Santos

962 N.E.2d 726, 461 Mass. 565, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 40
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 962 N.E.2d 726 (Santos) 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
Santos, 962 N.E.2d 726, 461 Mass. 565, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 40 (Mass. 2012).

Opinion

Botsford, J.

This case raises a question concerning G. L. c. 123A, § 9 (§ 9), the section of the sexually dangerous person statute that entitles someone who is committed as a sexually dangerous person annually to file a petition for examination and discharge from the Massachusetts Treatment Center (treatment center). Section 9 provides that at any hearing on such a petition, the written reports prepared by the designated qualified examiners1 of their examinations of the petitioner are admissible in evidence, as are written annual reviews of the petitioner [566]*566prepared by the community access board (CAB) under G. L. c. 123A, § 6A,2 as well as the petitioner’s “psychiatric and psychological records.” The question presented is whether § 9 also renders admissible the written reports of expert witnesses retained by a § 9 petitioner for purposes of the § 9 proceeding.3 The petitioner in this case, Hugo Santos (petitioner), filed a petition for examination and discharge under § 9 that was tried before a jury in the Superior Court. The judge ruled at trial that § 9 did not permit the admission of the written reports prepared by the two psychologists whom the petitioner had retained as expert witnesses. The jury ultimately found the petitioner to remain sexually dangerous, and he was not discharged.

The case is before us on further appellate review. The Appeals Court decided, as a matter of statutory construction, that § 9 “requires the admission of the petitioner’s experts’ reports on the same basis as those of the [qualified examiners],” and that in this case, the exclusion of those reports constituted prejudicial error requiring reversal. Santos, petitioner, 78 Mass. App. Ct. 280, 285-286 (2010). The Appeals Court expressed no opinion on the constitutional due process and equal protection claims raised by the petitioner. Id. at 285. We conclude that an interpretation of § 9 to bar the admission in evidence of a written report prepared by a petitioner’s expert psychiatrist or psychologist, while authorizing introduction of the reports prepared by the qualified examiners and the CAB, would raise substantial due process concerns. As we must interpret statutes wherever possible to avoid constitutional doubts, we construe § 9 to render admissible the petitioner’s experts’ written reports. We agree with the Appeals Court that the objected-to exclusion of the written reports prepared by the petitioner’s experts in this case was prejudicial, and we vacate the judgment of the Superior Court.

[567]*5671. Background. On January 29, 2002, the petitioner was committed to the treatment center as a sexually dangerous person after a jury-waived trial held pursuant to G. L. c. 123A, § 14. On June 8, 2005, he filed a petition under § 9 for his discharge. The petition was tried before a jury beginning on March 5, 2007. Before trial, the Commonwealth filed a motion to exclude, as inadmissible hearsay, the written reports prepared by Dr. Leonard Bard and Dr. Robert Prentky, two psychologists retained by the petitioner, each of whom had concluded that the petitioner was no longer a sexually dangerous person.4 The judge granted the Commonwealth’s motion but offered to give a curative instruction to the jury concerning the statutory basis for admission of the qualified examiners’ reports. The petitioner’s counsel preserved her objection for the record but accepted the instruction.

The Commonwealth’s first witness was Andrea Barnes, Ph.D., a CAB member, who testified that in her opinion and the opinion of the other CAB members, the petitioner remained sexually dangerous. During Barnes’s testimony, the Commonwealth introduced in evidence a copy of the most recent CAB report concerning the petitioner. After the report was admitted, the judge gave the following instruction:

“Members of the jury, I just want to point out something that pursuant to the statute dealing with this kind of petition, by law the Legislature has said that the reports of the Community Access Board and the two qualified examiners are admissible in evidence. The reports of the two independent evaluators that are going to be called by the petitioner are not admissible. So I am following the dictates of the statute.
“The written reports of the Community Access Board . . . and the reports of the two qualified examiners, . . . they’re going to be exhibits in this case. The reports of the independent evaluators that evaluated [the petitioner] at his request are not going to be exhibits in this case but you will be hearing from those doctors in a testimonial way later in this trial.”

[568]*568The qualified examiners, Dr. Michael Henry and Dr. Paul Zeizel, opined that the petitioner remained sexually dangerous, despite his advanced age, because he had committed a sexual offense in his early sixties, an age at which many other offenders have stopped offending. Their reports were admitted in evidence without a further instruction to the jury.

The petitioner’s experts each testified that the petitioner was not likely to reoffend, primarily because only a small percentage of sex offenders recidivate in their seventies, and the petitioner was seventy-three years old at the time of trial. As the judge had indicated to the jury, however, the experts’ reports were not admitted in evidence. In his closing, the Commonwealth’s attorney referred to the absence of the petitioner’s experts’ reports, stating, “Doctor Prentky made obvious mistakes in this case. He wrote a report. You’re not going to get to see the report for reasons that are not his fault and you shouldn’t hold that against him, but I pointed out some things.” The jury found that the petitioner remained a sexually dangerous person.

2. Discussion. The provisions in § 9 of concern in this case are all contained in the second paragraph of the statute, which we quote in the margin.5 As the quoted language indicates, § 9 designates certain documents as admissible at a § 9 trial, although they would not be admissible under the common-law rules of evidence because they are hearsay. See McHoul, petitioner, 445 Mass. 143, 147 (2005), cert. denied, 547 U.S. 1114 (2006) (McHoul); Mass. G. Evid. §§ 801(c), 802 (2011). Specifi[569]*569cally included among the documents § 9 makes admissible are the reports of the two qualified examiners who have interviewed the petitioner and reviewed his records, CAB reports, and “[e]vidence of [the petitioner’s] . . . psychiatric and psychological records . . . .”6 G. L. c. 123A, § 9, second par.

The petitioner argues that construing the statute to permit the introduction of reports by the qualified examiners and the CAB, but not by his experts, violates his constitutional rights of equal protection and due process. With respect to due process, he argues that the fundamental fairness of his trial was impaired by the judge’s evidentiary ruling, because he could not effectively rebut the Commonwealth’s experts’ reports with his own. Cf. Commonwealth v. Connors, 447 Mass. 313, 318 n.8 (2006) (expressing concern that Commonwealth and defendants in c. 123A proceedings be on “equal footing” and noting “disadvantage to one party does in fact occur when there is an imbalance of evidence”).

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Bluebook (online)
962 N.E.2d 726, 461 Mass. 565, 2012 Mass. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santos-mass-2012.