Commonwealth v. Jones-Pannell , 472 Mass. 429 ( 2015 )


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    SJC-11737
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   OLAJUWAN JONES-PANNELL.1
    Suffolk.     April 6, 2015. - August 14, 2015.
    Present:     Gants, C.J., Spina, Cordy, Botsford, Duffly, & Lenk,
    JJ.
    Constitutional Law, Stop and frisk, Reasonable suspicion.
    Search and Seizure, Protective frisk, Reasonable suspicion,
    Threshold police inquiry. Threshold Police Inquiry.
    Practice, Criminal, Motion to suppress, Findings by judge.
    Firearms.
    Complaints received and sworn to in the Roxbury Division of
    the Boston Municipal Court Department on August 8 and 25, 2011.
    After transfer to the Central Division of the Boston
    Municipal Court Department, a pretrial motion to suppress
    evidence was heard by Raymond G. Dougan, J.
    An application for leave to prosecute an interlocutory
    appeal was allowed by Spina, J., in the Supreme Judicial Court
    for the county of Suffolk, and the appeal was reported by him to
    the Appeals Court. After review by that court, the Supreme
    Judicial Court granted leave to obtain further appellate review.
    John O. Mitchell for the defendant.
    1
    We follow our practice of spelling the defendant's name as
    it appears in the complaints.
    2
    Cailin M. Campbell, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    DUFFLY, J.   The defendant, Olawajuwan Jones-Pannell, fled
    when two Boston police officers attempted to stop and question
    him on Norfolk Avenue, between East Cottage Street and Burrell
    Street, in the Roxbury section of Boston.2   When the officers
    pursued and apprehended him, a handgun containing seven rounds
    of ammunition fell from his pants.    The defendant was charged
    with several firearms offenses, as well as resisting arrest.
    Prior to trial in the Boston Municipal Court, the defendant
    moved to suppress all evidence derived from the encounter.
    After an evidentiary hearing, a Boston Municipal Court judge
    allowed the defendant's motion.   A single justice of this court
    granted the Commonwealth's application for leave to pursue an
    interlocutory appeal.   See Mass. R. Crim. P. 15 (a) (2), as
    appearing in 
    422 Mass. 1501
    (1996).   The Appeals Court reversed
    the allowance of the motion to suppress, Commonwealth v. Jones-
    Pannell, 
    85 Mass. App. Ct. 390
    , 391 (2014), and we allowed the
    defendant's petition for further appellate review.    We affirm
    2
    The judge's findings refer to "Norfolk Street," but it is
    clear from the transcript of the suppression hearing that the
    judge and the parties were in agreement that the incident
    occurred on Norfolk Avenue. We therefore refer to Norfolk
    Avenue throughout this opinion.
    3
    the motion judge's order allowing the motion to suppress.
    1.   Background.   We summarize the judge's factual findings,
    which were prefaced with his statement that "[t]he following
    facts are the only ones found by the court based on credible
    testimony presented at the hearing on the motion to suppress."
    At approximately 12:37 A.M., two Boston police officers
    were on routine patrol along Norfolk Avenue in an unmarked
    police vehicle.   The officers noticed the defendant, a black
    male, walking on the sidewalk ten to twelve feet away.      Neither
    officer recognized the defendant, although they were "familiar
    with the gang members active in the area."   The judge found
    that, "[a]lthough the officers knew of some crimes that had been
    reported in the area, Norfolk [Avenue] between East Cottage
    Street and Burrell Street was not a high crime area or so-called
    'hot spot.'"   One officer observed the defendant's "right hand
    in his pants between his waist and his crotch but didn't see any
    other bulge in his pants."   The defendant "looked towards the
    police vehicle, looked up and down the street and continued
    walking."   One of the officers twice asked to speak to the
    defendant, but he looked away and kept walking.   The defendant
    accelerated his pace, keeping his hand in his pants, and the
    police vehicle kept pace with him.   As the defendant turned a
    corner, the officers got out of the vehicle.   One of the
    4
    officers called, "Wait a minute," in a loud voice.    The
    defendant started jogging.    The officer began chasing the
    defendant, who began running, with the officer in pursuit.     The
    officer could see the defendant's left hand, but not his right
    hand.    The defendant was apprehended twenty to thirty seconds
    later.
    2.    Discussion.   "In reviewing a decision on a motion to
    suppress, 'we accept the judge's subsidiary findings absent
    clear error "but conduct an independent review of [the] ultimate
    findings and conclusions of law."'"    Commonwealth v. Ramos, 
    470 Mass. 740
    , 742 (2015), quoting Commonwealth v. Colon, 
    449 Mass. 207
    , 214, cert. denied, 
    552 U.S. 1079
    (2007).    Although an
    appellate court may supplement a motion judge's subsidiary
    findings with evidence from the record that "is uncontroverted
    and undisputed and where the judge explicitly or implicitly
    credited the witness's testimony," Commonwealth v. Isaiah I.,
    
    448 Mass. 334
    , 337 (2007), S.C., 
    450 Mass. 818
    (2008), it may do
    so only so long as the supplemented facts "do not detract from
    the judge's ultimate findings."    Commonwealth v. Jessup, 
    471 Mass. 121
    , 127-128 (2015).   See Commonwealth v. Scott, 52 Mass.
    App. Ct. 486, 492 (2001), S.C., 
    440 Mass. 642
    (2004) (that
    appellate courts have been willing to supplement motion judge's
    findings of fact is based "not only upon the fact that the
    5
    evidence was uncontradicted but also upon our conviction that
    the motion judge explicitly or implicitly credited the witness's
    testimony").
    In this case, it appears from the judge's prefatory
    statement that he intended to credit only those portions of the
    testimony that were reflected in his findings.3   "It is therefore
    not implicit in the judge's findings that [the judge] found the
    entirety of the officer's testimony credible."4   Commonwealth v.
    Daniel, 
    464 Mass. 746
    , 749 (2013).   Compare Commonwealth v.
    Gentile, 
    466 Mass. 817
    , 820-822 & n.5 (2014) (supplementing
    judge's findings with testimony that "was controverted and
    disputed," where judge found witness's testimony "credible in
    its entirety," but reversing judge's denial of motion to
    suppress because "even if the judge had explicitly made findings
    3
    The judge's prefatory statement does not, as the
    Commonwealth contends, insulate his findings of fact from
    appellate review. It is the motion judge's responsibility to
    make credibility assessments, weigh the evidence, and make
    findings of fact; it remains the responsibility of an appellate
    court to evaluate whether those findings are clearly erroneous.
    4
    Where a party contends that a motion judge failed to make
    findings warranted by the evidence, and that supplementation
    with material facts would require reversal of the suppression
    order, a reviewing court will not engage in fact finding, but
    may remand so that the judge may consider whether additional
    findings are warranted. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Isaiah I.,
    
    448 Mass. 334
    , 337-338 (2007), S.C., 
    450 Mass. 818
    (2008);
    Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    52 Mass. App. Ct. 486
    , 495-496 (2001).
    6
    adopting every factual assertion in [witness's] testimony, the
    findings would still fall short of establishing a reasonable
    belief that the defendant was in the home at the time of
    entry").
    The Commonwealth essentially asks us to do what our case
    law proscribes:   to rely on testimony that was neither
    explicitly nor implicitly credited by the motion judge,
    otherwise put, that we in essence make additional findings, and
    reach a different result, based on our own view of the evidence.
    The Commonwealth argues that the judge wrongly determined the
    points at which the defendant began to jog and run, and
    therefore erred in deciding when the defendant was seized.     The
    Commonwealth asks also that we consider the officer's testimony
    anew and conclude, contrary to the judge's finding, that the
    neighborhood was in fact a "high crime" area.   The Commonwealth
    suggests further that we should supplement the judge's findings
    with additional evidence concerning the officer's training, in
    order to conclude that the officer reasonably suspected the
    defendant was carrying a firearm unlawfully.    This we cannot do.
    After review of the judge's findings and rulings and the record,
    we conclude that the judge's subsidiary findings are not
    erroneous; they amply "support his general findings [and]
    conclusions based thereon."   Commonwealth v. Murphy, 
    362 Mass. 7
    542, 547 (1972).
    a.   Point at which the defendant was seized.   Identifying
    the moment of seizure is a critical question for purposes of
    deciding a motion to suppress.   "A person is seized by the
    police only when, in light of all of the attending
    circumstances, a reasonable person in that situation would not
    feel free to leave."   Commonwealth v. DePeiza, 
    449 Mass. 367
    ,
    369 (2007).
    Here, the judge concluded that the defendant was seized
    when an officer "exclaimed 'Wait a minute!' and then began
    chasing the defendant."   The Commonwealth contends that the
    defendant was not seized until he was physically apprehended.
    It argues that "the defendant's flight was not prompted by
    anything the police did," Commonwealth v. Powell, 
    459 Mass. 572
    ,
    578 (2011), cert. denied, 
    132 S. Ct. 1739
    (2012), because he
    already was running when the officer began to chase him.    The
    judge found otherwise, and his findings are not clearly
    erroneous; although the officer's testimony characterized the
    defendant's pace in a number of ways, the judge's factual
    findings resolve the differences.5   In any event, regardless of
    5
    Specifically, the Commonwealth contends that the judge's
    finding that the defendant started "jogging," only after the
    officer yelled, "Wait a minute," is clearly erroneous. We are
    not convinced that there was clear error. While there is some
    8
    when the defendant started "jogging", or what rate of speed was
    meant by that term, the judge found that the defendant increased
    his pace after the officers initially asked to speak to him, and
    that the defendant started to run when the officers got out of
    the vehicle, one officer called out loudly to "[w]ait a minute,"
    and the officer then gave chase.    See Commonwealth v. Barros,
    
    435 Mass. 171
    , 174-176 (2001).     Contrast Commonwealth v. 
    Powell, supra
    (no seizure where flight not prompted by police activity).
    The defendant was free to reject the police officer's
    multiple requests to speak with him, just as he was free to
    respond to the requests by increasing his pace.    Unlike the
    situations in Commonwealth v. 
    Powell, supra
    , and Commonwealth v.
    Sykes, 
    449 Mass. 308
    , 313-314 (2007), the judge's findings in
    this case, which are supported by the evidence, support the
    conclusion that the defendant's eventual running was prompted by
    the officers' actions.   The officer's loud command to "[w]ait,"
    and his pursuit, had compulsory aspects that his prior requests
    did not.   See Commonwealth v. Barros, supra at 174-176.   The
    possibly equivocal testimony about when the defendant started
    jogging, ample testimony in the record supports the judge's
    finding, and the judge clearly indicated that he did not find
    all of the testimony credible. The judge was not required to,
    and apparently did not, credit equivocal testimony to the effect
    that the defendant was already "jogging" prior to the moment the
    officer yelled at him to "[w]ait," and merely speeded up
    thereafter.
    9
    evidence amply demonstrated that the defendant was not free to
    leave at that point.   
    Id. b. Suspicion
    of criminal activity.   The legal question
    then becomes whether, at the time the defendant was seized, the
    officers "had an objectively reasonable suspicion of criminal
    activity, based on specific and articulable facts."
    Commonwealth v. Barros, supra at 176.   The judge found that the
    factors relevant to the reasonableness of the officers'
    suspicion were:
    "flight from police officers and keeping his right hand in
    his pants between his waist and his crotch. That it was
    just after midnight adds little if anything to the calculus
    of reasonable suspicion. Other factors that in some cases
    support a finding of a reasonable suspicion are missing:
    this was not a high crime area; the police didn't know the
    defendant; there were no reports or radio calls of a crime
    having been recently committed in the area; the officers
    were on routine patrol."
    The judge concluded that the defendant's refusal to respond to
    the officer's initial requests to speak with him did not
    generate an objectively reasonable suspicion and that, while
    flight from police and holding one's hand at one's waist or
    inside one's pants may sometimes indicate that an individual has
    a weapon, it also is consistent with other, nonviolent
    activities.   Although acknowledging these two factors to be
    "important," the judge determined that, without more, they were
    "not enough to support a conclusion of reasonable suspicion."
    10
    The Commonwealth contends that testimony concerning the
    character of the neighborhood as "high crime" added
    substantially to the reasonableness of the officers' suspicions.
    Although a characterization that an area is one of "high crime"
    may be relevant in determining whether a police officer's
    suspicion is reasonable, the accuracy of the characterization in
    a particular case depends on specific facts found by the judge
    that underlie such a determination, rather than on any label
    that is applied.   See Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    454 Mass. 159
    ,
    163 (2009).   And, as we cautioned in that case, whether a
    neighborhood is a high crime area is a consideration that must
    be applied with care.
    "The fact that the officers were in a high crime area
    is unquestionably a factor to consider, albeit with
    caution; we recognize that so-called high crime areas are
    inhabited and frequented by many law-abiding citizens who
    are entitled to be protected against being stopped and
    frisked just because of the neighborhood where they live,
    work, or visit. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Holley, 
    52 Mass. App. Ct. 659
    , 663 (2001). The term 'high crime area'
    is itself a general and conclusory term that should not be
    used to justify a stop or a frisk, or both, without
    requiring the articulation of specific facts demonstrating
    the reasonableness of the intrusion. See Commonwealth v.
    Gomes, 
    453 Mass. 506
    , 513, (2009)."
    Commonwealth v. 
    Johnson, supra
    .
    The judge's finding that the stop here did not take place
    in a "high crime" area was not clearly erroneous.   In some
    circumstances, locations where firearms offenses are common, or
    11
    where rival gang activity occurs, have been considered "high
    crime" areas.   See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Pagan, 63 Mass. App.
    Ct. 780, 781-783 (2005).    Compare Commonwealth v. Sykes, supra
    at 314-315 (in high crime area where large group congregated,
    attempting to avoid contact with police and clenching waistband
    while running contributed to reasonable suspicion).   Isolated
    incidents of nearby gun activity, or the mere presence of gangs
    in the vicinity, however, does not require a finding that a
    particular street is a "high crime area."    In this case, there
    was no testimony concerning arrests in the area of Norfolk
    Avenue; no testimony about any crime on the street in question;
    and no testimony that police patrolled Norfolk Avenue because of
    any specific criminal activity occurring there.    Indeed, at the
    time of the stop, the officers were on routine patrol and were
    not responding to any radio call.    One officer stated that he
    "knew of some crime that had been reported in the neighborhood,"
    but this testimony was supported by few specific facts:    he
    testified only to a radio call of "shots fired" about two weeks
    previously, and a shooting and recovery of a gun sometime in the
    preceding several months.    With respect to his testimony that
    there was "undescribed gang activity in the area," the officer
    articulated no specific facts, and made no statement that
    firearms or violence were involved.
    12
    That one or more "crimes" occurred at some point in the
    past somewhere on a particular street does not necessarily
    render the entire street a "high crime area," either at that
    time or in perpetuity.   Here, on the evidence before him, the
    judge's determination that "Norfolk [Avenue] between East
    Cottage Street and Burrell Street was not a high crime area" was
    not clear error.6
    The same can be said with respect to the judge's findings
    concerning the officer's training and experience.    The judge
    credited the officer's testimony that, nine years earlier, he
    had completed an eight-hour training class titled
    "Characteristics of Armed Gunmen."   The judge was not required
    to conclude that this training -- by itself or in combination
    with other factors -- made the officer's suspicion objectively
    reasonable.   Likewise, the judge was not required to make
    detailed findings about the content of the course.    The judge's
    findings accurately reflect that, apart from the eight-hour
    6
    Nor was there error, as the Commonwealth contends, in the
    judge's determination that the time of night added "little if
    anything to the calculus of reasonable suspicion." The
    defendant was stopped just after midnight on a summer evening.
    Nothing in the judge's decision suggests that he ignored the
    time or declined to consider it. To the contrary, the judge
    addressed the question of the time of night explicitly,
    apparently having concluded that, in light of the other evidence
    before him, the time at which these events took place was not a
    significant factor with respect to the reasonableness of the
    officer's suspicion.
    13
    training class about which there was testimony, there was "no
    other testimony about [the officer's] training."
    c.   Supplementation of judge's findings in future cases.
    We recognize that our decisions have engaged in (and condoned) a
    practice of "minor" or "interstitial" supplementation of a
    motion judge's findings with uncontroverted facts.   At times,
    that practice is benign, simply serving to fill out the story.
    See Commonwealth v. Isaiah I., 
    448 Mass. 334
    , 337 (2007), citing
    Commonwealth v. Butler, 
    423 Mass. 517
    , 526 n. 10 (1996).     This
    practice also may be appropriate where a judge's findings are
    sparse and additional facts are needed to provide context.     See,
    e.g., Commonwealth v. Silva, 
    61 Mass. App. Ct. 28
    , 30 (2004);
    Commonwealth v. Hecox, 
    35 Mass. App. Ct. 277
    , 278 (1993);
    Commonwealth v. Coy, 
    10 Mass. App. Ct. 367
    , 368 (1980).     And, as
    noted, we may affirm a judge's order on a motion to suppress
    based not only on the facts as found, but also on evidence that
    was "implicitly or explicitly credited" by the motion judge.
    See Commonwealth v. Isaiah I., supra at 337.   See Commonwealth
    v. 
    Jessup, 471 Mass. at 127-128
    (appellate court may supplement
    with additional undisputed facts that "do not detract from the
    judge's ultimate findings"); Commonwealth v. Bostock, 
    450 Mass. 616
    , 617 n.1 (2008) (reviewing court may supplement "with
    uncontested testimony presented at the hearing by a witness
    14
    whose testimony largely was credited by the judge and does not
    contradict the judge's findings").
    But the mere absence of contradiction is not enough to
    permit supplementation with facts not found by the judge.    A
    reviewing court should exercise caution in supplementing a
    motion judge's findings of fact with evidence in the record that
    was not included in the judge's findings, and as to which the
    judge made no statement of credibility, on the assertion that
    the judge implicitly credited that testimony.   While, for
    instance, a judge's denial of a defendant's motion to suppress
    may in some circumstances imply resolution of "factual issues in
    favor of the Commonwealth," see Commonwealth v. Hinds, 
    437 Mass. 54
    , 57 (2002), cert. denied, 
    537 U.S. 1205
    (2012), quoting
    Commonwealth v. Grandison, 
    433 Mass. 135
    , 137 (2001), where a
    judge made "careful and detailed findings," we may have "no way
    to tell whether, or to what extent," the judge believed the
    testimony as to which he or she made no findings.   See
    Commonwealth v. Correia, 
    381 Mass. 65
    , 76 (1980).   See also
    Commonwealth v. Cataldo, 
    69 Mass. App. Ct. 465
    , 472 (2007)
    (judicial silence, reflected in absence of finding supportive of
    witness, can suggest that judge rejected witness's testimony).
    Where a motion judge's findings of fact are insufficient to
    support the judge's conclusions of law, and it is not apparent
    15
    from the judge's decision or the record that the judge credited
    other testimony as to which no findings were made, ordinarily a
    reviewing court will reverse the judge's decision.   See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. King, 
    71 Mass. App. Ct. 737
    , 741-742 (2008).       We
    have on occasion supplemented a judge's findings with additional
    facts necessary to support the judge's conclusion, such as where
    the judge found the witnesses' testimony "truthful and
    accurate."   See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Anderson, 
    461 Mass. 616
    ,
    619 n.3, cert. denied, 
    133 S. Ct. 433
    (2012).   See also
    Commonwealth v. Scott, 
    52 Mass. App. Ct. 486
    , 492 (2001).     In
    the absence of findings on a critical issue, however, or where
    the facts as found are "susceptible of more than one
    interpretation," and there is additional evidence in the record,
    neither implicitly credited nor discredited by the judge, remand
    may be appropriate.   See Commonwealth v. Isaiah I., supra at
    338-339 (remanding for further findings where judge made no
    credibility determination concerning detective's testimony, and
    we thus were unable to determine whether omission was error or
    testimony was not credited).   A judge may resolve any
    uncertainty by including in the decision a statement as to
    whether the judge credits, or does not credit, all or a portion
    of a particular witness's testimony.   See, e.g., Commonwealth v.
    Daniel, 
    464 Mass. 746
    , 749 (2013) (where judge stated that her
    16
    findings were based on "credible testimony" of police officer,
    but stated also that she did not find credible officer's
    testimony that he had heightened awareness of danger, "[i]t is
    therefore not implicit in the judge's findings that she found
    the entirety of the officer's testimony credible").
    But, as our long-standing jurisprudence makes plain, in no
    event is it proper for an appellate court to engage in what
    amounts to independent fact finding in order to reach a
    conclusion of law that is contrary to that of a motion judge who
    has seen and heard the witnesses, and made determinations
    regarding the weight and credibility of their testimony.     See,
    e.g., Commonwealth v. Clarke, 
    461 Mass. 336
    , 340-341 (2012) and
    cases cited; Commonwealth v. Stephens, 
    451 Mass. 370
    , 381
    (2008), and cases cited.   A motion judge cannot be deemed
    implicitly to have credited testimony that is contrary to the
    judge's ultimate findings and conclusions simply because, as is
    often the case in a criminal proceeding, only one witness
    testified at the hearing, so the testimony is "uncontroverted."
    Here, the judge's decision included a detailed statement of
    facts, prefaced by a statement that the facts stated were based
    on the only testimony that the judge found credible.   Such a
    statement leaves no room for supplementation of the judge's
    findings of fact.   Because the judge's findings of fact were not
    17
    clearly erroneous, we must accept the judge's subsidiary
    findings of fact, and consider only whether they support the
    judge's ultimate findings and conclusions of law.7   See
    Commonwealth v. Thomas, 
    429 Mass. 403
    , 405 (1999) ("motion
    judge's findings of fact are binding in the absence of clear
    error").   "We cannot properly be asked to revise a judge's
    subsidiary findings of fact, where they are warranted by the
    evidence, or to review the weight (or credibility) of the
    evidence related to the findings."   Commonwealth v. Moon, 
    380 Mass. 751
    , 756 (1980), quoting Commonwealth v. Murphy, 
    362 Mass. 542
    , 550 (1972) (Hennessey, J., concurring).
    Order allowing motion
    to suppress affirmed.
    7
    An appellate court is, of course, "free to affirm a
    ruling on grounds different from those relied on by the motion
    judge if the correct or preferred basis for affirmance is
    supported by the record and the findings." Commonwealth v. Va
    Meng Joe, 
    425 Mass. 99
    , 102 (1997). See Commonwealth v.
    Bartlett, 
    465 Mass. 112
    , 117 (2013).