Commonwealth v. Edy G. Santos Y Santos. ( 2023 )


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  • NOTICE: Summary decisions issued by the Appeals Court pursuant to M.A.C. Rule
    23.0, as appearing in 
    97 Mass. App. Ct. 1017
     (2020) (formerly known as rule 1:28,
    as amended by 
    73 Mass. App. Ct. 1001
     [2009]), are primarily directed to the parties
    and, therefore, may not fully address the facts of the case or the panel's
    decisional rationale. Moreover, such decisions are not circulated to the entire
    court and, therefore, represent only the views of the panel that decided the case.
    A summary decision pursuant to rule 23.0 or rule 1:28 issued after February 25,
    2008, may be cited for its persuasive value but, because of the limitations noted
    above, not as binding precedent. See Chace v. Curran, 
    71 Mass. App. Ct. 258
    , 260
    n.4 (2008).
    COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
    APPEALS COURT
    21-P-1134
    COMMONWEALTH
    vs.
    EDY G. SANTOS Y SANTOS.
    MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0
    The probationer, Edy G. Santos Y Santos, appeals from an
    order finding him in violation of the terms of probation,
    revoking probation, and imposing guilty findings and sentences
    in a case that had been continued without a finding.               He argues
    that he did not receive adequate notice, that the judge relied
    on improper factors, and that his attorney provided ineffective
    assistance.     The Commonwealth concedes that counsel was
    ineffective.     Because we agree that counsel was ineffective, and
    because other aspects of the proceedings were irregular to say
    the least, we reverse.
    Background.     On May 11, 2021, the probationer admitted to
    sufficient facts on a complaint charging him with operating a
    motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol (OUI) and negligent
    operation.     The matter was continued without a finding for one
    year on the general condition that he obey all laws and on the
    special condition that he complete a G. L. c. 90, § 24D, driver
    alcohol education program.   In addition, the probationer's
    driver's license was suspended for forty-five days.
    Seventy-five days later, on July 25, 2021, a State trooper
    stopped the probationer in New Bedford for operating a motor
    vehicle after suspension of his license (OAS) in violation of
    G. L. c. 90, § 23.   The next day the probationer was arraigned
    on the OAS charge and a notice of probation violation issued.
    The notice charged two violations:   the New Bedford OAS charge
    and failure to complete the § 24D program.
    The probation violation hearing was held on September 22,
    2021.   The probationer testified that when he was stopped on
    July 25, he did not understand that his license was still
    suspended because more than forty-five days had elapsed since
    the suspension of his license, and no one told him he was
    required "to go back to the RMV" to have it reinstated.     No
    evidence was presented that the probationer received notice from
    the registry of motor vehicles that he had to pay a
    reinstatement fee.   Although defense counsel argued that the
    probationer should not be held in violation because he "truly
    didn't understand that he would have to pay a reinstatement fee
    after the forty-five day suspension," counsel failed to raise
    the statutory defense that a person charged with OAS cannot be
    2
    prosecuted based on "failure to pay an administrative
    reinstatement fee without a prior written notice from the
    registrar mandating payment thereof."      G. L. c. 90, § 23.   The
    judge found the probationer in violation based on the New
    Bedford incident.1    After further proceedings, discussed below,
    the judge revoked the continuances without a finding, entered
    guilty findings on the charges of OUI and negligent operation,
    and sentenced the probationer to concurrent one-year house of
    correction sentences, six months to be served, the balance
    suspended for one year.
    Discussion.     In a letter filed the day before oral
    argument, the Commonwealth conceded that counsel was ineffective
    for failing to raise the statutory defense to the New Bedford
    OAS violation.     We agree.   Probationers are entitled to
    effective assistance of counsel, evaluated under the standard
    set forth in Commonwealth v. Saferian, 
    366 Mass. 89
    , 96 (1974).
    See Commonwealth v. Patton, 
    458 Mass. 119
    , 128 (2010).
    Counsel's failure to raise the lack of written notice from the
    registrar was conduct "falling measurably below that which might
    be expected from an ordinary fallible lawyer" and "deprived the
    [probationer] of an otherwise available, substantial ground of
    1 The judge found that the probationer's failure to complete the
    § 24D program was not a violation because he had tried to enroll
    in a program and was waiting for admittance.
    3
    defence."   Saferian, 
    supra.
       The finding of a violation must be
    reversed on the ground of ineffective assistance.2
    Furthermore, had counsel been aware of the statutory
    defense and been more attentive to the evidence, she might have
    been better prepared to defend against the unfounded inference
    of perjury that the judge subsequently drew against her client.
    When addressing disposition, the judge reviewed the defendant's
    driving history and noted "another Fairhaven operating after
    license revocation because of OUI that's not on his criminal
    record because I assume it's still in process."    When defense
    counsel, unaware of this charge, questioned the judge about the
    date of the incident, the judge quoted a sentence from the New
    Bedford OAS police report, which had been introduced as an
    exhibit:    "In addition, it was also later observed that [the
    probationer] has been charged for operation after suspension on
    5/31/2020 by the Fairhaven Police Department."    On the basis of
    2 Represented by different counsel, the probationer pleaded
    guilty to the New Bedford OAS charge on November 15, 2021, and
    received a sentence of sixty days. While this guilty plea may
    "render moot an appellate claim that a judge erred in
    determining that a probationer had violated the conditions of
    his probation by committing a new offense," Commonwealth v.
    Pena, 
    462 Mass. 183
    , 187 (2012), it does not moot the
    probationer's distinct claim that he received constitutionally
    deficient representation at the hearing; "the two claims have
    separate identities and reflect different constitutional
    values." Kimmelman v. Morrison, 
    477 U.S. 365
    , 375 (1986).
    Moreover, we do not view the probationer's subsequent guilty
    plea as "trumping claims of irregularities in the revocation
    proceedings." Pena, 
    supra.
    4
    the Fairhaven incident, the judge jumped to the conclusion that
    the probationer was lying "when he just testified under oath
    that he didn't know his license was suspended."   Flummoxed,
    counsel asked for a recess so she could speak with her client.
    During the recess, the judge asked the clerk "to pull any
    paperwork" regarding the Fairhaven OAS charge and obtained the
    police report, which the judge had marked as an exhibit.     The
    Fairhaven charge became the focus of the remainder of the
    hearing.
    A probationer's perjury and pattern of driving with a
    suspended license are certainly factors that a judge may
    consider in imposing sentence after revocation of probation.
    See Commonwealth v. Doucette, 
    81 Mass. App. Ct. 740
    , 744-745
    (2012) (judge may take into consideration conduct relevant to
    deterrence, rehabilitation, and public safety).   However, the
    judge's emphatic emphasis on the Fairhaven OAS charge was
    improper for a number of reasons.
    As a matter of due process, the Fairhaven charge was not
    listed on the notice of violation, and the probationer lacked
    adequate notice that it would be used against him at the
    hearing.   See Commonwealth v. Maggio, 
    414 Mass. 193
    , 196-197
    (1993).3
    3 Indeed, the probationer was not charged with the Fairhaven OAS
    until October 7, 2021, more than two weeks after the violation
    5
    As a matter of fact, the Fairhaven OAS stop is irrelevant
    on the issue of the probationer's credibility concerning the New
    Bedford OAS charge.   The fact that the probationer was stopped
    for OAS in Fairhaven twenty days after his license had been
    suspended has no rational bearing on whether he honestly
    believed that his license was no longer suspended when he was
    stopped in New Bedford, fifty-five days later and seventy-five
    days after the forty-five day suspension.       We defer to judges'
    credibility determinations "absent clear error."      Commonwealth
    v. Moon, 
    380 Mass. 751
    , 756 (1980).      The judge's determination
    here, based on the Fairhaven incident, that the probationer was
    lying when he testified that he believed his forty-five day
    license suspension had elapsed by the time of the New Bedford
    incident, is clearly erroneous.       See Commonwealth v. Colon, 
    449 Mass. 207
    , 215 (2007), quoting Custody of Eleanor, 
    414 Mass. 795
    , 799 (1993) ("A judge's finding is clearly erroneous only
    where there is no evidence to support it or where the reviewing
    hearing. See Commonwealth vs. Santos Y Santos, New Bedford
    Dist. Ct., No. 2133CR004059. See Jarosz v. Palmer, 
    436 Mass. 536
    , 530 (2002) (court "may take judicial notice of the court's
    records in a related action"). On November 15, 2021, the same
    day the probationer pleaded guilty to the New Bedford OAS
    charge, see note 2, supra, he was served with a probation
    violation notice based on the Fairhaven OAS charge. He
    consented to an immediate hearing, waived the hearing, admitted
    to the violation, pleaded guilty, and received a concurrent
    sixty-day sentence. A further November 15, 2021, docket entry
    states, "All charged disposed - No future events - Defendant
    discharged."
    6
    court is left with the 'definite and firm conviction that a
    mistake has been committed'").
    The judge compounded this error by relying on a statement
    made by counsel as further evidence that the probationer had
    committed perjury.   During the hearing, the judge stated, "And
    then he just told me under oath through you that he doesn't
    remember being stopped on May 31st. . . .   How is that not
    straight-out perjury on an issue that is central to this
    hearing?" (emphasis added).   In fact, although counsel at first
    represented to the judge that the probationer "says he was never
    pulled over in Fairhaven in May," after having an opportunity to
    consult with her client, counsel corrected herself and stated,
    repeatedly, that the probationer admitted to being pulled over
    in Fairhaven.   Moreover, the Fairhaven incident was not
    "central" to the hearing; as noted above, the probationer did
    not even have notice of it.   Finally, the probationer was not
    testifying, and could not be committing "straight-out perjury,"
    when counsel, at first, mistakenly stated that he denied the
    incident.4
    4 We pass over whether the judge improperly took on the role of
    an advocate instead of an impartial arbiter when he asked the
    clerk to locate the Fairhaven police report. See Commonwealth
    v. Sneed, 
    376 Mass. 867
    , 870 (1978). The judge himself
    observed, "I'm not sure it's really up to me to do all this
    investigation. But when I heard something that I don't truly
    believe, I’m a dog with a bone." We are doubtful that a police
    report attached to an application for a criminal complaint that
    7
    Conclusion.   Both the finding of violation and the order
    revoking probation were constitutionally deficient.
    Accordingly, the order entered September 22, 2021, finding a
    probation violation, and imposing guilty findings and sentences,
    is reversed.   As the probationer has fully served the reversed
    sentences,5 a remand for further proceedings is unnecessary.     See
    Commonwealth v. Bruno-O'Leary, 
    94 Mass. App. Ct. 44
    , 51 (2018).
    So ordered.
    By the Court (Green, C.J.,
    Rubin & Massing, JJ.6),
    Clerk
    Entered:   April 6, 2023.
    has not yet been issued qualifies as a court record of which
    judicial notice may be taken.
    5 The probationer's one-year term of probation following his six-
    month commitment to the house of correction expired on March 23,
    2023, and the docket does not reflect any further entries or
    notices of violation.
    6 The panelists are listed in order of seniority.
    8