Commonwealth v. Maguire , 476 Mass. 156 ( 2017 )


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    SJC-12013
    COMMONWEALTH    vs.   LAWRENCE F. MAGUIRE.
    Suffolk.       September 8, 2016. - January 3, 2017.
    Present:   Gants, C.J., Botsford, Lenk, Hines, Gaziano, Lowy, &
    Budd, JJ.
    Open and Gross Lewdness and Lascivious Behavior.     Practice,
    Criminal, Required finding.
    Complaint received and sworn to in the Roxbury Division of
    the Boston Municipal Court Department on October 15, 2010.
    The case was tried before David B. Poole, J.
    After review by the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial
    Court granted leave to obtain further appellate review.
    Bradford R. Stanton for the defendant.
    Matthew T. Sears, Assistant District Attorney (Ashley E.
    Polin, Assistant District Attorney, with him) for the
    Commonwealth.
    HINES, J.     After a jury trial, the defendant, Lawrence F.
    Maguire, was convicted in the Boston Municipal Court of open and
    gross lewdness and lascivious behavior in violation of G. L.
    c. 272, § 16, and resisting arrest in violation of G. L. c. 268,
    2
    § 32B.    The Appeals Court affirmed the convictions in a divided
    decision.    See Commonwealth v. Maguire, 
    87 Mass. App. Ct. 855
    (2015).   We granted the defendant's application for further
    appellate review.    After the case was entered in this court, the
    defendant requested and received leave to file a new brief.      See
    Mass. R. A. P. 27.1 (f), as amended, 
    441 Mass. 1601
    (2004).      We
    consider the brief "in lieu of the Appeals Court brief."     
    Id. See Beal
    Bank, SSB v. Eurich, 
    448 Mass. 9
    , 12 (2006).    The brief
    filed in this court makes no argument bearing on the conviction
    of resisting arrest, and we do not, therefore, address the
    merits of that conviction.   See Mass. R. A. P. 16 (a) (4), as
    amended, 
    367 Mass. 921
    (1975).    See also Commonwealth v. Walsh,
    
    407 Mass. 740
    , 745 (1990).    We affirm the conviction of
    resisting arrest.   We reverse the conviction of open and gross
    lewdness and lascivious behavior because there was insufficient
    evidence that the defendant's conduct caused any person to
    experience "shock" or "alarm," as the statute requires.     We
    remand for entry of a conviction of the lesser included offense
    of indecent exposure.    We also clarify that the "shock" or
    "alarm" requirement has both a subjective and an objective
    component.
    Facts.    We summarize the facts in the light most favorable
    to the Commonwealth, focusing on those relevant to the
    defendant's claim of insufficiency of the evidence of open and
    3
    gross lewdness and lascivious behavior.    See Commonwealth v.
    Latimore, 
    378 Mass. 671
    , 676-677 (1979).
    On October 14, 2010, Detective Sean Conway of the
    Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) transit police
    department observed the defendant on an MBTA train traveling
    toward the Park Street station.   At Park Street, the defendant
    transferred to another train, and sat across from a college-aged
    woman.   Detective Conway transferred onto the same train.   From
    a distance of approximately eight to ten feet, the detective
    observed the defendant rub his penis over his pants for thirty
    seconds to one minute.   When the defendant departed the train at
    the Hynes Convention Center station, Detective Conway continued
    to follow him.
    There were between fifteen and twenty-five people on the
    Hynes Convention Center station platform at that time.    From a
    distance of about thirty feet behind the defendant, while on the
    same side of the train tracks, Detective Conway saw the
    defendant lean against a pillar with his left shoulder, with his
    hands in front of him, facing a bench five or six feet away.
    Two or three females were sitting on the bench.   The defendant
    jerked his head up and down as if he were trying to attract the
    females' attention and he began to manipulate his hands in front
    of him, "consistent with someone who's about to urinate."    No
    4
    urine was observed on the ground.     Detective Conway demonstrated
    the defendant's movements to the jury.
    Detective Conway ascended a flight of stairs, crossed over
    a landing, and went down another flight of stairs to a different
    area of the same platform, so that he could see more clearly
    what the defendant was doing.    As he descended the stairs, the
    detective observed the defendant still facing the women seated
    on the bench.   He saw the defendant's exposed penis for one or
    two seconds.    Detective Conway testified that he was "disgusted"
    and "concerned" that the women on the bench were being
    "victimized" by the defendant's behavior.     Almost
    simultaneously, the detective made eye contact with the
    defendant, and the defendant tried to zip his pants and run
    away.   Detective Conway attempted to speak with the women on the
    bench but was unable to communicate with them, for reasons not
    apparent on the record.    The detective then pursued the
    defendant, who eventually was arrested.
    Discussion.     The statute criminalizing "open and gross
    lewdness and lascivious behavior," G. L. c. 272, § 16, has
    remained essentially unchanged for more than 200 years.     See
    Commonwealth v. Quinn, 
    439 Mass. 492
    , 495 & n.7 (2003), citing
    St. 1784, c. 40, § 3.     The elements of the crime, however, have
    evolved through our decisional law.    See Commonwealth v. Gray,
    5
    
    40 Mass. App. Ct. 901
    , 901 (1996), citing Commonwealth v. Fitta,
    
    391 Mass. 394
    , 395-397 (1984).   We recognize that
    "proof of five elements [is required] to support a
    conviction, i.e., that the defendant (1) exposed genitals,
    breasts, or buttocks; (2) intentionally; (3) openly or with
    reckless disregard of public exposure; (4) in a manner so
    'as to produce alarm or shock'; (5) thereby actually
    shocking or alarming one or more persons."
    Commonwealth v. Swan, 
    73 Mass. App. Ct. 258
    , 260-261 (2008),
    quoting Commonwealth v. Kessler, 
    442 Mass. 770
    , 773 & n.4
    (2004).   See Commonwealth v. Ora, 
    451 Mass. 125
    , 127 (2008).    It
    is established that proof of the fourth and fifth elements --
    both of which require "shock" or "alarm" -- is what
    distinguishes "open and gross lewdness and lascivious behavior,"
    which is a felony, from the "closely similar" misdemeanor of
    indecent exposure under G. L. c. 272, § 53.   See Fitta, supra at
    396, quoting Commonwealth v. Sefranka, 
    382 Mass. 108
    , 116
    (1980).   In this case, the fifth distinguishing element is
    absent:   there was insufficient evidence that the police
    detective himself was "in fact" subjectively alarmed or shocked
    by the defendant's conduct.   See Commonwealth v. Botev, 79 Mass.
    App. Ct. 281, 287 (2011).   On the view we take of the evidence,
    we therefore need not address the objective reasonableness of
    the detective's subjective reaction, which is the focus of the
    fourth element.   In future cases, however, it will be incumbent
    on the Commonwealth to demonstrate not only subjective "shock"
    6
    or "alarm" on the part of a victim, but also that the victim's
    reaction was objectively reasonable.
    a.      Subjective component of "shock" or "alarm".   The fifth
    element of proof requires the Commonwealth to demonstrate that
    at least one person "in fact" was "alarmed or shocked" by the
    defendant's exposure.     See 
    Botev, 79 Mass. App. Ct. at 287-288
    (requirement that "one or more persons in fact be shocked or
    alarmed . . . has remained unchanged since 1880").     This
    requires evidence of strong negative emotions -- a subjective
    inquiry -- most commonly corroborated by an immediate physical
    response.    See, e.g., 
    Swan, 73 Mass. App. Ct. at 261
    (where
    young student was "grossed out" and made "nervous" by exposure,
    and rushed from room, alarm sufficiently established);
    Commonwealth v. Guy G., 
    53 Mass. App. Ct. 271
    , 273-274 (2001)
    (evidence sufficient where student testified to being in shock,
    upset, angry, and sad; that she left after defendant's exposure;
    and that her failure to report instantly "was due . . . to her
    being 'too in shock'"); Commonwealth v. Poillucci, 46 Mass. App.
    Ct. 300, 303-304 (1999) (evidence sufficient where girl alerted
    her parents to defendant's conduct and testified that she felt
    "very uncomfortable and nervous"); 
    Gray, 40 Mass. App. Ct. at 901
    (jury could find alarm where witness testified that he was
    "'disgust[ed]' by what he saw," and "acted swiftly and
    purposefully to stop and identify the perpetrators for the
    7
    police").   Contrast 
    Kessler, 442 Mass. at 772-775
    (where boys
    reacted to viewing masturbation with nervous giggling, and
    continued to watch, insufficient evidence of shock or alarm);
    Commonwealth v. Militello, 
    66 Mass. App. Ct. 325
    , 333-334 (2006)
    (where "boys did not experience a reaction so intense that they
    immediately sought to notify someone of the defendant's
    behavior," evidence insufficient to establish "serious negative
    emotional experience" [citation omitted]).
    In this case, the detective was the only eyewitness who
    testified to the defendant's conduct.   There was no evidence
    that the women seated on the bench or any other person noticed
    the defendant or his actions.   The detective's testimony was
    that he was "disgusted" after viewing the defendant's exposed
    penis, not for himself, but rather out of "concern" for the
    women seated on the bench.   While we do not discount the
    sincerity of the detective's concern, there is nothing to
    suggest that the women themselves experienced any strong
    negative emotion, such as fright or intimidation.   See 
    Ora, 451 Mass. at 128
    ("central purpose of G. L. c. 272, § 16, [is] one
    of preventing fright and intimidation, particularly regarding
    children").   Indeed, the women remained seated while the
    detective traversed the station platform and stairs, and while
    the defendant's penis was exposed.
    8
    With respect to the detective, we agree with the dissenting
    judge of the Appeals Court, who described the detective's use of
    the term "'disgusted' to mean something analogous to 'offensive'
    under the indecent exposure statute.   See Commonwealth v.
    Cahill, 
    446 Mass. 778
    , 781 (2006) ('Offensive acts are those
    that [are] . . . repugnant to the prevailing sense of what is
    decent or moral')."   
    Maguire, 87 Mass. App. Ct. at 862
    (Milkey,
    J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).   To be sure,
    special words neither prove nor disprove shock or alarm.     See
    Commonwealth v. Pereira, 
    82 Mass. App. Ct. 344
    , 347 (2012).
    What is required, however, is evidence that a witness personally
    sustained the type of "serious negative emotional experience"
    that is stronger that "mere nervousness and offense."    
    Ora, 451 Mass. at 127
    , quoting 
    Kessler, 442 Mass. at 774-775
    .    Vicarious
    concern for other people or even disgust does not "convert any
    ordinary indecent exposure case into one for open and gross
    lewdness."   
    Maguire, 87 Mass. App. Ct. at 863
    (Milkey, J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part).   Someone must be
    personally and "in fact" "shocked or alarmed" by the conduct; it
    is not sufficient that someone merely might be.   See Pereira,
    supra at 346.1
    1
    In the Pereira case, a police officer viewed a public sex
    act (masturbation) and testified that he was "personally, angry"
    in addition to being "disgusted." 
    Pereira, 82 Mass. App. Ct. at 345
    . Although the Appeals Court concluded that the evidence was
    9
    In this case, the detective observed an exposed penis and
    testified that he was "disgusted" and concerned for others.
    Compare 
    id. at 345.
      Nothing about his testimony or his actions,
    however, would have permitted a rational jury to find that he
    (or anyone else) personally experienced shock or alarm.     Cf.
    Commonwealth v. Mulvey, 
    57 Mass. App. Ct. 579
    , 584 (2003)
    ("behavior that has an impact only upon members of the police
    force is significantly different from that affecting other
    citizens," for purposes of disorderly conduct charge under G. L.
    c. 272, § 53).
    b.   Objective component of "shock" or "alarm."     The fourth
    element, "shock" or "alarm" impact, requires the Commonwealth to
    demonstrate a "substantially more serious and negative impact"
    to prove conduct constituting "open and gross lewdness and
    lascivious behavior," under G. L. c. 272, § 16, as compared to
    conduct that violates the indecent exposure statute, G. L.
    c. 272, § 53.    
    Ora, 451 Mass. at 127
    .   The "process of judicial
    construction," 
    id. at 128,
    now leads us to emphasize that this
    element includes an objective component.    Cf. Commonwealth v.
    sufficient to establish that the police officer "experienced a
    significant negative emotion," 
    id. at 347,
    it did not address
    whether, as an objective matter, there was evidence to
    demonstrate that it was reasonable for an experienced police
    officer to be "shocked and alarmed" by the conduct. Cf. Revere
    v. Aucella, 
    369 Mass. 138
    , 142-143 (1975) (G. L. c. 272, § 16,
    may not constitutionally apply where there is no imposition of
    "lewdness or nudity on an unsuspecting or unwilling person").
    10
    Braica, 
    68 Mass. App. Ct. 244
    , 246 (2007) (criminal harassment
    statute expressly requires conduct or speech that both
    "seriously alarmed the victim" and would "cause a reasonable
    person to suffer substantial emotional distress," G. L. c. 265,
    § 43A [a]).    Cf. also Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    470 Mass. 300
    ,
    308, 313 (2014) (construing element of "serious[] alarm[]" under
    criminal harassment statute), citing 
    Kessler, 442 Mass. at 773
    -
    774 (offense did not satisfy shock or alarm component of open
    and gross lewdness statute).
    The objective of G. L. c. 272, § 16, is to criminalize
    behavior that is shocking or alarming to society generally, "as
    distinct from punishing the defendant for the effect of that
    conduct on particular victims."    
    Botev, 79 Mass. App. Ct. at 287
    .   The requirement that one or more persons was personally
    and in fact shocked or alarmed is the first step in "insur[ing]
    that the conduct in question indeed is of a character warranting
    a felony conviction under G. L. c. 272, § 16, as distinct from a
    misdemeanor conviction under G. L. c. 272, § 53."    
    Id. at 288.
    The requirement that the person's reaction be reasonable is the
    second step.   A person's particular reaction -- or the
    particular words used to characterize his or her emotional
    response -- to the misconduct will not suffice to support a
    conviction under § 16 if the reaction is not one that a fact
    finder finds reasonable.    See 
    Braica, 68 Mass. App. Ct. at 246
    .
    11
    See also Commonwealth v. Sullivan, 
    469 Mass. 621
    , 624-629 (2014)
    (applying objective standard to charge of accosting or annoying
    person of opposite sex under G. L. c. 272, § 53).     Requiring the
    Commonwealth to demonstrate that "shock" or "alarm" was an
    objectively reasonable reaction in the circumstances of the
    conduct is consistent with the statutory objective.
    Conclusion.    The judgment of conviction of resisting arrest
    is affirmed.   The judgment of conviction of open and gross
    lewdness and lascivious behavior is reversed.     Because the
    defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence
    with respect to the first four elements of open and gross
    lewdness and lascivious behavior, including public exposure of
    his penis, see G. L. c. 277, § 79, the case is remanded for
    entry of a conviction on the lesser included offense of indecent
    exposure.
    So ordered.