Commonwealth v. Urkiel

826 N.E.2d 769, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 445, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 429
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 6, 2005
DocketNo. 03-P-1402
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 826 N.E.2d 769 (Commonwealth v. Urkiel) 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. Urkiel, 826 N.E.2d 769, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 445, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 429 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

A judge of the District Court found at a bench trial that the defendant, Richard J. Urkiel, had unlawfully resisted arrest by certain police officers of the town of Greenfield (G. L. [446]*446c. 268, § 32B), but had not committed assault and battery upon those officers (G. L. c. 265, § 13D).1 We reverse the judgment of conviction and remand for a new trial, because of the judge’s handling of the issue, tendered by the defendant, of self-defense against excessive force used by the officers. We discuss, further, a matter that may arise upon the retrial in the application of the resisting arrest statute.

1. Sergeant Daniel McCarthy was the Commonwealth’s sole witness. McCarthy testified thus:

About 6:55 p.m. on June 18, 2002, McCarthy went to Lunt Field, a local little league baseball field, on a report that the defendant was present there in violation of a provision of a restraining order against him in favor of his ex-wife, Gail, forbidding either party to attend their children’s sporting events when the children were at the time under the other’s care.2

Arriving at the field, Sergeant McCarthy learned from Gail that the defendant had driven up in a green pickup truck, remained in the vehicle for approximately five to ten minutes, and driven away: He had called one of their children over to the truck and talked with him for a few moments before the boy returned to his baseball game. The defendant did not communicate with Gail or threaten her in any sense. Gail rather said that Richard was not supposed to be at the field and she could not teach the children respect for law if he did not himself respect it.

Around 7:10 p.m., McCarthy alerted all units by bulletin to be on the lookout for the defendant and his vehicle. Then he drove to the defendant’s known residence at 280 Chapman Street in Greenfield. Officer Rice separately arrived there. The officers identified the defendant’s truck, the engine and tail pipe still warm, in the backyard. They knocked to no response on the front and back doors of the house; both doors were locked. Detecting no activity within the house, the officers left the place at 7:20 p.m. Sergeant McCarthy filed a report which stated, [447]*447“Other checks will be made at this house for Richard. If unable to locate him a warrant will be applied for.”

Some three horns later at 10:00 p.m., McCarthy, with an Officer Greene, returned to the residence for the purpose of arresting the defendant for the restraining order violation (a misdemeanor). Neither officer had sought a warrant. The defendant was sleeping on a couch downstairs. Circling the house in opposite directions, the officers heard the defendant snoring. As they met near the back door, Greene told McCarthy he had awakened the defendant by calling to him through an open window; now the defendant was coming to the front door.

The defendant opened the solid wooden front door and talked to the officers through the unlocked screen door.3 The officers said the defendant was under arrest on account of violating the restraining order. In response, the defendant “basically said ‘so?’ ” and that he “wasn’t going to be arrested.” He began to push the front door closed. McCarthy opened the screen door and thrust his hand inside the front door to hold it open. The defendant grabbed McCarthy’s wrist. McCarthy grabbed the defendant’s hand. The defendant pulled McCarthy through the doorway.

According to McCarthy, the defendant attacked him, seized him in a bear hug, lifted him up by the waist, and slammed him into the open front door, thus breaking a pane of decorative glass in its center. In violent struggle, the defendant tackled, pushed, and repeatedly struck both McCarthy and Greene; during the skirmish, McCarthy was thrown into a coat rack just inside the doorway. It took the assistance of Officer Rice, timely arriving, and multiple uses of OC spray4 to subdue the defendant. After he was restrained on the porch in a prone position, he continued to try to pull away and hid his arms underneath his body to prevent handcuffing. The officers soon completed the arrest.

2. As McCarthy ended his testimony, the defendant moved [448]*448for a required finding of not guilty. Under the resisting arrest statute and general law, a person has a right to resist by reasonable force an arrest carried out by police with excessive or unreasonable force, see G. L. c. 268, § 32B; Commonwealth v. Moreira, 388 Mass. 596, 601-602 (1983), and this permitted exercise of self-defense does not turn upon the legality or illegality of the arrest itself, see id. at 601. In the present case the Commonwealth conceded the constitutional invalidity of the warrantless entry and, therefore, of the arrest.5 The defendant went on to argue that this invalidity — simpliciter, without more — should count as unreasonable force, justifying forceful resistance. However, the cases are distinct, not analogous, and the right now claimed by the defendant was repudiated in Commonwealth v. Gomes, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 332, 340-343 (2003). The judge was right to deny the defendant’s motion. But defendant’s counsel remarked that the question of resistance to the police behavior in its entirety would come up when all the evidence was in.

3. The defendant, the sole defense witness, essentially confirmed McCarthy’s story about the incident at the field except that the defendant had all three children running over to the car without being called. After leaving the field, the defendant ran two brief errands (to a gym to place a medical hold on his membership, and to a friend’s house to drop a video game in the mailbox). He returned to 280 Chapman. He was recovering from a spinal tap procedure undergone the night before. He took a bath upstairs followed by a nap in an upstairs bedroom.

About 9:45 p.m., the defendant went downstairs to the kitchen for a drink of water and an ice pack for his back. Then he lay down on a couch and fell back asleep. A few minutes later, he awoke to the officers yelling through the window. McCarthy said the police were there to talk to him. He answered, “The window’s open, talk.” McCarthy demanded that he come to the [449]*449door to talk face-to-face. The defendant responded, “I’m on doctor’s orders to lay on this ice pack on this couch, come back tomorrow morning.” McCarthy, in an angry tone, insisted that he come to the door immediately. Despite pain from the spinal tap, the defendant got up and complied.

The defendant testified that the officers never told him of their purpose to arrest him. As the defendant opened the front door inward, McCarthy, without a word, rushed at him — breaking through the screen door, which had been locked,6 and sending splinters of wood flying. Fearful for his safety, the defendant tried quickly to resist and close the wooden door. When the door was almost shut, McCarthy punched through a decorative glass panel at the center to force the door open. The defendant continued to try to push the door closed, while McCarthy used all his weight to keep it open. After about two seconds, the defendant was overcome, releasing the door. It flung inward, smashing into his bare right big toe, peeling the nail back with blood. McCarthy was self-propelled inside the house and into a coat rack.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
826 N.E.2d 769, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 445, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-urkiel-massappct-2005.