MA:
Mass. Supreme Judicial / Appeals Courts
December
23, 1998
COMMONWEALTH v. TRIPOLONE, 44 Mass.
App. Ct. 23 (1997)
686 N.E.2d 1325
COMMONWEALTH vs. SALVATORE
TRIPOLONE.
No. 96-P-1224.
Appeals Court of
Massachusetts.
Bristol.
October 17, 1997.
November 26,
1997.
Present: Armstrong, Gillerman, & Jacobs, JJ.
Abuse
Prevention. Practice, Criminal, Complaint. A person named as defendant in a
misdemeanor complaint, who is not under
arrest, is entitled to notice and a hearing
on the issuance of process
thereon in accordance with G.L. c. 218, .
35A, and a District Court
judge correctly dismissed without prejudice
a complaint for violation
of a G.L. c. 209A protective order that had
issued without such notice
and opportunity for hearing. [26-28]
Complaint received and sworn to in the
Taunton Division of the District Court Department on August 8, 1995.
The case was heard by James M. Quinn, J.,
on a motion to dismiss.
Lewis A. Armstead, Jr., Assistant
District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
John L. Holgerson, Committee for Public
Counsel Services, for the defendant.
GILLERMAN, J.
The single question before us is whether
the defendant was entitled to a hearing pursuant to G. L. c. 218, . 35A[fn1]
prior to the issuance of a misdemeanor complaint against him for an alleged
violation of a G. L. c. 209A abuse
Page 24
prevention
order.[fn2] We hold that he was entitled to such a hearing, and we affirm the
judgment dismissing the complaint.
1. Background. The Commonwealth and the defendant
filed a statement of agreed facts, which we summarize. On November 9, 1994, an
application for a misdemeanor complaint was filed against the defendant. The
application alleged that the defendant had made a telephone call to Lesley
Kelley (complainant) on November 7, 1994, in violation of an outstanding abuse
prevention order (which had issued on July 26, 1994), pursuant to G. L. c.
209A.[fn3] The following day, a complaint was issued on the application. No
hearing was held. The defendant responded to a summons and was arraigned on
November 22, 1994.
Page 25
The defendant moved to dismiss the
complaint on December 15, 1994, arguing, in part, that the complaint had issued
in violation of his right to a hearing pursuant to G. L. c. 218, . 35A.
After intervening procedural events not
material to this opinion, the motion to dismiss was allowed on February 28,
1995, on the ground that the defendant was entitled to a hearing prior to the
issuance of the complaint. The Commonwealth did not file a notice of appeal,
but after review by the district attorney's office, the Easton police
department was directed to seek a new complaint based on the same alleged
telephone incident of November 7, 1994.
On August 8, 1995, an application for a
misdemeanor complaint was again filed against the defendant. The application
was based on the same alleged November 7, 1994, telephone call that had been
the basis of the first complaint. The same day, a complaint issued on the
application. Again, no hearing was held although the Commonwealth's application
for the complaint requested a hearing. The defendant again responded to a
summons and was arraigned on August 22, 1995.
On August 25, 1995, the defendant moved
to dismiss the second complaint, arguing, in part, that the complaint had
issued in violation of his right to a hearing pursuant to G. L. c. 218, . 35A.
After another round of intervening
procedural events not material to this opinion, the defendant's motion to
dismiss was heard and allowed on August 31, 1995, without prejudice, by the
same judge who had heard the first motion to dismiss. The judge adopted the
agreed facts, and again he ruled that the defendant was entitled to a hearing
pursuant to G. L. c. 218, . 35A, before the complaint issued. He also found, on
the basis of the agreed facts, "that the denial of the [Commonwealth's]
request for a hearing was based on the court `policy' and not on any exception
included in [G. L. c. 218, . 35A]." The "policy" to which the
judge referred was a directive implemented by the First Justice of the Taunton
District Court directing the automatic issuance of a complaint without a prior
hearing where there has been alleged a violation of a 209A order.[fn4]
Both the Commonwealth and the defendant
appealed. The
Page 26
defendant
claimed, and he argues in this court, that the dismissal should be with
prejudice.
2. Discussion. The Commonwealth argues
first that the required review of the defendant's criminal record, see note 1,
par. 2, supra, "would have shown" [fn5] the existence of a pending
rape indictment in the Bristol Superior Court. The rape indictment is
admittedly an afterthought, see note 5, supra, which was not argued or
considered either when the complaint issued or when the motion to dismiss was
argued and allowed. It cannot provide the basis for claiming the availability
of the statutory exemption.[fn6]
The Commonwealth argues that the 1992
amendment to G. L. c. 218, . 35A, St. 1992, c. 188, . 6, requiring the court
and named officers to consider the records contained in the Statewide domestic
violence record-keeping system maintained by the office of the Commissioner of
Probation, demonstrates the Legislature's "will to treat violations of
abuse prevention orders as imminent threats to the safety of the individuals
involved." Even if true, that history has no bearing on this case, for (i)
the judge found on the basis of the agreed facts, that the complaint in this
case issued without a hearing only because of the directive
Page 27
requiring
that result, and (ii) the violation of the abuse prevention order is merely
alleged, not shown. The rationale of the directive that imminent threat of bodily injury is to be presumed whenever
there is an allegation of a violation of a 209A order conflicts directly with the statutory requirement that there be a
hearing unless there is a showing sufficient to satisfy the judge that one of
the statutory exceptions is available. The directive is especially pernicious
because it precludes consideration of alternative procedures prior to the
issuance of criminal process. See Gordon v. Fay, 382 Mass. 64, 69-70 (1980)
("the implicit purpose of the . 35A hearings is to enable the court clerk
to screen a variety of minor criminal or potentially criminal matters out of
the criminal justice system through a combination of counseling, discussion, or
threat of prosecution").
In this case, then, the statute has been
violated.[fn7] Given the fact that . 35 provides no remedy for the unjustified
denial of a hearing, the Supreme Judicial Court in Commonwealth v. Lyons, 397
Mass. 644, 647 (1986), considered the question, "what consequences the
Legislature intended to follow from a violation of . 35A." In the course
of its discussion of this issue (in the context of a motion to suppress
evidence) the court, after reviewing the statutory history of . 35A, observed
that (i) . 35A "guarantees a potential defendant (barring exigent
circumstances) the right to notice and an opportunity to be heard in opposition
to issuance of process," and (ii) "[w]e might reasonably infer from
the history of . 35A that a defendant may be entitled to dismissal of the
complaint where the opportunity for a . 35A hearing as to that complaint has
been denied. The procedure could then start anew, and the defendant would have
a chance to be heard before process
Page 28
would
be issued."[fn8] Ibid. See also Gordon v. Fay, 382 Mass. at 69 n.8.[fn9]
We conclude that the directive issued to
the clerk magistrate in the Taunton District Court is inconsistent with the
procedure mandated by . 35A, and that the defendant was unjustifiably deprived
of a hearing prior to the issuance of the misdemeanor complaint. Therefore, we
affirm the judgment dismissing the complaint, without prejudice.[fn10]
So ordered.
[fn1]
General Laws c. 218, . 35A, as amended through St. 1992, c. 188, . 6, provides:
"If a complaint for a misdemeanor
is received by a
district court, or by a justice,
associate justice or
special justice thereof, or by a clerk,
assistant clerk,
temporary clerk or temporary assistant
clerk thereof under
section thirty-two, thirty-three or
thirty-five, as the
case may be, the person against whom such
complaint is made,
shall, if not under arrest for the
offence for which the
complaint is made, upon request in
writing, seasonably made,
be given an opportunity to be heard
personally or by counsel in
opposition to the issuance of any process
based on such
complaint.
"If such complaint is received,
the court, or any of
said officers referred to in the
preceding paragraph, shall,
unless there is an imminent threat of
bodily injury, of the
commission of a crime or of flight from
the commonwealth by
the person against whom such complaint is
made, give to said
person, if not under arrest for the
offense for which the
complaint is made, notice in writing of
such complaint; and
said person shall be given an opportunity
to be heard in opposition
to the issuance of process as provided in
the first paragraph. The
court or other officer referred to in the
preceding paragraph
shall consider the named defendant's
criminal record and the
records contained within the statewide domestic violence record
keeping system maintained by the office
of the commissioner of
probation in determining whether an
imminent threat of bodily
injury exists. Unless a citation as
defined in section one of
chapter ninety C has been issued, notice
shall also be given of
the manner in which he may be heard in
opposition as provided
herein.
"The court, or said officer
thereof, may upon consideration
of the evidence cause process to be
issued unless there is no
probable cause to believe that the person
who is the object of
the complaint has committed the offense
charged.
"The term district court as used
in this section shall
include the Boston municipal court
department" (emphases
added).
[fn2]
General Laws c. 209A, . 7, inserted by St. 1983, c. 678, . 5, provides, in
part, that any violation of an abuse prevention order "shall be punishable
by a fine of not more than five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment for not
more than two and one-half years in a house of correction, or by both such fine
and imprisonment."
[fn3]
The 209A abuse prevention order ordered the defendant, inter alia, "not to
contact the [complainant] . . . by telephone, in writing, or otherwise. . .
."
[fn4]
The directive, issued by the First Justice to the clerk magistrate, dated
November 1, 1990, states, in full, as follows:
"In order to expedite the handling
of this type of Complaint [i.e., complaints for violation of 209A orders]
please implement the following:
"When an application for a Complaint
for a violation of a 209A order is received in the Clerk's Office the Complaint
should issue forthwith without the necessity of a Show Cause Hearing.
"I am satisfied that the prior
issuance of a 209A order in conjunction with the allegation of its violation
provides sufficient grounds to consider the situation to be an imminent threat
of bodily injury.
"Thank you for your cooperation."
[fn5]
Evidence of the pending rape indictment was the subject of a Commonwealth
motion, filed in this court for the first time, to expand the record. That
indictment was not brought before the judge who allowed the second application
for a complaint, and he did not consider it. On the contrary, the judge stated
that he considered only those facts appearing in the statement of agreed facts,
and there is no reference to the rape indictment in that statement. Thus, the
rape indictment was not part of the record in this case, and could not have
been included in the appendix even if the motion to expand the record had been
presented below. See Mass.R.A.P. 18, 378 Mass. 940 (1979) (appendix is to be
prepared from the record in the case).
[fn6]
The motion to expand the record, note 5, supra, was first presented to the
single justice who allowed the motion "subject to possible further action
by the panel assigned to decide the case." For the reasons stated in note
5, supra, and in the text, the panel declines to consider the proffered
indictment.
[fn7]
Given that the alleged violation of the abuse prevention order occurred on
November 7, 1994, and the application for the complaint at issue in these
proceedings was not filed until August 8, 1995, seeking a hearing and neither a
summons nor an arrest warrant, the Commonwealth can make no claim (as it
appears to do) that the statutory exception for "an imminent threat of
bodily injury" is available. Moreover, the statement of agreed facts, upon
which this case was tried, makes no mention of any such imminent threat. See
Commonwealth v. One 1986 Volkswagen GTI Automobile, 417 Mass. 369, 370 n.1
(1994) ("[t]he theory of law on which by assent a case is tried cannot be
disregarded when the case comes before an appellate court for review").
[fn8]
The court in Lyons, denying the motion to suppress, held that evidence obtained
as a result of an unlawful . 35A procedure is not automatically tainted; some
significant prejudice arising out of the procedure that occurred must be
demonstrated.
[fn9]
The Commonwealth's further argument
that the history of . 35A is evidence of the Legislature's intent to
expedite the procedure which brings allegations of violations of 209A orders to
the attention of the courts does not
address the issue in this case (whether or not that history is accurately
summarized).
Finally, the Commonwealth's argument that
abuse prevention orders are impliedly exempt from the hearing requirements of .
35A has no basis in the provisions of that section, and we reject the argument.
[fn10]
We see no basis for dismissing the complaint with prejudice, and the
Commonwealth may start the proceedings "anew." See Lyons, supra at
647.
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