Renaud v. Commonwealth , 471 Mass. 315 ( 2015 )


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    SJC-11762
    RONALD RENAUD   vs.   COMMONWEALTH.
    Suffolk.    March 3, 2015. - April 17, 2015.
    Present:    Gants, C.J., Spina, Cordy, Botsford, Duffly, Lenk,
    & Hines, JJ.
    Erroneous Conviction. Practice, Civil, Motion to dismiss.
    Evidence, Identity.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    May 16, 2013.
    A motion to dismiss was heard by Thomas A. Connors, J.
    The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative
    transferred the case from the Appeals Court.
    Jeffrey T. Collins, Assistant Attorney General, for the
    Commonwealth.
    Timothy St. Lawrence for the defendant.
    Stephanie Roberts Hartung & Drew Glassroth, for New England
    Innocence Project & another, amici curiae, submitted a brief.
    HINES, J.    After a jury-waived trial in the District Court,
    a judge found the plaintiff, Ronald Renaud, guilty of malicious
    destruction of property, breaking and entering in the daytime,
    2
    and larceny over $250.   On appeal, the Appeals Court overturned
    Renaud's convictions, concluding that the evidence was
    insufficient to support them.1   See Commonwealth v. Renaud, 
    81 Mass. App. Ct. 261
    , 263, 265 (2012).   Renaud thereafter filed a
    complaint in the Superior Court under G. L. c. 258D, the
    erroneous convictions statute, seeking compensation for his
    erroneous convictions.   The Commonwealth moved to dismiss the
    complaint, which a judge denied,2 and the Commonwealth appealed.
    See Irwin v. Commonwealth, 
    465 Mass. 834
    , 835 (2013) ("Because
    the erroneous convictions statute provides only a limited waiver
    on the Commonwealth's sovereign immunity, we conclude that the
    doctrine of present execution applies to claims brought under
    that statute, and thus that interlocutory appeal is
    appropriate").   We transferred the case here on our own
    initiative to determine whether, under G. L. c. 258D, § 1 (B),
    the reversal of Renaud's convictions due to insufficient
    evidence amounts to "grounds which tend to establish" his
    innocence, thus rendering him eligible to obtain relief under
    1
    The plaintiff had served more than 490 days in a house of
    correction for the sentence he received on these convictions.
    2
    In his denial of the Commonwealth's motion, the Superior
    Court judge inadvertently labeled his decision as one in
    response to the Commonwealth's motion for a judgment on the
    pleadings.
    3
    the statute.   We conclude that it does.      We therefore affirm the
    denial of the motion to dismiss.
    Background and prior proceedings.3      The relevant facts, as
    introduced by the Commonwealth before it closed its case, are
    that a break-in occurred in a Falmouth home.        Renaud, 81 Mass.
    App. Ct. at 262.     Four television sets, a digital video disc
    player, and items of sports memorabilia were missing.         
    Id. No one
    was seen perpetrating the break-in or stealing the property
    from the home.     
    Id. While examining
    the living room after being
    called to the scene, a police officer recovered from the floor
    an electronic bank transfer (EBT) card bearing the name of the
    plaintiff.   
    Id. The EBT
    card had been cut into three separate
    pieces and was taped together.       
    Id. The owner
    of the home and
    the residents thereof did not recognize the plaintiff's name.
    
    Id. The police
    officer, however, did recognize the name and was
    aware that the plaintiff recently had resided in Falmouth.          
    Id. at 263.
    The next day, a detective telephoned the plaintiff's
    cellular telephone and recognized his voice.        
    Id. The detective
    informed the plaintiff that someone had found his EBT card on
    the side of the road.      
    Id. The plaintiff
    stated that he did not
    3
    The background is derived from the facts set forth in the
    Appeals Court's decision. See Irwin v. Commonwealth, 
    465 Mass. 834
    , 835 (2013).
    4
    know that his card was missing and that he would have to go home
    and "check because he had not really looked for it."      
    Id. The detective
    informed the plaintiff that if he wanted to pick up
    the card, he would have to come to the police station.      
    Id. The plaintiff
    did not do so.    
    Id. The Appeals
    Court reversed the plaintiff's convictions, set
    aside the verdicts, and entered judgments in favor of the
    plaintiff because it determined that the Commonwealth's evidence
    was insufficient to prove that the plaintiff was the person who
    had committed the charged crimes.     
    Id. at 263,
    265.   The Appeals
    Court noted that "[t]he convictions here were based almost
    entirely on the fact that an EBT card bearing [the plaintiff's
    name] was found on the floor of the living room of the
    burglarized house."    
    Id. at 263.
      Although the Appeals Court
    determined that, because the EBT card bore the plaintiff's name,
    that it could reasonably be inferred that he was at one point in
    possession of it, the court concluded that "the Commonwealth has
    presented no evidence that [the plaintiff] possessed, and
    subsequently dropped, his EBT card during the crime[s]."        
    Id. at 264.
       The Appeals Court went on to state that "the fact that the
    card was found taped together in three pieces evidences that it
    had been discarded by its owner on some prior occasion."        
    Id. In sum,
    the Appeals Court reasoned, "ownership of an EBT card
    cannot allow a fact finder to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt
    5
    that the owner of the card was in possession of it during the
    commission of a crime."   
    Id. Concerning the
    Commonwealth's
    arguments regarding the facts that the plaintiff lived in the
    same town where the crimes were committed and was known to
    police, the Appeals Court concluded that those facts only showed
    that the plaintiff may have had the ability to commit the
    crimes, but were not proof that he did in fact commit them.      
    Id. The Appeals
    Court did not find significant the fact that the
    plaintiff did not retrieve his EBT card from police where he had
    not been ordered to do so.      
    Id., citing Commonwealth
    v.
    Stuckich, 
    450 Mass. 449
    , 453 (2008) (where detective did not
    order defendant to do anything, consciousness of guilt
    instruction not warranted where detective told defendant about
    criminal charges against him, asked him to call back later, and
    he did not call back).
    Statutory overview.      The erroneous convictions statute was
    enacted to ensure that "those erroneously convicted but
    factually innocent be afforded equal opportunities to obtain
    compensation."   
    Irwin, 465 Mass. at 847
    .    Notably, the statute
    "waives sovereign immunity 'for an erroneous felony conviction,"
    G. L. c. 258D, § 1 (A), then establishes the class of claimants
    'eligible to obtain relief.'     [Id. at § 1 (B)]."   
    Irwin, supra
    at 841-842.
    6
    In order to be entitled to compensation under the statute,
    the "threshold matter of eligibility as a member of the class of
    claimants eligible to pursue relief" must be decided.        
    Id. at 842.
          Then, a claimant must establish at trial, by clear and
    convincing evidence, that he or she did not commit the offense
    charged.      
    Id. at 839.
    As relevant here, concerning eligibility, G. L. c. 258D,
    § 1 (B) (ii), provides:
    "The class of persons eligible to obtain relief under
    this chapter shall be limited to the following: . . .
    those who have been granted judicial relief by a state
    court of competent jurisdiction, on grounds which tend to
    establish the innocence of the individual as set forth in
    clause (vi) of subsection (C),[4] and if (a) the judicial
    relief vacates or reverses the judgment of a felony
    conviction, and the felony indictment or complaint used to
    charge the individual with such felony has been dismissed .
    . . and (b) at the time of the filing of an action under
    this chapter no criminal proceeding is pending or can be
    brought against the individual by a district attorney or
    the attorney general for any act associated with such
    felony conviction."
    "We have interpreted the word 'grounds' in that statute as
    meaning 'basis.'"       
    Irwin, 465 Mass. at 843
    .   We concluded that
    "the requirement that judicial relief must have been granted on
    'grounds which tend to establish the innocence' of a claimant
    4
    General Laws c. 258D, § 1 (C) (vi), provides that a
    claimant must establish that he or she "did not commit the
    crimes or crime charged in the indictment or complaint or any
    other felony arising out of or reasonably connected to the facts
    supporting the indictment or complaint, or any lesser included
    felony."
    7
    does not limit the threshold question of eligibility for relief
    'to individuals whose convictions were vacated or reversed
    strictly on the basis "of compelling or overwhelming exculpatory
    evidence," that is, on the grounds that they were actually
    innocent.'"    
    Id. at 844,
    quoting Guzman v. Commonwealth, 
    458 Mass. 354
    , 359 (2010).   "Rather, 'grounds which tend to
    establish' a plaintiff's innocence require that a conviction be
    overturned 'on grounds resting upon facts and circumstances
    probative of the proposition that the claimant did not commit
    the crime.'"   
    Irwin, supra
    , quoting 
    Guzman, supra
    .   Last, "[w]e
    have cautioned, however, that such grounds must 'tend[] to do
    more than merely assist the defendant's chances of acquittal.'"
    
    Irwin, supra
    , quoting 
    Guzman, supra
    at 360.
    Discussion.    The Commonwealth argues that it was entitled
    to have the plaintiff's complaint dismissed because the
    plaintiff did not meet his threshold burden of proving
    eligibility, specifically, that his convictions were overturned
    "on grounds which tend to establish [his] innocence" under G. L.
    c. 258D, § 1 (B) (ii).   The Commonwealth advances separate
    arguments in support of its position.
    The Commonwealth first argues that the only claimants
    eligible under the statute are those who are "in fact,
    innocent."    As previously 
    indicated supra
    , we have expressly
    rejected this interpretation.   See 
    Irwin, 465 Mass. at 844
    .
    8
    Although § 1 (B) (ii) references § 1 (C) (vi), the eligibility
    requirement is "separate and distinct from the merits of the
    claim of relief that a claimant must establish at trial," namely
    that he or she did not commit the charged offense.     
    Irwin, supra
    at 839, 842.   The Commonwealth improperly conflates the two
    stages set forth in the statute.
    Next, the Commonwealth contends that, although the Appeals
    Court's grounds for reversal concerned the Commonwealth's
    ability to prove the plaintiff's guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt, the grounds did not tend to establish his actual
    innocence.   The Commonwealth asserts that, "categorically,"
    insufficient evidence of guilt does not necessarily equate to
    actual innocence.5   We do not disagree with this broad statement.
    However, contrary to the Commonwealth's contention, there is no
    need for us to make any "categorical" pronouncement.    Rather,
    the unique facts of this case inform our decision.   Here, the
    5
    Our cases addressing the erroneous convictions statute
    have not addressed this issue. Our decision in 
    Irwin, 465 Mass. at 835
    , 855, involved the erroneous admission of evidence of the
    plaintiff's prearrest silence as purportedly probative of his
    innocence. In Guzman v. Commonwealth, 
    458 Mass. 354
    , 359-360,
    363-365 (2010), the underlying convictions were overturned based
    on new evidence of exculpatory testimony from two witnesses whom
    defense counsel failed to call to testify at trial. In Drumgold
    v. Commonwealth, 
    458 Mass. 367
    , 376-377 (2010), we were faced
    with a new trial that had been granted based on newly discovered
    evidence that would have challenged the credibility of a key
    prosecution witness and the nondisclosure of exculpatory
    evidence relating to the credibility of another prosecution
    witness.
    9
    Commonwealth's "insufficient evidence" pertained to the identity
    of the defendant.    As such, we conclude that the Commonwealth's
    inability to establish, viewed in a light most favorable to it,
    that the plaintiff was the person who committed the crimes, is
    entirely "probative of the proposition that [the plaintiff] did
    not commit the crime[s]."    See 
    Guzman, 458 Mass. at 362
    .     This
    case is not one where there exists other evidence offered by the
    Commonwealth implicating the plaintiff in the charged crimes.6
    Cf. 
    Irwin, 465 Mass. at 855
    (noting that "exclusion of the
    nonprobative and irrelevant evidence would have had no bearing
    on the weight of the remaining evidence").    We add that the
    grounds on which the plaintiff sought relief "do more than
    merely assist [his] chances of acquittal," 
    Guzman, supra
    at 360;
    the grounds required his actual acquittal.   In the circumstances
    of this case, a reversal of the plaintiff's convictions based on
    the absence of evidence that he was the person who committed the
    crimes is probative of innocence and the plaintiff has satisfied
    his threshold burden of establishing eligibility under the
    statute.    Our conclusion does not entitle the plaintiff to
    relief.    He is entitled to relief only if he proves at trial by
    6
    We agree with the reasoning of the Appeals Court
    concerning the significance, or lack thereof, of the facts at
    trial pertaining to the defendant residing in the area where the
    crimes were committed, being known to police, and not retrieving
    his electronic bank transfer card from police. See Commonwealth
    v. Renaud, 
    81 Mass. App. Ct. 261
    , 264-265 (2012).
    10
    clear and convincing evidence that he did not commit the
    offenses charged.
    Order denying motion to
    dismiss affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: SJC 11762

Citation Numbers: 471 Mass. 315

Filed Date: 4/17/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023