant [57]*57argues that the judge erroneously excluded several statements of the victim which he claims demonstrated her bias against him and his family. The judge excluded verbatim accounts of the victim’s statements, most of which included very vulgar language, on the basis that there was more than sufficient evidence of the hostility between the victim’s family and the defendant’s family. Concluding that the judge did not abuse his discretion or commit other error of law, we affirm the convictions.

1. The evidence. We briefly summarize the testimony of the victim, Karen.1 Karen was about five years of age when the defendant began staying through the night with her mother at her apartment. The first incident of abuse occurred when Karen slipped into bed with her mother and the defendant, and the defendant reached beneath Karen’s pajamas and fondled her chest and buttocks. Over the next six years, the abuse continued and intensified in nature. We need not detail the acts. It is enough to state that Karen’s testimony concerning the defendant’s sexual abuse of her was sufficient to put each of the indictments against him to the jury.

At some point during their relationship, Karen’s mother became pregnant by the defendant, and they married. However, the defendant continued to abuse Karen sexually until she was a little over eleven years old. Karen related that throughout this six-year period of abuse by the defendant, she once told her mother that the defendant had been “touching” her, but her mother chose not to believe her. When Karen later told her mother of the defendant’s acts, the mother confronted him. He denied the allegation, and the mother did nothing more.

In 1994, Karen disclosed the defendant’s abuse of her to a therapist, a clinical social worker, who, in turn, filed a mandatory child-abuse report with the Department of Social Services. About a week later, Karen was placed in a foster home where [58]*58she remained for about two months. Thereafter, she lived with her maternal grandmother.2

In the months following her disclosure to the therapist, Karen was interviewed by people from the District Attorney’s office, the Concord District Court, and a children’s protective agency. In the meantime, Karen did not see the defendant from the time of her placement with her grandmother until the time of the defendant’s first trial.

Karen’s mother testified that Karen’s relationship with the defendant was “mixed,” that is, “[t]hey either loved each other or hated each other,” and that when she married the defendant, Karen seemed “upset.”3

2. The statements in issue. During her testimony, Karen stated that she loved the defendant and always would, that “he was just like my dad, to me” but that “in some ways,” she “hate[dj” him. She acknowledged that she currently wanted “[t]o put him in jail” and stated that he “deserve[dj” to be incarcerated. However, Karen denied that she had told the defendant’s mother (Mrs. Tweedy) that she and her (Karen’s) family would “grind the Tweedy family into the ground.” When the judge sustained objections to the defendant’s questions concerning whether Karen had ever sworn at Mrs. Tweedy and whether Karen had ever told Mrs. Tweedy that she would never see her grandchildren again, the defendant attempted to make an offer of proof. The judge stood firm in his ruling and told defense counsel that the offer of proof could be made “at another time.”4

During questioning of Mrs. Tweedy, defense counsel brought out the fact that she (Mrs. Tweedy) had received numerous [59]*59telephone calls from Karen. When he attempted to elicit the substance of these conversations, the judge conducted a sidebar conference concerning the nature of the conversations. Defense counsel represented that he intended to show that Karen would telephone Mrs. Tweedy, speak to her in abusive terms, and tell her that her (Karen’s) family intended to “grind the Tweedy family into the ground.” He argued that the conversations were admissible to show that the relationship between Karen’s family and the defendant’s family had become so polarized as to have an impact on Karen’s testimony. The judge ruled that the “position[s] of the families [were] pretty-well defined” and excluded any testimony by Mrs. Tweedy concerning the actual substance of the conversations on the basis that a verbatim recitation of the conversations was of “minimal evidentiary value.” As an offer of proof of the substance of the conversations, defense counsel had marked for identification Mrs. Tweedy’s handwritten journal, with entries dated from November, 1995, through August, 1997, in which she described her conversations with Karen.

Staying within the limits of the judge’s ruling, defense counsel elicited from Mrs. Tweedy the facts that although she had not seen Karen after December, 1994, she had received numerous telephone calls from her, that during all these conversations, Karen had been “abusive,” that she had used “[v]cry bad language,” and that the nature of Karen’s statements made it “hard” for her to believe that Karen was the “little girl I loved so much.”

3. Restriction of evidence as to bias. It is the defendant’s argument that the judge erroneously deprived him of an evidentiary basis upon which to argue that Karen’s testimonial “expressions of love and magnanimity [for and toward the defendant] were disingenuous.” The defendant claims that he was denied the right to show that Karen had a bias against him.

Although a defendant has a right to show the bias of an adverse witness, that right is not without some limitation. As stated in Commonwealth v. Hicks, 377 Mass. 1, 8 (1979): “Reasonable cross-examination of a witness to show bias or prejudice has long been matter of right. Commonwealth v. Russ, 232 Mass. 58, 79 (1919). Commonwealth v. Graziano, 368 [60]*60Mass. 325, 330 (1975). But the right is not necessarily infringed by curbing inquiry where the matters sought to be elicited have been sufficiently aired. Commonwealth v. Walker, 370 Mass. 548, 572, cert. denied, 429 U.S. 943 (1976).” See Commonwealth v. Smiledge, 419 Mass. 156, 159 (1994).

We see no error in the judge’s ruling. In the first instance, he did not preclude all inquiry on the issue of bias against the defendant on the part of Karen and her family. Compare Commonwealth v. Civello, 39 Mass. App. Ct. 373, 376-377 (1995). Rather, and as earlier noted, the judge limited the testimony of Mrs. Tweedy to the abusive nature of her conversations with Karen while restricting her from any verbatim recitation of their substance. The limitation was based upon the articulated reason that the positions of the victim and her family and that of the defendant and his family had been “pretty-well defined.”

We think the judge’s ruling was within the broad range of his discretion. Our conclusion is based upon the facts that Karen and her mother demonstrated feelings of extreme animosity toward the defendant and his family throughout their testimony and that all of the statements in issue allegedly made by Karen were made after

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Bluebook (online)
763 N.E.2d 1119, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 56, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-tweedy-massappct-2002.