Commonwealth v. Dustin ( 2016 )


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    SJC-12036
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   DONALD DUSTIN.
    November 23, 2016.
    Assault and Battery.   Words, "Substantive dating relationship."
    After a jury trial, the defendant, Donald Dustin, was
    convicted in the Marlborough Division of the District Court
    Department of assault and battery on a family or household
    member, in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 13M (a).1 We granted the
    defendant's application for direct appellate review to consider
    the "substantive dating relationship" element of § 13M (a).2 We
    affirm.
    1
    The defendant also was convicted of reckless operation of
    a motor vehicle, in violation of G. L. c. 90, § 24. He makes no
    argument with respect to this conviction, and we do not consider
    it. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty of a charge of
    strangulation, in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 15D (b).
    2
    We acknowledge the amicus brief submitted by Tyrone
    Stampley. We decline, however, to address the argument put
    forth in the amicus brief that G. L. c. 265, § 13M, is
    unconstitutionally vague. "An amicus may not argue issues not
    raised by the parties." Robinson v. State Ballot Law Comm'n,
    
    432 Mass. 145
    , 147 n.4 (2000). See generally C.O. v. M.M., 
    442 Mass. 648
    , 650 (2004) (considering same statutory language in
    context of G. L. c. 209A; "[b]ecause [G. L. c. 209A] enumerates
    four factors to be considered in determining the existence of a
    'substantive dating relationship,' there is sufficient language
    in the statute to enable [fact finders] to make informed and
    consistent determinations").
    2
    1. Timing of the defendant's motion. The defendant did
    not make a timely motion at the close of the Commonwealth's case
    for a required finding of not guilty with respect to the assault
    and battery charge.3 See Mass. R. Crim. P. 25 (a), as amended,
    
    420 Mass. 1502
     (1995). See also Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    449 Mass. 747
    , 762 (2007). Had he done so, we would have considered
    only the evidence admitted during the Commonwealth's case-in-
    chief to decide "whether the Commonwealth presented sufficient
    evidence of the defendant's guilt to submit the case to the
    jury."4 Commonwealth v. Platt, 
    440 Mass. 396
    , 400 (2003). See
    Brown, supra; Commonwealth v. Berry, 
    431 Mass. 326
    , 331-332
    (2000). Cf. Commonwealth v. Hurley, 
    455 Mass. 53
    , 69 n.15
    (2009) (motion for required finding filed "after the
    Commonwealth has rested and before the defense was invited to
    present evidence" must be ruled on at that time). Instead, we
    consider whether the evidence during the entire trial, including
    the evidence presented during the defendant's case, was
    sufficient to sustain the conviction.
    2. Factual background. A detailed description of the
    events of August 28, 2014, which gave rise to the criminal
    charges, is unnecessary to this appeal. It suffices to say that
    3
    The defendant's challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence of a "substantive dating relationship" was first made
    after the Commonwealth had rested and after the defendant had
    called his first witness, the witness had completed his
    testimony, and he had been excused. Unless a defendant moves
    for a required finding after the Commonwealth rests its case and
    before he begins his own, his rights are not fixed at that point
    for purposes of evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence under
    Mass. R. Crim. P. 25 (a), as amended, 
    420 Mass. 1502
     (1995).
    The defendant has not raised, in this direct appeal from his
    conviction, any claim of ineffectiveness of his counsel at
    trial.
    4
    The point is of substantial significance here, because
    both the defendant and Stacey Rock testified about the nature of
    their relationship, essentially filling any gap in the
    5
    Commonwealth's case.       General Laws c. 209A, § 1 (e),
    instructs courts to consider the following factors when
    determining whether a "substantive dating" relationship exists
    for purposes of c. 209A: "(1) the length of time of the
    relationship; (2) the type of relationship; (3) the frequency of
    interaction between the parties; and (4) if the relationship has
    been terminated by either person, the length of time elapsed
    since the termination of the relationship."
    3
    in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, see
    Commonwealth v. Latimore, 
    378 Mass. 671
    , 677-678 (1979), there
    was evidence at trial that the defendant and Stacey D. Rock
    were in a parked vehicle when a witness observed an altercation
    between the two of them. After they were confronted by the
    witness, the defendant drove off at a high rate of speed and he
    was stopped a short time later for various motor vehicle
    infractions. A police officer testified that when he asked the
    defendant why he had been driving "that way," the defendant
    replied, "something to the nature of that he was pissed off
    because he had just got in a fight with his girlfriend and that
    he knew he was driving like an idiot." The defendant indicated
    to the officer that Rock was his girl friend. This was the
    state of the evidence when the Commonwealth rested its case.
    The defendant testified in his own defense, and Rock
    testified as well. Rock said that she had met the defendant
    several months before the incident. They developed a
    friendship; the relationship evolved as "boyfriend-girlfriend";
    and they began dating. Although they were exclusive to one
    another, they did not live together. Rock testified that they
    "got along beautifully. Great friends." The defendant agreed
    that they had a "[f]riendship at first and then boyfriend-
    girlfriend," and he described the relationship as "awesome,"
    "great," and "probably the best." Rock acknowledged that their
    dating ("boyfriend-girlfriend") relationship did not end
    immediately after the incident.
    There also was other evidence about the defendant's
    relationship with Rock. The defendant had cared for Rock while
    she was recovering from a medical issue; he "nursed her back" to
    health. He also drove her motor vehicle. On the day in
    question, they spent "a good part of the day" together, first at
    her home, and then doing errands. The altercation for which the
    defendant was charged was, according to the defendant, brought
    on by Rock accidentally calling him by her former boy friend's
    name. Rock also insisted, both to the witness and to the police
    officer, that there was no problem between her and the
    defendant, and "beg[ged] them" not to arrest the defendant.
    3. Discussion. The defendant claims that the evidence was
    insufficient to support a conviction under G. L. c. 265, § 13M.
    Subsection (a) of the statute provides:
    "Whoever commits an assault or assault and battery on a
    family or household member shall be punished . . . ."
    4
    Subsection (c) of § 13M provides:
    "'family or household member' shall mean persons who (i)
    are or were married to one another, (ii) have a child in
    common regardless of whether they have ever married or
    lived together or (iii) are or have been in a substantive
    dating or engagement relationship."
    Only the last definition is at issue in this case.
    Because the defendant did not make a timely motion for a
    required finding at the close of the Commonwealth's case, we
    consider whether the evidence during the entire trial:
    "viewed in a light most favorable to the Commonwealth, is
    sufficient so that the [fact finder] 'might properly draw
    inferences, not too remote in the ordinary course of
    events, or forbidden by any rule of law, and conclude upon
    all the established circumstances and warranted inferences
    that the guilt of the defendant was proved beyond a
    reasonable doubt.'"
    Commonwealth v. McGovern, 
    397 Mass. 863
    , 868 (1986), quoting
    Commonwealth v. Chappee, 
    397 Mass. 508
    , 519 (1986). The only
    issue on appeal is whether the evidence is sufficient to permit
    an inference that Rock was a "family or household member," on
    the ground that she and the defendant "are or have been in a
    substantive dating . . . relationship." G. L. c. 265, § 13M (c)
    (iii). The statute further instructs that:
    "the trier of fact shall determine whether a relationship
    is substantive by considering the following factors: the
    length of time of the relationship; the type of
    relationship; the frequency of interaction between the
    parties; whether the relationship was terminated by either
    person; and the length of time elapsed since the
    termination of the relationship."
    Id. These factors are essentially identical to the factors set
    forth in G. L. c. 209A to determine whether a "substantive
    dating relationship" exists for purposes of that statute, which
    authorizes a person involved in a "substantive dating
    relationship" to obtain a civil abuse prevention order. See
    G. L. c. 209A, § 1.5 See also E.C.O. v. Compton, 
    464 Mass. 558
    ,
    5
    General Laws c. 209A, § 1 (e), instructs courts to
    consider the following factors when determining whether a
    5
    564 (2013); Ginsberg v. Blacker, 
    67 Mass. App. Ct. 139
    , 142
    (2006) ("conduct proscribed as abuse 'closely approximates the
    common-law description of assault'" [citation omitted]). In
    determining the sufficiency of the evidence of a "substantive
    dating relationship" under G. L. c. 265, § 13M (c), and in
    otherwise interpreting and applying that statue, we therefore
    are guided by cases arising under c. 209A.
    As we said in C.O. v. M.M. 
    442 Mass. 648
    , 650-651 (2004),
    with respect to c. 209A:
    "[b]ecause the statute enumerates four factors to be
    considered in determining the existence of a 'substantive
    dating relationship,' there is sufficient language in the
    statute to enable judges to make informed and consistent
    determinations. We need not add to this language by
    interpretation."
    That is no less true under c. 265, § 13M, even though the
    Commonwealth must prove the existence of such a relationship
    beyond a reasonable doubt under that statute.6 Both statutes
    identify the prohibited conduct and require the fact finder "to
    adjudge the existence of substantive relationships by
    considering [the enumerated] factors." E.C.O., 464 Mass. at
    564. These factors provide "explicit standards" both to
    ascertain culpability and to allow a person to conform his or
    her conduct accordingly (citation omitted). See Commonwealth v.
    Hendricks, 
    452 Mass. 97
    , 102 (2008). See also C.O., 442 Mass.
    at 654-656 (vacating abuse prevention order where judge failed
    to consider statutory factors and improperly relied on other
    considerations); Brossard v. West Roxbury Div. of the Dist.
    Court Dep't, 
    417 Mass. 183
    , 184-185 (1994) (sufficient evidence
    "substantive dating" relationship exists for purposes of
    c. 209A: "(1) the length of time of the relationship; (2) the
    type of relationship; (3) the frequency of interaction between
    the parties; and (4) if the relationship has been terminated by
    either person, the length of time elapsed since the termination
    of the relationship."
    6
    The statutes share a similar legislative purpose. "The
    Legislature enacted G. L. c. 209A in 1978 to address the problem
    of domestic violence." C.O., 442 Mass. at 651, citing St. 1978,
    c. 447, § 2. Similarly, G. L. c. 265, § 13M, was enacted "to
    establish a specific penalty for perpetrators of domestic
    abuse." St. 2008, c. 534 (preamble).
    6
    of "substantive dating relationship" for purposes of G. L.
    c. 209A, where defendant referenced victim as his "former girl
    friend" in other c. 209A proceedings, and alleged that he saw
    her two or three times per week, even though she was living with
    another man).7
    In this case, the evidence was sufficient to permit the
    jury to find that Rock and the defendant were involved in a
    "substantive dating relationship" on August 28, 2014. Both
    testified that they had been involved in the relationship for
    several months, and that it had developed into an exclusive
    "boyfriend-girlfriend" relationship. They described their
    relationship as "good" or "great." Among other things, the
    defendant took care of Rock when she had a medical condition;
    she allowed him to drive her vehicle; and they participated in
    daily activities together, such as running errands. The
    defendant had recently given Rock a "friendship ring." See
    Brossard, 
    417 Mass. at 184-185
     (sufficient evidence to establish
    "substantive dating relationship where defendant referred to
    victim as his "former girlfriend"; saw her "two to three times a
    week"; and correspondence "reveal[ed] an emotional relationship
    which entailed substantially more than a few casual dates").8
    Conclusion. The evidence warranted a finding beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant was involved in a
    "substantive dating relationship" with the person he was charged
    with assaulting, in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 13M (c), and
    therefore that conviction is affirmed.
    So ordered.
    7
    The factors enumerated in the proviso of G. L. c. 265,
    § 13M (c), are not themselves elements of the offense. There
    does not need to be evidence as to each factor, let alone proof
    beyond a reasonable doubt as to any one or more of them. They
    are simply the legislative criteria that the fact finder must
    consider in determining whether the "substantive dating
    relationship" element has been proved. It is enough that the
    evidence on these factors, taken as a whole, warrants a finding
    of a substantive dating relationship beyond a reasonable doubt.
    8
    The fact that   there was less evidence on the "frequency of
    interaction" between   the defendant and Rock, and more evidence
    as to "the length of   time of [their] relationship" and "the type
    of relationship," is   not dispositive. See note 7, supra. The
    evidence, taken as a   whole, was sufficient to warrant the
    requisite finding of   a substantive dating relationship.
    7
    Michael A. Waryasz for the defendant.
    Melissa Weisgold Johnsen, Assistant District Attorney, for
    the Commonwealth.
    Max Bauer, for Tyrone Stampley, amicus curiae, submitted a
    brief.